Some rowderti Teifamesj tni Flavors. A charming receipt for scent-powder to be used for wardrobes, boxen, etc, far finer than the mixtures sold at the shops, is the following 5 Coriander, orris root, rose leatea and aromatio calamus, each one ounce ; lavender-flowers, two ounces ; rhodium wood, one-fourth of a drachm j musk, fir grains. These are mixed and reduced to a coarse powder. The scent on the clothes is as if all fragrant gar den flowers had been pressed in their folds. . A perfume for note paper, said to be that used by the Queen of England, is made . of powdered starch, one-half ounce; fresh orris powder, the same; otter of roses, ten drops. Put this in a bag and keep it in the writing-desk with paper. AM delicious flavors may be impro vised ' by keeping the substance in deodorized aicohol. How . deodor ized Y By filtering through animal charcoal or bone black in powder, the black may be used many times over ; a thick flannel bag, with wire at the top, will answer for a filter. Fill it with the blaok dust and pour the alohol in it, leaving it to settle through. Have wide mouthed bottles with glass stoppers ready, and fill with alcohol; then fill with powdered or lemon peel, peach leaves, almonds, slices of pineapple, rasp berries, or fresh cherries, and you will have a finer assortment of flavors than any manufacturer can furnish you. If you wish, however, flavors which are out of reach, it is best to use compounds of which you are not ignorant. Banana may be imitated with oil of jasmine and a very little tartario acid. Strawberry, with a very strong tinc ture of orris and a very little ascetic ether one ounce of the tincture and one-eighth of ether. Strong tincture of orris root resembles raspberry. Pineapple is made of butyric etber, the acid itself coming from the trans formation of rancid butter by a chemi calprooess. Very little of these preparations is needed to give the desired flavor. Four ounces of the tinctures mentioned will supply flavor enough for constant use diuwg the whole summer. The Lobster. When a lobster shakes hands with you, you always know when it takes hold, and are exceedingly pleased when it gets done. They have small features, and lay no claim to good looks. When they locomote, they resemble a small boy shuffling off in his father's boots. ' They are backward, very. They even go ahead backward. They occasionally nave a row like other people, and in the melee sometimes lose a member, but have a faculty of growing out another. Their process is patented both in this country and in Europe, which accounts for its not coming into more general use with the human lobster, so to Bpeak. A lobster never comes on shore unless he is carried there by force. They are afflicted with but one disease, aad that is boils. There is more real excitement in harpooning a whale, or in having the measels, than there is in catching lob sters. The fisherman provides himself witn a small nencoop, and baa therein, as enticers , several dead fish. He then rows his boat to the lobster ground (which is water) and sinks his boat to the bottom, anohors it to a small buoy (one from eieht to ten years old will do) and then goes home. "When he feels like it again, say in the course of a week or two, he goes back and pulls up his poultry-house, and if he has good suc cess he will find the game inside the coop. As an article of food, the real goodness of the lobster is in the pith. Very few persons relish the skin, and physicians say it is hard to digest. We therefore take the lobster and boil it until It is red-dy to eat. Nothing is better for colic than boiled lobster. It will bring on a case when cucumbers have failed. For a sudden case, we advise them crumbled in milk. Eaten at the right time, and in proper quanti ties, lobsters stand second to no fruit known. To a Young Girl. You think you love the young man who is coming this Sunday night to visit you I And he acts as if be loves you ! Suppose he declares himself, and asks you to become his wife. Are you prepared to say to bim, " I love and will trust you through life with my happi ness, and the lives and weal of our children '(" He is jolly, gaj , and handsome, and all the darts of Cupid are twinkling and sparkling in bis eyes, but will those eyes always find expression from the love of a true soul P To-night he says many pleasant things, and draws pretty pic tures for tbe future. Does he go to morrow to work which gives promise of the fulfilment of your desires in life ? Do his ambitions and achievements sat isfy you ? Does his every-day life shine with the noble endeavors of a trust worthy man ? If you think, and desire a companion in your thinking one who can unlock the deepest depths of your mind to what strata of humanity does he belong in the scale of excellence and morality Is he doing all he can to build up ruture usefulness and happi ness, in which you can share and feel blessed ? These are the questions which the expenenoe of after years make many women weep i-i bitterness of soul that they bad not thought of before they an wered " Yes." The Manufacture of Tobacco. It is reported, on reliable authority, that in Manilla, besides tbe Urge nam ber of men and bovs eneasred in tbe Dre paration of cigarillot and cigarette, there are over four thousand women employ ed in the great tobacco-roll manufac tory. More than eight hundred of . these women work together in the same hall ; they sit on the floor in the Hin doo fashion, and each woman daily re ceives a certain quantity of the three kinds of tobacco required in the making of cigars, and out of this she is obliged to furnish a specified number of rolls of equal size. About three years time is siaeamry to prepare the tobacco leaf for the consumer. The health of tbe work men employed in the manufactories is generally very poor, owing to the mephitio emanations they are daily obliged to breathe. By their constant handling of tbe plant, the poisonous subs tan oe is absorbed through the pores, which enfeeble their constitution ; and the generation following and still suo- aT 1 il. 0 : 1 . : that "the 'sins of the fathers (and mothers) sfisU be visited upon the chil dren unto the third and fourth genera tion." Watery brains, weaknesses gen erally, sluggish blood, and idiocy, are Use results. rtwasawsaasnssasw It is a - ' Weeds. ' w well known fact til the stsienco of agrioulture, that many of our most prized vegetables and fruit-bearing trees were originally weeds and useless snruos, and. bv nesleot. thev mav degenerate into the same useless annoyances. The carrot is a native of Europe and the ! n-ast, where it grows wild ; and even here, when the seeds are allowed to scat ter themselves profusely over the ground, and remain unmolested for a fewytars, they become one of the most persistent and incorrigible weeds with which we have to deal, . They exist on the road sides in soma of our best farming towns, so as to cover the ground with a dense, unsightly vegetation some two or three feet high. The number of seeds which they produce is beyond calculation, and when ripe, are scattered by autumnal winds over the fields of all adjacent farms. The same is true of the parsnip, which produces many seeds, and when these are neglected and suffered to sow themselves at random, they spring up the next year, go to seed, spetdily de- fenerate and in the course of a few years eoome a troublesome weed. The pota to was originally small, and was not tolerated as numan food for a long time. They are mentioned by old writers as a "delicate dish," and that they were roasted, and then steeped in sack and sugar, or baked with marrow and spice. They were long considered as inferior food, and it was not until the middle of the eighteenth century that they came into general cultivation. A strong pra- iudice long existed against them in France, but they are now cultivated ex tensively, and a market in Paris is ex clusively devoted to their sale. - Now they are introduced into almost every quarter of the globe, and the varieties in use are entirely the result of cultiva tion. Celery also was originally a tough acrid plant, unfit for man or beast, as food, but is now esteemed a great delica cy. Chiccorj, the root of which makes up a considerable portion of the coffee of the shops, mixed with ground peas and a portion of the genuine article, is one of the most tenacious plants in ex istence, and if not carefully suppressed will overran the whole farm. Tr-e root is large, quite long, and holds on to the soil with such tenacity that a plant of two years' growth requires a man's strength to pull it up. It is cultivated largely in England as a substitute for coffee, and in this country its blue blos som is seen in great profusion along the roadsides during July, August, and Sop tember. It is also well known that the peach was originally a poisonous bitter almond in the wilds of Arabia, and the tomato a poisonous weed of the night shade order. By the use of persistent skill, many plants may be brought up from a bitter, tough, or pungent condi tion, to a mild, succulent, and tender state, so as to furnish a large amount of wholesome and nutritious tood for man and beast; and all these mentioned above, as well as many others, have a tendency to go back to their original condition, and if allowed the opportu nity would probably do so. By cartful cultivation, however, we can preserve them " Delectable both to behold and taste," and give us no trouble as trespassers upon cultivated crops in the form of unsightly weeds. W e can also receive a lesson in ethics here that will be' useful in governing us through life. Many of our loves and aspirations have been cul tivated from base passions and desires, even as Darwin teaches we have pro gressed from lower creations; and it should be our study to so watch our ac tions, and guide our loves into proper channels, that they shall not degenerate into sensuality and lust, but rather ripen into the loves 01 the angel-world. The opening of the European and .North American liailroad will furnish continuous railroad communication from Halifax to San Francisco, with the ex ception of a gap of seventy-five miles between Amherst and Truro, which is expected to be finished in July, 1872. It is proposed in Europe to construct, or perfect by a union of lines already con structed, a continuous route of travel bv which the lournev mav be accom plished from London to Bombay with out change of cars ; and it is estimated that the trip may be made in precisely five days, sixteen hours and forty-six minutes, though in cases of unusual de tention it may be necessary to add 1 quarter or half an hour to this time. The contemplated route is by way of Dover Straits, through France and tbe Mont (Jems Tunnel by existing lines to Trieste, and thence through Austria, Turkey, Persia and Beloocbistan to Kuracbee, and so on to Bombay. To complete an unbroken line of rail, it will be necessary to tunnel the Straits of Dover, a project which has for a long time received the attention of engineers, and which has been favorably reported on again and again by competent authorities. Recent investigations have led to the be lief on the part of some engineers, that the tunnel could be opened to travel in two or three years, instead ot requiring nine or ten for the work, as was at first supposed ; and a similar reduction has been made in the estimate of tbe cost, originally set at ten million pounds ster ling, ueologists say that the tunnel will run for the whole distance through gray chalk that can be scooped out as easily as Dutch cheese. The distance is about twenty-eight miles, The Mont Cenis Tunnel is not quite eight miles long, and was fourteen years in process of construction, costing over 115,000,- 000. The Hoosao Tunnel in Massachn setts, will be a little less than five miles long; but it is being bored through flinty granite rock, much harder than that penetrated by the Mont Cenis ex cavation, and has been longer under way, though the work has not been steadily prosecuted on it It is not im probable that a tunne.1 uniting England and France may yet be carried through but the work will probably require more time and a greater expenditure of money than tbe latest estimates call for. Adulteration of . Tobacco. Salt sugar, sal ammonia, and other substances are used in the manufacture of fancy brands of tobacco, and it is adulterated to a great extent. It is curious to ob serve what a vast number of ingredients and substances are thus fraudulently used, such as bean and pea meal, potato Starch, tar, oil, rhubarb-leaves, sawdust oak and beech-leaves, peat earth, barley, bran, and many more which are too du gusting to mention ; but, as none of VUV ruoies eww uiuuu uuuier vnau tuiwu 00 itself, the harm arising from tbe frand is not so reprehensible as when extended to some other aruoies. Eailboad Bonds. Whether you wish to buy or sell, write to uharles w Hasbler, No. 1 Wall St., New York. I FARM ASD household. KEErao Eggs for- WlNTEB.-At dif ferent times 1 have road in your paper many ways in which farmers' wives lay in eggs for winter use, but I never saw the way I do it simple as it is. if 1 have only good eggs, and good eggs every body must have, or they will not keep in any way. In August I generally com mence saving eggs, ana am very carol u l to save only good and fresh ones. I take bexes which hold about 1,200, pn ton the bottom a layer of oats, and set my eggs all point downwards, so that not one touches the other, until the layer is tall ; then cover with oats and make an other layer, and so on until the box is full, and thru cover and set in a cool, dry plaoe, where it does not freeze, until used... , I have followed this way for the last twenty years, and cannot say that I ever lost more than one or two out of fifty, and then generally found that it was knocked or put down unsound. I use small boxes so that I can use the eggs which I put down first . I have never thought ot changing my way, al though I have read so many ways to do t for instanoe, in ashes, in fat in lime, in limewater, and even varnishing them, because my way seemed to me tbe simp lest and cleanest and I, am just as sure to have good eggs next February and March, which 1 lay in now, as I can ave good eggs now. There is no dan ger of having any musty taste to the eggs if you keep them in a dry place, and are caretui to use dry oats. A Far mers Wite.tn Uonntry Uentleman. TnE Cruelty, of Stanciiiox3 fob Cattle. A correspondent of the Vrairu Farmer pronounces stanchions a mild form of cruelty to cuttle, and we fully agree with him. He adds : " When cows are sleeping, they invariably bend their necks and rest their heads at their sides. This must be their most comfortable sleeping position, of which they are de prived by stanchions. A cow ought never to have less than three feet by five and one-half feet space to stand and lie down in, and the fastening by rope, chxin, or bow gives it, provided tbe short chains are regulated accordingly." But, it is urged that stanchions insure in creased cleanliness. In a properly built cow stable, cleanliness is insured by other means. There should be a trench behind the stand from six to eight inches deep. This prevents the cows from step ping back to lie down beyond the intend ed space. The droppings will fall into tbe trencb, and only in cases where cows are eating and have stepped forward, their droppings will fall on the stand. But there is even a provision against this, by making the cows get up a few minutes before feeding. In most cases trify will drop their manure as soon ss they get up. When done with the feed ing a hand may go behind the cows with a hoe, and rake down into tbe trench such manure as may have been dropped on the stand ; he also pulls back under the hind part of the cow any straw or refuse feed lodged under tbe lore feet, so she may find a pleasant bed when shi, has done feeding and wants to lie down. Oil Meal for Cows and Calves. When cows art in profit, a little extra feed, in tbe shape of oil meal, will be amply repaid in the yield of milk and butter. It must not be supposed that because a oow is on pasture there is no longer any need for stimulating food The tact ib, that with an ample supply of grass, the appetite of the cow for the meal is quite as vigorous as during the winter, when she was fed on hay. Cows may be very profitably fed with a quart each of oil meal morning and night. They will pick it up from a trough, if it is made sufficiently large, without waste. When cows are not tied up at night a good plan of feeding them is to have a square box for each cow, large enough for ber to put ber nose in easily, and six inches deep Put the allowance of meal in these boxes. They may be scattered about the yard, at such a distance as will give each animal an opportunity to eat without being driven away by others. Calves will soon show, by their improved appearance and hastened growth, that oil meal is good for them also. A small handful given to them in their pasture daily will push them forward rapidly. It is well to use a small tin pan to feed tbem witb, and a few minutes spent witb the young stock, daily, is not only an agreeable occupation, but highly profit able; for the more regularly the owner's attention is given to the cattle, the sooner he will perceive anything wrong, and be able at once to remedy it ; and a daily visit is seldom made unless there is some express purpose in it. Let the purpose then be to give them extra feed, and double benefit will result. Kx cluinge. Tricks of Jugglers. Our sober Christian neighbors of the New York Observer are responsible for tbe following: We think Hermann and Heller are jugglers, but what can they do to compare with the Cbiuese trick sters V A traveller at Kinsai was enter tained by the Viceroy, the Amir Kus tai, and this was one of the amuse ments: "That same night a juggler appeared, who was one of tbe great Kaan s slaves, and tbe Amir said to him, 'Come and show us some of your wonders.' Upon this he took a wooden bail with seven holes in it, through which long thongs were passed, amf, laying hold ot one ot these, slung the ball into the uir. It went so high that we lost sight of it altogether. (It was tho hott st season of the year, and we were outside) in tbe middle of tha palace court). There now remained only the short end of a thong in the conjurer's hand, and he de sired one of the boys who assisted him to lay hold of it and mount. Jle did so, climbing by the thong, and we lost sight of him. The conjurer then called to him three times, but getting no an swer, he snatched up a knife, as if in a great rage, laid hold of tbe thong, and disappeared in his turn. By and bv he threw down one of the boy's hands, then a toot, then the other hand and tbe other foot, then the trunk, and last of all, the bead! Lastly, he came down himself, putting and bio wine, and with bis clothes all bloody, kissed the ground before tho Amir, and said something to him m Chinese. Tbe Amir gave some order in reply, and our friend then took the lad's limbs, laid them together in their places, and gave a kick, when, presto 1 there was the boy, who got up and stood be fore us. All this astoniahed me beyond measure." - ' Mrs. Barry, of the Boston Children's Mission, is said, during a year's time, to have made 1,501 visits to the poor, to have lined and trimmed one hundred hats and bonnets, to have cut out 661 garments, and to have made two visits to another State, where she found homes for nineteen destitute children. w0,lMilTPr Mln. . t -t.n suit of clothes, and,, with, tbe Buperin,. tundenttrf the Crown Poins Mine, lrop. D-d' urlrlil down perpeodicuUr shaft one thousand feet into lh earth, The temperature was at more than one tFJnr "lll like the workmen in rolling miu. tub """" " wo o... .,.. only air thev pet to breathe is forced j , " . rnm .U.i fanri I uowu in air pump i with the best appliances the thermome- medicine on saie, ana in an eases reinna ter rarely gets beyond 100 degrees, and ing the money when tho cure was not from that to 110, and sometimes 120. I WHllV.. .11 U Dltl.V . " uVoA .. nointinrlant now the men I could stand it to work in such a teni- perature. " They have to stand n, said he. " Sometimes a fellow faints and has to be hoisted up, but generally they sweat it through." " Is it not un healthy V" I asked. " On the contrary it seems to be very healthv. Men are rarely sick who work in the mines, and they are never troubled with the ordi- in which these herbs should be coin nu, ou. .n crmnv us noor devils bined, by which a natural fennentation above ground." " What wages do they getr "Ifonr dollars a uy. " a h work ?" "Eieht ira,JL - - Thorn are three relavs in every twenty-four hours, and tbe though the elixir of life had been dis work iroes on day and night without covered. In tbe year 1808, Dr. K. II. stoppine." " now much further do yon suppose this vein goes r " I don t know, but the probabilities are that we shall never be able to reach the end of it." " And it grows warmer tbe furtner you go i" " Yes, wa nii'r and warmer." urnRnar notices. The Phrenological Journal, one of tho vcrvfew Mnirnsliies which nrcnulillslied at tho lirenent tiny for the rndlcnl hnieflt of renders, is rcpnucnti'd on our table by Its November number. The contents should In terest evurv live member ol our community. The following aro particularly lutercBlintc. James MeCoh. President ot Princeton Col- lcne; A Man anioim Men ; Hpliltuul Presence; The Educated Man in American Society : Alex'r H.flteiilii'ns: Thoughts on Phrenology; Tho TninilRnnil Vlsavans : Healthy or Diseased Children i " Fill no tho (M ntal) Measnre;" Pic-blRtorlc Man ; t'he Boa Const rlutor ; Con sumption ; Ilis Kocommcudiitiuns, or tho Boy who not a Situation i vie. The publisher oll'urg tho last three numbers oriSil tree n a premium to subscribers for 1S7-J. Terms ?3 a year, Single Ns. 'M cts. 8. R. Wells, :i.l Uroadway, New ioik. AETnuR's Lady's Home Magazine Among the Ladies' Muijs.ines, Arthur's llOMK lias, lortwpiiiy years, niaiuiaincua 1111:11 reoutation. It Is known throughout the Inn as one having a distinctive character mid nlin, from which it bus never swerved. It Is devot ed to the work of making homes bcnutiful.and pure, and hnppy : and well has llio worK Dccn done. Tho November number now belore us is very attractive. The two benutiful engravings, " The Children's Ullering," ana " me rup pics' Nursery," the latt a double-page cartoon, lire works ot art of high merit. The fashion pages are full of new costumes, ana tho litera ry department rich in stories and articles suit ed to all readers. Jo tho announcement for 18i2 we notice, nmonir other attractions, that " Pipsiesiway l'otts " is to cive a new series of " Other Peo ple' i Windows." It is a long lime since nny- tlilug so lresh, spicy, sensiuie and tnKing as thin series of papers has appeared in our pe riodical literature. Everybody is charmed with " Pipsissiwav." Terms of Lady's Home Magazine, $3 a year. 3 copies for t". 4 copies, t(l. tt copies, and one extra, $10. 8 copies, and ono extra, $13. Specimen numbers, 15 cents. Published by T. a. Abthob & Suns, Philadelphia, Pa. ' The Children's Hopr. Edited by T. S. Arthur. The November number of this magazine, pronounced by the Press every where to be " tho choicest of its class," " the pur-oat and bent magazine In the world for children," and "enough to drive a six-year- old crazy with its many delights," is already on our table as charming and beautiful as ever, It contains tbe prospectus for 1872, and we re commend all who wish to put in tho hands of their little ones a magazine that "speaks through simplo forms of language tho highest truths," while it fascinates its young readers by sweet ana tenner stories, to send to I. B, Arttidr & Sons, Philadelphia, Pa., for a spe cimen number. The price of this beautiful uagazlnc is only f 1..) a year. Oliver Optic's Magazine for Novem ber is rich with good things. The contiuued stories by Oliver Optic, Elijah Kellogg, and Sophie May, as they draw toward their close, increase in interest, lucre is a cnptivatlni and instructive article on Fancy Work for Girls, proluscly illustrated, a rattling college story, a graceful uccountof Psyche, a long dia logue, attractive pigeon-bole papers, Letter Bug, a couple ot pugua ot puzzies, a pretty song, words and music, gems ot poetry, lull- page illustrations, &c, &c. Published monthly by Lee fi Shcpard, 1411 Washington street, .isoston, at IJ.M) per yenr. New York market. FLOl'it ami Meal The flour market was ilull ami wuak. live Hour dull and col-n meal lower. We quote: Flour ttiiportiuo . tute ami Weeteru. fu.'ju H . .u; exiril riluto, AO.. fS.K a 7. ; Western HpllllK wheat extras, til. 75 a 7. 10 ; du double ex- iriM, 7.wai.60: no. winter wneiitextraH uimi dou hie. ex. ran. IIM a iu.M: lleut-nee extra. iT.M) a t'J.'Ji: Houtheiii bakera' ami family b anda, ts.?6n SI0; Southern hiilpptnv extrax, 7.2&a 17.76. Kye nour riue ami Mineri u. us;i.7a. iJoru meal W eatein. c..f:i.Mi a W.aO: Hrumlvwiue. .. (1.30 a M.-U). iiuekwnent Hour, loo thn. .I.I0 a i.sn. 1'oriON Was dull ami declined M'. Middling iilila'dK. mho : low do.. l!i'.c. tor future delivery an active movement, with frequent tlueluatlon, cloRiiiKHtroiiK. i-KuviMu. I'orx waa not aeiive ami prirea mi- elinilLFfwl - Milieu of ntf.Hi. Mimt noil f,itiiiri nr. Ir , iu.:t7li, caeh ami regular - Siu.&o for November, ami (H lor January; also extra prune at fioii, ami prime measa S:125. Reef in larae sioek, but ihe demand kihmI ami prices firm, llaeon quiet, with Hiunll sales of city lonn clear and NtuiVoiit at a Uc. Cut meats nominal. l.ard llrni and in fair demand i sales Wes em steam at Uc. lor prime new to arrive, 10c. for prime old on tin spot, and lo'.o. for prime kettle rendered; also city kettle at 10c. liressed hog steady Hist a 7o. flutter stonily but rathcrqutel ; Western unit Ohio, 10 u 2;l.; Hiale amtOrauKeo iintv, Is a 33c. l'liccodullatUai:i.c. Uiv latter price for choice lactones. (;kaiK Wheat win unsettled, nlthouirh n fair annum! oi luisiuess was done; sales at fi 4af l.b'2 for Mo SHiirlnu. rlisilllK-a' tl.M for No. i! t'hlouiio: fl.Viall.uJ for red and amber winter, ami Si. h- a $l.7'i for K'mmI to choice w llite. Rye quiet slut nom inal, llsrley m, re active; salesat 1 us tor choice Canada West, and sou. for o. 2 Western. Oala Hull, lower, ami iiusetlleil: No. 2 v ilcairo. ,'xk' alt ai; sal sat rustic tor mixed Western, ami 61 uo.iii. ior mute mate ami utile, l orn wus He, lower ul the (ioe. at which the demand washi-la : sales at 7ft a 7H ' .e. for We.-ttt-i u mixed in store ami stloat; yellow. 7s a boo. ; while. 0a!O'.. unlet.. Java quiet at a'Jiic, Kold. duty paid. Rice dull 11 ..... 'II. II- 1.... .....I ut 1U u IMll.n alSk a c. for Carolina, ami sv a 7c. for Kast in ilia. Molasses ottloi at old tirlces. buKaia falily acilve and steady; salesat S'i a 101,0 We quote iiur 10 kihhi rcuntiiK. a ue. ueuueu siusis in demand: Hards. u? ul;iit.: soft white, 12 a 12 W'. htNUKiKs In in i-oletim business was dull at f a Z4o. lor mined. U 'ic. lor ci tide, ami lu1, a 1 te. tor Western and city. Rosin was ottoted ai 14 16 m i wim- si rained. Hpirtts lurpcuune sold at ante. 'I'allow was scarce ai.il llriu. and a hi at III suVu. Wliiskey sold al Hi au.iV,e. l-'relKhts moderately nciive iwiica- was cnKilKi'U w Liverpool oy sail SI 10',il., by Hlomu at lot, ilil., aud lo uhuixow by ate . in at 1 2d. LlVK H'rui'K Mabkkt For the few a'rletly prima moer uiiercii, Sliop-uuleliers pain il-, a le. iu.1 lor ordinary to icuod lots, wliol sale shmliler. Paid a a 10We.lt' Ib.i mid some of the roimhcsr native cattle were aolil t situ If II). , to dress .t tii. to the KTOSacwt. For a 1 ige druvo ot Cherokee i utile. Hie seller o- talm il 7c. i lb. Hhuep and lamlia wero quickly sold At tail prlcea mo sucuu atoa ui,i). v ui., auu me tamos ui a so. r'at veal calves were Arm at 9 a lie. IB ; anil frrass calves were selliiiK at $k6Uai V head, ill eliuUiiM a lara-e lot at ti.tiii each. wore firmer ut OS i i.ive nogs were sieady al a a 040. v id. ; uressea i 7i,c.,wuuiiKUipiKsoiiisi;' TlTE W'ORKINO FARMEB FOB 1871-72 Vols. 23 and 21. Extraordinary in ducements to new subscribers. Three months for nothing. Sent to subscriber from October, 1871, to the close of 1872, for one dollar and a half, and the 111 us trated U2tno. Dictionary (price 75 cents) liven to each subscriber as a premium ; r for three subscribers at 11.00 each, ill send one of Brady's Celebrated Corn Shkllers, which is an exceeding, ly useful aud indispensable article to every farmer. Address W'M. L. ALLISON, Publisher Working Farmer, New York city. - From u Figaro, Auow.m.a., The Oifntest Snccess of Modern Times. j Judicious advertising, has raado the fortunes of many men, bat we question if there is on record n equally npid suact ss as that which has cUKractenzed tbe introduction oi ur. w. 'er s yin- PiZ to 1887. The ial of tse bit- ters was oonun w wu Wu u . . I I ried on by a single peraon carrying about & nirnknt. in Haii Francisco, leavinff the -- -- - . r, --- perfected. ' IDS virtues oi inn ut-run, iiur iib Hie dlclnal virtues are wnony atxriouiaDie ... 1 ,1 ...... . to herbsV which enter into the composi tion of the bitters, had long been known'. In early times tbe Indians and native Mexioans had resorted to their use, witn eood effects, to alleviate suffering and cure bodily ills ; but it remained for Dr. Walker to discover tbe exact proportions should be brought about, and the result " s' 'w" modern times. From its marvellous healing powers it would almost seem as McDonald, proprietor ot one ot the larg est and most successful wholesale drug and medicine houses in San Francisoo, with a branch at Sacramento, Ual., was induced to tke bold of the Vinegar Bit tors, well knowing the virtue of the medicine, and having fall ftitb in the nower of'advertisiiig as a moans of in- a ucirig public patronage, ur. jucuonsm resolved to make tbe medicine Known to the world. Commencing on tho Pacific coast, he advertised most liberally in all tho Btetes and Territories west of the Rocky Mountains, advertising in every publication, and distributing millions of circulars, ana in one year introduced the Bitters as a stundard remedy in every town, city and hamlet, from Alaska to Liower C.ihfornia, to the naints of tbe Slt L iki-, and to the tniues of Colorado, Montana, Nevada, Idaho, etc. About one year ago Dr. McDonald came to New York, ftiid commenced at once to adver tise witn moit liberal nana, in every conceivable way, but chii-ny in newspa pt-rs, and now the brave general is reap ing bis reward. Xhe cash sales ot Dr. Walker s V inegar Bitters exceed f 00,000 per month, and ia increasing at a rate unprecedented in patent medicine his tory. It is now being advertised in all the States of the Union, and is no doubt destined to be a blessing in millions of American homes. The herbs trcm which the Bitters ure made a:e all indigenous to California soil, and can be had in un limited quantities. So there need I e no fear that whatever the demand may be, tbe supply will not bn forthcoming. A Favorable Notoriety. The good reputation of " Brown' Tironcliial troche for the relief of Coughs, Cold-, and Tbroat Diseases, has given them a favorable notoriety. " Mercy to me, missns, what nice bis cuit I have made from J. Monroe Tay lor scream i east .baking i'owrter. Fbvers seldom make an attuck with out warning, and may often be thrown off by soaking the feet in warm water, wmppmg up warm in bed, and taking two or three of ronton FurqaUve Fill. A missionaiy just returned says he re gards Jolinwn Anortine J.iniment as be yond all price, and efficacious beyond any other medicine. It is adapted to a great variety of special cases, and is the best pain killer in tbe world. Who, when his brother asks for bread, would give him a serpent ' Yet how often when tbe sick ask for mediciue, tbey receive poison. Mercury, iodine, strycbnme and prussio acid are prescrib ed daily, and the larger tbe dose the more heroio tbe practice! Khun all deadly minerals, and concentrated vege table poisons. Let Dr. Walker's Vixe- gar Bitters be the first resort of all who suffer from gentral debility, indi gestion, constipation, biliousness, inter mittent fever or rheumatism. They will need no other medicine. Dnre not to Trifle with a Cough. It is iiivltiiijr death, when safety is witliln reach. Stop Hie Couch, Deal the lungs, re move all Irritation from the windpipe, relieve the rlilliculty of breathing with Haj.b's Honey OP IlOKEIIOLNO AMI Till. A luW dial's Will ell'oct a perfect cure. l'iku's Toothache Drops cure Toothache in one minule. Hold by nil Druiri'isls at i cents. Veartine Does Dot act as a cathartic to debilitate the bow els, but clesnsi-s all the eriiaus, eualilinit tacit to perioral 111c iiiuciionsdevoiviiiK upon tm-ui. TO C'ONML'IHPTIVKH. Tli a.lveitlHer. hnvtnR bwn pennancntly cured of tliRt ilrciul illM'ai, CoDKiimiitinn, by a Blnile reinixly. In unxtoua to make known to hla follow auirorem tlie mnui of Hire To all Tho denlre It, ho will seuit a co)ty ol tho iiroscriptlou tlit'Oof clmru'oi, with tho illm tluna lor vrt'uiuliiK ud clmrf;ei( with tho illii ropmiiiK a BI KK lmitiK the HiiniH. w hli'h thoy will tliiil a al'KK ClihK KOB ( UKrtC UI'llON, AhTIIMA, HuoNciiiiib, &C l ur. tioawulilua the iiri'm rltiliou will iilcano ailiUeas Hov. KDWARl) A W1L-O.N. 164 Mouth bououd Ht.. WUllaiuiiblll ifh, N. Y. ADVERTISEMENT Chicago Great Conflagration. A o"nol4il Utory of tho iaht of th'n inont wonder. im oi onii'it, nioi a nriaueit, circutiuianitat aim t-ipiti iTouul ot ltn itt'itti'iitrii .u hy tln; with hi-imioh. lu 1 dciitrt. off. IW M .hi'h. I'o tMirt A: I'haiHOorlnlll. Cllv Ktltor ol rmoaifo 'I rihiiu . Kiuly illiistraloil inuii 1'iioiovoiHia uihou ou luo bviou iigcuid wuu- iwi. Ailiii-o n i:. r. VKKT, M Murray Ht .New York. Fancy (iooils, Toys Si Fireworks. JOSEPH B. PURDY, 32 and 34 Maiden Lane, New-York, IMPORTER, EXPOHTEIt, AND 'i Ullh.K'r Aiil'.M'. MANITAC Uaa on hand a laru aud choice a lock of FRENCH, ENOLIKIl AND HERMAN TOY, . KOtt THE Fall and Holiday Trade. Home and out-door aporta and Raniea of all kinds. r ir- An exorrlene oSA v or enablei vie to antiei- ; f'irwa Isot e pubttc, and ol price that all t itrrmieusonaute. 1,800,000 ACRES OV1IIB Richest Farming Lands in the World, FOR SALE TO ACTUAL 6ETTLERS. Neosho Valley, Kansas. ' Ra wav To VIL Missouri, Kansas, nd Texas CARS NOW KUNNINO 400 MILES 1 Tho f.nnila off-red hv this Coinnauv are tnslnlv within 20 miles of each slile of the itiail. extending 170 unles aloud the N EOMllO V A t.l.fc Y, the riehest, tiuest, and most iuVitiug valley lor settlement Ut the West One. third of the labor required at the East will InMin-A hern Hmtlile the amount of clona. of teu vears' time. raiin ur i.A.'su.-n u r ir sire; ereiiit TKK.IIn utt HA bKOne tenth tlown at tha lime ol pureiiase. o payment me second year.. une-ieiiin every year auer, whu ftuuiau uiuveal. rormriuer luiurmainui, aoun "; ) ISAAC T. U0ODNO W, Land Coaa'r, ' Nf.osho Falls, Kansas. WANTED Agenu la eTeryeonnty toeanraas for autiKcrlpUons to I popular Uterury paner. A luuuiMioa, preniiuia S1 T su w vvery saoscnoex. Good work and large pay. Address Benedict at mehioan forest TRKiit-rniiD, liiupa, An lure, K per tlKPii-nnii, mm upwards. Homo varieties bv mull. MO. M0. . Bend Mamn fof clr. CUJJir interests flu. - . a, a i i urn, (.Mint. I FRANCIS & LOUfRELV 1 M- Mk Hlinc I.AXIH'' ; Hlatloncrs, Prime's, and Manufacturers rnt Sprlng-Bark Accent Bo.. till Irlnclanf firit.i-l.-m StoflrvnoTT Wrltl r TaKK Rnca lot iv2, i-otket tntioir, i nnn, . ciicuwnra, --'"-i vntytliuij; In onr Hue, mnmi nun- InwfMl trlrp.4. i'ntcnt Comp sttlon fur rrintprs Iflkliifr Rnllttn. Sonrt Stamp fr a Maniple Kmiibpr ! A MONTni.Y MAOAZINF. FOR READKRS. VOUNOF.Sr Huperbly HIiiMtratccl. WSuhncrWir nmo, and gtt tlnlait tltrtt nvmbert i ran year libit. tl.nn&vrair In MlvnnrA. 1.". cpntA n nlnvlf, nnmlmr. Mhir.il rhiblcnim. ulipriil nr niiuni. Aililrenn llH) f lllillHlior, , JOHN L. HIIUREY, m nruniTip i t.nt,, hhbtoh. EVERY FARMER I( iuvltort tn arnil Ills nrtilrru "'l r reive Free and Porirh Paid a copy of tint American Farm Journal Thn niOBt Practical, tho Runt mid Clirnp t Ulna. Initiil AKrtcnltiirnl japcr In the l'liited Htiiti-n. )iil 7li r.mte pT ynr. Hi nil for a HiwHrnm Coly. AiIiIioimi M1L.LKR, LOCKK CO.. Tnli'.w, Ullln. N OW IS THE TIME to wnil 2S cent for a Uekot nml clinw n Watcfl. SewiiKI Machine. Pl'ailO. or wmii nrtlclfof rnlue. Knhlnnks. Ntx ticket tl. AUllH'HN I'AI'KAKI) & " ., t Incliinati, o. SUPERIOR PRINTING INKS ! The attention ol Printers Is called to the superior BLACK INKS, Mnimfnciiirnl liy Meesrs. MORRILL WINS. LOW, Kudo I'Miitlnir ink Works, Ikwtun, Mum. F"r1ln Joh. llx,k. snil Ncwbtihimt wmk. tli vari ous irrndt-H of these Inks ine coiili'lt ntly HHt-rtfU to oo me Very Host for the Price ever maTiufncttirod In this conntry. Extra qnnlity News Ink, (Haiue an uhhI on this paper), funiinlieil lu .oo una loo It. kexs, at 11 CtM. Per I-.l. A fnll linn constsntlr on hand and for sale at manufacturer!,' prices. AililreHs t HA. II. lONKLIN, liox 1 1 3, Mlclillctown, N. V. Spirit Photographs RY W. II. MUMLKH.' Full information how to obt tin ilifm. nml a benn- linn Hii'ciimn h-nt lo nnv part ol tne world on CCipt of Si CKXTS. Ail.U WH V. II. ML .11I.KIl. 170 etKp'inKliel1 St., Ronton, Mas. I KOH ALL J II INKS nil 4.EWINO MA- ran lie obtained at about one hn f the usim! ratea bv orrt. r nif ilirert. HIiilti-'h. 40 cm. prr unz. wnceier rt: Wilkin, w rt. ; iiowe h. ftOctrt. j (iroyer A Bakor, .V)ct., una other In pro portion. Knrinse t he uniouiit ami Needles will be returned by niM mail. Ailim- CAULK SKtlILK Ul., lltel toWD, N Y. A 1 CET THE BEST. I , DR. CROSVESOR'S J 1 Improved Porous Plasters It art. rKpummonilAl l.v thn HF.ST PHV. 5 - Kiel ANS as a mre and m(e remedy 5 for KUEUMATIhM, NF.UHALU1A, 5 IHSKASKS of the KKiN ami Kill- KKYS PA'N in the I1KKAKT I.fSOSorSIDF.SCIATI A. WEAK BACK, FEMALE WEAKNESSES, J severe COUlills, COLDS, &v. The wonderful curative power of theae plaftcrs has been proved beyond 2 question lu their use by eu.in nt Jiv nliiaiis and fnmilii-s. Tlia reach t lie 5 ditliculty, and act where they are 3 - neeeed. n -cnnomical remedv. 'la.e J none but UK liROsVKNOlt S to In- sum the best result. t li. Dei nl I)i'iot. lii TTndson St.. "fw York, bold by all DnigKiata. 1'ltICK 25 cnta. Hii(ii'.it 1EXT. GOODNOW & CO.. Bustou. Mass, pub- It llsh "Tim Patkxt stak." sell Patents, ami give promauio agencies 10 canvassers. lrslXESS FOR WINTER Waterproof Polish 1 lllackini: for lhiotsaii'i Haniess. i,n receipt ol oo cenis ami stump 1 win semi le any auuress a cipc lor making the above klackiiiK. Box Sw, Host n P. O. a. (5. 11 r.a.tt aa. BOOK AOEXTS WANTED, For two new and laipular works. KNOTS UNTIED; Or. Thr Hidden Life of Amkkican UF.TKmvKB It dWlost-rt llio wlmlti l)ctH iive nyHtt'iu. Twenty uiuiiHiUiu copu's som id imi ly uuvh. A WOMAN'S PILGRIMAGE To thk Hoi.y Land, by Mm rt. M. OiiswoM. Thin wot k (jives lior t xpcnmid'H tliuin ft (our through Knnim mid tho Kant lu rnmitiny with " Murk Twa it "aud the " uimkor C'itv M tmrtr. WoofltTex- tr I iniM ami nrtMiuiuiiH tn HKnitti sond for circu lars, j. Il lit . Hlt,4lVl:& CO.. CliiuiK". HI. .and itaruoni, tuiin, AN 1 N V KSTM KN T OF flOO MAY SKCVRB VOL V--.WW ! The Aiken Premium Land Sale ! The PMHliution of Prlzeii will tnke ilaco at No roatuoiierueut. One Iluiidrcd TIioiimiiiiI Dollars to be nwniilt'd to lucky shareholders, in Ileal Es tate and (ii'i-enbackH. Kiiii't rllmaio 111 tho World. Fxemnt from liine roinidtiliitH mid malarial fevera. The lnvoi ite resort oi iHoiuneruti'. 111 ino summer, aim jNnriiicine h in tho winter, for full partlcu.uia a dreas J C. DERBY, (leueral Manager. Prlneliml Olllce. Aibruata. Oa. New York Ofllce. 5U I.llieily M. UlA TEU 1KNT. IJITKCKW. VHKH Or 7 UUVatiAdlHA i TAX. MARKET SAVINCS BANK. H'J NA8SA0 ST., NEW YORK. Open dally from 10 A. If. to S r. M. and on MON DAYS ar.d THUKHUAVS from S to 7 P. M. lolerral rammenrea on the drat day of enrb mouth. WM VAN NAME, President. rl EN KY a. UUMt.liV. KeorotMiy. IATII NKW srifMCRlBEK -J to the WKbTliRN WOKLH IB )SI L'O S p.'ijre Weekly naper receives, (rati, a .Maffiiiououi .j iMeei rjnKrnvinir, Ja liy 3a inches, eut tiled "THE NATIVITY OK i,U It I.OUIV or one of I'iuiiks ( liiiniilMK Uri chronios, uliv 17 Inches, entlt ed " nA VE lJATlENOK"-a lit tle country Kil l tensing a dug one of liiemoa attiactie liltlo aiti-tio aenis FOR ever Issueit Terms ts a real'. Yi i choieo beta eon the two oi-emiums. wi-cinieu eoiy of WkhTKKN W. klii, v ui nil. (lesciintioits, stut iursinmp. AtiKNTS W ATr.l.-Any one whu wilf eugnae to act as a local agent aud send VI, shall receive a nerfoct ctpjf ot either premium ne oesires,wiiu full tuslruetiiiiis auil the WkarBkN $3.00 WoitLUfor Uiies mouths free. 1-ocal Agents can easily make ts.oo a ihiy. Ad rosa JAM KM K. KLI.lOiT, Vut). lsher, 1W iliomfield bueet, liostoo, Maas. REDUCTION OF PRICES TO CONFORM TO REDUCTION OF DUTIES. GREAT SAVINO TO CONSUMERS BY GET T1NU ur t'Luas. JTBenAtoreY? nTuJ7.0fi JffriSinin?Im wulaooompany It, ooBtainlug f uU dlrectlons-maa- ingalaig.'wvingtooousuiuer.and remuneraUv. Send for onr new Price List and a Club form to oluU organisers. THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA CO., SI A: 3'J VK8EY STREET, New York. P. O. Bel flU4:l. THK HABK18BUKG FAMILY COR.NSHEL. lerCo want Agents to sell their Family Corn shelleia. Beat Invention of the kind Sells at sight Protl'S largo. ef eireuiais auuiesa .uuj!.jii; SN YDEK, Treaauivr, lock Box , uaiTlsourg, Pa. $6 A LINE for an ADVERTISEMENT la 830 Weekly Newspapers clrcrdatln IB all the Northern Rtatai of the Union, Best and cheapest medlnin of Its kind In the world. Bt ana cneapesi meiunm oi in Edliouttos sent on application to E. W. FOSTER, 41 Park Row, N. J. W.ijrtn, Pror-rltWT, R. H. MrpfmiLt ft Co., rnnli.a 0n AcnnU.ftR ImicIin( Cl., anil S4 Commrc KttMt. N, V. PIIi.tlONH Bear Tomlmonr to their Wonderful Curatlrs Eflrctit. Thoy are not a Tile Fancy Drink, Made of Poor f Rnm, Whisker Proof Pplrlte and Refune Llquore doctored, wi'locd and sweetened to pleue tha Ufltc, colled "Tonica," " Appetizer a,1' "IUrtorcm,"Aia, that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin.bnt are a true Medicine. mode from the native Boots and Horbf of California, free from all Alcoholic tttltnn tnntti. They are the GREAT BLOOD PURI FIERand A LIFE GIVINO PRINCIPLE a perfect lUmorotor and Invifforntor ot the System, carrying oft all poisonous matter and restoring theblood to a healthy condition. Ho person can take these Hit ters according to directions and remain long unwell, provided. their bones ore not destroyed by mineral poisonor other means, and the vital orcans wasted beyond tho point of repair. Thpy are n Orntlo PwraiitWe na trcll na a Tonic, poswMinn, also, tho peculiar merit of nctinit as a powerful npent in relieving Conffpstion or Intlam mation of the Liver, and nil the Visceral Orpans. FOR FEMALE COMPLAINTS, In young or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood or at the turn of life, Uicmi Tonic Hitters have no equal. For Inflnininniory nml Chronic Rhea ma 1 1 m nml Gout, Uyapcpaia or Indiffratiort, lliltoiia, Rvinittrnt nml Intermitteut Fc vera, lUnpnaea of the Hlooil Liver Kid neys nnd Klmlder, these Bittern have been most succcMfiit. Juch Dtfienaea are canned by Yltlntrd Blood, which is generally produced by derangement of the Dlgeatlvo Oi'Rnns. BYHPEPSIA Olt INDIGESTION, Head ache, Pain In theHhouidors,Couffhs, Tielitncxs of the Client, Dlzzinom, Bntir Enictattonn of tlic Htnmnrh. Dad Taste in the Mouth, Uihmm Attncks I'alpltatlon ol the Heart, Inflammation of the huns. Tain in the re gions of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symp toms, are tho ofttprincs of Dyspepsia. They invlfforate the Stomach and stimulate the torpid Mver and Dowels, which renner them of unequalled efficacy In cleanslnff the blood of all impurities, ati'i im parting new life and vijor to the whole system. FOR Kit IN DISEASES, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Blotches, Spot, Pimple. Pustule, Boils, Cnr- htinclps. Rinsr-Wnrms. Scnld Hiad, Sori Kyes, Rrvsfpe- las. ncn.iNTuns, uiwoiorniiohtt ot the kint llumoi-snnd UiHeaMs if the ft-kni. of wlinti-vr name or iinture, am literallv duff up and carried out nf the pysttem in a iliort time lit the ucent lh.-.p Hitter. Om iHittln in cn. h ens ps will convince the most incredulous of their cura tive eui-cis. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever ymi find its Im parities bursting throuch tho skin In Pimples, Erup tions or Bores ; clennso it when you find it obstructed and sluRgifh in the veiiiRt cleanse It when it is foul, and your feelintrs will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of tbe srstem will follow. Pin, Tnpe, nncl other Worms, lurking In the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. Sat n. riittinmihtrifxt nhvHlntnfffet. there is scarcely an individual upon the (ace of the earth whose body is expmpt from the presence of worms. It is not upon the healthy elements of tho body that worm cunt, but upon the diseased humors and slimy deposit that breed these livinir monsters of disease. No Syt.mi nf Medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelmintics will freo the system from worms like these Bitters. J. WALKEK, Proprietor. II. Tl. McDONALD & CO, Druggists and Gen. Aeents. Snn Francisco. California, ana a ana 34 commerce otceet, new iork. WW&QLl) BY Alb PRUOGIST8 AND DEALKR3, "NAYUKE'S REMEDY. Gi'E at DLonp Purifier, A valuable Indian compound, for restoring Oie health, and for the permanent cnie of all lUsenses arising from Imparities of the blood, such ns Hcrolula, Hcrofuloua Humor, Cancer. Can cerous flnmor, Kvyslpelas, Canker, Wnlt il lieu in, Pimples nnd Ilumora on the Knee, l lrers, Coughs, Cntnrrh, Ilronrhlils, NmrolBln, Hheit niniism, Pnins in the Hide. Djspeplo, Constlpntlon, Costlveneas, Plica, Ileailnrhr, Dizziness, Nervousness, Faint- nesa nt tbe Stoinncb, 1'nlna In the llnrk, Klduey Complaints, Female Weak ncsa, and General Debility. REPORT OF A PRATICAL Client it and. Apothecary. Hohton. May 1st. 1871. Hear A'ir This Is to eertily that 1 have sold at re. tail. Hixlv.tliii'e do.. ITAti hollies, of vonr VilK-llNE aince April lJlh, lsTO, andean truly say that It las given the best satlslai t'.on ol any Heineuy, ior mo COinpininis lov nuicu ll IS n-coiinoi-inn-u, iintv X e.,-r sthl. Ki-arcetv a day passes without wane of my customers testifying to its merits themselves or their fl lends. I am personally cognizant of several eases of Hcr.-.fuU'H Tuvtnrg being cured by VK.uk- ILVK alone in this vicinity. Very reslieeiuuiv yours, A I Hl'lAlA.,4lil llroadwiiy. To If. 11. STF.V F.N8, Key. THK tiltKVT BLOOD PURIFIER. riiKi'AUKU iir II. Ii. STEVBX8, BObTOS, MASS. Price 91. it3. Sold by all Druggists. AOEXTS WANTED FOR THE YEAR of BATTLES. Tim History of tho War between France nnd Genua. i t'ln'Taotinr a ho runs uuuer tho rom in uno. KjO iliUHiruUoim ; 642 lai?f; p ice, I2.S0 6,0(M conii'8 nlremly huM, Tho tmly vumpU'tn work NoiliinK fiiialn it u, hi-11. M,ikiu 10,000 copie wv month t nw, lu KiiuIIhU amUiiumu Terms uu cqUHllcil. Outfit tl.2S AillilchH II H. toUOll. is ff.r. it V- iii run rww, nry nun. v i r tMTi- 11. PnHifR who havft a verv Hinntl can- If ital, or can jrive wcuilty, nnd are rt-Kirons of niklnif moiii'y in u llfrht, liduorahlt, itlt-nnant uum- i ohm ut, nomt. or n iruvci. AftdruHH M. M. TIL TON, IMttwIiurph, lu MUNN A CO., PnhUsher Arim tiJlc American, 87 Park Kow.N.Y., bttiiu patent evrywlmr. 25 yuat'H exiHTiunco. fc.verytiiinic ronbdoiitiul. beno tur l'Aluui law and Uuldd to InVMltiH-tl. THEA-NECTAR (S t PURE BLACK Tf A with tho Oreen na Flavor. War ranted to suit all tuatus. jh sals everywhere. And for sale wholesale only by tho tircut Atlantic & FacillcTeaCo.. N Church St., New York. P. O. box 350ti. Hetul or ritsa Nectar Circular. tO(in for tl rat-class Pianos. bent on trial. No tp-iuvj agents. Address U. 8. PIANO CO..H65 Broadway, N. V. SEND for onr Catalogue of Gay Books! Address J. B. DAVIS, Itliaea, New York. BUSINESS! ANY PARTY HAVING A GOOD ARTICLE of universal demand, which can be ' shoved " by advertising, may nnn a pni chaser by addresa inn. staling full particulars, BUnlNEBs, Hex SMi, uiuoiewwu. unuige county, N. Y. RUPTURE Relleyed and onred by Dr. Sherman's Patent AppU. .nce ,d (n.innml fiflii' 8117 Broadway, N. Y. iTJoffw book with wgliplT Hkeneei If cases before and after cure, with Henry Ward Beecher's oase, letters and portrait. Beware ol travelling Impostors, who pretend to have been as sistants Of DH. bHKSMAN CURSS fOU. HOUHK8. CVHtS . Sweeny, Ringbone, Spavin, and all Dlaeaaea of Horse Flesh. ICS Eight O'clock I" ISM T. I octa-i vu., ouruwjiivB, t.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers