The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 10, 1874, Image 4

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    Farm, Harden and Household.
Th HtSMWlff.
A correspondent commends onions as
a specific against epidemics— not as an
esculent, bnt sliced and kept in a sick
room, whore they will absorb any at
mospheric poison. They should be re
placed by fresh ones every hour. It is
noticed that iu the room of a small-pox
patient they will blister and decompose
very rapidly, but will provent the
spread or the disease. Their applica
tion has slso proved effective iu the
case of snake bites.
Fisn RTSSOI.KS.— Take some fish,
either fresh or that has been cooked,
ah rod it, and let it stew with some but
ter, covering it over until sufficiently
done. Soak a roll in milk, beat up the
fish and this together in a mortar with
a little finely-chopped mushroom and
throe eggs ; season with salt and pep
per. Mix all well together ; bake iu
small cups, first buttered, aud turn out.
Serve wit h or without sauce.
TUB BEST WAT TO SKKVK Bio*.—Soak
it for some hours in cold water, to
which a little salt has leen added
Have a stew-pan ready, containing boil
ing water, into which put the rice, and
boil briskly for ten minute-*. Four it
into a colander, and set it by the fire to
drain. The grains will be separated
and very large.
A good method of keeping potatoes
for family use is to pack them in bar
rels with snu-dried sand, covering the
tops with turf, and keeping them in a
drv and cool atmosphere. Then they
will neither shrivel nor shrink to any
real extent.
ECONOMICAL COVERLET. —Sheets of
brown paper pasted together at the
edges snd laid over a blanket on the
I*s will give the warmth of two more
blankets, aud the article, with care,
will last a considerable time.
avMloal Htats.
A CORK TOR Sorr CORNS.— Dip a bit
of soft linen rag into turpentine, and
wrap it around the soft corn ; wet ihe
cloth in it night and morning, and in a
few days the corn wiU have disappear
ed ; but the relief to the throbbing,
burning pain, come* almoat immedi
ately after the first or second applica
tion. Wear cotton between the toes
and the corns will not reappear.
To REMOVE STINOS.— In many cases
instantaneous relief from the nam can
be obtained by pressing upon the place
containing the sting with the tube of a
small key. This extracts the sting, and
then a drop of aqua ammonia will neu
tralise tbe acidity of the poison, and
allay the smart of the wound. A little
bit a1 saleratus moistened and laid over
the affected part will also heal it,
OOCRT THE Srv —Sleepless people—
and there are many in America—should
court the sun. The very worst soporific
is lsudanuni, and the very beet is sun
shine. Therefore, it is very plain that
poor sleepers should pass as many
hours of the day in sunshine and as
few as possible in the shade. Many
women are martyrs, and yet do not
know it They shot the sunshine out
of their houses and heart*, they wear
veils, they carry parasols, they do all
that is possible to Veep off the subtlest,
and yet most potent influence, which is
intended to give them strength and
beauty and cheerfulness.
PrtMrrUf Fodder.
Corn fodder and oats are preserved
fresh by German farmers, with entire
success. This is done by closely pack
ing fodder on the roots alter they are
pulped and mingled with ent-straw, in
pits or troughs dag in dry soil, and
covering the mass with a thick layer of
earth to exelndo the air. In this way
fresh beet or turnip leaves, green-corn
fodder, clover, lucerne, pulped tieets,
mangels snd turnips are perfectly well
preserved during a whole year. After
being thus stored fermentation sets in
and is completed in two months. Tbe
food thus preserved goes by the name
•f sour hay, bnt it is not soar, being,
on ihe contrary, alkaline from the pres
ence of ammonia. When fed with cut
straw it is especially valuable as pre
venting the constipating effects of the
drv food. Stock eagerly consume the
fodder, and are kept in heathful con
dition during the winter season by its
use. Among the products of the fer
mentation a variety of fatty acids, with
some alcohol and other carbo-hydrates
unusual in fresh fodder, have de
tected. It contains less water than
green fodder, and is therefore to be
considered as to that extent a concen
trated food. Probably upon dairy
farms where fresh food is desirable dur
ing the winter and early spring this
J dan of preserving fodder might be
onnd a valuable addition to our re
sources.
Thr Barrel ot Pork.
It appears that the recent action of
the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce
in adopting the national standard barrel
of mess pork was in violation of an
Ohio law, and therefore is nugatory.
The law reads as follows :
" That each barrel of beef or pork
put up for exportation in this btaie
shall contain 200 pounds weight of
sound, clean, well-slaughtered meat,
and such only as is well-fatted, which
shall be denominated as follows: *
• • Each barrel of mess pork shall
consist of twenty-five pieces, of eight
pounds weight each, as near as may be,
rnsking 200 pounds of pork, taken from
the middlings or sides of hogs weighing
upward of 200 pounds each. • •
The pieces of pork shall be packed on
the edge, with st least fifty pounds of
clean, fair salt, and two onnoes of salt
petre to each barrel, and when thus
packed and beaded each barrel shall be
filled up with strong pickle."
This makes it clear that neither the
present standard nor the previous one
of 196 pounds conformed to the law.
Indeed, one is as complete a violation
of the statute as the other, and conse
quently the Chamber of Commerce can
not eniorce the new standard.
To PrfMrrc Grape*.
A lady from Westfield, Pa., writes a
very appreciative letter, *Bha sends
the following : " First, pick off all un
sound or unripe ones and lay the clus
ters in an empty room on papers until
dry, for in all packages some will be
crushed and dampen others. Then an
empty crate will do to pack them in.
First a layer of grapes, then a thick
ness of paper, so as to exclnde the air
and keep them separate, then grapes,
then paper, and BO on until you have
three or four layers—no more". If the
box is to hold more, put in partitions
to support the others that are to be
packed. We packed hundreds of
pounds thus last year, and they kept
perfectly until the middle of March,
and, had the supply not been ex
hausted, they could have been kept
much longer.
TH Proltt of Sheep Kalslng.
N. G. Abbott, of Vassalsboro, Me.,
had a mowing field of forty acres
covered with white and yellow daisies,
and the grass was killed in many places.
Ho thinned out ten acres of it for sheep
pasture and allowed them to feed on it
two years. The third year he mowed
it and got the heaviest crop of hay that
he had ever grown on it even with top
dressing. Timothy and red-top came
in, and in some plaoes the clover was
so heavy that a mowing machine could
not be used. What a rush of capitalists
there would be, if there was an invest
ment to be made that would pay 50 or
100 per cent. Farmers might make
just such investments in tile draining
their lands and seeding them with
grapes, with no more manure than they
now let run to waste.
Striae Seed Corn.
The best plan, as a general thing, is
to select the best ears at the time of
husking, and spread them on the barn
floor, so that tbe cobs can become
thoroughly dry. The old method of
leaving the husks attached to the oorn,
so that it could be braided together,
and suspended in a dry had airy place,
brought about a similar result. In ui!
cases, the oorn should be kept where
it will be free from dampness. Many
in saving seed, are particular to select
only from stalks that produce two large,
well developed ears. As you say. com
is often planted so deep that it will
sot germinate quickly. If the soil is
flue and dry at the time of plautisf, the
planter wiD be apt te sow deeper than
it sbettld.
THE STARVING FRONTIERSMEN.
It mi a* * Imiiili'iiriti ;*! Mm nrt l>-
maalli Anlitiaa Wllhottl fonil.
Early lon the morn fug of the 30th,
says Colonel Dudley, in a report of his
visit to the plagnostrickou settlors of
Nebraska, I moftvl down tho Medicine
across tho divide to Coon creek anil
camped; distance marohoit twenty-two
milos. October 31 proceeded to In
dianola. tho county neat, so claimed, of
Hod Willowis>unty, visiting on the way
nearly every cabin or house that had
tho appearance of an absence of stock
and supplies, getting, from a personal
knowledge and conversation with heads
of families, their actual condition.
Many of tho house* 1 found abandon
ed. On the morning march I discov
ered two families only, however, with
out at least tou or fifteen days' provis
ions. These two, one a Mr. Warners,
his wife and four small children, had
only some uiuo or ten pound* of tlonr,
not a particle of any other breadstuff
or meat in In* house, an J no means to
bny with. The other, J. N. Ferguson,
who was sick, hss a wife and two chil
dren. lie had anly ten jnnindit of flour,
remuant of a sack received from the aid
society, and about two pounds of fresh
pork, give" him by a neighbor. With
Quivering lip* ana a moistened eye, he
said he did not know where he was to
obtain a further supply. Both these
parties have most excellent claims.
One owns a horse, and the other a pair
of oxen. To sell either is out of the
question, as there is little or no money,
aud then, as they stated, they would be
withsut the jneatis to haul fuel to their
homes during winter, aud m the spring
they would have no means of cultiva
ting their crops.
The remainder of settlers visited on
the way to Unlianola I found had some
provisions for the time being, say from
ten to thirty davs" supply by strict
economy, which all seemed disposed to
practice. -On arriving at Indianola, 1
sent taeuty meu of the detaolimint
above the month of the Bed Willow to
form a temporary camp, with instruc
tions to the sergeant in command to
render all the assistance he could to
the settlers in case the buffalo returned
within a reasonable distance and they
desired to hunt them. He hail teams
along for that purpose
I met Dr. Shaw and Major R. S.
Cress we 1L These two gentlemen and
Mr. John Eagan hud been appointed a
committee fox the distribution of sup
plies sent for the relief of Red Willow
county. The two former stated that
they nad canvassed the several pre
cincts of the oonutv and had ascertain
ed that Ave hundred and forty-four per
son*, including chiidreu, out of the
total eight hundred inhabitants of 'ihe
county, would require aid before the
winter months were half out; that full
three hundred would need assistance
within twenty days, and that more than
one hnudred were at the present time
either entirely without food or wonld
be in less than five Jays. Some of the
families have one or two cows, others
a yoke of oxen or a horse. Many of
them had worn down their animals iu
attempting to hunt buffaloes, and they
hail no corn to recuperate them with.
The few hogs and pigs I saw were mere
skeletons, having had no grain and sub
sisting almost entirely en the wild roots
Uiey found in the bottoms.
A Strange Disaster.
Tbe disaster to the steamer Empire
at New Orleans was as mysterious as it
was fatal. The Empire arrived at her
dock about 12:30 at night, heavily
loaded with sugar, molasses, rice, etc..
and about 4 o'clock suddenly broke in
two and sunk. Several passengers left
the boat upon her arrival, otherwise
the loss of life wonld have been very
large. As it is fourteen passengers and
many of the crew were drowned.
Mr. D. R. Perret, a passenger who
escaped from the sinking steamer, gives
the opinion that the boat was overloaded
and parted in the center. She had on
board about one hundred and sixty
nine hogsheads of sugar, besides a
large number of barrels of molasses
and a quantity of rice.
Captain Jeanfreau states that the
Empire had only a fair cargo, that she
was not overloaded, and that her guards
were well above water. At the time of
the sinking he was awakened by a great
noise and confusion. He caught one
of his children and swim with it to the
shore. On looking back he saw his
wife standing on deck with her babe
in her arms. As the boat went down
she clang to the wheel-house of the
Bradish Johnson, which stood along
side, bnt the violent shock wrenched
from her grasp her child, who fell into
the water and was drowned.
John Dnblin says : lam mate of tbe
Empire. We arrived about 12 o'clock
and tied up. I went to my room and
almost immediately fell asleep. Be
tween 4 and 5 o'clock I heard a tre
mendous crash, and thinking we had
been run into, rushed on deck. Seeing
she was sinking I shunted for every
body to get life preservers, and rushed
along forward, shouting with all my
might so as to wake all I could. I
-darted for the cabin, when the boat,
almost in a second's time, seemed to
sink, and I was thrown into the water,
when I swam until I caught hold of
something and saved myself.
Eugene Durall, pilot, states that
when the boat sunk lie was in his bed.
He heard a crash, and thought the
steamer hail been run into. He was
thrown into the water anil swam to the
wharf. He thinks the boat broke in
tiro she sank so suddenly.
Sanitary Reform.
The New York Herald thinks that
the cause of the diphtheria so preva
lent in that city, and of diseases gen
erally, is in the domestie arrangements
3nd economy of the different districts.
The contamination of indoor air, which
every poor fsmily must breathe nearly
twenty-four hours in the day, is the
great evil to bo abated. This is due
partly to the wretched and crude sys
tem of house and sewer pipes and
drains, from which the sewer gas poison
ceaselessly escapes.
Aside from this, a more deadly evil
abounds in the matter of house-heat
ing. The indoor process of aerial de
terioration is fertile of disease. The
poor workwomsn, shivering over a few
embers and scantily supplied with fuel,
should know that her store of coal
would go mnch farther and furnish her
more and more salubrious heat if care
were taken to supply her apartment
with an ahuudanoe of vapor formed
from pure water. No doubt the failure
to do this, the editor says, explains the
sickliness and feverish languor which
flushes the wan face of the tenement
inmate snd makes effective indoor lalxir
almost impossible. Until public atten
tion is fixed upon this kind ol sanitary
reform it will be vain to hope for an
adequate relief of winter sufferings.
ENGLISH AIIMT. —Last year 743
soldiers were sentenoed for desertion
from the British army. Borne of the
reasons given for desertion by the men
are curious. Forty-seven were annoyed
by oomrades or harshly treated by
non-commissioned officers and others;
forty-four married without loave, or
hail love affairs ; eighty-seven were led
astray by drink, or deserted from dis
like to the army ; eighty-one were per*
suaded by comrades or bail company ;
sixty-four alleged refusal of absence as
the canse ; twenty-nine deserted to
better themselves; thirty went on
sprees and did not return ; forty
three were tired of the army ; eighteen
deserted on account of whims and
folly; and thirty-two gave no cause.
His Character,
Au honest blacksmith was once
grossly insulted and his character in
famously defamed. Friends advised
him to seek redrets by means of law,
but to one and all he replied, " No ; I
will go to my forge, and there in six
months I will have worked out such a
character and earned such a name as
all the judges, law courts, and lawyers
in the world could uot give me." He
was right. It is by honest labor, manly
courage, and a conscience void of of
fense, that men assert their true dignity
and prova thai; Uoncrtr ud respecta
bility,
NEW YOKE ELECTION.
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Imllctmeut of Mormon Lee.
A telegram from Salt Lake City tell'
ns that John D. Lee has been arrested
upon an indictment found by the Grand
Jury of the Second District Court of
Utah Territory, charging him with
murder, in having been engaged in the
bloody Mountain Meadow massacre,
perpetrated by the Mormons several
years ago. The victims of the terrible
slaughter, it will be remembered, were
a large number of men. wonieu aud
children traveling overland to Califor
nia. They formed the wealthiest im
migrant train that ever attempted to
cross.the plains. Many of them trav
eled in their own private coaches and
carriages, and were supposed to lisve a
Urge amount of money with them.
They travel til leisurely toward the land
of the setting sun, where they intended
to establish a colony, and find homes
for themselves and children. They
were eminently a mora! and law
abiding people. They bad few fire
arms, and made friends of the ludians
as they traveled along rather than ene
mies. Yet s band of the Mormon Nau
voo Legion, disguised as savages, fell
upon them one night and massacred
the entire train, with horrible atroci
ties, Leo was at the time a prominent
officer of the Nauvoo I#egion, a Mor
mon military organisation, better
known as the Danito band. It has for
years been asserted, and generally be
lieved, that ho was the leader of tho
expedition that committed tho terrible
slaughter. He is a man of extensive
means and influence among the older
Mormons, and des]H>rste efforts will
nndonbtetlly be made to shield him,
but it is to be hoped that he will be
brought to trial, aud, with others en
gaged in this bloody crime, roceive the
tardy punishment they richly deserve
if found guilty. The United Htates
officials are entitled to great commen
dation in their efforts to ferret out the
perpetrators of this barbarous and long
concealed crime—the blackest, per
haps, of all the high-Landed outrages
on life and property that have dark
ened tho record of the Mormon the
ocracy.
The Cause of bis Death,
The Plainficld Timtn Bays that the
resent death of Mr. Henry A. 11. Martin,
ono of the moat respected citizen* of
that town, innst be ascribed directly to
the shock received on reading the New
York Herald'* stupid hoax übont the
escape of wild animals in Central Park.
Up to the morning of Nov. 9 Mr. Mar
tin bad enjoyed his nstial health, and
thongh h was conscious of nn occa
sional cnrions sensation in the region
of the heart, there was no good reason
to suppose that, with proper care, ho
might not live many years. Beit on
that morning he began reading the
Herald's hoax, and when he reached
the description of a tiger springing
into a landaulet and devouring helpless
children, his emotion overcame him,
aud very soon afterward he complained
of a pain in his heart which completely
depressed him. On the Thursday fol
lowing he died. His physician ex
pressed the opinion that his death re
sulted from a rupture of the left side
of the heart, the predisposing cause
probably being a fatty degeneration of
that organ, and the immediate or ex
citing caußO the shock producod by
reading the Herald article.
The Longshoremen.
In the city of New York and vicinity
are employed about seven thousand
longshoremen, or men who work by
the hour along the shores, at the, diffei
ent nocks, loading and unloading
Bhipe. When one job in finished they
are ready for another, and work day
and night, as they are wanted. Here
tofore they have each received lorty
cents per hour during the day, aud
eighty cents per hour for the time they
were employed duriug the night. This
additional forty cents for night-work is
stated to have been put ou to preven
the steamship companies giving the
men unnecessary night-work. And
now their wages have been reduced
twenty-five per cent, by the stevedores,
who, they claim, have taken some con
tracts at a low figure, aud arc making
up their loss by reducing their wages.
This has caused the great longshore
men's strike.
A ©oru-wt tractor that has neve? baeu
patented—-Xba wow,
KEVIVAI. OF HI'MIMIHS.
TIM Uronailindl l a Praalt llatt hi
4 nniui.trial 4rtllljr.
Although nearly ona-half of the
period assigned for tho short time
movement iu the Now England cotton
mills hu. now elapsed. any a the United
Stnton A'oomwiiaf, it in yot too soon to
ili'trmin with the requisite accuracy
the effects of tho movement on the
trnile. Hut that tho movement nt the
titue wan saltitarv one eaunot l>e
doubted. It Imparled oouttdenoe to
the trade, and nt lonnt Umt|>oranlv
averted the downward teiuleuey whielt
threatened auoli grave results. At the
I'ream it time prtoea are ly uo nioann
nettled, and judging ly recent develop
men to it ia not improbable that a gen
eral reviaion of the entire lint may take
place. Hut the general tone of the
market in decidedlv unproved, ami there
in a bustle ami activity apparent which
are iu marked contrast with the stagna
tion of a tew wockti ago. The improve
ment is still more marked in prints and
drvws goods, owing, it is probable, to
the active demand that has Hot in for
the retail trade, the requirements for
which are likely to be uiuoh heavier
than were deemed either probable or
possible a short time since. The gen
eral feeling now is that we shall have a
large and active winter trade, espeeuilly
if the season should chance to be an
o|en our. In continuation of the im
proved tone of the dry goods trade of
New York city the uews from the manu
facturing districts is unexpectedly
favorable. The short-time movement
in the cotton traile appears to have al
ready reached the turning |v*nt.
Several mills which went oil two-third
time have resumed full work ; oltiers
are preparing to do so. Now, this
movement is chiefly important as ilium
trating the unproved feeliug, and U by
uo means oil a scale to warraut expecta
tions of important changes.
Hut front the West the news is more
decided of oomiug activity. At Cht
cttgo, St. lronit, Louiiiville and Ctueiu
u.ati there is an active demand for uioury
for busiuees |iur|Hise. lhe grain trinle
appears to haw received a new impulse,
the receipts and deliveries one wi-ek
r. ceiitly reaching to something tusr
the figures t corresponding ihtukU in
former years. Hut the clitef cause of
the present activity ap|>ears to be the
rejuiremeuts of the pork tra<le. This
will liberate u very large amount of
money, which will be distributed all
over the West iu payment of hogs.
The farmers who, from whatever cause,
held back their grain, will now be in a
position to realize ou stock, and will l>e
in a jHtsitiou to settle up their old store
bills and make new purchases.
The South is harvesting her cotton
crop with ait activity which shows that
the granger policy of holding back
produce for higher prices hts made
very little headway in that part of the
country. The proceeds are put into
immediate general circulation ; and al
though, owing to cansas which are a
disgrace to our country, they no longer
flow back iu a stream of wealth to the
North, yet the mouey received for the
crop is "devoted to the wiping out id in
dividual aud local indebtedness. Even
at present prices planters receive a
good profit.
The general outlook, then, is not un
favorable. It is true there is nothing
particularly bright or attractive iu the
immediate future, but at the same time
there is nothing particularly de| re* sing.
AU our industrial interests, without
exception, are in a sound condition,and
this encomium could perhaps now be
more truthfully appUeo to the general
finances of the country than at any
former period in our history.
How to Mauat;f Her
A man name*l Tad dies, in Virginia,
has got his wife iu proper subjection,
and means to keep her so. "Oh,"
s*ys he, in telling about it, " there
ain't many who know how to rule a
wife properly. Nos, my old woman is
one of the beat-uutured women iu the
world, but ehe's got adeuoeof a tem
per. whenever I see she's got her
madness up, if it's a dozen times a day,
1 just quietly say nothing, but rather
humor her, and she comes around all
right after a while. Even when the
throws thing* at me or givi s s wild
daati at me with the broom or rolling
pin, I just dodge a little, and she never
hits mo a third time before I get my
eyes on her. and let her know 1 disap
prove of such actions on her part.
Perhaps I lisrc to leave the house to
show her this, but alio st-es the point.
Then, by lieing car-ful not to irritate
her, aud* letting her have her own way,
I manage make In r do as I please. And
you bet I make her understand and ap
preciate my discipline. Oh, I keep
her under perfect control ! A man
has, you know, got to be ran tor in his
own house, or your wife will ride you
down as if von wasn't nobody. My
wife's a perfect angel in her natural
disposition, hut any other man but me
would spoil her."
lloir lie (lot *IOO,OOO.
An item of mneh hißtoric*l intercut
in oonUined in tlm account of the es
tnteof Robert Roberts, 'f Meilfleld,
prcßcntetl in the Probate Court of Rod
ham, Mhab. It aeems that the father
of Uobert RotnTtß, whose account haw
jut been filed, wiu: captain of an
American vessel, and during the first
French revolution, when Robespierre
was in power, called at si French port.
While there e wealthy Frenchman, who
had Rained the hostility of the govern
ment, secured n passage on Captain
Roberts' vessel and placed tho sum of
SIOO,OOO in gold in the cabiu. Pre
vious to the sailing of the vessel the
government arrested the intended fugi
tive and beheaded him. Captain Rob
erts, fearing he wonld got into trouble
and perhaps lose his head, immediately
set sail from the port, and, upon arriv
ing at home, left the dangers of the
deep and invested the SIOO,OOO in the
Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance
Company. A number of heirs laid
claim to the money at the decease of
the son, but the conrt liss acknowl
edged the present holder the rightful
heir.
That Little Ulrl.
The jovial captain of <>no of the steam
ships now in port tells n good story
relative to the May and December mar
riages so common in RrszU. A Bra
zilian gentleman, apparently over fifty
years of age, was a passenger on his
vessel. lie was accompanied by two
girls, one about fifteen and another
younger. Tho gentleman was sea-sick
in the cabin and the girls were on deck,
wherenpon the captain endeavored to
amuse them, took them on his knees
and told them stories, while he enjoyed
their prattle and pretty smiles. In tho
midst of this pleasant occupation the
gentleman came on deck. With a fierce
expression id face lie gazed upon the
accne for a moment, and then in juired
in a harsh, husky voice : " Yon, air,
are yon married ?" " Yes. I have u
daughter older than your little girl
here said t!iee.apfain. " She reminds
mo very much of mine." Hero he
potted the pretty cheek. "That little
girl, sir," exclaimed the indignaut
Rrnzilir.ii with gnat emphasis, "that
little girl is my wife, sir 1" The cap
tain collapsed.
Fleli llrppfllitif.
Both Groen, of Rochester, N. Y.,
publishes tho following notice : Any
parties in tho Uuitod Htatcs or Canada
wishing to experiment in hatching tho
spawn of the salmon trout and whito
flsh will ho sent a few hundred, on re
ceipt of llfty cents (to pay for the pack
age), by addressing a letter. Also,
parties desiring to experiment in rare
iug the yonug of tho California salmon
will be given a few hundred by going
to the New York Btato hatehing-honso
for them, all applications to be made
during the month of December. All
kinds of fish will be disti ibuted to the
public waters of New York Btate the
same as in years before.
An Englishman has jnst bought at
Bordeaux, for $1,300 francs, three bot
tles of Medoc wine, of the year 17W8--
*IBO e bottle,
HI MMAItY OF NEWN.
Inlsrssllng llrms ftotu lloins anil
Abroad*
hi (lreeii|H>rt, L. 1., Mra Jones put two
young children In a cradle wltti a |>el cat, near
lite displace, and went altout her work till
returning alio saw tho ctad.e had been over j
turned, tine of tbo children was burned to a
crisp, and the other was dead of suffocation In
the lilt euihers . l lio divers, ou examining
the wreck of the Kruplre at Now Orleans, saw
wedged 111 the freight oil deck the bodies of
<■ uuo ton or twolve deck bands. Tbo diveis
ware unalilo to gain admission into lite nlalu
rooms ou aoooutil of utstruellun# by freight. )
It Is believed that tbo bws of life will reach
between thirty and forty. liy an expluaton
at the gas works at Mount Kloiliiitf, hy , two
while men and one negro wore killed. Tho
bodies wi re so burnt as to he baldly recogni
sable. Oue or two othor uiploysos escaped
Two buildings connected Willi tbo weiks were
destroyed Mrs West, forty years of ago,
llio wife of a well-to do uillli-r in F.tmlra, corn
mil toil ntucido by attaching a heavy alone
to her person and thou jumping luto a cistern
full of water The official returns of the
Alisons election show that 0. (J. llean was
elected Delegate to tYiugroes over Hlevciis,
who wan sup|>osod to t>e elected. They both
ran as lb-publicans, (ireat oxcilemeiit exists
lit coliaei|Uol>ce of the discovery, and tile eloo
llou Is to be contented Near < 'utntuavllle,
Ohio, the officers of Ute American Kxpiees
Company found In a stump, wrapped in a
cloth and Covered with leaven. tlti.UlAJ, making
with that recovered t-eforo from tho eauic
place #37,UXI. l ight or nine thousand dollars
remain to bo found or acoouuted for. <lf this
sum it is supjioeed #1.200 or ♦ 1 ,SMX* were
divided among the tkleVen, and # 1,5: (J to
#2.000 burned by Mrs. llackuey, wife of one
of the rob be re. This leaves about tSWKi
which may yet be accounted for or recovered.
The report of the Commissioner of Internal
Kovonueof the lulled Mates shows the follow
ing results : 'ldle aggregate receipts from all
n. urcee. exclusivo of duty upon ths capital,
circulation and depoalla of uaUoual banks and
collocUous made by coutract under the act of
Mat i I *72 for the fiscal year ended June 30,
1*74. were # 102.641 746 !W, exceeding his esti
mate by #J id 17tn IK The report shows Uie
total production of spirits during the fiscal
year from mater als other than fruit was <>,-
s ',..174 gallons. Total production from 1 uit,
766.6*1 gallons. Aggregate productions from
all sources. 69,571,061 taxable gall, lis During
the last fiscal year 'J S0 fruit dlsUUerloa were
registered and tMI operated and7(Jy distil
leries, other than fruit. Wore rrgo-lered oJkI
665 ojwraled Tho receipts from all sources
relating to'formeutej lniuors wore #3,304.679 ;
the number of brewers engaged. 2.624. The
total receipts from the manufacture and sale
of tobacco, snuff, atid cigars, in all their forms,
were #.U,'Jti,!>7i C 2, showing, as compared
Willi the previous fiscal year, a decrease of
Ft.113 427 47. The numt>er of cigarw, cheroots,
etc , on which taxes were collected during the
fiscal year oiidrd June 30, !7S was 1,166 C.'7,-
4.'" l-ellig IU excess of the number on winch
taxes were collected theprevieus fiscal year by
?'_■ .. J - 1 Tho following ah w the reee.pl#
from all courts other than spirits, lobaoou
and fermented h'luors for I*7l Ital.k de
j>osSt*. savings tanks capital, lank circulation,
#3,3-17, Hi) : adhesive slain}* #6,13n 144 jeti
alti< , i ' thllo , articles ai. l occujaU :is for
merly taxed but now exempt. F7i-4 1-0. The
total re,-<.} Is from iltiuj* on tank checks,
etc , perfumery, cusomUcs, latent medicines,
matches, etc . being tho remnants of what
were known under llio revenue laws originally
as documentary and proprietary stamps, were
for the last fiscal year #6,136,M4
Ibahop William li. l'atae. the col oral In
command at the Mountain Meadow massacre,
was arrested at Pwruwan. L'lah for murvlcr in
thai affair I'lspatchr* say that his arrest
will implicate many oftean of high stal ling
in llie M rm> n church Joseph (iriffln.
bookseUor to Uowdoui College, and tho oldrwt
printer m Maine, died at llruuswrjck It ta
rum,,rest that King Koffee of Ashanu-o, ha*
teen dep, -ct, and his nephew u.stalled in his
I lace Sixty toemlerv of the ( ammortrtl
bare been arrested Ui Naples..., The object
of the EugUsh Catholic htshofwi' v .sit to llome
is to ask from tlio I'opo jerm.. n "to pursue
an indepemdent course in case the 1-riLish
governmentehould seek to restrict their hberty
•f action The I'reel,lnitial election in
Nicaragua has engendered much 111-fcehng.
and sen, -us troubles are thr< alened An
Arabic j-apcr sera a fewre of T. f ;yptisns ha*
t-wpinrrd lsr four, Africa, and killed the Kal
ian There was an alarming explosion in a
chemical factory In Kt. Wuss. France. Ttie
building was destroyed, and tho radway station
near it was badly datnag<-l. Three jsrscviis
were k:!!e-l and fifteen injured Half the
wind s(n the town were If ken .A t>oat
I w longing to 11 M.S. Aurora was run down
in the ( lyde. and seven teen men w ere drowned.
Hykemau was f, un l guilty ef taiirdT
in the second degree at Herkimer. N Y., and
wan sentenced to State prison fi-r life. He
denied hi* guilt to the last.
In ttie case of the llt>cl suit brought by
llenry C. lbiwen against I>ema Ilarnos, of llie
ltrvs klyn Arjut. the jury found a verdict of
"net guilty." lite court and llio jury de
clartd Uie vindication of the character of the
late Mr* ILowen against the charges male,
as full, entire and complete I'hc estate of
the late Col. James Kisk, Jr., who was believed
to be immensely wealthy, is sufficient to meet
all demand# provided there is uo judgment In
in favor of the broker# who have aued it. and
there i# no probability tlial llie eaee will eTer
l camel to judgment ....Isaac Halts, a
wealthy and prominent citizen, and for many
year# editor of llie Koch eater I'm *i on-1
tdrv-rfierr, died after a painful illness
A lerriblo explosion oocture,l in a ccnlieiy at
Warren Vale, near Uawrnar>h. West Ki ting of
Yorkshire. F.ngland. Ttie total number of
killrwl by llie explosion is twenty-four. Ten
men wore nwicued more or !e# injured....
Kliaile Westmoreland, n!uu Khado Wool, was
hanged at Chattanooga, in llio presence i f
",oflo jiemons. for llie murder of William Km
-1 erlmg, in May of I*7l. Westmoreland con
fessed Uie murder, but said that false wearing
, had placed him iu hi# prose lit ooiohu n, and
: exprese,l a liopc of meeting those who had
! sworn lii# life away in Uie better world. The
rope w## cut at 1 V> f. m.. and iti ten minutes
Wood was protwunoed dead, in fifteen
minutes bo was cut down, and his remains in
teri ed in llie city cemetery.
Tbo steamer Cuba, from Vera Cruz, brings
new# of an oarUu|uakr at that place. Two
shocks, lasting t< u seconds, were felt along
the cuUrv Mexican coast. Several houses wore
•h -'troyed, and great consternation prevailed,
j but lio lives were lost I'. II Williams.
late cAsliior of the (Ymnoautville Ilauk. and
recently eouvicted in the Culled State# Ihstnct
(\iurt iu I'lttstmrgh of euilez/lomont. Inu-
(.roil HPiitonccl to flvo yeara' imjir.sonntcnt in
Uio iH-iiitontiary. anil hi pay llio eonla of llto
lirosccutioii.. . .The tmmlior of ilwtitmo in tho
State of Kanra* by tlio Rra-shoiiifr plague
is 25.000, but tunny are IOCAUHI iu tbo oldor
counties, wrlipre crops, with tlio exception of
corn, were a fair aver ige, anil tho more for
tunate citizens urn able and willing to help
thoir dorutnto neighbor*, lint in right counllon
tho de*titution in vory goner*), and almnot the
whole population will need moro or loan a*-
*intauce. At leant 15.000 portion* mn-l he
itn-iaU-d daring the winter, and until another
crop in grown A Kpaiueh gunboat, with
200 lire*, la *npi>o*ed to have heen loet at nea.
Tho wage* of tho mechanic* in tho New
York Ouitral railroad nbops have boon reduced
ton per cent A heavy gale prevailed on
the Mediterranean, and eovoral largo voaol*
wont aehore .on tho Calahrian roaat. One
Aiuciican veeael, whose name is unknown, l a
total wreck, and all on board have been loot
except three A fire in Syracuse, N. Y'.,
destroyed property to the amount of ♦130,000,
the iinmranco amounting to #30,000.
Mr. Cobb ha* aeoeptod tho Hopnblican
nomination for Mayor of Itonton Tho
Virginia Hlato board of oauvaaaera have given
(loodo, Cotißorvativo, of tho Second Cougres
nional District, a cortiticato of election by 131
majority The Kt. John (J lobe says that
tho lieir of tho Jauiioeon estate in Scotland,
worth from 1'70,00010 £1,000,000 was discov
ered there in tho person of John W. 11. Jaiuio
-8011, a young man in poor circumstances, re-
employed in peddling stationery
There is much sickness in Mobile. I'lie small
pox is raging, among tho negrooe particularly,
though vomo whites have been attacked. Tho
Marino Hospital, tho City Hospital, and tho
Sinters' Hospital are full ( f patients, and mauy
dsathx occur...,. Tho sponsors of the aon of
the Duke of KtUubtirgk were Wueeu Victoria
Uie F.nqieror of lluaela, alio was represented
by (ho Caarowlloh, the Herman Km|wr<>r,
represented by llio Duke of (!diintilgli( , the
I'rtuoe or Wales, the Crown Tritiee of iier
many. and tha Duke of Mate (Johtug
... A tamfcln slouu ooouriod la Tuacumt>ia,
Ale., da* troy lug one lliirJ of 11 to rooldoioo*.
killing twslvo |>eiiHMis, and iujurtug many
others. Tho tornado oatuofruiu Ibosuulhwaal
passing norllioul. til MolitoVallo twelve or
llflMii houses aero deslroyetl, two poroou*
kllletl, and fifleon or twenty aoundoiL
'Ttie authorities of Tuoeumbia, Ala, tele
graphed to I'losldeut (liant asking fur aid to
tho sufferers by the storiu. 'The I'roalderit
replied that ho is unable to comply Willi the re
'litest Tbo Got oritur of Arkansas hao
offered #l,<t reward for the capture of ei-
Ltouteuaiit-Ooveruor V V Hmttb Four
uiankotl men broke In tho door of Jaruna
i Hiee.t a farmer, living five mites from Ttlua
vilie. la , and demanded his mouey. He re
pllud that he had none, and they then U<xi him
to a lounge and afterwards put his feel In
the Are to compel bun to disgorge. They ran
rackeil (lie (muse secured about forty dollars,
and Utsde their eeca|>e The new Keglala
lure of UlliHita stands: H mate, 34 llepnbiloana,
.'i I lemiK-rsla and 6 lieformsra , House, 63
Itppubbi >ns, 67 Demonala and 27 Kofurtuers.
Aiutin F l ike declines reiiuuUnaUun
fur ( undress from the Manchtsiler, N. 11,
llsli'ict. Michael Martin, of l'uughkeepaie,
N Y killed his wife by boating her to death.
IHnihiiuch Of.— Tho editor of an tsx
change dtejiobea of a chromo adver
tising enterprise liiUH : Dear Hir -A#
tho " Portfolio of Ocma " will not au
awor as au overcoat during the oomiug
winter, aud wo are not cannibalistic
enough to dino on " Tho Twins," joor
tnunihneut ofTer is rosj>eotf ally declined,
without thanks.
And Now. —And now the lieatkof the
family, returning home from hia
" oluh " through the sharp midnight
air, gently rolls his sleeping spouae
over t i the cold side of the bed, and
siuks softly into the vacated spot with
a sigh of thankfulness.
A right and a wrong way of doing
things, thus : A ball of twine, if opened
from lhe inside, will run oil easily
enough, and give no trouble in the un
twining ; but, if beguu'from the out
side, will sjteedtly get tangled aud into
coufumoa.
Evan* kfadku of this paper can re
ceive, /rem, a copy of the boat A<jri
i ulturai and Fhmity newapajier iu this
country by addressing Moore' a A'ura/
.V* m - Yorktr, 78 Liuane street, N. Y.—
Com.
A I'luvldeiitlal Xau.
This title now justly belongs to a
physician who has added to the list of
medicines a new remedy, which appears
to include all that is most valuable in
the old pharmacopoeia, and not to in
clude any of the drawbacka with which
the so called api-cifloe of the faculty are
chargeable. Tiie providential man is Dr.
Joseph Walker, of California, whose
Vinegar Hitters Lare achieved, iu the
short space of two years, a degree of
popularity never before attained by any
advertised preparation in this country.
We have too much confidence in the
shrewdiie*s of the American people
to suppose that this sudden and sur
prising celebrity is the outgrowth of a
delusion. Indeed, we have reason te
km>w that it is founded on innumerable
and well atitheulicxited cures of almost
all the bodily ills that fleeh is heir to.
Not the least among the merits of Uie
famous tonic and restorative ta its on
tiro freedom from alcohol, as well as
from all mineral drugs. It is composed
< Toluaivcly of rare vegetable extracts,—
fbm.
Demoiulst'h Yorra Amkiuoa. A
llitt siitl Uirta' Magazine of I'.nu-naitunr
ttVortM, Travel# Manic (tomes. Turkic*, aea
••Iter uaeful and otuwrtive festnrea. Yeoriv.
#1.(0. :Ui x <tirliio jircmium . ainjia copter
10 eeut* Moiled tree, hu uot foil to send
for a rj-eeimru o pv. Addrea# IV Jenn.nga
llsunt 17 East HUi M , New York.— [Com.
Cure* All kinds of Catarrli.
K > ni'Vustul ho* I'r l .c rcw . ('mitten Medi
cal Disvuwy proven. . s ooaatttutional irsat
mnit f"i Catarrh, xrtxra coujJed with the um
of l>r . > aioxTli li-tucdv, apttUad locally
t<v Uie <'f Vr. Tierce # Nazal iHtacbe (the
i>n!r uicUi -1 of rrachii.c the uj'j<er and twrk
oatilM# of the head! that the j ropnelor of
Uj * tilc- It -mm ho* lout; offort<d a aULuditir re
ward >-f #'-U f> r a ca*c of Catarrh winch be
cannot cum. The two medlctne#, with tij#tra
tac.it, fur #'J (it drugpiot#.
x arsi'tME# err op raoraasna.
(VikTUin. IU., April 2s. 1573.
Tr Tierce, lluffalo. N \'. :
/nir Sir It I* with pleazure I moke Oil*
•taicmei I to J a that aficr taking tncUrine far
li >*ar* for the ('alarrti, 1 tried jam
Catarrh Kcmcdv and effected a cure, eo thai it
ho# not trouLled me for two team.
8. WIIMXXX
sraxmso oca rnt-KtiML
Tcojdo *hould twwar# of tiioae imjxwlor.
who cut v I)r. Tierce ortgiual #tyla of dver-
Ustng, 11 i ffenng varum# sized mworl* for
ca*< - of i xtaiTh and oilier dimaees which Uiey
caiiiiol cure. Thoec wlio do not jkhmsmx# uffS
C4-n tntelligeiice to write on unginal advertiae
un nt are not Ukc'y to have made great and
laluat-ie diaooverie* in mediclnxx —H'om.
Rev. E. 11. Ilopkius, of Jackson Cen
tre. Shelt'V Co ,0 . *•;# : "My wife had ttie
c. mtnvtion for ten tear., arid had beeti con
fine-t u her 1-e-l f r * >mo bme I heard of
Dr L. (J C. Wishart # Tine Tree Tar t'-ordial,
iTid after iifirg four !-ottle#be wa* al io to do
the work for tier family."—l Com.
If yon have lceu wearing patter
collar, and have not yet trial Uie V.imwood,
we would a-1 vine you to >l* eo at once. They
fit splendidly. All the edges are folded, so
Uiey sill not turn out, and llie collar* will not
soil a* easily a# others (Com.
Investment with I'oeltvc Return.
No financial eacuritie# yot offered in the
market liaro Ixvome so readily and generally
pojmlar a# the first mortgage premium honde
of tho Indn.ttial F.xlubition ( umpany of N<
York, and Uiote exists many \ atent reason#
for this marked preference. In Us# first place
Uie bond, ore placed at llie attainable prise of
#2O each, and the [return of Uie principal ts
a*urod beyond contingency; furUier, tbe
holiler of each t>oil jsxrticipate# In every
quarterly Tremimn Irawuig unUI it t# re
de misl principal and interest. The pre
mium# range a* high a* #IIXI.OOO for a .ingle
bond The next Vtemium Drawing will be
liel.l on the 7th of Teoectbsr next, at Kletnway
Hall. New York. Tlio character of Uie gen
tlemen lio have Uie management of tin. great
enterprise in hand, i* of it.clf ample awuranoe
that tho plan will lie earned through to auc
o<s-ful on: eunimation, and that Uie intere'l#
ui llio Isuidholdcr# will l>e moat faithfully
guarded.
Uy addrcoing M>irgenUian. I'.runo A Co..
tho Financial Agent*, at No. 23 Taik Bow,
N. Y.. circular* giving full explanation may
be obtaincsi -Corn
A protruding too is uot n pretty
sight, and i* never *o n where children wear
.silver Tipped *h •#. Tlicy will #avr half your
elioe bill# For *alo bv all dealer#. —pom.
The I'rrlflral Unman lu baw York,
Mia/ X , wall bnowu In onr faablonabie aociaty
for her <fi/finy appcaruioa and boautlfnl et""!-
plaaloa, waa onoe a tallow, touub-ebinnrd atrl,
rhaoluod at har rod, fmrblad faco. she pile had
into Hiyui'i Macnolla Halm, and la now at pietly
la roatplrzlon aa aba la rharmluß In mannara.
Thla artl. l* or#ro..roi<a fracklaa. Un. tallownaaa,
moth-palrboa, rlns-marka, otc . and makaa ona
look lan years yornFtr than tbay are. Maffnolla
Italm t"' a tranaparent mroplemton, and Lyon'a
Kmthairon to maba tbe bair r'ant ful. himiirlant,
a, ft and i>lloat, bars no rlrala. Tho K.lhairon
prevents tho bblr Iroai turn Ina Rray. aiadtoatas
uandrnß. and la the brat and rbecprat draaatng In
be world.
Ilaaintil by Kalnt I'ralu—J at. ticckmeu.
clergyman "f New York, w* recently badly kicked
by a horae. and VM epeodtly cured by using tka
relobralad Mexican kfiiitang Liniment Wbn
the proprietor seked him tor a certificate, he re
plied that he " considered It a remarkable erttcle,
Imt It wouldn't atuwer I r htm to tnderaa a
remedy In print." Here's consistency. Put we
didn't kirk blm, as the hone did. The world
know* that for Rheumatism. Brufeea, Swelling*.
Spavin, flcralchea, It.flemmsMon, Lameness, or
auy tt'ah. hone cr muscle alliient upon man er
inimrl, there la m thl' , like the tluetana Llnl
meiif. II co*ts bnl no ots. and SI.OO per bottle, and
should be 111 r rcr> family. It !• wrapped In a Una
areel plate label, aud iigr.od •• O. W. Weetbrook.
I'h am.t"
Tonic anil Itrcuprrant I'lonfallon 1111-
lera. Thee* mtantlv tnereaeliiif patronage which
It receives bet, it it true, cxi Itrd the petty envy
of certain eplenctle adrerlifere of pinchbeck
panaceas, who lu ne to make a market for their
own atatfirant. watery warea, by decrying alt
• plrttuoiia medicinal preparation*. But tho pub
lic can h ueltber ibelr arguments nor tbeir
notation*. i cuieaqiiantlf reject theeo very
week lui tationi i f the rnerag as eullrely to thlu I
AOENTB WANTED FOE THE
TRUE HISTORY
OF THE
BROOKLYN SCANDAL
The aetoutiulug rcvelatlcuie and at trtling dta>
closures 111,.!!* in ihla work are crnatiug the must
tuti nee il. air -i In tno mind* of the people to obtain
It. It Blr ea the whole tnuer bleiory of the (treat
Scandal an* le tho or ly /ret aud authentic work on
tae subject. It a i. .t Send for term* to
Agsnti end a foil dricrtjilion of th* work. Ail
,**• I*aTluKAh r*Ui |B1N0 cC.i Ph l*d*lhla.
The Markets.
■aw roaa.
MeetOaHl#—Frlm#te Kitra. 0>lx
Outtiinoii to good Tsian#.,... .)• "H
Miloa SO 00 a7& UO
liuga teWS .17
l)tHd .o#\
Shsop. .04 a Jilt
OutUUi Ml, I,lllns .t4\X .14H
Fhiar-Xilra Wwteni 4 M alte
HUO run SSI alio
Wlisat Iked Wseism . ■ t.'/T
Mo. 1 1.10 a 1 11
ity# M a .0#
I tar 1* v Malt ... >.> aKM
oala -Mliod WeaUru -1 S .7t(
u#r por.wt .44 a.
Mtraw -put c w1............ 40 a .SS
ll<>te Ta, ,'SMJA VM IN a .11
Fork—Hie# 30 00 a3o IS
laid 13*. .!*
NMlwiu 'red. 04 M4j#tt.BL.ad .10*
Hatter Stale 48 a .80
Ohio Fill. SB a .M
•• katlew .* a .3#
Waateru Ordinary M- a .31
Fenaaylvanla Sua .Mi a .43
(Utaeee—iau Fartery..,. .I**4 .H ,
" Httounad. 04 a .OS
0hi0..... hi a .IS
fig#* —aui* so a .31
ttixn.
Wheat. I.SO 1.33
Itya Olai* M a M>
• lerw-Mixad .VI a K
Marlcy etau ........ 147 a 147
oau <tuu N a a
vvniLo.
Fleer S.TS a VOO
Whset—Mo. 1 MprUig 1.00 a 1.V7
Ourn Ta a
Oau .ta a Aa
Uye. .M a .M
barley 1.34 a 1.13
anitaoH.
OatW-lea Middling#. .14*# .14*
Ftoer-kxlra 4.34 tt.3
Wfisat 1 34 a 174
Otrro—fallow.. 7ft a 7a
Oata .(3 a .SI
, riuxusLmx
Fleer—Feen. Extra. ---- SAO at 71
Wheat Weeterb bed 1.31 a 1.31
Gore—Tallow .M a M
Mixed eft a M
Fatmleeei —Orede IN on#* befteedlO*
th'eve end Here wed# and Plaata. knt
1" 4 cents Ini leletogwe ar>4 In FarkeU Cholee
ll.mi ImXi *4 .I'M.n A lauu X ('. arm.Fa
THE WEEKLY SUN.
Imiliii I.rw.|..| er, o 84 broad eolana*, eapacial-
Iv dealgtied f, r the tamer, tae <heale, ta. nei
cuaet a>,d the protesaiouei etL, eud their eli
end chtldteu We aim to cite tee Weekly Been
the beat lenity aewseeper in tha w„r 4 It la fell
of entertaining an# Inilrecnve reading "' eeery
eort, bet grlnta aotbing to nffeed the muel eetupe
l.'be end delicate taete Price, at.'du per year,
eoeiage prepaid Te. beepset paper eebliebed.
Try it, ldlreee TUB Sl'M.Jlew York City.
JUS TI"""-3 '1 I* it EE < 'MI
lout Ukrtul. Handeoiae, Cheap. Bell*
111 u levartwbere Seed foy pioeeeclnx to
n Anyrll V HKIDUMaM. ft Barclay kt , ■. *..
JJ U U Jx. I.r 1 l Weal lib Bt . Cincinnati. Ohio
A GIFT
WORTHY OF A ROTHSCHILD
ll Hloavn'l "hak>|>r>fUn AlUMkc for
ItiTA. II Mtlr !■■ *iu wuuou ul lllui
trtiiuti from IU " lul cI inn," tut from lop ••
u ii nui'i I.ft Übiiutiti 1 iktU pital luti
million oopite or nori, end be lap d.tlrrraa c 4
mehiu* Ui duiributioi. of Uia at rapid at putt.
IU. 1 wilt tend tan if Bftaen ouptea frat. pit be d
to Uf una tti>*lU]llciMUlf diapete of tbam
la tkalr k.alllf Addicee l'k U. CMKL-hk
lt*oK M i\ liiacl Blrati, Jrrt.y Clip. W J.
/*OUNG FCLKS'^MIV
11
l , tiiAkiaii, lifiiu. hull. I'll'
V rial. aoJ JGtftt* I trtt iim a.
\ Bl.lt". •• ■■
V*j A Bramlijol < Arvan*
BAI.LOOK* PAl.l> OB 1 f LOOK ' LOOK I' Ba
jal.k laa'l >-a tat u> Oti Ut'.la " lUilm
Bop" It c.ak • A bellooa *<te*a . traawMf * ♦!
tad wlda. d I >1 p.np apln of UllOC*o BOLKt,
tit iaa ha iroae. If be kat net pitta ret oat.
write at nut a Br Alfrad Hainan, Pb.ledrlphie.
ii.rlotioir a 1 brat car i aiaoip. and kt Will aand a
coot A kAßda.tna CBBOKO win ba flora to rttry
tcWribn Iff JT tat a tar|fr till at aaau ooaiet
in,and a large pile of CHlf>fioß foo owl If powr
naiot it out on Ik a lttl. eead It la at ost'e, till
tl.ll, aad poo will receipt tkt pap a f for
tear. pottat paid, aad tba cb're of foe. bead
acwat CIIBBM, fli " A Krallc la tkt
U aorta <" •'Tht llfwit Kate |" "Uallla(
llaa.lt for tfti" and •' 1 lit KU.pwrarh "
Tka rbicmoe ran ba had eamiabed ai.d iaoa?fd
oa Card board, rradp far fiair.lot. at tti.dma- *B
toi.it a'dil tl I i aatk CBtae>> taat it. |l SO
will procure lit paper (p. ibft paid) aad a '"brr
lao tari.itt.td and mootitad , or kl.f .1 will pro
cert laa t kn • latiautfd aird lit tiprr fcf oat
taat. pottawr paid . or pt. wiltprorata tka
f ar rfcruwit.a ni I'd an ■ the paper ( r oat taat.
poatApr paid. Bttafif fkn att will plaata beet.
fWaTa ?krot rat Mam* for a %erfaaea .Vweakra.
Al. bit a II HaHTIKIi. bakllaktr.
II aoiilh Itar cnlfc airtal. I*l>lladalpt>la.
JUST PUBLISHED!
PIANO at HOME
A larpt oollectioo of tba brtt
rour-Hftiid Plcoo*
FOR THE PIAHOFORTE.
Xo b k II battat flllod for "Boat'' Kaaloal
rtirria. meal tber. tbie Befflartre can plap Ibe
rt rr matt IdrtaMt platan tad taartara ntad
nm ... ha void ttai pie. Ilea witb f or baadt la tka
aarr htt t. i,tm "tnaa" end " certainly."
Cranio* In iba * rsaioitll me" it boUia# but a
Of tti uel plpattire
Sko r>f t.full tbeat mr.rlc alt*. In boar 4k, KiSft,
rA.it, >llO, fa.l cut, M.IO.
FobC aoiaa TB LEAHRB Frio# FI.RB.
FohEisataaf. KMJ THE SoBO HORARCH, Wta.
THEEMERSON METHOD
For Reed Organs.
By L. 0. KIIIMI ul *' •• 1 HATTRawa.
Eaty and riiftMim lattont. kim. atudit,
voluntaries. lata rladrt, 4 aarieta. ' (•■ sad <Mhr
Mtm tr pr<C n. Ail wtll arranged by ahiUful
Ur.<i rnw ItM.
Fen CB tan PERKINS' ANTHEM OOK l RE
Eofc or abtit Caoißa TUoHAR UCAETBTb, fXjO.
ypectmra d piss imt yoil l'S4 Bv meat! Bitot.
OI.IVKK iiirsex a co .
CHAN. 11. UITMI* A co..
J I I llrimSn ay. Bow X ork-
I'KIC OA V Ooonniaatoa o aJO > weaa
to m , • Salary, tul uicuio. Vt t olhl II aa4 wtl
. ' t /III) now U Wammaa A'*.'.. Martob. O
- can rltl>llra/. Tar-usa free. A4e
JO S Jou 08., iuuoi A i 0., Portland, Ma'aa.
I>rl K.I w/ril ColltfUif Institute—A
I boarding l/m nary for l.ten tt/ (1/bli/ntK.
S0 for 1J wftli' I. 'Br 4 Bna eosnrm.n F-neush Wlb
irt Iria. Is. um . hprlug Urr. . Kuril SM h UK
CoDrin of Stndy . .-ntßitrpial. BcißMiße, ClssM
ral, CoU' g< preparatory ad Prof. teiuaai-yropa
ratory. or ifct stnaer,t may tltl any three atu
411# Hitlirr tattlon to Civrgymea't families ina
to thoas u lrr.flir.tr t. be Ministers. onilklrd dts
roonl For srlf be larders. good BBA aocesalbla
ro.n.a with kBBTy furnilura at Jf. rr torn. Sta
dents B4Rilttt4 at si.y Ilea# prop<.rtiot>a.lr.Pirieeu
I.e. hare Saprrb brink batldlt ge. Tei..j><ata
of pr"rprrllT. Adri-as frr cetaingars or rooaia.
JOSEPH K KINO. 1' 1' . Prior . F. rl 1 JuJ. S T
I Mlli'l'l Sh. WtliX Is the title of IhßßßrrßttTa
I of a poor ran baste. who. while In bad krallb,
elseovered a bnaluras in a bleb ha mads a forians
in a few ytara. and trlla ao plKiuly bow u vaa
doaa. thai any rna wko mala bia narrative ran be
ronaily ancsaaaful robitabad la iba POPFL4R
JOfKNAU Band Ten Cralt to IhaJofHSAi.
(•oMI'ASt. Lawrence burgh. Itrdlana. lor tna uum
bar for January, lsr.t(now roedyl, containing tua
< pi-ntng rbapirra of tba narrative
SKM> I tb- Kanaaa l.oan 4b Traaal *'•.
Toprka. Kan . for rirrnlar rmplaini.it tbair
IK |>rr Ont. Fatal Norliiatir Hon.la. It
tarsal paid at yonr Bankets or lu Saw Torb.
/ti .nn v'IITISO OARDI! Jo<i"ibtai *••
(y \SS ir "-'"~tr ¥ b-> ' f—•
VI 1/.1 1 'k' jltl Yeai aaSßUfall) | -r,Bird It.
.. SO ariaahrSLatlfab
laid 1..0T1 W.ou. Rroirrua I'.lßUb. Allwbr
read Ibla •b. ald t aUßirr.-l n.|.l Bill. Bro.pCBBd <w.
/ I Ha. U U. 4 J. 4. bobKKTW . lit WaU.r SC.. Sa Toaa
ca T . _ _ For full Information. prim-Hat,
/JIAFRN <s<", adtlrraa . a'.tii atampi liav.
COStb. T. I. i 111 LI'S. Toy. Ohio.
t BBA A*rnta wm.ir.i r.. •, *. ■ For
•Tl O until Jki. Fan. u A W uib bajru i.. t,>ilo.
ThIjFATINT CABINET or
Kj1.~7.w~ aw>LETTER F ILE i.„ Mmi ta/mr
i tm
TIMS'!, and tn alpbabMaoal orderi h.'lda
I rff 1 . 1! i lita *.OOO Utt/ra. can ho uard on a daak
Or buna <'* tba wall. Wo proiwy
I KaorrM/harym Band for ciroular
and prior Hat with IjOOO raforor.oaa.
Address a A. OOOk dt (XX. ttooega. lIL
/\nil I Mil HABIT CI'SKD at Hun.e. No
■ J Iwl G a |W| Publicity Terra* af-'inU,
wW ■ IwW ■ x bis efurt. Four jeatt Of
urptrall*l'l lurclll lvetcrlba ol' (HO fr(-
.r nt.it A■ ,!rm I>r V B. A*#H. gnucy. Wi.a
kt'illli '"t **p**r* a mnntb to •grnii Ad
"allll ilrm I 1., S-rmineen JooulMich.
DUNHAM
PIANOS.
Dunham & Sons, Manufacturers,
Wararoomf, 18 Eaat 14lh Street,
[KatabUeheJlßS4.) NEW YOUR.
Sriuifor i. uttratrd CYreulor aa4 /Vic LiH.
(Sf 1 A p**r dar mad* wllh nar FOOT I*-war *rmll Sawa Price
Ma. add—M.witacumu. u ixnio turns., Bocifcrd, m.
fHTD "LADIBS' paiaMD" oontatns T articles
UU il needed by every Lady—Petent Spool
Holder, Bctceor*, Thimble, Ac.- guaran-
Mteed worth |1.60. Sample B> x, by mall,
Wccnti. Agouti wanted. PLCMH A CO.,
10* S. nth Street, Philadelphia, Pa
If IT by hi* comrade D. W. Peters,
l\ll LAftdUIX. g only Anthaatlc
aud Authorised Lit* publlehed , 000 pagri; bean
tlfuily llluitreted. Agnntl wanted everywhere.
W,OUO stroady sold. Circular* of ail our work* free.
Addreer MTSTIN, OILMAN e CO.. Uartfbrd. Conn
1 1 1 Ho it lit I 111 I Trunafcr Plclurra,tii*true
1" " 1,„1t.A .lUl.fUr .lurll. luwll V imntlrr—d. II.Wi I'hT*WMM
10 u. A.-ntienieu. J. L. PATTgN A Co., II Ph..SI. N.T,
DOG RIIVGER.
, 16,000,000 Klage,
V."t TO, OOO Blngera,
J.V/—T ? #.500 Tonga Hold.
ZBr \ VT Berdwar# Iwelari Bel 11 hem.
/VAHBMBCV. kiD*iT!, klegaer IdOdOrm,
Tbri*e| l,r*. ky men, pen petd.
Cheater* 6ie. Addrvat
j~"l ' ' r* Hi W. BiTA * CO, Bteetav, tU,
CAUTION.
On Account til the popularity of the
Wheeler A Wilaon Hewing Machine*, partiee
ha*e largely hern tngage<l in piiit-hMing
old amlarcond-hiinrl iim hinw of that make,
hlt<! iinpoM-tl tijMiti the publir Wy arlling thetn
a* new mitahiiM-*. Tha Wheeler A Wilaon
Company lirgato adviwthe public UiAt any
one tleairing to buy their moad kand
niAcliinea can be aupplied by that C ompany
dirrct,on lrtter terma than otherafitn afford
litem, and l>e an*uml of what they are buy
ing. Addrew,
WIIKELKH A WfIAON M'fd <.,
'/•" HMOAIIWAY, New YORK.
WADKESHA WATER,
Mineral Rock Spring,
ccem
IJro|>, tttabctaa. tiraval,
U|ri|i<ptU, I ua*ll|olloa, JawatJtra,
Hrtghl'a IMaaaaa,
Aiut all dlMaata of llta Hrw an* ktdlvjr, Tina
\t atrr It BOW hi.owa tud add at a rrruciy for lUt
tljtn. ill if in In all |trl of Hit world II la truly
wuodrrfui A Lai rlfwt II ltat U|JH Iht Inuoati t*t
l*n. It la aow liolha thl|iplattht followloa |Wtoiw:
htrrr t, auptl., (II ; half do, (I; daaultolitaa aud
Juft ho rwult lr pal., Jai ktpr flirt; butUat (qta.),
|liii |f d>. Hour) urn* tonotopati* tha order,
ti(i to our rtguiar auUiorthad tpfOl. lO'juHf ai
Cor druppiat fur Wtukiwb* Mlurral Kuril Hprlne
•tar Aililnwt C. a. OHM A Oh, Watttfwha, Hit.,
for urilnr* fur the U alar or fur i l-tttara.
mix rCBTHJUt TEItIMOIY.
hmrtuii, Matt., Roy. hth, Iftt.
Maatht C. C. HUt A tXl.l
O-Mta-lu IrwUmiMiy uf the (taal VAloa at th*
Ha a Art lit Riuml Koch orlop tW fur lliuaa
miSeritip with ilitiwtf uf tot Bidurja, 1 wtll aa*
that I havr iMt truutilad fur a lohf tltua with I IN.
Jmaotul illwtao, to I aUMti hat larauuattd la lha
drvia) uf in* lowtr llioljt.
1 Oatr tudrrwl tor tit yaar* wtth dlaladaa, |*aa
lit* larpr <1 utiit 11 lr. u f urhif Into with atuir, aa*
lufmftlfd with a<l Mowi ug thlrat, praduall* tuaUi#
Ooaii tad tiff opto, and Until.) U lit* uf M) lia.Ua,
wtihh iMtiiif aliuuat dayoid uf fotliop. Thafiha In
a hind J-ruilhaiOf 1 aaw >our adywriMMßrht of lha
Aaukntha Mihrrti Buck r>|.nop Waiar la a Raw
dma* pt|.<r, tint 1 uiadf up ui* Ihlod at otww to
tr) aotha of tha W tU-r. I aahl for mat diwaf! India
to >our tpft it Ui Nfa Vurk OUJ, Maaara. lmd(a A
Aioott, M WllJMto at ltat,
1 tacwlrad thaau in a faw dtya, and ItpM to dnnk
Of 11, and tadurr the* Wf*f pout 1 rxoiid f*wl 11a
(Swu upon ui* gymma. Ktum dnnkuap than. I
atcl fur another duam buiihM, aad ito ttaa hat Uh
pratad in* Lcalth woudarfull*, hanop (BUM) tha
Mt uf m* Inula, at>d tj Mrmpth and Ink hava
rrl UI uod ahd linn* iliowat, a* hat ilai Uh auptr
IB lha urltif. I a ill aa* tha Watar baa dubt for Iba
what umdhal aktU could nut do I in, thankful for
rrlmuiif hmlth, and tu* |aj la thai H ma) btlp
• ithrra tdtirlad with lha kldho* dtfirull* aa M lata
af la lan. I am to umrh hattar thai I nohaddrr
lujaaif timoal eumd. S .annoi riMnbitArui your
Mprlap W alar too hlphl*, aa 11 baa iloua fur tua what
■nodli-lba ootid but do and baa failed to da, and I
am mufiilriil, tlthouph 1 aw a* bad uff, thai Ihf
Waif* in tha and will aflat* a radlral rura. ] a hail
•and fur mora Waiar auon. and frad and drink
uuiii 1 am ndirrip rural, and If I can induce ulbam
thua aflUch-d to uaa lha Wafer, I aba.l taa* thai I
halt dona autuadhlnp tu rdkh ui> frlluw iraalum
uf the inuat drandfn fimara that mankind la bt*r
tu. Rmpactfnll* yonm,
Maa. l atfturri Himian.
Ae * Rack W aah. A pan la ■an tad partim-
T I •* lara traa Wohtß a OQ„ At tnaia. Wc
THE
Qhicigo [eH
THE CHEAPEST ANT) BEST
PAPER IN THE COUNTRY.
in PER
jWe gIiPUAHHUM
Unexcelled by any Weekly Literary
Publication, East or West
CAJTTANBEEB WANTED IN ETEBY
TOWS IN THE UNITED STATES.
Tha Moat Uharal Frawlani an* Clak hat-a awar
. flara* by ati* uawapapar. W'rtta *ur a Ctranlnr
i aontnininp fall lnh-rmauon. at* hpaclmaa ooptaa
(hraiahod ua application ACCraaa
THK BKDFIK* OOMRANT. CSICAAO. CLU
lARVIN S SAFE GO.
Alum and Dry Plaster, Fire
and Burglar Proof
SAFES,
Absolutely free from Dampness
and Corrosion.
MA XRFACTI'RF D OXLY BY
Marvin's Safe Co.,
263 Broadway. Naw York.
7*l CUtnut Street. Philadelphia.
OMI tarui •old In om BODU SO 1 roplcl of
v- I.IKK OK I lIIS(iYUSi.
• hick ua*ol4* lb. rbr£h*a f nnnir*( of A ri
tutir lltro, dud U . wrt.-.mfwd <lf > tnmdrrjwL
"diMfj. Mat* •***• IdtrMl, HVB
HiRI. Peb!i*h*r*. Fkila** pkla or Boatua.
A I'VEKTU/Rk band *1 CM. K6K p. BW
A BLI. 4 CO.. ! Park Bow. •* York, tkat
r<iai|idM r/ .(X <>n taint n* )I*U afUE B*W*
tl Nttwm tk>ia <*>•♦ ara4*ar*i*int
HHi kktKLt THIMTI kKAItt TUB
Richmond Prints
b** b, „ tai* in ti|t MldM by lkM M n*o •
(Vw. Tb. j i • >.rotac*4 in all tk* I . ctlllM <4
rtat>(lr* fddk.oi.*. ai>4 la onnaar*ei'*a *tpla
IIIMIC Mi tuliofauntuwA duA| u<
lattar air* tb*
"STANDARD GRAY STYLES,"
proper *> r the lotie or •treet-hMtUM la e
ii|ta Ml pleoata# in eotoribf
CHOCOLATE STANDARD STYLES
la kraal *arlMp, aa4 wl4*lp known aa Boat Mr
*to*akl prima. Nolkinf l*li*r far oallp *ar.
Th*** ou4* kur H.MI a* *w Mr4 otvoo. Tone
ratailar kon'4 bar* tbrm, and poor cznalaattoa
ar4 approval will cotnrMl*
BECRWITH
S2O.
FortmbU Family Sewing Machine,
on
30 DAYS'TRIAL
Witfll *a*4 to aep a4<lra*a. C O. I>, aaa* t eft
■itallH with prtrilcw* of aiaalniUaa baton tab
law out of ti|rra •#. i aad If H doaaaotatva Mb
lafaeuoa wa will mfuad tb* nnn, )•** lima
Mam, aa mora at macbtna wttkta Ma Ma pa
lecknlth lewtn, Mnrhtn* O*.
■•w York i sea Broadway.
Ohlo*go i as I Wabkth AM
BDOK A<iK\TS WAVTED
VwkTELL IT All.
Hy Ha AtmMs# of M !*■¥• City, for t.\
Jrrs tho Vifo id rn ifonmNl ilu:* FIUbL lu
boßotioa by Mm litia rti.-r rf •
t moo Wpmonto lat U>* "AiA/ni /.
Nt itifll*. mrrt Amtign. rtr . f lit# Moron m m
atkd Hoc*. M I* tHo M nrv hrwl cwt artutll;
j Mrlin mwkl Uiinjk tor AK ( to popular •>!•
*hm, viih fYirtbodf, amfotitarUa afl other K>kt iWr i#
osr HiDitoti Mi ' Ik*' torr I u - Iminti.l t#mo
rndow il I'tarthkl* et II i and **. Nt irr %,. • 5
fwm 1 • K> •• • dy f Statl* Hon M • W
want .VIM •"*•* truotr arrru N#W mrn or *mn and
or aril! infcl ttolßl rm t tho** • * will ia>bm I-Brrw
p*m|>hl#4a with full jailit ul*. Ufria, k W Aw lo uu.
Vvir— A. Ik WoiiMiu.it *a < v >.. JU-Hutvi Coou.
Wishart's
Pine Tree Tar
Cordial
Nature's Great
Remedy
FOR ALL
Throat & Lung
Diseases.
For Sale by all Drug
gist* a4 Otorsksapars.
MASON 4 HAMUN
CABINET ORGANS.
JiSSS S. TOl
IMP an. la A■on H A AbwCTf M** "*
MenoiAN*aDaubi *> ha MWAUBM-'
IXiiICAIIILI I It il ftta* (n an prteaa M
All, *MM wi print.* ..* laynnaMa.
Ti mi iiA*kM or oitUANa * *
DIKIiKU that tM aamiiot. b IhMiara ad
t*Aulri !• *ar* lINX t AAAI la aO
aa bail Iha unliUM a.hiitlo will far
ihana Ihi Imaaal aomnalaatoiaa vr ia-
C "R?*ll*5o OHO All CO.,
prlailh* aa tha* tha • laiaaal prteaa. aaa
thai to #*l r* oalf b amallaal enawmta
aluaa. Thia plan a# nraa h. a*at purahaaar tha
fjaaai pewa. laaaaaatha daniai aaaaat aaa vara
than £ iiatatopßr prtn, hat II oaaaaa taaap
aaalrrt to aa thalr tail h> aall utbar affaaa,
■ aiptr h • tha* flat aaotai"aa nir-Mita oa
thai.. BuM urflaoa ara mrraatl* hot* t® Aalaa
at aaat-A a pa* aaat. rianntat. a at oaa •<*•*■
la* tha prtaaa prialai k>* taaaa. A< a rala, taa
a airar tha 01 aa* tha I'ftii It* prta.** prtaa aa*
la praatar tha *>tu>"ir.t m it.
TM AIWI * HIILI limit! CO. a*a
now aa* a'flaa, aith iKpti lml laapmTa
•aula. aa* a** aUiup n>i a .1* t" a*h aaala
aiMlr tMii al><> am* plana o# aut MraMH,
raaafa* tKmapA una yam or Mopac. Taa* al*a
rant oaw Hrpat.a with irillp at pt < haaa
It •h i pal J Ihraa yanra parthaiti tha
tSnfHtor tha lllaalrato* Oatalapaa* aa* Otrav-
I .it, which ptaa **** tall ith.'iattij- an* *'#
a.i.t frta ini I'lll, AII thhl*
ONUtI CO , at Mihar Itw hark, Itwa.wn,
ur ciiltiaiff i
A
our# 1. P I inn Btflblb htraat. Paw Ta*%.
STEINWAY
Grand, Square & Upriilt Piaios,
• o parlor to all othar*. Rear* Plana Warrant* i
tat p.*a Tanra. piuatrakoa Catalopuaa. *rU
prtaa Utt, ahhtia* fraa oa apfltratiua.
„ rafau aS
THE DYING BODY
ICPPLH9 WITH THH
VICOR OF LIFE
THKOCO3
DR. BADWAT'S
SnilM fiesoiMt,
THH CHEAT
ISlood Purifier I
OWE BOTTU
Wtß taaha tha let* poa* tha Mas Or, Ha
bnptd.fha flnmplatum n—lh aa* hitanal, lha
■air atroup, *a* ran.oa all HMahaa,
Purtulat. Tact ara, Gaahara, *. frarn tha
Paaa, Maah, MaOh. aa* Rata. H I* I •*
laAa aa* tha laaa la aahOL
t> Baaalaat awa* Dtaaaa.* Dajwdtt; B FarlAaa A
Biood aa* Iwrma lha Aftnat. It ear**
Vlu. jmnMutr *A Ohiawtii Pt**■* thaA
hata Unpaaw* M tha w* l ** >• aa
la* yaara, whatha* ■ ha
SerofhU ur 8/ph lit tit, HwrJlUrj
Caa ATIiHU,
ax rr BBATSP u tu
Lup MT Masaah, Shla ar Bv—t
Flaah nr Marrat,
ooßiturrtM TU AOUOM AXD miu
TU VLCUML
RurnoKiTrou rraenifn
KIDNEY uti BLADDER COMPLAINTS,
Onuarp and VmcT. Bnnmn Or.nl, DaaMQ
Deejay, ip p|if I at o*tar. ImnlinnM df trl>i
Bridkt'd D mu< A knouonrt*. ul a tJ u**4
•Mar* urn ar* UI4S-4.1*1 4<poa m. CkiaaM kt
nat.are. fcrafuia, Ikiaafalar Bwaluaf, Hi AM, brj
aaufb. Oaamroaa APartLtaa. BpjtalltUi <"i M*ll*ta
lUa*4le# at tin Lnapn limnk. Wata- Btaak, YU
Duams. Wku* Bw*tJn#M Tmaata. Ola*pa, Beta
and Hp lnaaaam, BcwU Dwiaiiia, Panala 008
ptatnta, Ooat. Dnipf, BMkoU. Bait Bli iw* . Bna
tuuun. OunavatpcMa. Uw O laiiMladi. Claan >a
Um T .mat, MontK Tndwr*. ** Wa CI Waif
tad oUm* part* of IW Mar* Bp**. >■■
>w iHato-fW from aa Bar*, aad Ida ward 4ar
* *i llama, Bmpnooa, Paar Bn, fcka
flaad, Bui, Wars Bait Bbawa, Brntpaiaa, daaa
<u*nk U-ta. <mw fa t*a fa*. iiMn la Wd
Kacnk, aad all aaatanltij aad paint a. tliOaffaa,
taaaia. Lna* at Spars aad all raw at us
Hi* prtactpw an attain tka aatabva ranpa af IkM
anads at MwWra CluailAi j, aad a faw iapa* aa*
*lll proa a la aaa iiwn islaj M far as bar af *M
fara* of ton tta psat paws u> ear* tkaaa.
Sotd by Drx%glßta. I LOO par BoCttoj
R. R7 R.
RAD WAY'S
READY RELIEF,
rhs Choopeat aad Beat Modtoto* fM
fuuly Dm la the World t
OH &0 Cast BattU
KILL CCU HOU OOttPLUkIS I|| Plk
' rm>T THB trsTBW aadlVßt tCLDtB af*
racta OP BPtDBMIOB KBD OakSfTdOlOt'S yl.
BaSBS Tsak OXB HCXDHKO bOtX*M ts>
PBXDKIi POB OTSU UXDICIXMM OB MBM>
saL arrtsoaxct.
THB UOMtTY kaDW4Y*S BKaDY RtUfY IB
a PPL! BD KXTBBX t LJ.T-OB Tat EX IXTBA.
SatXY aOOOkOIXO TO I'IBtCnOKB—PaIK
rn '* *H tIBTBB CaCBB, Ctaits TO KXiBT.
IHPOBTaXT —lt nor*, rtnsn. and attar* iw
ilkn| la iparaSy aKtlad tMnaH, wtar* II S SB
■st to **aur*tb***r*taa*aY apbTiiosn, BaOWdYO
HB tDT RELIEF It lavalaabl*. I> **a b* wl wllk
peaitt** aa.ar.sM af data, good la oil aw wkapa
Kw dsomoforl M wiwlswf ; or If oSaod witk
now. In Jakarta, ftnra Tkrart, Bod Oaifka
Hoariaavaa, Blitao* Oota, lußassalfo af tta
Oowala. Btoiaaoh. Loaf*. td*or. Bidncy*- or wttk
Oraom, Qimi,. Par** aad aaa*; ar wttk HeanW
fu, feaadaoko, TW Doioroat, ToOmK lumW|
at wna LaaHafn, Pua la Hi* Oaok. ar BkassniHwa;
a* WIU Ularrksa, Okal*** Mat Una. or Ppaaatary |
or wttk Burn*, bra d., ar Brutaa* ; or wClk StrolaK
(Hmia. or S- ns Tta applinallaa of UDWiYs
BBaOT UUEftfflHnjMk Itawantaf tWsa
•asiJatnt* la • faw hrars.
Twastp diwp* la half a tasfcWo of wolor wfT la a
raw mmnaaH com CHiKPS, BPaBlfS, SOI'B
rroMaea. brt VBCKH, srox ME tuacsß,
liUMKHIXa. IiTMBXTUY.'MUC.OIXD IB THB
BOWELS, aad all IXTBKXtL PaIBB.
TraraWra abo-t l a'rrajo aarrp a botti* of ÜB.
wars BEADY BELIEF wnata**. A raw dmpa
A walar will praaael Sakr>as or palm fNa okatjo
rt wots. It k haMar ttaa fiioik (tuff at Batata
00 o K'CILUL
BoU ky Oragglali. Erlaa *0 Coota
DE. RADWAY7S
Regulating Pilla,
ParfaHip HS.I.s, atagaaU* aaa si wttk out fwaa
pot* rarutala, ponfp idsoaa. aad fHoutfcro.
BASAYTI PILLA, for tta am of ok BtattZaoW
tb. Staoiaak. Lira*. Bowala. Udoapa. Kaddar,
S.rtaoa Puiatia. Haodarka. OaiMUpaHoa. OoaHis
**• lodtfaoooe, Dpstapsa. W lmnaras, BUI.OO
P*ar, Indamioaltaa of tta ftoarala. PU*a, aad aB
Dwasisws of tta tatarool V.aoara, Wamatad
In *ffart a pofUn trato. Parolp YawotafaW. aoatala.
(nana sarrarp, staatol*. a* dilitart oa drafa.
CWT Obaarra tta failowtnf mpMs rtaulttai
from DSordaio of tta ItaaStoo QtSkk* S
Oooailpatlam, toward fclaa, PallaM af W* ood
la tta Baad, AatdHp af tta Stoosok. Xaoaoa, Baart*
koru. IWnM of Pood, Pnllaata af W.iakt ta tta
•to - ark. dear BmataUooa. Stokiof ar Plottarlaf ad
US Pit af tta Stosaek. A-lmmlta of tba Haad.
Hurrlad aad Dllßcn I Braalblnf. piottrrlnf at tta
Haott, Cbotauf or Boffooauiu Sswatioaa wkaa lb a
Lynn Pootoro, Dunuos of Tots. Data or Wabo ta
lorn tta Suit. r.Tr aad DnJ Pun la tka Htsd,
D*Bctanop of prraplraHao. Yal lowa aaa of tta Bklo
and Kpaa, Palo ta taa Hi da, Ctas, Ids bo, aad nAs
Pltsbm of Haol, Buroion ta tta rsok.
A faw doaat of BtDwPILLB wUI trom Wo
■potato from aU taa aborn uaa! t Word arm.
Ftlmi 3 Cantn per Box. 801 lby Draffbta.
Baod " FALBB AND TBTB--
Boad oaa Mtar-atamp to RAD P vY * 00_ 80, M
Wbrroa Biro at, Xow York. laioraiaUoo waiSß
•Rosaaad* wUI ba M il pop.
MB
M flnmjiili 111 lira
Dr. J. Walker's California Vin
egar Bitters are a purely Vcßetablo
preparation, made chiefly from the na
tive herbs found on the lower ranges of
the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor
nia, the medicinal properties of which
are extracted therefrom without tho use
of Alcohol. Tho question is almost
daily asked, " What is tho cause of tho
unparalleled success of VIXEOAK BIT
TEKST" Our answer is, that they removo
the cause of disease, aud tho pationt re
covers his health. They are tho great
blood purifier and a life-giving principle,
a perfect Kenovttor and Invigorator
of tho system. Never before in tho
history of tho world bos a nicdicino !><■<>n
compoanded po.snes-ing tho remarkable
qualities of Vikkgar BrrrKtis in healing the
sick of every disease man is heir to. They
are a gentle Purgative as as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation, of
the Liver aad Visceral Oigaus. m iiiiious
Diseases.
The properties of I>K. WAI RKH'S
Vi.VBOAR UrTTkMK are AperieiiL Diaphoretic,
Carminative. Nutritious. i.aJ.aiivi.
Sedative. • ' vjTronf ' c ' Ltv:--
lira. .*ll AStl-Hlhoii
R. il. McIkO.VALD * CO.,
Druppiits and Ova Aft*., Sac Franeiwo. Caltftirila
and ocr. of Wiilßfloa and Chartoa 9t* . X. Y.
Wd ky *u D||kk sal IkiUirfi __