EAR*. WARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. How (If to Knrm. That well known Now York farmer, George OeddfS gives the Xesi York TYibunr some fact.* relative to how ho learned to farm. It will ho noticed that ho h'.\l tho adviuilagc of largo w. with: This letter, and tho helplessness of ita own or, brings to my mind tho mom orv of days forty-five years ago, when 1 Wt n law offioe. having a pout nearly all my days in nchools, to man ago noarly 1,000 term of land, that thou canto into my hands. I had IWII lorii ami raised on a farm (just whore I now live) and had spent my vaont ions and tho summer* of my sixfecSuth and nineteenth Year* at homo, and had formed souto ideas of farming as practiced in thane day*. I haul held n plow some, and assisted in haying and harvesting, hut of tho prac tical management of a largo farm 1 cer tainly knstw hut little. The homo farm being lot ou shares to a very goinl man for tlio pkuxs I put my aoU under his instruction, and from hint loarned something of the use of such tools as tho soythe and the grain cradle, and tho next spring assumed tho raiui agomont. I knew ottongh of Ute busi noss lx-forv uie not to attempt ita on duot in connection with anything els', and I had atots not ton of nvy great ig nonutct of the business that oirwuni stances made it imperatively necessary for nto to follow for life. - There w-foo three fanners, living some suites apart, but neither of them vory far from nie, who had each for himself wade a handsome fortune iu farming, and each was a marked man among his neighbor*, and ht someextent led them by example. Though very successful, they were quite unlike si thing for me to do, and I thiuk 1 always had my way made clear by their counsels. Another aonnv of infonuation r found in my hired men, and I hav* never had a good man work for me a year that I have not received some good hints from, in regard to the beet time or way of doing work ou the farm. re •' Krikwi. The common earthworm, though apt to 1*- despised. is really a useful cwwture in its way. Mr. Kuapp describes it as tho natural miunirvr or the soil, consum ing on the surface the softer parts of decayed vegetable matters, andconveying down wan} u> the more woody til-er*, which (here molder and fertilze. Tltey perforate the earth in alt direction*, thus rendering it by air ami water - both indispensable to vegetable life. According to Mr. Darwin's mode of txpraaioo, they give a kind of uuder tillage to the land] performing the same below ground that the spa.le does for the garden, and the plow for arable aoil It is, in consequence, ehieffy of tho natural oprntiuuiof worms tliat fields which have beSn overspread with lime, burnt marl, or cinders, become in proceaa of | time covered by a finely divided soil fit ted for tho support of vegetation. This result, though usually attributed by fax-j men- to tlie "working down" of these materials, is really due to the action of earthworms, as may be soon in innumer able casts of which the initial soil con sists. The*c ana obviously produced by the digtwtive proceeding* of the worm, which take into their intestinal canal a largo quantity of the soil iu which they fees! and burrow, and then reject it it in the form of the so-called casta. "In this manner,"MY* Mr. Darwin, "a field, man ured with mart, has been covered, in tho course of eighty years, with a bed of earth averaging "thirteen inches in thick ness. ToMilor-. But few vegetable* are in more gen eral nee for both winter and summer than tomato,*. And while ttwirvultitra tion is very general, bat few persons understand how to grow and develop them successfully. The vines are great growers, ami in rich loose soil all that is necessary to raise and have them tumbled in heaps, like "some deep tangled wild wood, is to cultivate well and keep the weeds down. These tangled, luxuriant, topsy-turvy vines, while they may pro duce abundant iv, uever produce so good fruit, nor do they ripen it as it should be. It ie necessary, in order to have good tomatoes and to have them early, to set the plants about four feet apart and keep them well staked and tied up. A good stake can be made by cutting small bashes down, leaving them about five feet long, with some of the limbs on; drive those stakes down near the planks and train and tie np as tho plant grows. Keep the laterals well pinched off and the fruit will be much earlier and finer than if the vines are tumbled into one undistingu ishable mass. The young fruit needs the son, and any system of pruning and training that will give it to them is better than letting them fall down. Thr Petal* Beetle. The Colorado beetle has made its ap pearance already in the luwt, and mil- j lions of barttes -are eugsged in laying eggs upon the under rid.' of the loaves. The beetle is abont the size of a white bean, broAii, round, and plump. It is dark in Solor, vjtli ten orange-yellow stripes on its back—five stripes ni cub of its wing-cases. This enttspjeuoos marking enable* it to be known at first sight. As artoi as it appears it may be kept dowtf very easily by hand picking it from the vines aad crushing the eggs laid upon the leaves with the fingers. ; As soon as the lame appear, which may j be expected in a few days after the ap peonutoe at the beetles,"if they are not at once attacked the best remedy is to use paris green, either mixed with wa ter (at the rate of one heaped table spoonful to a pailful of water), or with twenty times its bulk of floor, and scat tering it evenly over the leaves of the plants, upon which the larva- feed vora ciously. As it is imjtortant to have the paris green pore, atal much of it on sale is adulterated, and therefore to on equal extent use lees, we would recommend our readers to procure only the pure article, which shonld cost abont one dollar per pound. liaricd Alive. It is not often that the victims of too hasty burial are discovered until after death ooenrs, bat an Englishman de scribes what he • xperiencea; while lying in a coffin iu a perfectly conscious state, in the following words: "It would be impossible to find words that would ex- ! tress the agony and despair that I suf ered. Every Wow of the hammer with which they hulled down my coffin lid went through mf brain like the echo of a death-knell. I would never have be lieved that the humau heart could en dure such terrible agony and not burst into pieces. When they let me slowly down into the ground I distinctly heard the noise the coffin made every time it rubbed against the sides of the grave." This man awoke under the knife of a doctor. He had been stolen and carried to the dissecting room of a medical school. At - the moment the professor made a sligh Incision down the abdomen the spell was broken and he sprung to his feet. The Paraguayan Exiles. The exiles from Paraguay have arrived in the United States and meet with a hearty welcome. The party embraces many leading citizens of the country, and they give the following account of their banishment: On the 15th of February last, Don Elluari, president of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay, was deposed by a military. insurrection, by which Pedro' Voriela was put in power. On the 2Atfi of the same month these persons were notified to prepare for de parture, and on Jfce 26th were arrested and placed ou board the Puig, which was immediately sent off to Hai ana. They arrived at? Havana on tho 30th of May, but the Bpanish authorities re fused an asylum to tliaui on suspicion of their being exiles. A Spanish man-of war was sent to the ltork Poig, and towed her to sea, despite tita protests of the j captain that liis vafeel was •naseawortfay and provision* -abort. Tits Pnig tfcsn ! mode for Charleston, 8, 0. Thi* Untile Fish. 1 liave loen fortunate enough, way* a St. John's (N. F.) correiqvuideiit of tin- ICbrhf, lo obtain the Ix-ak and one sticker of a splendid specimen of the devil fish, or " colossal cephalopoda of the North Atlantic," as Prohwsor Verrill has day t iu IVoeinWr last. There iahttle interoourse between that locality and the i-apital in winter, owing to the preva lence of ice, and it was not till March 1 tliat new* of Ute matter arrived here. I wrote immediately to the magistrate of the district, Ooorge Riutma, Esq., re questing htm to ooiiect full juutn-ular*, and if pwaible irnxw for me a>nue j*r tiona of the gn>at *-pud. should any have laxe.t prt-si-rvixl. He informed nte, in re ply, that he lud not aeon the fish entire, os before his arrival at the pot where it .-ante aahore |vrtions of it hal hvu cur ! rieil off by tho tl*hermeu a* f-*xl for ' their dog*. He niatle a careful measure metit, however, of the jHtrtioits that re maiued, ami found Utat Ute teutmmU, or two longest anus, were twimty-wx feet in length and atxtiwn inches tu cir enmfervuotx and the eight altorti'r arm* each eight and a half feet ut length, aud nearly <4 Ute same circumference. The head or central )xt, jmlgiug by the pruportiuus of my *peei mem. The arms tap-red at the jxnut to an inch in circumference. Mr. Suurns was able to olttaiu the lx-ak utul one large sucker, which he has sent me. Tlie sucker is tin inch iu diameter. The beak I* large and powerful, slui{Hxl pre cisely as the jaw* which Profeaaur Ver rill has figured iu hia able articles above refemxl to. It is a special cause of grief to your correspondent that this fine specimen was not preserved for wientific examination. t i rc.it inU*ret among naturalists haa been awakemxl regarding thorn gigantic ceph-ilopols simx- the di> covery of my Logic bay sjxx uuen, and Uiis iiiU-re*t" will iw gn-atiy deepened by IWewor Verrill'a pap* rs, in which he has made an cxltgnstive study of the subjt-ct a* far as present data enable him t. proceetL It evident tliat the *cus around tiiceo sboreg are a fariMib- A6i tat of these creatures and 1 am in hopes of yet securing a finer specimen than any previously obtained. The out which came asliore at lirautl Bank—with its long anus of twenty six feet and eight shorter mica of eight and a half feel, covered with twelve hundnxl sucker*, its fourteen foot body and powerful beak—would have been an awkward customer to mtx-t, and once folded in its clammy embrace escape would have been impossible. That Female Caoby. There is a touch of gallautrv abont the English cabbies, afur all. Not long ago, it will be remembered, a young female was am-sUsl in Liverp*x>l and sent to the gaol for haviug donned male clothing for the purpose of successfully plying the vocation of a cabby. She had been in needy circumstanixw, and so, catting off her tress*-* and assuming the garb of a Londoff cabby, main tain e*l heraelf in re*p*xtabiiity, and as " Billy Seymour" won the good opinion of her fellow-workers. The gocxt con duct of "Billy" was acknowledged by her master*, aud the cabbies speak in high terms of the gixxlfellowahip of "Jollv Seymour." The term of her in canx-nition, which was for two months, expirtxl reo-ntlv, and a vast concourse of the cabbies assembled outside the jail to give her an ovation when she came out. They had resolved to pre sent her with a cab and horse, aud the sum promised for that purpose reached a very handsome amount. All the roads in the vicinity of the jail were lined with "four-wheelerH" and "hansoms," and there wanting ahowy wag ouettes and a good sprinkling of " bug gies," harnessed to fast trotting horse*. Several of the calibiea were gaudily got ten np for the occasion, and crowd* of sightseers of all ages and sexes swelled the multitude. Around the massive portals of the gaol sentinels were poftod, iilforder that " Billy " might not tuiss oat unrecognized. But the cabbies were doomed to diaappth-e ri-uiaimug were much damaged. All books ami pa|*r.i are lost. The custom house and tho Los Uaclios were sacktxl ami afterword set ou fire and tleetroyixl. It is said that tnere is scarcely anything of value re tuaimng among tiie rums. A singular incident is relateil of Mr. Bosquet, who miraculously e—vqaxl injury during tho cvtrtiiquake. lie was standing u|H>u the balixuiy of his residence when it iwurml, and tiie walls falling, made a prisoner of him, thougli he was uninjured. Kx (WH-tiug each moment tliat tiie walls would crumble aud crush liirn ill the rums, he was exclaiming: "Oh thai, a hat a death yoti liavc reserved for nie!" when a ae*>unt heavy sluvk otx-umxl, and, imnu-le like, the walls all fell ont ward, leaving him ixirfectiy safe and without a scratch. The tvitiuiatixl Uais of life in Cucuta is from 2,(k*> to 3,lkW, and from fi.UOO to B,(XH) iu the si it.-en surrounding villages, which were all de strove*l. Lite nutulx-r injuml is very large. The jwopla la-r*- from Cucuta have been talking of tnuldiuga temporary town at Man Hticna, near Cucuta, but have given up tiie project for the pres-nt on account of the t*se, and which, it is feared, may pr*xiuoe a i*estileu*x< among the survivors. Truopa have Ixx-n sent to Cuoula from l'amploua, t> pre vent more air*vities in the district, ami already several of the thlevt-s have Ix-eu shot. Cucuta wua tiie center of the shtvk, but it was destructive for twelve league* around. Itclief expslitnuis liare I veu sent out from this town, and every thing done to alleviate the sufferings of the scrvivur*. One correspondent state* that the town of Cucuta lias entirely di*ap|war*xl, as well as nearly all of the promising villages in the State, eighteen or twenty in number. The loss of life is variously estimated at from 10,600 to 15,0011 pcreous. The Vessel that was In "Distress." An old sailor spins tin* following yarn in the World: I mind once comin' home from Liverpool iu the ship Atlas, and we\i had a head wind for weeks, and bid fair to make a tcrrihl* long liaanage of it, when, one day, jn-t arti-r noon, the mooti changed, ami the wind shifted from west nor'-west to uor" nor'- easL Well, we got all the starlxiard stuusaiL act, and soon liad her a gum' slxiut nine knots, which wore fa- nure, jist as we bad got this wind, to have to stop, hut there weren't no help for it, and all luiuds was called and tin stnusaiis bxik in and the royal* and tlyin' jib furled, and we hractxl np sharp on a wind, for to beat up to him. " Now," nay* the old man to the mnte, "it more than likely she is out of provis ions, and we mtisu't lose a minnt*- more than we can help of this fair wind. So git up some bread, and l***f, and jKirk and have some water in handy casks, ready to go in the boat, (lit both of our l-oots cleared away, so as to supply her at once, or, if they want to Ix- took off, we can transfer 'em without delay." Well, we washes out a couple of beef barrels dean, and fills "em up with fr<-*h water. Wo gits up a cotiplo of barrels of tx-ef, and a couple of pork, and about % half-dozen liam-ls of bread, and we clears away both quarter boats, and selects a crew for both <4 'em. Then wo clew* uu the to'gallau' sails and hove about on the jxrt tack and let her lay with the main-topsail to tiie mast. The brig, all this while, had beeu run niu' down afore the wind, and aoou came down across our stern, and the old man hailed: " Brig ahoy ! what can Ido for you first I" There were about a second's pause, and then on me the reply: "What is your lougitude I" Yon ought to have seen our old's man face jiat then. " Drink less rum and buy a chronometer," says he to the English chap, and then to us: "Fill away the main yard ! down main tack! gather aft the alack of the sheet! put your helm np! so—steady—a* yon go, S" it full and by; stations now for stay* ! own helm! hard a lee ! rise tucks aud sheets! main to'bowline! mainsail haul! Head brae*-s ! fore txiwliue ! let go and haul!" Well, the minute we got her around, we piled the muslin onto her, and soon lia-1 her trottin' towards Sandy llook agin' with stunsails alew and aloft, leavin' the Britisher to find oat his longi tude from some one bettor natured than oar old man. An Engli-h Pintle in America. On a race day at Jeromo Park, Now York, some of the young men of the club got up n picnic on the grounds, in clone imitation of the F.uglish plan, ami a lady writer thus discusses pleasantly in regard to it: Suddenly a stage horn's mellow note swelled out an the crisp June air, and from around the club house hill dashed an English mail coach and four. It drew tip iu front of that edifice at the foot of the hill, in full view of the spectators on Ixith the grand stand and club house piazzas. The seats on top were'filled with three ladies and as many gentlemen. C)[Hti flow both of the doors, and out leaped two liveried footmen, who assisted the ladies and gentlemen to descend fred, laer veiied, kid gloved lientitien and their lieaux threw themselves in graceful at titudes on the grass and made their pio uic feast. The French Army. European writers are naturally ex cited over the late grand review of the French army in Paris. The French army was almost annihilated by tho Germans only a few years ago. Paris was captured, and the victorious con queror* returned to their own country, leaving behind them devastation and chaos, and a frightful debt for France to pay. Of course, the first thought of France WHS to reorganize her army, and the Into display shows that this has been done. Forty thousand troops were re viewed at Longchamps, and the display of cuirassiers, light cavalry and infantry was superb. A IMH'IILK MUKUK.It. The Kate el a Wrsiera Parmer whe la Maid la have llna Awnv train hla Wile. About u your mnl u hulf ago u Mr. Ki'twh immigrated from Wiwoonaiu to Flortdn, mnl purchased u furm 111 Hi. Jolm'* county, u few naif* from tlu< old fort, Mlluhulr.UA Inlet, lln wu* indus triouu utul energetic, mnl aoou Immune noted u* mw of tiio mont prosperous former* 111 tlm county. Mr. Kocoh waa uvotu)mnit'd by hi* wife, or by u womau thut pur|>orh'il to W hi* wife. To ull upjMiitruuctv tho two livotl togi *llier iu tho utmost jwmco mnl trmnpiilitv. Home limo ago u mun culUttf; hiunuilf J. Smith Now ton, mut roprtwmutiug him iwilf it* u lmul pnw|H-i'tor, uiuilo la* up pouruuiwi in Koivh'u iioiphbi* liimiil, mid rommtiisi uovorul iluyu. Ho tluullv loft, mid lii ithor Kivwli nor la* ueigUburn thouglit uny muro of tho ntrungor. A fow duy* Bfp>, liowovtii\ ho uguiu mmlo hi* upiH'unuiim, utul uftor inuking uomo iiiiitiiru'.* of u Mr. NViUimu*, pnuwoilod to KoiwlT* houuo. It hup|>oiiod thut Mr. hiwwh owvd Mr. Wtlhmua u *mull muiu of liiouoy, mid hml prouiiuoil to onll mnl tmy it UlO unit dnv uftor Now ton tuado hi* up(witruiuv. Ttuit duy, hi iwovor, mid tho next ptt*Mu|*out, and the other under th command of the alteriff of St. John's couuty. They followed the murderer nearly fifty mile*, sparing neither whip nor spur, and finally came up with him in \ oluia county, where he was en doavoriug to make hi* way on to the Mt. John's river. The confession of the murilarer, which ha* been made, invest* the crime with mysterious interest. Ill* muuo is J. Smith Newton, aud he says he „** l>oru in Hueno* Avres, f Ktiglisli parent*, lie says that lii* pur|H>se wa* not rob bery, but the hojHi of ulUinnUt gum. He state* that the woman known a* Mrs. Flleu Kerch was not the wife of Mr. Keeoh, but his mUtrxt**, and tliat the rxxal Mrs. Kexsdi is a resident of Foml tin Doc, Wisconsin. koech deserhsl lus rxttil wife, ttsik up with the munlered woman, and fiexl to Florida. The pris oner nay* he wns employci by Mrs. Keec-h, who is his aunt, to follow her truant huslxuid and murdi r lu>th him and his mistreMs. As a reward for his trouble. New ton wa* to receive a slutre of the estate of Mr. Kceoh, which is sold to bo worth aluuit s>ki,tloo. Ail attempt wa* made by some of the citiseu* of Orange county to lynch New ton, and it wo* the fear of this thut led liim to confess his crime. l'uidal t anU and l'rharj. Since the Uitaxxlnrliaa f ivwlnl cards, Mf> lb< New York TVwin, the u*-a to which they aro applied bitv lieeu steodi lv increasing in number and rarity, ■flurt Ihe amount of convenience thus furnished UUJ public IN very great cannot In* denied. At the ntuir tune there an-, uot uufrequeutly, certain annoyances oooDMtad witli the injudicious employ ment of }Mwtal curd* 111 epistolary writ ing. (if thm class of atuiovancea, jx-r --httjw the most common in that which oc cur* from receiving one of these missives when the person to whom it in s-nt would greatly prefer the privacy which would be afforded by a sealed letter. A gentleman or a ladv in a large oitj, who write* a putdal c*ud and puts it iub> the box with her own hands, or mud* it by a messenger nut anpjxwed to gossip, in ordinarily in little danger of ttaring what he lias writUu made the subject of COM veratlion among his own neighbors. Nobody near the tender baa a chance to peruse it except the government official*; and they an* uot likely to read it, and jierluqie would tuff know enough about the writer to understand it if they did. But when the cords gets to the other end of the rout**, tin* case may be very dif ferent. The numerous individuals who in u country village sonn tunes assume the dutit** of deputy postmasters on the arrivnljof the daily or tri-weekly mail, are not always too busy to sp*nd a little time in the acquisition of interesting in formation, or too delicaU* to take any means that may lie convenient of ac quainting themselves with their lieigh- Uirs' affairs. We do not wish to Is* understood as intimating that this is the ease with all country poat-offioca, or the majority of them. On the contrary, there arc a great many more of them than is generally sup|x**d where the {HMffmaster is very careful to liave no gossip ]>rovided bv means of his office. Hut leaving out of view the poat-ofßoca, a jHSffal card is often liable to be seen by a good many pairs of eyes Is*fore it cornea within the scope of thaw for which it is intended ; and nobody who sends one lias, unless lie is well acquainted with the circumstances of the party to whom it is sent a right to presume that it will not lie subjected to tho inspection of in dividuals who will not hestitote to toll all the news it contains, and jierhaps n good deal more. The Siren Fee WhUtlo. The roost powerful fas-signal whistle now in nw is an American invention. The whistle is produced liy mentis of n disk, with twelve radial slits, Is-ingmade to rotate in front of a lined disk exactly similar. The moving disk revolves 2,800 times n minute, ami in each revo lution then* is, of course, twelve coinci dences between the two disks; through the o]tc!)inga thus made steam or air st high pressure is allowed to pass, so that there are actually twelve times 2,800 (or 83,000) puffs of steam or compressed air every minute. This e uises a sound of very great power, which the cast iron trnni|et, twenty feet in length, com presses to a certain extent; and the blast goes out as a sort of sound-beam in the direction required. This instrument has been set tip at va rious points along our own coast, when* danger to shipping is imminent during the prevalence of foggy weather, and its superiority to every other form of fog signal was immediately so nppnrent that the English naval authorities scut for n specimen to lie tried with English inven tions at some reeent experiments on the coast. It was found to lie vastly more effective than anything with whirli it was put in coinjietition, and a large numlier of th*so instruments were at unco order ed for the purpose of establishing a complete ehaiu of sound-signals round the English coast, to IK* used in foggy weather. Xovel Method of Adrertising. At the Pcre la ('liaise cemetery, near Paris, there stands in a conspienous Siositiou a splendid monument to Pierre 'atmchard, grocer, with a pathetic in scription which closes thus : •' His in consolable widow dedicates this monu ment to his memory, and continues the same Imsiueas at the old stand, 161 line M A Parisian pn|cr relates that a short time ago a gentleman who haeg par don, but I wish to see the lady in pcr son." "Hir, I am the Widow Calio chard." "I don't exactly understand you. I allude to the relict of the late Pierre Cabochnrd, whose monument I saw yesterday at Pore la Chaise." "I see, I soe," was the amiling rejoinder. "Allow mo to inform you that Pierre Calaxshard is a myth, and therefore never hal a wife. The tomb you have ad mired cost me a good deal of money, quite a small fortune indeed, and al though no one is buried there, it proven a Urst-rutc advertisement, and 1 have no cause to regret the expense. Now, sir, what can I sell you in the way of groceries ?" Tbf Outlook For Drain. All tiio evidence* point to continued dtiUiioHii, mill low pritMw for wh*t. For awhile, fortunately for U producers, utouey Wing mmj, many capitalinta Wugltt wheat mnl corn t> hold, Wliering thut t carry. Hut Great llritaiu hud mi iitiUNiud crop lust your, ho* ploiity of wheat in utoro yet, Mid tho prosiieot* fur tho incoming crop uro o*oo flout. Tho low (Mi wliout in stfne in Chicago foot* Up 8750,(100, figuring till* lon* ut tilt ecu 0011 I* u bushel. Tho shriukugc on tluiMo grain* me I prurliiimi maki*" tho totwl about 82,000,000, mnl including tho limu on option*, proluddy not loan thnu 85,000,000. This ious is said to full lurgi ly tiisin s|HHUilulor* iu uoighlmrtiig Ktutou. It is Iwdievetl thut one lntlf tho los*, or tuoro, is niiiMtdo of Tkii'sgo. Tho distribution of tllo loss hu* Imiu *o gout-rul, thut no groat noiuuioUoii cau isi'iir. If auy fuilurs tuko phuw, they will not uttrm-t gonoral liotioo. t>|H'rulors iu wheat UsW advantage of the partial ikmtructioti of winter wheat by the unfavorable weather of early spring, and of the gramthopper rant, in the hope of stimulaUng oriooa, by (•urtnliiig tlioiHi domugiiig iutfueucoa un duly. All sindi spasmodic effort* arc, in -the end, damaging. They stimulate hope unduly, tempting farmers and others to make investment*, la*ed upou the belief that those sudden advances in prices indicates a growing want, and that they have ouly to hold a littie longer tm*hing rapid gruwth uf corn, snil ninety xlsys will see us iude|H'iideut of any necessary (IcptxutlMioc U|OJI our old crou. All this will Ist in accordance with tint |trumi*tx given us, ami tlm iudicstiutui |x>iut to s reslixutiuu of this mvmrance iu 1n76. The farmer* Uuotigboat all the Wet, a* we know Wy jiersunal observation* maxle uf the growing fltupa in several State*, are putting forth sttcb effort* s* will fully entitle them tu the fulfillment of the scriptural prxxnisc. We sincerely Inqce thut every farmer who is holding old wheat and eurn may I** in a oondl tiuu to hold until it Will !*• UetNled at jNtving price*. — J'rairir Fnrmtr. Iljdrophoblr Munis. The New York tit raid says: They used to put dowu iu the surgical alma tiacs, at the jtcriod when in the course of nature cliewies should bo ripe and cherry trees loaded, " Alxmt tiu* time look fur lioys writli broken onus." t>ur city surgttous otmmouly have a* much practice in gunshot woutnls after a r'ourth of Jiuy as falls to the share of the army doctors after a moderate IwUle; and the warm wtli r always gives s fair share of practice in the athletic ti*- ercise of nsuscitsting half drowuexl hu lumity. Although death has, a* j***ti colly 01-served, all sesst>us fur hi* own, he adopts a different style for osndi, mid comes in shape* appropriate to tin- time. It would appear from late experience tliat we are now to have our warm weather scarce of hydrophobia as ivgu larlv as we used to have a Scare of ch..lent for the same season. Hydro phobia we may have and do have, ami it is not perceptible hw we can avoid an occasional case, until society si large tnske* war on dogs and cxUrmumUw Uie sjwvies; and then est* and foxes and wolve* will remain to do what they may a* substitutes for the friend of man. And so long as there is hydrophobia it will have the spurious aud in certain a*|x>ct* most ridiculous double hydro phobic mania, the deluaiou in which men frighten themwlves to death with the fancy tliat they liave beeu bitten by rabid suuuals, a case of which lis* alrx adr conic this summer a* several came Isst summer. That there is tlisease in tliese esses is propable enough, but not hydrophobia. There is evnletiUv disordered Virsiu, tending to iniuiis iu sil probability, and the character of the mania ia liotermined by a bite receivod, which would be otherwise harmless, and the apprehensions in regard to it, upon which the victim brootls day and night. People should not jwnnit themselves to accept on any term* a notion so contrary to ages of exjwrieoce an tliat hydrophobia can be given by the bite of a dog not evidently rabid. The I*rlce of larc. Tho orders for woxldiug lac' rvceircil nt Alcncon, FlUOt, soiui-t imivi nmouiit t<> SJD.OOO at a time, arid largo sum* are also cxtM'tiiltHi for loco nt Honitoti, Eug laud. The following particuhirs in n>- gard to the lnoe tradt> are interesting : r'or Valeucienties, made at Ypres. SSO Cor meter (aUmt 1.1-11 yards) is paid, ut the huvnutker, working twelve hours a ilsy, osui only prodaoe one third of on inch in wwk. Every piece of Alencou paamxs through the hand* of twelve workmen. The beat liniNsels 111rem 1 is siiuu iu cdls underground, be catiM' the itry air alwive would oause the thread to snap. Upon the worker, as *he nit* in the dork, is directed one ray of luht, but the thread is so fine that her delimto fingers nre lietti'r guides than her eyes. Very many lose their sight, aud the high (my the lace worker earns ia proportionate to lite acknowl edged unhenlthiness of the occu|u>tiou. Th> liatnl upon thread mail* at Brussels of flax of HrnlMuit (vests, Iwfore it is yet made up into lace, (1,20(1 pet poniul. and the process of nutut.fncture more than doulilos the value. Old lace is more variable in price, and some of it can le counterfeited by imitations. Of some varieties, however, the secret is lost, us of I'oint d'Argenton, whieh continued to lie made on Ui luuiks of the Orne till the French revolution Mopped the de mand for a time, and gave the |Mnant* other mittus of earning their bread. The Efleets of Presence of Mind. What coolness may do in such caw l * as the Holy ok e disaster was one well illustrated by the great German actor, Entile Devrient. The Grand Theater at Vienna waa crowded. The Emperor Francis, with several members of his family, was in the imperial box. The plnv,Schiller's " liobliera," had reached its third act, when a cry arose that the stage was on fire. Devrient signed at once to the prompter, who lowered the curtain, the actor stepping out in front of it ere it fell. In his clear, clarion voice, he said : " There ia no fire. The Emperor luu been despoiled of an aigrette of diamond* on entering the theater. No honest man will object to Wing searched. Yon will pees ont one by one at each several entrance and W searched by the police stationed at the several doors. Any man attempting to get out of order will W arrested." The crowd, deceived by his onolneHsand the charge, poured out. As each reached the door lie was simply told to hurry on; and just a* tha last rows of the upper gnllerv were filing out, the flumes liurst through the curtain, enveloped the auditorium, but not a life wa* lost, though iu less limn half an hour after the great build ing was in ruins. A llig Throw. A woman called st the police court, iu Detroit, and wanted to have her lma bnnd arrested for throwing her over a fence. Hlie stated tluit the fence wns seven feet high, ami his honor knew thnt her liUNbaudwasa small mail, weigh ing not over one hundred and twenty pounds, while she weighs nearly two hundred. "I don't believe your story," ho re plied. " It's de solemn truf," she continued, rolling up her eyes. " I tell you your husband could not have thrown you oyer a fence seven feet high." "Couldn't lie if" "No, inaihun; it's an absurd story." " Wal, mebbe lie couldn't," she said, after a moment, " but he will if ho over gits a chance, and I want him put be hind de bars! He ia atill free. HI'MMAKY OP NEWH. low ml Imirrmm* frmmt llmmm u4 ABread 'Hi* llrituili admiral In cciuiiuaud in Ut* I'uoilto lia* aent ulil to lbs otMow* of Uiaauukou I'nil tl Htatas sUiaioar Marauao ..., Tim (utslo hug tin* appcarm! In |wrl* of Ixxig Inland. Ymmt t'ollru® Una year graduated fnrtjr-lwo female aiudetiu Pulioemau Jacob Muter att*ui|>td I" arteel Patrick Mtilligrsi, wtio waa ■trunk and bealiug hla family In lit. Louie, when Mulligan picked Up a chisel and atahheil tho olttoer twice. City Maralial t'liae. Horn then attempted to arreat him a td waa also atahheit. w lion he drew a pialol and uhol Mulh- Kan dead. Belli of the officers wwo eeverely injured..., Advice# from New < iranada our roi* rate the repirU Oral receive- 1 la regard to the carth#culatiow aud loaned it without any security. He mode vrav with the sum of £6OO, 000 ..... A monastery in Otneinnati ta prehear ing to receive two hundred Jesuit priests lately driven from Germany A train an the Old Colony railroad ran into a wagon si a rroeamg in Ho wen villa, Maaa, and killed three men and a child who were driving serosa the track. The dnver of the vehicle was (Killed away by the home and escaped Frank Kntcrer Apcrmau. aged fifty ycara, who was oommittod to prison at Philadelphia for at tempted rape on a little gtri four years old. committed suicide by hanging himself to a crass bar of his cell window By a tornado in Detroit, Mich., thirty houses and many out building* wi re dcmollaiied. involving A tow of about (25,000. Four (wraena ore known to haTe been killed and many injured The drought at Porto Rico injured the crops to such an extent that trade waa depressed, in cons<#(uenee of which many failure# took place among the merchants. The neighboring ■elands ore alno depreeeed The Ixmdon Niandnrtt puhhabea report# of a fearful in uiHlalioti in Bohemia, Moravia. Cartnlhia, tbe Tyrol, and lianat. with noma loos of life and great destruction of j>raparty. Many bridges bare beeu carried away, thousand* of cattle drowned, aud crape in several district* totally ruined. It ia believed that after the Alabama claims commission has completed it* awards there will t>e a Icolanoe of nearly (10,000,000 of ilia Genera award remaining to liie credit of the government Four white prisoner* in jail at Lawreuco, Kan., overpowered tho guard, and taking all tho weapons on tho piomnxee. escaped. They are all desperate character* and there is little chance of theii rearrest. Attorney-General Pierrepont has given a decision on a vexed question of nationality. A iTuasian come to this country and after the requiiute number of years became netoraliied. Ho anb*#c|uenUy returned to Pniseia to live, taking with him his sou aged twenty years, who had been born and brought up iu this country. The Trunnion government claimed the sou for military duty, and the attorney general nay* tliat government is eiiliUod to his services, as he, being a minor, partakes of the statu* of hia father, who has leaumed his Prussian citiceuship. When the son becomes of age, however, he no longer owes allegiance to Prussia, and can return to this country as one of its cittxans and even be eligible to the Presidency Investigations into Uie work ings of the Cincinnati water Ixcard has resulted in the grand jury indicting Thomas F. I taker, present chief of police, formerly secretary of the water works ; William Metk, city editor of the IT>M-#/(-vt!d wherein two children were sleeping, din robed himaelf, got in twd between them, and when found by the narenta of tho little oufln was dead drunk ami snoring like a hog. The chief of police wus called in and the "tramp" waa taken out. Tliore were 2,'271 vessels built in the United States in 1H73; and in 1874, 3,147 The highest number previous to the war was 2,047 — iu 1855. As regards steamer*, the highest number built m any year be fore the war waa 281— in 1854—while hut year the number was 404. Com par" ed as to tonnage, the shipping built in 1859 was 156,601 toua ; in 1874, 482,725. A FopuUr lloolt. ltc(K>rl* from agents thus far received by the publisliera uf the new lxtok enti tled "Tha Present (Vmfliot of Hi-ieuoe with the Christian Iloligiun," show an average sale of five copies jmr day for eai'h agent. This indicate* a much larger sale than was attained by tits author's former work, of which the extraordinary sale of 60,0U0 copies wu* made iu a very *hort time. Dr. Morris already haa a high reputatiou as su author, aud his now book will occupy one of the higlnwd plaeeu iu literature. It is a hook for the times, u work 011 the most vital <|uetiou of the day. The magazine* and the ihtily and religions paper* are constantly lllled with articles on one side or other of this great question. It is talked of in private conversation, disc-usaed in pnblie liH-turcs, and |>rcaehcil from the pulpit. There ia a call for just such a book- The people ntcl it, and rem lily purchase when brought b> their notice. Pubiiah ed by P. W. Ziegler A Co., 61H Arch street, Philadelphia, Pa. • Farming. As an incident ut the times, we regret to learn that ui many parts of the coun try great and small farina are being fore closed. ('apilaltsts liave made large ad vanorw upon them, aud beeu obliged to foreclose. Our tiMunutoe oompautea are full of evidences of these wet disasters, and they are the result of unwise invest ment*. living beyond one's menus, and exjK-ctiug too much. Agriculture will Iwy like other iirofrnwionain good hands, >ut it is also attended with the chancoa and risk* which belong to trade and commerce. Farmers, like other people, have their pood aud bad years, aud with them, as with others, mistakes alike in mnuagemunt and expectation, yield their natural louses. The Sew Panacea. Modern scieuoe having demonstrated that alcohol is neither food Dor phyaic, but, on the coutnuy, a apeoiHi of putaon, the introduction of a potent tonic which is entirely free from it ia certainly a sub ject for congratulation. l>r. Walker's Vinegar Hitters ia a medicine which may lm fairly chnractemed as an unobjsw tionable specific fur many diatreamng aud liangeroua dianaaea. Temperance organization*, heretofore in favor of t*-r nutting the sale of alcohol for medical purpoana, are of opinion that Vinegar Hitters poaseas** all the eflloacy as an in vigorant tliat haa ever been even claimed fur spirituous stimulant*, and on this account, as well a* because of the singu lar suoccws which ha* attended its tue in ■lvM]My some jsiwerful explosive suliatance in quantity greater than is ordinarily kept ■by apothecaries. The must prevalent tiieory ia that some of the druggist em ployees, in experimenting, mixed sub stances that were harmless when scjiarate j but exphwive when compouuik-d. W liaTo t ricil Dobbins' Fjectric Soap ■ made by Cngin A Co., Phila. >, and find it the best, purest aud most economical *oap we have ever seen. Too much can not lm aatd iu it* favor. Try it. * A genUetnsn afflicted with the chronic rhraaabm says : " No ilaacriptloo of mv csaa ■an oouvsy lite vast aiaoaut of bmefll 1 have isoetvefi lions the oa of Jahtnm'i Atodynr , JJmtttrHl. 1 believe Uis the beat article ia the wot Id for rlieameliMa. On**. If a horse lus a gxsxi constitution, and ttsa once been s good boras, jm> matter bow old or bow much run down be may be. be can be graally unproved, and in many reepec'a made aa • 1 ae new. by a liberal use of >crtaa*'j Qatabry ( rsdifwn I'omla%.-—Com. '' Their name is legion, " may be ap plied tu those who die annually of'ouneusen lion. allhonxb adeoce tiaa of late year* nnusibly (bouinabed tbeir uumbor. It la graufnog to know that the geoeral um> of fw lii Mart Halnttn of M ild (%trry la largety inatnuaootal m atUuniug this and Fifty cents and cms dollar a bottle, large bottles much the cheaper. | Cvtn. Ilieu C'RAUDOCK A CO. 103S lUee PfcUalpSta. Pa Save foal m rvr adrartlaeaieet la mj lwear. I kaee all abeat tha OmmmmUt MSww. nrtaae jaaja ae It cared wr daaahtar at the Aat lime ; aha had It rary had (or eereraJ reus, hat #aa parfeeUr eared, aad I aaad hi tea# the ai.itlclaa oe kaad Is aa nsaabe air IrtaaS. I Sara takaa a aold lata)?, and •a I am fearful of il eaUllns oe ml lung*. |aa mil plraar aaad ma a *U hot of poar aaedlnSm Kaaeaetlally. JACOB TROUT. KicWtmasvu.tx. Jaaaamtoa <**.. Ki . Jaa So. lrt "HI V MX AND UI.I. DO VOf UOOD."- Ia the bear walk* al Uia poe wtU bad am and raw wbo are ruff aria* from dj*pe|>Ma. brer eom|>lalat, head ache, recuse. daMUtr of the arm** *)alam. rossUpa Una. actdllf. daaiKKidaacp. and mnnr etam m*litlm raaaad trma an Impara alalael Uta Wood. Thla ataia of ■ blue* need ao( atlal. Dr. I.tMiUtYW MOOT A Nil Hb.HR BITTBK** II.iH thaaa W. and laaara a* II war- a new leaae of Mia. Bald bf al! (Iraqau I.KO v. OOODWUI A CO., Boeroa. Wbalwuala Aaala The Xsrket*. Baof Cam# -Brtma to Rxtra Dullecka lOjd# UH O.romon to Oood Texas* >t d 10 XUcfa flow* SO 00 M 0 00 I'rtwaed. tlW<* (m\ Immba OAlidi 0W (VStoo—Mid.iilns lAM newr-Extra W0atmra.............. A 00 * I S State Extra ID fit I AO Wheal- Red Waatorn 1 XI # 1 It No. IRpnns 1 IS 9 1 14 Rye—State Ml 9 1 00 Barter —State 1 XXJ*# 1 221, Barley Malt 1 80 $ 1 TO i mia—Mixed Weelem 1 9 8 Corn—Mixed Wasterc..... n | n Hay. par ret M 9 1 10 Straw, per <-wt AO 9 M Hotm Tie. SU#S—o!iU IS # II IVfk—Meat Si 80 #2O 2H bard US *8 U\ flab—Markerrl No. 1, new It 00 911 00 " No. 8, new *BO 9oo Pry Cod, per cwt 8 80 9800 Herri tor, (haled, per b0x.... 40 9 40 Petrtdewm —Orwda V9OS\ Refined, 11', Wool-California Tleeoe 28 9 M Texaa " 24 9 84 , Aoatralian " to 9 81 Batter— State 0 I Western Dairy 24 9 2ft Western Ye110w..... 20 0 M Western Ordinary. 10 9 14 PeenaylvanU Flat 23 9 XS Cheese—Slate Factory |fl 9 |2\ •• Kklramed 03 9 08 Western 09 9 11 Esxe-OVOe 11 9 XI XUUT. Wheal I 27 9 I XT Rya_Bt.tr 1 03 # 1 00 Corn—Mixed 84 9 83 llartey—State, 1 121,9 1 18 Oats—Stale 82 9 M irrriia. Floor A 78 9 7 18 Wheat—No. 1 Bprln 1 10 # 1 10 Oorn—Mixed.. 72 9 72 (lata. 47 9 47 Rye ... 1 CT 9 1 07 Bsriry 1 80 9 I 80 axLTtsosa. Crth'O- Ixjw Middling* 111',48 18V Flour—Extra 8 78 9 28 W iioal—Red Western 1 80 9 1 20 By* 88 91 02 I Oorn—Vetlow 81 9 81 Oxte —Mixed 84 9 04 Petroleum 'S \ * 08V rnupfuiiu. Flour—tuanaytvaola Extra. 8 28 #BXB Wheat-Weatert. Red 1 24 0 1 21 Rye... 1 08 9 1 08 Oom--Yellow 80 9 00 Mixed 78 9 80 list* -Mixed 81 # 81 Fetixtlenm—Crode.... iS *OO Refined. It \ ■ —_______________________ amnmnamm All the a. Nmmb. Run* (V- \ \ S( )M ETHING W| h.n f work nd momv for ikil, mon or tonn, boy* or clrU. who)* or intto tjm*. Sotitl trtip fur (gulogur. , Aiidrr I RANK GLUOK. Now Bedford. MB as pAAnrV'Q CHEAP MUSIC ! DUUAr.I A F.cll Catalccauaa Free by Mall. VUUIJUI U 32 Kaxl I Blh Hlreat.NewYicrk. 1 3 Pounds of Butter from 1 Quart of Milk ! Can b* madr uywhsro, by any om. No churning ra quired. Hocrlpt rent for c*nt. Addrrre IV • i Bos 174 1, Philadelphia, Pa. P Wl 1.1. HAVR OUR (HK)I>A. Hrnd V?. crnU and wr will rend by mall, prepaid, our LAMT Plt.l.Rß, E wl*h which you can h!l any Afroren# trithout Orwmnring rhimnry or getting r*on can make from $5 to dally Wo want AgonU crerywhore. EN ATHIN Al* AGENTS* RNHOKIIN, BOSTON, MA*. i r* la• t x ohb rsLwV im H T 9 nil, H mqmkmlvUa IvMlnfl s .t.rl).Uirt •..~-•< .••. boa n^nirnt rnvnTm tM * i *' w'■■"• *** r JIMMMJIMMI ••>♦• r O*M. a* Mil M lb- < aim! Il oil I ! Iln radical oataa obaa all nUan Fall II aaa b# ' ooru oiih waaa aal MM ohao aa wIH uaa laa ha I oaad. Whan aawo adjaalad. as ■—Sfii aat ih* bed ar-otdaml aaa rtt|iUoa | Tlw laanmMU Sara tka *—• •• I of UM nasi aaalaaat pfa*uuntai I [ la Ibw prulaaatoa '"■ I" ia> aaawraaa laslaiaatall la oaf |l ill Ml ■ aa a 1 sf|aad UM f -ll - laa: . I Ahat tlx ttiwtitaoo aI MaaltM, pallwaia ißQilfi ' , slaoaalf la lis *4* not. as oili aa ut lint aaa* and flail r fntm iaooaraslasoa oiih otil. h Uaa laatrwanaal la tsarm. Win, aapartr adtaalaaa, (Aa eioana fVw. } mail la 1 a lalch laain A LI. reati IfUiw and umlMnliiea tlakaii w I nar utbaf InianUnaa I kaaa t> baIUUH to rafatllaa 'Kt llwalili (Moot f tlx fori Koo York,Hofpaoa4 ' Uidaf of Noo York Mala ItuapUal." ola.. aia. ' uao V. Ilouaa M 11. aonwrMtoanW KlaaMaTraMOa. ;! Sfca&fcss: 1 owialala la tkM soantra and la Breapa. I. ton caret #. , aopitol foot Aiwa.it ft-at. aaA Moao that MOM I kaaa Windfall I cm tart and aaUafaau-a.. and liaaa Hrekl I Uw IratA, UM! UM Klaaua trM la li> no If UMMuwaal I UMA ikuild ka aaad bt UM HdW and atua at Harata, . and an* aflat am Mian initio foam' annUaaaaf prao- Una. aad lattaf adjaltd kaadtada at Traaaaa l iaaa tor tlx laM toaato waslbt wawjatdialfalf), I nrnWullj dx l*>w II ftlti Lai HI I ■ i *7. Ukat Cm 7K ; al IMB la taiai a A • til aknaaA wwt aot 1 aaM iatn utttt O tat taadu kadatisad UM auaa ■ I CHA>. O. FIIRCIi Fa*a. Utada ' In Actual Use: ? >• MORE THAN 56,000 :< ESTEY ORGANS; f MANUFACTURED BT J. ESTEY & CO, > BR % TTI.KBONO, VT. IV Scan pan lumtana CafaMMrm. i HPIFM II tKIT Oaaadßkoaa (ha pat* ' 1 *rivJl *ll Or Anaaaawa. Borrtan. IdJW. OPIUMCUREiS . lac. FlOd. D. httdtf. dU. Boa 49A. Intama.loa DEAL EBTATE. ■ m rof'iai otaalaa b> i.oy, aaU at aaokaiwa Baal r Uataia amy adaaatiaa tkadr waoaa at tan aatoll atMoaa tea h bbib ' f 11 mi Mnmmmb la VmA >w f |l a ii 1 Mw Jw#w dk SST ti!3k I iaire.lll oao.l lu any a.taiJat oa attitmnUaa M I I K. . WMTKK. LAO Ufartk iw- Mow Torki ■ I • oaaatlaitna awauafid lUD -Mdl Addiaaa Wak • Ton A Ui Jiabtafliu, Fla hay ok art poa aaa tkda. TBE WEEKLY SON. fMftM.Wrrala. Addraaa Tnb Ben. MOO Taafc. I NEW YORK TRIBUNE. The Lending American Newspaper TUB MKHT AIH KKTIMMi UKIUIM. OaiITI *lokfaay Somi-Wookly, ) Wtildr, M Aaap ho io (Aa ful in tin. fiiiHilaaaa fliimi and "" i;" I** 1 ** Hnloaften Woakld. In.clotW MOor gaurw. . MUd pi. pMta pad. A.idoMa Tan Tnatcun. A T CCT i lo Wa oaraoa a hid; K ptariSaa aad ramlataa. moiji BY Ai.t pm unim IMP** 111. 1U ivl litenperaice SfMPtlilf en rail hT I)R B K'fl on 1* known and atiro Ih-ianl;. * €ll IRIIB lot UakUoetil Willi cuml. Call on or Bddivaa St.;.q EZZZ, na Jeia S_ ClatißaAti, 0. I Geo- P. Rowell a Co. I AGENTS WANTED I^ aaJitio hook over i nUttahad elrtalata and aaaa. grV-XrS.' r 1 ** Mora Braid to kfcl rioor. WVtSfcOvJ MAVI'H MII.K. KliliH, Ar. /;<_• \\ 1 Oat par 1 MtlMl Bill t IMB rfcSßkll Sum' *•<) i h nkr.Aii. ! iNirfc# 1 ] / wjjkai. IJat'Ma. lie ■tanTol'>wr LVMWIA// 1-VKKVffonV CraWa It. KCMV A To* U€ka an all la Loeo atu M. I VftfrW.'J IV hoad at ooee fur lltrulat lo til 11. I . t.tNT/ A CO.. dBBOOK AVEXTS WASTED fpffii GLEANINGS THE CrßlOt'N." Fnn arm titzsurz ■ tka rata aad tattoo* ikia#* MHtd I*ll la Skip markakla book Uka onuoßa , •-•d.a.w: ollk awatnt, keaatlf ui. kHKaal Utaaal.k aad tndka. neelaiit wallm*el. itirtT.imit dttlraa. aad Ikt rata, aoa drtlu. la. t* Bad nutooa latirfcM ttrtt fcneva Tto ia af U M "*' a*'ifAca ra *at "It'a a MIC Mil. aaa tw aoo at oath wwaJ-tR"—"MI"-" W"—' • I a weak ! II raallr .w : la*Ho alt ollwr kaoka tktea aa oaa IM ■okBte W,ii W, wool It taaanne Anroia By-aM " • woaa-aad w wffl wall otOl Free aa ikoaa wbc trill eartaaa lot** MptpaVata e-Hk fall pay i Ueuiart. Ittwtt. Mr . Ital ha* t* wk Addraaa A. D- WOKTIUXUTUh A CO- Harroan. Cora ! An UMI'l-K Krrc aad lU| Ttr la Maia aad $3 ''""THE ' lifcljlh*Pl*B 'tx'rfjloerafk. B. J. WKiiiironn iituaa .(V ■ "'v/>i \ tiTa'a ItiaiTao Baita and ty a F . r Baoda ar ind..rotd by tka ▼ \ \ J r.P moat aminaal pkyatciaaa la 1 - b.wt.tldhJTtlicßraofrkpn \ k r / mat tarn, r.MiralAta,!lirmm ~*-r _ pialnt, dyapapaja. kldoay dla ' H rao.Brhra ltuna.aa*racut dla /? ifcS ordtra.l.Ataala com plaint a / r nctToua aad swaaral dokility. aad other rhyme dtaaoon of hrhaal,bea4.ll ear, atomach aoa p* ktdaafa and bkqd Book with js iifL BOOK AGENTS RiXCtTaa 1 ?: neaac ricdlrol Idtlorr.'' It H Wo okaapmi baoa oeer MUMmI ts: ptn. oerr F.VO UlualraUoaa. ! fl.Ml. To. oaaa.lt buy H at ucht nho could not be ! Induced lo paKaaa Iba bleb pn -1 bkt iratatlatl ol Doaaeailc Modhdna Uallka .dhei book* fold ibronak aaenta iHIa work la thnemffkly adratlkrwl ihtoupkoal fl.-tih AmH.(wnta who hare bad elparlaei'a in aallln* Kfaka. aay Ih.t la all Wrfr pra rlnna rrn-aaalno tKey aerar mat atlh to.-h tui etoa at mode #. iaraa waoaa. at aiaca commacolaa Wa aaka ol m- work, rnc lwr;r.t and tanltory. addraaa tluoloaiat two palace . ißitpt and l#pep*ary, Buffalo X 9 •Vol* . Mark Knrab pa " For ruhUaatag D-fl." slOssoo:r^"Hl,2 event Men. and copj of < l will of tba prop la to a craater daciaa thaa thin. Y.Uoa wrap par for animal and wttta for human Utah V r. MERCHANTS GARGLING OIL ssssa r jffifiitf'ilM ILIiWV \ Am i n711il : 11IIlira 3 Dr. J. Walker's California Tin. Pfftr Bitters are a purely Vcgeuble prepßrßttoo, miido cbidly from the bb • Uve berbv found on tbe lower rsngva of ifc* Storm Nevada moantalne of CallfoT' • nU, tbe mediefnßl properties of whicb H are extracted their from without the UM i> of Alcohol. Tbo qurotion to almost a daily (waked. "What i tbe cause of tbe j unparalleled succen of Vivbqab Bit > Tximf" Our answer to, tbst they remove r. the cause of disease, and tbe patient re -5 covers bis health. Tlicy are the great blood iMirificr and a life-giving principle, a periect Renovator and Invigorator k of tbe system. Never before io tbe hit lory of tbe world bss e nediciae beea a comjK.unded poßseKdng tbe ntawtkeUe * qanlittos of YISSOAK Birraas in beeiiogtiM • X sink of every diacaiw mm fa heir to. They > are s gentle Pargstive as wail as a Tonic, relieving Ln or luftsaunetion ol the Liver sad Yiaoerat Orgaas to BUkm* I The proprrtlm of D*. WsutwtT ViSKUABIJiTTSBsarB Aperient, Dispboeetto - OerminsUve, NsUitkKM, Lexstive, I>it#rati% ' hedaUve, Cooaler IrHtaat feodonflc, Alteru i Uve. and Aati-Rilioas. Ueutrntl TnouitoiMls proctohnTnr ao AM BJTTXKS tbe muss wonderful In ngoraot that ever susUuned tbe staktoc ' ijnorr No Poraon eaa take these Bitten • according to direct iota, and remain long an well, provided tbetr bones are not de stroyed by mineral poieua or otber mreuiA ff>d vital organs wasted beyond repair. Bilious. Remittent aad later* mitteut Fever*, which are so preva toot in tbe valtovs of our great river* • throughout tbe United Btata, especially thoae of tbe Mtouesippi, Ohio, Misaouri, Illinois. Tenneasee, Cumberland, Arkan sas, Red. Colorado, firasos, Bio Grande, Peed, Alabama, Mobile, Sarauuab, Ro anoke, Jamas, ""i many r others, with , their vast trii yt mes. chrougbout our entire country during the Bummer and Autuipn, and remarkably so during sea sons of unusual beat and dryness, are ic variably accompanied by extensive de rangements of the stomach and livwr, ! and other abdominal viscera. Io tbetr t treatment, a purgative, exerting a pew. ► erful influence upon these various or. • gane, to eest-nt-ally neceeaary. There ! to no cathartic for the purpose equal to Da J. WAUKK'S VIXXOAM BrrrxMa, ae they w ill speedily remove the dark* J colored viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time f stimulating the soeretione of the Uveg and gvuorßlly restoriog the healthy • fonctions of the digestive organ*. I < Forttfy the body agaiiwt diaoaiM , by purifying all Its flrnde with VIXMGAB . Brrrxae No can take bold i of a system thus fore-armed. Dygproftia or Indle**tJon, hsad nche, raio to tbe Sboulders, CwsKbs, . Tightness of tbe Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of tbe Stomach, Bad Taste - in the Mouth, Bilious Attack*. Pilptla , tatiou of the Bosrt, InfiammAUoQ of thv . Longs, Pain in the region of the Kid neys, and a hundred otber painful symp . tome, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits thiia %lengthy rdvertiss Scrofula, or King'* Evil, Whits Swellings, Ulcere, Rrynpeto*. Swelled Neok, (kwtre, tMrafatottA lnAunmaUeiu. Indotm* InflaiußißUonA. Merearial Affections, Old 6ores, Erupticuui of tbe Skin, Bon Kyws, C* "" In there, M in all other oonAtitutkdtial Ois eaaM, WALKKSB Yibbqab Brrreas have shown their greet emwtfve powers to the moat obstinate i*" 1 intiwetohte ceeee. For InflAmmatorj aad C'hroak l Rhcuraatism, Gout, BUkm*. Remtt teot and Intermittent Fever*. Diaeasesef * ' the Blood, Liver, Kjdaere aad Bladder. ' tbeee Bitten have no equJ. Bask Dtoaane r ere conaed by Vitiated BtooA Mechanical Diseases.— Pereoneea ; caged io Paints aad Mioenito, soeh aa Plant here, Type-rettere, Goid-beater*, and Mtnere, m ib-y sdvonce to life, are ewtfleM to peralyMs of the Bowels. Te fwed Against this, take adoee of TAIUS'ITD IUU BtTrsae oooatooneUy. For Skin IMwmn, Eruptions, Tet ter, ttoll-llbeua, Bktckre, Sputa, Pimptoe, Pnstatos, Bods, Cartmaclei Ring-worms, Scold-bead. Sore Eye*. Brywipeiae, Itch, Scurf*. Qiwcotoratioae ot the Skin, Haasere md IHeraaeß of the Skin of whatever aaaW or notnre, ore literally dog op and cornet oat of th system in a short time by tbe an* of there Bitten. • \ Pin, Tape, and other Worm*, 1 larking in the system of ee many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. No system of medicine, no vermifuges, no an tLelnanities will free the system Cram worms like there Bitters. For Female Complaints, to young sr old. married or single, at the dawn of wo manhood. or the tarn of life, these Tonic Bitten display so decided an inflaenos that improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Viuaied Blood when ever row find its impurities banting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores: clean re it when yon find it obstructed aad dttgish in the veins; cleanse it when it to foalj your feelings will tell roe when. Keep the blood pare, and the health of the syeteur will folk**. H. IV MrOOBALD db CO.. tiregrlele s4 (res. An.Su toeadsiM Okhlkxeia red oar of W ptoti Sad Cterites SU.. N'. Y. IsM b>- all IbsmMi and Drslrn. ! a. v. a. p.-as. r. _ AOlUt • sua Is ira #iuskn. Allrai 55it'll CO.. Brehs—sJllck. 1 ir> MUM w nATsayagaaPAgi AvssmamiaanMj^urr^^^^ Aldmii JiksMS. CWk A Ck, BMUM, MMI m* Tw CHI I rsmiink.Vk.iOMsreS I*7**.tssu.Ms. STOCKS dssH Is si lbs Bss Talk Kiosk Esrksnss bonchl sad sold br as ss Msista at ts par sort. PRIVILEGES sasollaMd at are Is twa pat oast, I rem works! as sram ksn st tiba |t*r Varfc Kiekanp, sr re*|Kin*u>!* parti*# Lanes SSM har* b*#a rsaltrad Iba pau W lea Pat kraaltaoawoa lOOakarea $106.25 amddlaa ItJM) naak, oaatml SOU abaras at alack tar 3O dar# rWmt tsrtlw-r rat. ablla OMi kasaaad dollar# prodt aa* bs sslasd. Adrtss Badtaionsatt-a toratibsd Pamphlst. eooulnlas rstasMs sUUsUes! Wlorstalios aad sbswisa boa Wall Sttstt opsraUcn# IM omdtctod mit FREE Is aaf address. Ordsra aabcltsd hj Bad or sits sad prompt)* asaratad bj aa. Addraaa TI .TIHH tim; I-: & CO, Bsskrra sad Hrskrrs, Na. 1 H aJI Hirer!. :>># l ark. v-gt SAMARITAN NER VINE j|Med '• * **** * m r # BfUrpd# '!. COaralrtMa aad mTf *■■■ I Ilk*#bat ani ay ni###da aad Mia I vHka*#it,ti)t|#tft,*io*. 1