A WtLW WltAtll' - - BofUf-trean soffit lA babf's asleep Under the dsl4es sjad fcfesM JTje. Over bit bosom th tlolete ererjp t Ah I bnt bis aumtjls) tender and, Jh tT""" Wrpfllitidlthtmrkl sluar ,. " Waed by tb'whsr that loTth htiWm,"-- Ah t IHtlebsbf, sleep sweetly to-day t Boit that Ijiwoiw no V kyhathksejrti,.'i 'io'I Roftly-trcad ahftlxi nor waks frtun hit rnatjf r r Under the da'lsles tni press, Thlt babf sleeping with Bowera on Its breast, Knowing of unlet the sweetost and host, CA Never the sorrowful secrets of life, . ' . Nersr UJo mystery ellnginir to death, ' ' For this wee sleeper. He'i done with the strife : Grave, guard him oloeely your bloMoiM beneath. i , .. . . , ... Some mother mtuae thlt bnbs from her brwUtS. Under the dalslsi and grata . '' ' ' Often sttwiujrbtitoohashsd It to rest, . " 1 Blnlhg the songs that baby loves beat, ; ' . v - Ah I bat the in of the Mother of all ' ' Wrappetb the Hula one'olote to her breast ; ' Kind Motisr Earth 1 wheii tie night-shadows fall, Gather tu all to your bosom to rest. Scene in a New ork Police Cpnrt. " Louisa Maeder I , William Macdefl" scouted Clerk Johnson in . the Court of Special Sessions yesterday. A pale, hubohbacked woman, with a babe in her arms stepped slowly for ward and took her seat upon the witness stand, t She was dressed in a suit of black,, and her ilarge eyes looked out p'iteoualy upon , the three justices and the steaming crowd of spectators A XPpei!tahly dressed nnd gentleman ly man stepped from the prisoners' pen to the br. His' eyes fairly started from his head as he looked toward his wife. Louisa,? he murmured . in a soft, heart-broken tone, bat no answer came from the witness stand. t Justice Cox conducted the examina tion. Turning to the deformed woman he said : "Where do you live Y "No. 21 City Hall place." " Have you been beaten?" " I have been beaten very often," was the plaintiff's .answer. " He always tries to kick me in the body, but this time he kicked me in the face." ' ' Louisa," came in tender tones from the bar. Louisa turned and met her husband's gaze. She burst into tears. Turning to their Honors she said : " Please put him and- bail to treat me well."..; . : ". . " Where did yu get that scar on the nose Y" asked Justice Shandley, " did he hit you there r" . " Yes, sir ; please put him under bail." Jusiice'vCox turned to the prisoner and said : William, the Court finds you guilty and sentences you to the penitentiary for one month." William's fortitude forsook him. He began to weep; 1 Two officers took him and forced him from the room. The poor hunchback wifo and mother sprang from the seat, and with deep emotion exclaimed, " Please sir, don't do that." Three little girls, the eldest not more than eight years old, ran up to the bar and began to cry fr "papa!" The prisoner had by Jthis time been forced half way across tho Bridge of Sighs. The soene was too much for the Justices. Mr. Cox spoke : " Bring th.it man back." Ho return ed, tears of genuine grief in his eyes. " William,". said Justice Cox. "in con siderition of your wife and children the C urt. ' will suspend judgment on you." - Then followed a taVlcau such as a court room seldom sees. The prisoner took his children in his arms and kit-sed them lovingly. His deformed wife hung on his arm, and the family went from the room, in which many an eyq was met, and many a sympathetic heart naa noen touched. Tho Talno of Salt. Salt is one of the necessities of life, and any thing we eat, except bread, oould be more readilv snared. It is in teresting to know how salt has been valued in former times. Dr. Letheby says : ; Animals, in fact, will travel Ions dis tances and brave the greatest dangers to obtain it. Men will barter gold for it j indeed, among the Gallas and on the coast of Sierra Leone, brothers will soil their sisters, husbands their wives, and pareritw their children, for salt. Ih the district of Accra, on the Gold Coast of Africa, a hnidiul ot salt is the most valuable thing - upon earth after gold, and will purchase a slave or two. fllungq Park tells us that with the Man diugoep and Bambaras the use of salt is such a, luxury, that to say. of a man, " He flavors his food with salt" is to im ply th,at he is rich j and children will suck .4 piece of rock-salt as if it were sugar. . j . i Jfo etjoriger mark of respect or affec tion can be Bhown in Museovy than the sanding of salt from the tables of the rich to their poorer friends. In point of faot the value of salt in a dietetioal and sanitary toint of view has been ratio?. irized.from the earliest time. In the book of Leviticus it is expressly com manded as one of the ordinances of Moses, that every oblation of meat upon the altar shall be seasoned with salt. without lacking ; and hence it is culled toe B-klt ot the covenant of Viod. . Tk Greeks and Komnus also used salt io, heir sucriticial cukes; and it is still uied in the Ktirvices of the Latin church the fiana mica, or pinch of salt, being in the ceremony of baptism put into the child's mouth, while the priest says, " Bsoeivw the salt of wisdom, and may it be a piopitiation to thee for eternal ute. Everywhere, and almost always, in deed, it has been regarded as emblemat ical of wisdom, wit and immortality. To taste of a man's salt was to be bound by the rites of hospitality ; and no oath was more solemn than that which was sworn upon bread and salt. To sprinkle the meat with salt was to drive away the devil, for, in the quaint language of an old divine, " He loveth no salt on his meat, for that is a sign of immutabil ity ;" and to this day nothing is more uniucKy man to spill tne salt. A. other Gas Story. At a hotel in New York, recently, an old gentleman came down stairs and inquired ot the clerk whether be had any tallow can dies. Being informed that he could be) supplied with tallow dips, the old gen tleman said : . " Then I wish you'd give me some ; I Want something I can blow out, for I've been blasting away at that cussed jigger la my room till X ve no wind left I 1 The clerk, by a spasmodio effort, kept nig countenance and ordered a pound ot flips to room Wo. . There is nothing like a good defini tion, as the teacher thought when be explained the meaning of " old maid " as a woman who had been made a very long time. -. ...... . flonth in Life. About two rears aero, the alternate amusement and pity of social circles! in Portland, Oregon, wns a young man whose convivial weakness mnitralined Ms every eood iLtentiou. and made him a contempt to himself, and a burden to all who cared for him. With mental capacity much above the average, and worm Buupiumues to Keep aiive nis sense of shame at his own degrading excesses, the miserable young fellow's career was but a succession of sore repentances and renewed indulgences until his once oom- fortable home had become repulsive with debt and despair, and his Door young wife could have prayed that death would claim both of them while it oould yet come without infamy. Rocklcss, unprincipled borrowing of money for dissipation from the nearest practicable possessor is ono of the first as it is amongst the last signs of a character lost to all honor and self-respect in the bru talization of dram-drinking, and the subject of this sketch had practised it until the toleration of his most patient viatims was exhausted. Thus it ensued that when, one day in his maudlin extremity, he applied to a much-tried acquaintance for a turther sum, and intimated that he should de stroy himself if his request waa refused, tho hasty answer was 11 vll, that is perhaps the best thine you could do." The words seemed to shock and arouse the hapless wretch, as suggesting a new, awful, and prophetic idea. With a ghastly smile, and lnghtcned stare, he muttered "That's so, I believe you're right," and turned away, partly sobered. In an hour thereafter, at nightfall, he was seen on the edge of the wharf. People near at hand heard a heavy splash in the water, and word was sent to the waiting wife at home that her hapless husband had committed suicide. In the morning the river was dragged tor the body, but not until a week fol lowing did tho waves cast ashore the disfigured remains which, to the eyes of the near relatives only, had a semblance to the lost drunkard. A decent funeral came next, by frrace of Christian charity, and the weeping and penniless widow was left alone to battle with the world for a livelihood. In this she might have reached an early grave herself, being wholly unused to severe toil, but for tho chivalry of a mend, who, after exerting himself to obtain employment for her, allowed his interest to assume gradually a deeper character, and finally prevailed upon her to become his wife. So passed away from current record the very name of the first husband ; not to and mention again until recalled by a revelation of the last week. The person whose final refusal of money to the importunate borrower had been accompanied by such fatal words, and who had never forgiven himself tho utterance of those words, chanced to be in Chicago on business lately, and was creutly startled at noticing, in the fea tures of an humble workman upon one of tho new buildings there, an exact likeness ot the long-ago suicide ot Wil- lauimette river. Noticing his involun tary start and stare, tho workman un hesitatingly advanced toward him, with extended hand, saluting him by Name. The dead was alive again ; the former self-destroyer of Portland, Oregon, was now a sober but prematurely ajred brick layer in the City of the Great Fire, and fraukly confesst d his identity before the other could accuse him thereof. Dead, however, to his former unworthy self, and unworthily treated relatives, he wished still to remain, and would never resume his old name nor return to his former home. His wife must procure a divorce from him, and have her second mariage solemnized anew ; as, in pre tending suicide, he had taken leave ef her, and all his other joutbful associ ations, as perfectly as though he had really died. The idea of suicide, as suggested by his friend's impulsive reply to his last disgraceful importunity, had taken such a hold upon his conscience, that only a sudden hope coming to him as he was preparing to plunge into tho dark water had prompted him to cast a heavy stake into the tide instead, and then fly for ever from the scenes ot his past ignom iny and despair. It was well for those lie left behind that the body ot some dead stranger, cast up by the wavas.was subsequently taken for his own, and confirmed his mortal departure. From Dalles by stage to Kefton, and from thence by rail to Chicago, he had made pilgrimage into a new life a life of rigid self-control, penitence, and honest, if humble, toil ; in which, under a new name, and far from all that he once was or ever again shall be, he has deter mined to spend the remainder of days vouchsafed to him in this world, and strive to merit rehabitation iu the world 'to come. " You need not reproach yourself for those words of yours," he added, when his old friend spoke regretfully of them, " for they only warned ine ia time of what must have been my end if they had not been said just as they were, and tnen. How to Lire on $1,200 a Year. Under the heading of " Household Expense," the New York l'iine has called out a long list of communica tions, showing how a middle-class family may be maintained in good houses, and have every comfort, on $1,200. The following plan strikes us as the most feasible and commonly practised : " Your inquiries are by far more num erous than the replies as to the method ot making both ends meet when keeping house or living on a small salary or in come. I have for the past two years kept house with a wife, three children, ana two servants on an income of less thau $1,200 per annum, and from present appearances shall do it again this year. My plan is this : I spend what I need to live well, keeping a monthly account with the butcher, grocer, etc. I let the bills accumulate for a period of say two months, and at this time the treasury is empty, and the bills considerable. Then (and this is the great idea) my wife col lects the bills, and goes, with tears in her eyes, to her father, pleads poverty, talks the old gentleman out of a check, and the crisis is met. The next time, to give him a rest, one of the two inevita ble well-off brothers-in-law is called in requisition. This, you will see, only happens twice a year to each and it don't hurt them much, so we swing along. The above is the only feasible plan I see, and is, I know, the most com mon way. No young man, ia my opinion, has a right to get married un less his father-in-law keeps a bank ac count, and unless the marriage brings him a couple, at least, of moneyed brothers-in-law." A Stndy of Society-Comparisons with our English Cousins. (Mri. Stowe In the Christian Union.) Saratoga is like a irroat citv: the throng is so great, tho succession so con stant, that Ono has a oomfortablo Sunse that one oan do as one nleanes without exacting a passing remark. When the bj-sad colonade, two or three hundred feet long, is full of promenaders, with every variety of toilet, positive, com parative, and superlative you feel that tne most you could do, had you the means, would be nothing here ; and the least you can do answers every purpose. since nobody gives more than a passing glauoe at anything. It is a constant tido of faces and forms ebbing and flow ing, and tho second blots out the first, and the third the second as the waves of the sea efface each other. As a study of American society a visit at Saratoga is a thing quite worth one's while. There are peculiarities in it distinctly American, and resulting di rectly from the habits of republican so ciety, which are worth notice. One of these is the ease and independence of the lifo. Nobody is afraid of anvbodv. There are no visible bolts and bars, no boundaries of frigid reserve such as ob tain in society which has been broken into classos, each ono of which fools it necessary to keep off the other from its acquaintance. In an English hotel or watering-place, for example it would be impossible, as here, to get at the heart of English society and observe the daily manners and goings on of the best classes. What are called the bettor clussos in England are fenced in by every national custom and regulation, and as completely secluded as tho ladies of the Grand Seignor's harem.' There are no common parlors where all may meet no common railroad cars. An English family travels like an island surrounded by water, or as if genii lifted up tho house and took it from place to place. The family, whole and compact, goes everywhere and keeps by itself. One may travel on the same railroad, put up at the same hotels, with the best English families, and see no more of them than if one were anywhere else. A servant secures a compartment-car for their sole and separate use. Closo-veil- ed, and looking neither to the right nor left, they enter it. At the hotel their suite of apartments is engagod. They pass from the retirement ot the car to the retirement of the hotel, and disap pear in mysterious shadows. The fifteen hundred gentlemen and ladies who were making Congress Hall their home while we were there were of our best class and we say, with honest pride, that the best class of English so ciety has no better. There was no flash and dazzle, no predominance ot shoddy aristocracy ; all was quiet, easy, genial, and refined. The American family of tho best class was there well represent ed. The father and mother, the young collegian, the pretty daughter. And here we must stop and indulge in a lit tle gush of admiration at these dear, charming, high-bred American girls. Their beauty is of a style so delicate ; it is so much the expression of character ; it has so many positive intimations of suppressed power and ability, that it is all the more interesting. We watched several of these little queens from day to day without detecting an inharmo nious movement or an unbecoming ges ture everywhere and always they ap peared coolly mistresses of tho situa tion. This piquant little air of entire self-possession and ability to look any position in the face, is one of the pecu liarities of our young ladyhood, and when veiled by perfect modesty is a wonderful charm. As to toilet matters, we saw much ev idence of good taste. The general av. ernge was in that precise distance be hind extremes which marks good sense and refinement. The female costume of the season, by the by, is in a much more hopeful and beceming way than it was two or three years ago, when the demi monde ot irans sat as a queen, and had seen no sorrow. It has not now that scraggy, wild, nigh-flying air, that quantity of jingle and tinsel and furbe low that was at one time the desolatm fashion. Toilets ef modest colors am harmonizing shades of ono color have taken the place of the startling con trasts and theatrical fashions tint once obtained, and there have been few in. stances of vulgar over-dressing. In deed, nothing has been more suggested by the whole tone of dress, air, and manner among the hundreds wlo thronged our halls or sat at our tables than the idea of culture and reunement. Quiet ease, self-possession, and good breeding have marked the tone ot so ciety. Letters. Letters are of very ancient origin. The first letter of which we have any record is that written by David to Jonah, directing him to place Uriah in the front ot the battle. A bad begin ning, surely. Cicero wrote a letter, as he did everything, with ease and ele gance. Seneca and the younger Pliny also excelled in this art. The Romans used tablets of wood coated with wax sometimes ivory or parchment. Tho Spartans sent their secret dispatches in time of war on a long strip of parch ment. This was first wrapped around a stall, rolled slantwise and written lengthwise, then taken off, and carried by a special messenger to tho command er who had a similar staff. It would, of course, be perfectly unintelligible when unwound, and so would cause no trouble if it should fall into tho hands of an en emy, but when wound on the staff of the receiver it would reveal its mean ing. Herodotus tells of a cruel practice re sorted to, to convey secret intelligence with safety. 1 he head ot a trusty mes scngor was shaved, and the writing was impressed on his skull. .This was not a rapid methoa ot transmitting news, tor tho poor fellow's hair must grow long enough to conceal the writing, and on arriving at his destination he must again be shaved. It is probable that little anxiety was manifested in those days to secure the pt srtiou of a letter carrier 1 In oar time, the cheap postage makes letters valueless as literary productions. But in the "dear" old times, when one felt it his duty to make his epistle worth twenty-five cents, the letters were not only long and newsy, but worth keeD ing, and the letters of the past, pub lished for our delight, form one of tho most charming branches of our lighter literature. The French, as a nation, are the best letter writers, and a woman Madame De Sevigne, is their brightest star in that respect. But English read ers can boast of Lady Mary Montague and Waipole. ray. vovrper, Woott, Byron, Southey and Burns have all dis tinguished themselves by their letters. A GRIG ULTUllALr The VAtUE of Fise Fruit. It is a common event that fruit is found on an overstocked market. Some years it is ono kind of fruit,,omotirues another j but there is always a day. during the season when there was absolutely no sale, and the fruit on hand had to be thrown away. But this is true only of common fruit There never yet was a time when fine fruit did not meet with a ready salo, at good pricos. No matter how the mar ket may be gorged, the large luscious specimens are always sought after, and found to yield an excollent profit to tho raiser. i Tho ' moral " of all this is. that fruit growing, in order t be a good business. should be intelligently pursued. Only he who thoroughly understands what he is doing can achieve excellence in any pursuit. Any one can raise fruit. One has but to set out strawberries or plant orchards to get some fruit J but to get fruit which is emphatically good, a fair knowledge of the principles and practi ces of culture is desirable, and when this is possessed mo one need fear making fruit-growing pay whether in poor seasons for fruit, or in thoso seasons when so many complain that every av- enuo to tho popular demand is complete ly glutted, and that they intend another year to get into better business. It is in this as in every business, those who understand it best succeed ; and in fruit-raising the principal avenue to suc cess is in the direction of the production of first-class fruit. Necessity of Greek Food to Fowls. The first requisite in the shape of diet is a regular supply of groen food. Here, again, fowls kept on grass will need no attention ; but for birds penned up, the daily provision of it is an abso lute necessity, though most beginners are ignorant of it. We well remember, in our own early experience, how our fowls died, yet we could not at first tell why; and one fine buff Cochin cock whose only fault was a strong vulture hook was, in particular, greatly regret ted. An experienced friend let us into the secret ; and after that wo had no difficulty in keeping fowls, even where it is often said they cannot be kept in health viz : in a yard paved with large flagstones. The best substitute tor nat ural grass is a large turf thrown in daily to each four or five hens ; and even in towns it is often possiblo to procure this, by giving childrea a lew pence every week to keep up a regular supply. Where turf is not allowed to be taken, grass may be cut or pulled ; but' in this case must be cut into gTeen chaff with shours or a chaff machine. The latter plan is how we actually managed for years in a yard only sixty-eight by thirty-five feet, divided into six pens ; pay ing some child a few pence to bring fresh cut grass daily, cutting it up and mixing it with their toft meat. Ex change. Delicacy of Butter. It is well known to all dairy-women of experience that butter, to bo sweet, requires the cleanest and most delicate handling and care. A farmer's wife says : " Of all the products of the farm, butter is the most liable to be tainted by noxious odors floating in the atmosphere. Our people laid some veal in the cellar from which a little blood flowed out and was neglected until it had commenced to smell. The result was that the jar of butter which 1 wasthen packing smelled and tasted like spoiled beet. Another lady reader observes that there was a pond of filthv. stacmant water a few hundred feet from their house, from which an offensive effluvium would be borne on the breeze directly to the milk room, when the wind was in a certain direction, the result of which was that cream and butter would taste like the disagreeable odor coming from that pond. As soon as the pond was drained we had no more damaged butter. Lime in CRors. There is said to bo carried off from the soil nine pounds of lime in twenty-five bushels ot wheat, nine pounds in htty bushels of oats, and fifteen pounds in thirty-eight bush els of barley. There are thirty-five pounds ot limo in two tons ot rye grass, one hundred and twenty-six pounds in two tons of clover, and one hundred and forty pounds in twenty-five tons of turnips, and two hundred and sevonty pounds in nine tons of potatoes. Some soils contain abundance of limo for a thousand years, while other soils require an occasional application of lime as a fertilizer. Rotation in Crops. A five years' rotation, adopted in England, for light, loamy land, is : " First year, roots ; second, barley ; third and fourth, clover ; fifth, wheat. The advantages of the system are, that the land gets a thorough cleaning, and a mellow seed-bed is pre pared for the barlev : and a vounor sod is held to be, when broken up by a single ploughing, a good preparation for a sound seed-bed for the ensuing wheat crops. In the west, roots are not raised as a part of the rotatin, but the corn crop should be used for the same pur pose that roots aro in England one of which is, clearing the soil from woods. Buttermilk. Persons who have not heen in tho habit Tof drinking butter milk consider it disagreeable, becauso it is slightly acid, in consequence of the presence of lactic acid. There is not much nourishment iu buttermilk, but the presence of the lactic acid assists the digestion of any food taken with it. The "Welsh peasants almost live upon oat-cake and buttermilk. Invalids suf fering from indigestion will do well to urmK buttermilk at meal lime. Extremes iv Tin van V, of vulgarity exists than an inordinate love of showy dress. Toilets evon when tasteful as to color and style, denote, if habitually rich and showy, mental vul garity, their transparent dosigu being by superficial material means, to impres the beholder. Tho refined beholder i Unfavorable imnrAoanrl imimftt in ir mii.l j 1" ., " i outward richness to be a mask of inward poverty. Hence, a prevalent fashion ol costly dressing betrays general vulgarity Tlia rtnHftt. ftf,a r.' 1 u1 1. Ii iwl runnila tt fended, from her mirror, if seeing herself besilked, and befeathered, and bejeweled, for a moruing walk or drive. She will be Sllnplv flo.rt rii in ttni affirn inrlonra or out, as in her manners, and will not exhibit, either in the ono or the other, the slightest eiurt to outvie her neigh bor. The Rt. Louis Globe tells its readers that "Louisville mules, after kicking tne countenance ou their drivers, calmly haul the corpse to an undertaker's shop, wuere it can oe attended to. Lie Down and Best. Dr. Hall says the best medicinos in tho world, more efficient in the cure of disease, than all the potencies of the materia niedica, aro warmth, rost, cleanliness and pure air. Some persons mako ita virtue to brave disease, to " keep up " as long as they can move a foot or crook a fingor, and it sometimes succeeds j but in others the powers of lifo are thereby so completely exhausted that the system has lost all ability to recuperate, and slow and typhoid fever sets in, and carries the patient to a prematuro gravo. When ever walking or work is an effort, a warm bed and a cool room are the first indis ponsablo steps to a sure and spoody re covery. Instinct loads all boasts and birds to quietudo and rost the very mo ment disease or wounds assail the sys tem. A lawyer and A Parson wnrn talkinir about which wur t.lm winrl wn Tim former said, " We go by the Court House vane. "Aiiuwe, replied tho parson, " go by the rhurch vane." " Well," said tho lawver. " in the mutter of wind. t.hn.r. is the best authority," and tho parson If you wish to buy or sell any Rail road Bonds, write to Charles W. Has- bleu, No. 7 Wall Streot, New York. New Y'oi Jt Wholesale Market. Bl'TTER-Sljito.fine (lrkln.. f n (H S W.tirn ia CI1EKSK PiAte factory 12 vinu no., s (oj Furrn fluirv o i,t COTTON Ordinary.. I6 M EGOS N. Y., N. J., dt Poun a Si (uj Limri 1 FLOUR Supernne e oo ( r.xtra to liuicy state 7 le (4 Ohio ronud hoop 7 Id t4 Kstra ainbur 7 85 d4 Spring wheat 6 70 Sl Kxtra Qcnopco 7 so rtd . 8U Loniadonnle extra.... 00 ti Conn Meal Western ijemny.. 3 .' jt ItriimU'tvinn ... 4 1 t,. GRAIN Conn Wtmn i: Soutlieru HH !0 Bam.it WnMorn a (, Canada 90 (V4 Oats 43 ; flvi 7i eo Wbat Western No. 1 Pnrliiu... 1 (1 Do. No. t do I 60 (;C Do. Amher 1 5I lt Do. White 1 80 64 Whltn (lonA.M I 44 (7tt PROVISIONS-Pork-N-winon... 11 in W w u prime.. 10 50 (at Brar Plain 7 on Cu Kxtra incus 9 OA Gti Beef hams 80 00 04 BACOK 71 eo (Ihkkn Hams i'ai l.AKD Rk lid SEKD Clover Oi Timothy. ... t 37 Flaxeed (7a WOOL N. Y., Pa., O., and Mich.... CO (a) vt. and lowa , ii C4 Texas and California 3D (u) BEEVES Bout , Wi Ot 13 11. 3 1034 13 6 vtouu ix (ai Common tn fnlr Q Ciit SHEEP A LAMBS Sheen 10 & Lambs 11 (a SWINE Live tn rg Dresifd iX (e) A Deaths Head and Crossbones ought to be the trade mark of every dealer in Rum Bitters. But no ; to proclaim their real mission would ruin them, so they sail under false colors, and do their deadly work surreptitious ly. Fortunately thoir triumphs over credulity are nearly at an end. Ever since tne introduction of Dr. Walker a California Vinegar Bitters the sale of all tho burning fluids advertised as "tonics" has been rapidly declining. They are still the unwholesome solace of individuals who wish to satisfy a mor bid appetite for strong drink, without compromising their respectability ; but the sick are everywhere discarding them ana adopting the vinegar Bitters. The success of this wonderful vegeta ble remedy astonishes Dr. Walker him self. He believed, when ho gave it to the world, that it was an unequalled tonic, free from the objections urged against the medicated lire-waters and dilutions of strychnine, quinine and oth er powerful alkaloids employed in mod ern practice ; but he scarcely expected that it would prove a specific for chronic dyspepsia, liver-complaint, incipient uuiiBumpuon, connrmea rneumatism, gout, scrofula, nervous affections, trener- al debility and all diseases that disor ders, without destrovinff. the vital ma. chinery. Yet this, unless thousands of witnesses have consDired to deceive the public, is actually tho case. Talk at th Toilet. Everv inilv'a mold kuowg that Hbcliewltehinp; beings who pnve their triumphant way wiib conquered hearts, rpcnrii a splendid head of hair the most etleo tlve of all womanly facinations. They believe, and they ore ri);hl,that they can latto as many mi-lux wim iw. luxuriant ringlets aud glossy braids as they enn " kill at slant" with tbeir beaming eyes. Hence in their "toilet talk" umonir themselves aud with their ntteudnntH. the merits ol preparations for the hair are free ly canvassed, and the latest result of this dis cussion seems to be the almost universal adoption of l.von i Kathmron as an article bet ter adapted to promote the growth and beauty of the " Chief Glory of Woman " than any other at present before the wsrld. Thev v that without Irritatlujf tho skin of the head it eradicates daudruff, and that It penetrates be- iuw uie suriace to tuo roots 01 tno uitlr, en- uuwing meui wuu new me nna vigor. Edward Bayer. Eq.. Hot ton. Kine-s Co.. N, 8., writes that an ui-toiiUliin; cure has lecn ttlectcd on his dauirliter bv the use of John- bod s Anodyne Liniment. The whole spine became diseased, she lost the use of her limbs, ami ber bck was rounded up like a bow, in consequence of taking cold after hiving been innoctiluted for the kine pock. She U now weu. We pledge our repulullon on the assertion mat any vauealed physician, alter acarelul ex. ninlnaiion of the recipe, will a.iv that Varton'i Vurgatire l'illt possess more merit thau any oiuer piu now onereu lor Bale. If you desire rosy cheeks and a complexion f.iir, ami free from l'hnples, Blotches and r.ruptions, purify vour blood by taking Dr. 1'ierce s Golden Medical Discovert". It has no equal for this purpose. 596 For bites of mosquitoes and other in suets, Buiinett'sKalliston neutralizes tho poison almost instantaneously. Wee Dooley's Yeast Powdel If you rcll light, sweet, wholeaouie Hi .Cults. Rolls. Pust Ac. Your grocer sells it. Full wcigjjt strength. Till Browns ind Bi.ima produced by that sterling nremirutinti. In u ,i . i,n..'u V v., -. II..- It..- cannot bo excelled by Nature; U tints challenge comparison wiin nature s moat favored productions, UU UGIJ UUll'UUUll, FLAOa'B IKBTIHV Rll.i Wrrntwl tn mI.Iv. .11 llieuuiatlc Aitlioiiona, Mpraina, Neuraliria, eto. The '" tno surest, and the quickest remedy for all Bowel Oomplaiuta. Belief guaranteed or the tuoney Da. WlSTlH'B RllllUnl Wit tl P un.V I. Hi m. binatlou and a form indeed " for bealliif and curiuir ulseaoua nl the throat, limns and che.t. It cures a eoUirll bv loo.enlli ami nlMf.n.l tl. lmi.r. mii.1 bI. luyius irritation i thus rtmnrint l cow. instead of ui jiub si we uoaicQ una teaviuc uie atsvae uejiiua, Nature's Appeals far Help. Every indication of debility and exhaustion Is mute appeal of Mature for medicinal aid to arrest the progress of decay. How are these silent appeals of phy.lral weakness to the rasouroos of the healing art usually met? Too often, unfortunately, the drugs prescribed ace-ravate the symptoms. Whoever recom tends drastic purgatives, or mineral salira&U, or poisoaoas alkaloids, a rider saofe circumstances, is an ally of the ailment and an enemy of the patient. Who ever, on the contrary, advises the broken down and desponding sufferer to resort to that peerless invig- orant, ftoatottor't Stomach BitteK for aid and com fort, la a true philanthropist It Is fnfo to tmy that there never was an Instance In which snch advice we aiven ai-.d accepted without tho happiest resnlu. From tho very depths of woaknnss and desonndencv thousands havo been restored to vigor, honltb and eheerfulnosa by the renovating operation of this wholneome stimulant and alterative. All Its medi cinal InaTodlonta aro remarkable sanative properties, and tn combination form an absolute spoclflo for In dirostton, llror complaint, norvoas affections, rheu matism, Intermittent and remittent fevers, general and local weakness, and every species of disorder In cident to change of season or cllmnto The etlmnla tlve element of this Invaluable protective and restora tive Is not an Impure excitant, but tho thoroughly rectified essence of sound rye. admlttod by all good ehemlsta to bo the most healthful of azhllaranta. TO CONSUMPTIVES. Tho tvlvortlf-er, bavin jr henn pcnranently cured of thatdrrmd dt-me, Consumption, bya rimplo remedy, Nant.o.nto make known to hie fellow unfferor the mi dn of care. Trj nil who dentr it, ho will send a ropy of the proscription u-ved, Oreo of charge), with tlifl dli-rotton for pr"prrlnir and uif(r tho flame, which tlmy will ttml a Sprr Curr ion CONSCMfTiOrt, Auth- A, IlitONRIiITIn, OCOt l'tU UOH WlfiD.nff UlC ptUHCnptiOD 111 iiifui'juuuitffi HOT. MIWAHU n WlliMJM, 1M Fcnn St.. Wllliarmbnrirli. N. T. GENTS WANTED. No money required In ad l vanco. Address LATTA A CO., Pittsburgh, Pa. Every Good Hmhnnd Rnd Father Should pond Ht once for our Circular. Eugenie Manufact uring Co.. 142 Fulton St., New York. ANY ESTATE in Germany, Holland, Franco, or Great Britain, looked aftor ami if poMhle collrctod by J, F. FHUEAUFF, Attorney at jaw, ;ommoia, ijancanier vo, ra. OMETI1INO- NEWEvory poron fcndlntr a v rwnmpt'M ifuveinpt1, niri-cuMi to iiieni'-eiVP". will re colvo a vnlunhto preflrnU which will bo of torvice during lifo. Adflnsf FKUF. SALVO, Box 5127. Bo-ton, Mom. The Farmers' Home Journal, the great Farm and Live Stock Journal of the Blue Orats region of Kentucky, published evetr Thursday at $3 a year. Sent free to any nddrnss for ono month. ena lor specimen copios. Agents wanted every- uere. AoarutjS FARMERS1 HOME JOURNAL, Lexington Kentucky. THE GUEAT REMEDY FOR CONSUMPTION and acknowledged by many prominent physi cians to be the most lieliablc Preparation ever introduced for the liELlEK and CLUE of all LUNG COMPLAINTS. This well-known remedy is offered to the public, sanctioned hy the experience of over forty years, aud when resorted to In season, aeldom fniln to efTect a apcedy cure of Coughs, (olds, Croup, Bronchitis, In fluenza, Whooping lough, Hoarse ness, Pains or Soreness in tho Chest and Side, Bleeding at the lungs, Liver Complaint, Ac. CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED by a timely resort to this standard remedy, as Is proved by hundreds of testimonials received by the proprietors. DR. WISTAR'S BALSAM OF WILD CHERRY dor not df up a Congh, and leare the cause hrhintl. a is the eae with moat prrjinratioii. hut it loosen and eleanse tne tuny, ana anuy trrttatton, tliut removing the eaueof the complaint CLERGYMEN, LAWYERS, 6INGEKS, and all those whose occupation requires an un usual exerciso of the vocal organs, will find this the Only Preparation which will effect ually and Instantaneously relieve their difficul ties. Beware of Counterfeits. Remember that the genuine Wiitnr'e llnlsan hat on the outside wrapper the signature of ". D UTTS," and the printtd name of the pro prietors, "setu r.oir.K.f soSs, ifos- TO." All others are bate imitations. Exam ine the wrapper carefully before purchasing. One Collar I Bottle. 8ii Bottlr for Tit DuUarf. - IMIEPARKD BY BETH W. F0WLE & SONS, Boston, Mass., And told by DruggUts and Dealers generally. READ THIS I Tho lowest price lltt evor published of WATCHES, In solid Gold and Sllvor Casosonly. Henedlct'M Time Watches PRICES. Silver Watch, Benedict $30 Gold, IIS karat) " t'jo Silver Watch, Samuol W. Ilcnedict $45 Gold (19 karat) " " $105 American Walthani Watches. PRICES. Coin Silver Hunting Watche ta oo Gold Iluntius Watches, Gents' Size ..$79 50 i.auies size $75 00 flent to all nnrts of the conntrv bv exnrnss with nrlv. Hope to examine before puyiuir. Send for a price list auu compare pricos uciore purcn;isinc eisewnere. UENEDICT llUOTHKItS, Jewelers and keepers or the City Time. C9I llroudway, near Fourth Street, New York The Rights of the Slrk.-It is the rieht of erv invalid to know what his medicine Is. nuri vh. It i iiicKuucu, uur ituuviur iiuiu uyHpepxia, liver cumpiaini, ueauacue, cosiiveness, or nearlDuro, ueslr- .... ...... t, . n . . a - .. . . .. .. n nruitni is, and why he ought to take it 1 The answer is simple. It is the chemical equivalent of the geltzor Spa water, aud the areatust phvuiclans the world has evtr seen nave prououncea that nuuir a spocibo lor the com. plumbs m uuvhi inn. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS For anr cue of Blind, Uleediuc Itchtntr. or Ul cerated File that Di Uinu'sPili ItEMBbr fail- to cure. It 1b Die Dared ax. preebly to cure the Piles aim notninfr eipe. eoia oy an aruiu. rnce yi.oa VALUK TO ETERVBOUY Old or Young, hijtU or low male or female, lck or velli rich or poor, fiend a tkree Addreu DGliSON. iiAYNKS k CO., caul Dotitaire e'ttinD ror circular. . . it, Louis, Mo. AUf.n i a ffARiEU. MONEY FOR POOR MEN. Wg want poor and honest men aud women to work for us, A SALARY ot $35 per week. Everything fur ItUbed. A rare ebauce. U. WEBBER it Co. Marion, O. 61 Kfi THK M'RMKRY.-TIIK BEST 1 MAGAZINE I'OH CHILDREN. HIT- PERULY ILLUSTRATE!), how is ihs lime to tut- sertae. d. w tena tiamp mr a siimpie number. JOHN L. SilURE Y, 36 BroniUeld du. Boston. Mass. $30 DVD U7 V I 17 a n. -.. .1 nr a reliable agent lu every County iu th J a. auurvu uuuiua an n n ink vlli 1 If Honeet, herjr etic God-feariujj meu uid u omen can have pleaAtijroli table work ; no risk Ot capital. Write to U. t. Huliug 19 Llndall St., Boston, Maw. k GENTS Wan ted.A genu make more money at iV work for ui than auythiiip el Pantoulari free r DTiaaua m. vo i ri nM(uvn, Portland, Mi CLUBS. lit Pa Demand Mutraiin.. v.nt geiid Stamp, L. t. ?A1HCUIU, RoUinx Praiiie.Wia. 1.000 Vlnesnr nittere are tint a vile Fancy Drink, lauc w grvn ivumi, uu.cj.riwi spirits ana rterase .iquors, doctorcl, spiced, and sweetened to please the isle, called " Tonics," " Appetiiers," " Restorers," :c. that lead the throler on to drunkenness arft tin. but are a true Medicine, niarlo from the native roots and herbs of California, free from nil Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the Gre.it Hlood Purifier and a Life-givmg rrmiii,c, n cuc. ivciiuvrtiu, riiu iiivigorninr ol ine Srstem. carrvinz olT ail poisonous matter and restotine the blond to a healthy condition, enriching it, refreshing and invigorating both mind and body. They are easy of administration, prompt in their action, certain in their results, sife and reliable in all forma of disease. He Person can take these Hitters accord ing to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poisen or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. Dyspepsia or India-ration. Headache, Fain In the Shoulders, Couchs. Tightness of the Chext, Dix xiness, Sour Eructations of the Stemach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, BilioHs Attacks, palpitation of the Heart, Inflammation ol the Limes, Pain in the regions ol the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful svmptoms, are the offspring of Dyspepsia. In these complaints it has no eaual. and one bottle will prove a better guar antee of its merits than a lenjrthy advertisement. For Fcmftln Complaints, in yotm or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that a marked improvement is soon percep tible. For Iiinmninatory nntl Chronic Rlien mutisms and t,out, Dystiepsianr Indigestion, bilious, u . .. .1 t . ' . . . i- .r .1. - noio.tM. an,, i,,,.:, men, men, fix'.!.,, VI u. Blood, l.iver. Kidncv and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood, wh eh is generally produced by derange ment of t he Digestive Organs. They aro a Uentlu Purgative its well ns Tonic, possessing also the peculiar merit of acting as a powerful asent m relieving Congestion or Inflam mation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, and in Bilious AJiseases. For Skin Disease. F.runv'nns. Teller. 1t. Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, poils, Car buncles, Ring worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes Ery sipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorationsof the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried opt of the svslem in a short time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle iu such cases will convince the most incredulous of theii curative effects. Cleanse Hie VKInteil Itlomt .!,....... nd its imnurities bursiiii? ihmuli ,l.l.;ni n;Mni.. Eruptions, or Sores: cleanse it uliei, v.. ; K- stmcted and sluggish in the veins : cleanse it when it ia foul ; your feelinjs will tell you when. Keep the blood pre. and the health of the system will follow. Ornteful thousands proclaim Vihrgar Bit tbs the most wonderful Invigor.iut that ever sustained inc winning Rvsicm. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually de stroyed and removed. Save a Histii.o;.l,a ,.l...Ainl ogisl : There is scarcely an individual upon the face of the eatih whose ldy is exempt from the presence of worms. It is not upon the hcilihy elements of the body that worms exist, but u:kii the diseased humors Una slimy deposits that breed these living monsters of disease. no system ot Alctticme, no vermifuges, no anthelmin tics, will free the system from worms like these Bil ters. Itleehnnlcal Diseases. Persons engaged in Paints aiid Minerals, such as Plumbers. TVn...i,.H Gold beaters, and Miners, as thev advance in life, will be subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this take a dose of ai.krr s Vinegar Bitters once ui i" ic a met. fls a rreveilllvc. unions. Ilemittent. ami Intermits... Fuvers, which are so prevalent in the vaiievs of great rivers throughout the United Slates, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Ten nessee, Cumberland, Arkansas. Red, Colorado. Braio Rio Crande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile. Savannah, Roan oke, James, and many others, wiih their vast tributa ries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkab:y so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of.the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. There are aiwavs more or less ohstnict ons of the iiver, a weakness and irritable stale of the s:nmach, and great torpor of the bowels, being .ur.ssu Jp " ,."..,u sicuinu..nn in tneir treat ment, a purirative. exertin a nowerfal infiuer.ee nr.-. these va-ious organs, is essentially neresMrv. There is no catltartic fr the purpose equal to Dr J. IVsun'l Vinroar IliTTRRs as they wiH speedily rei.iove the dark-colored vise d matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions ol the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. 8erofula, or Kiiis's Evil, White Swellings. Ulcers, Erysipelas, Sw.,ed Neck, Goiter. Scrofulous Innammations, li-,do:ent Inflammations. Mercurial Af fections, Old Sores, Eruptions or the Skin, Sore Eves, etc., etc In these, as in ail other constitutional Dis eases, Wai.krk's Vinrosr BtTTRRS have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intract able cases. Dr. Walker's California Vlnesar Bitters act on all these cases in a similar manner. By purifying the Blood they remove the cause, and bv resolving away the efects of the inflammation (the tubercular deposits) the aiTected parts receive health, and a permanent cure is effected. The tsrOnertles nf De. Witm.i V Bitter are Aperient, Diaphoretic and Carminative, Nutritious. Lax.uire. Diuretic. Sedative. Counter-irri tant. Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious. 'tne Aperient aud mild Laxative properties of Dr. Walksk's Vinrgar Hitters are the best safe guard iu all cases of eruptions stud malignant fevers. their LM.sarmc, healing, and soothing properties protect the humors of the fauces. Their Sedative properties allay pain in the nervous system, stomach, and bowels. eitner irom inflammation, wind, colic, cramps, etc Their Counter-irritant influence extends throughout, the system. Their Diuretic properties act on the Kid neys, correcting and regulating the flow of urine. Their Anti-Bi'.ious properties stimulate the liver, in the secre tion of bile, and its discliames throueh the biliarvducts. and are superior to all remedial agents, for the cure of Uiiious r ever, rever and Ague, etc Fortify tlie body a&ralnat (lUense bv puri fying all its fluids with Vinegar Bittkrs. No epis. lemic can take hold of a system thus forearmed. The liver, the stomach, the bowels, the kidneys, and the nerves are rendered disease-proof by this great invig orant. Direction 'Take of the Bitters on come to bed at night from a half to one and one-half wiiie-glassfull. Eat good nourishing food, such as beef steak, mutton chop, venison, roast beef, -and vegetables, and take ut-door exercise. They are cam posed of purely veget able ingredients, and contarh no spirit. J. WALKER, Prop'r. It. H. NcUUKALDACW., Druggiits and Gen. A g is., San Francisco and New York. W SOLD BY ALL PRUOOISTS & DEALERS, BLEES Noiseless, Link-motion, Lock-Stitch -cm vs- ;. SEWING MACHINE, Challenges the world in perfection of work, strength and beauty of stiich, durability of construction, aud ruiMiiuyoi motion. Call and examine, and for agencies and oircuUrs, address BLEES BEWINO MACHINE CO., 683 broadway. New York THEA-NECTAR 18 A PURE IIIjAOK mUM. with the Oreesi T Flavor. The best Tea Imported, for sals svsryiehtTS, And for sale whole. saie ouiy oy tne Ureat Atlsm iieanaf actnc'leaVo,, Ha. U Fulton 8tnd V Church 8t New York. . O. Box, 5900. tt.wd for Ths-N'scar Circuity TUB COMFKHinOIiS OF A NERVOUS INVALID. - Published lor the benefit of vous iiwsj and others, who suaer from Nervous Debility, etc., supplying rue Klaus oreiLr-ODaa. Written by one who cured him self, and sent free on receiving a post-paid directed enrol one. Address NATHANIEL MAVf AIR. Brooa lyn. N. Y. DR. WHITTIER. PITTSBURGH, Pat. Longest enjratfed, and most successful physician of 1 1.. aire. Consultation or pamphlet free. Call or writ. J ust published for benefit ul yoiuir men who sutfer tn D Nervousness, lability, Ac, a treatise of lt pages, fo II stamps ; a book of Mi pans, til antra ted. for it cenk. . Innri AGEMTS WANTED to sell our . VJ VJ V ' Popular Campaign Churls and New Man Union and World. 0. P. Bradway, bauville. Pa. Boiloiho Vilt (ne (or) for outside work and lnsids instead of plaster- felt CarpetiuKs, etc. Bend t eUiuua or circular and samples. C. J. Sax, Caniden. H.i AuKusUi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers