CHANGED. TI19 mnalo of Spring's In tho irrore, Will ; The flower are out In tho dell ; And the pioneer boe emit., lad. O'er the gleam of the cow.lip's bell. Far down by the murmuring brook, tlioro, The pnre thlning daffodils blow I But the golden dreams are away, lad, That were mln. In that Spring long ago 1 There is balm In tho morning brooio. Will j There Is song in the morning skies 1 And the rosy sunbeams kiss, lad, The dew from the violets' eyes. Far down In the dnptht of the pine-wood, In the twilight the blackbirds sing ! fV But never the Jov can they bnng, lad, That they gave In that golden Spring I There are frisking lambs in the meads, Will ; Tb.or are bees on the bonding flowers ; And the wUil-dort cooi to hit matt, lad, 'Mid the hash oX the evening hour:, the lily dreams ovor the fount, Will, And the sunbeam sleeps ol the oa ; But the songs and the flowers of yore, lad, Shall nevor come baok to me I There's a grave far down in the vale, Will, By the sldo of tho churchyard wall ; There often I sit alone, lad, Till the dews in the twilight fall ; And I gore on the violets twoet, Will, Thnt watch her with tender cyos ; And I mingle my tears with the clows, lnct, As they fall from the far-off skies I Hero are tho flowors she gave mo, Will 'Just withered violets ' you fay : Bnt I'll ever keep fresh In my heart, lad, That face wno has passed away I And when in that Garden we moot, Will, Whore tho violets always blow, "he'll smile as I give her tho flowers, lad, That I got from her long ago. Mothers, Tnt Your CMlcIren to Bed. There may be some nioWiors Vho feel it to be a self-denial to leave their par lors, or firesides, or work, to put their little children to bed. They think that the nurse could do it just as well j that it is of no consequence who " hears the children say their prayers." Now, set ting aside the pleasure of opening the little bed and tucking the darling up, there are really important reasons why the mother should not yield this privi lege to any one. In the first place, it is tho time of all times when a child is in clined to Bhow its confidence and affec tion. All its little secrets come out with more truth and less restraint j its naugh tiness through the day can be reproved and talked over with less excitement, and with the tenderness and calmness necessary to make a permanent impres sion. It the little one has shown a de Bire to do well and be obedient, its effort and success can be acknowledged and commended in a manner that need not render it rain or self-satisfied. We must mako it a habit to talk to our children, in order to get from them an expression of their feelings. We can not understand tho character of these little beings committed to our care un less wo do. And if we do not know what they are, we shall not be able to govern them wisely, or educate them as their different natures demand. Cer tainly it would be unwise to excite young children by too much conversa tion with them just before putting thtui to bed. Every mother who carefully studies the temperament of her children will know how to manage them in this re spect. But of this all mothers may be assured, that the last words at night are of great importance, even to the babies of tho flock ; the very tones of the voice they last listened to make an impression on their sensitive organizations. Moth er, d not think the time and strength wasted, which you spend in reviewing the day with your little bov or eirl : do hot neglect to teach it how to pray, and to pray for it in simple and earnest lan guage which it can understand. Soothe and quiet its little heart alter the expe rience of the day. It has had its disap pointments and trials as well as its play and pleasures ; it is ready to throw its arms around your neck and take its good- mgnt kiss. Mother Magazine. A Plea for the House Dog-. A correspondent of the Maine Farmer speaks these good words for the house dog: What hard working farmer, on returning at night to rest his weary limbs, does not fuel that he is more safe from burglars, and his stock, fowls and orchards more secure from thieves and midnight prowlers, both two and four legged, if he has a good, faithful dog about bib premises r Wnat good house' wife, and all such prefer leaving their bard day's work on the clothes line du ring the dews of night, does not feel that her clothes are more safe if Bose is in the yard 'i When the little ones are off berrying, fishing or wandering in the woods, what parent does not feel less anxious it iiose is with them t When you are absent from home over night. do you not feel that homo is more secure if Bose guards the premises and who greets your return with a more cheerful welcome than he? From the earliest period of history the dog has been tho faithful companion of man, and is the only species of the brute creation that will forsake its own species and follow man. A dog may be taught to be useful in many ways, even to the saving of hu man life. You can easily learn a dog to go into tho water, and bring out a stick, your hat or coat, and by tilling a suit of your boy's clothes with straw and throwing it into the river your log will bring them out j and i your little boy should accidentally fall into the water, Bose would soon safely land him on the Bbore. A Palatable Mcdicluc. Milk is an excollent remedial agent. I'eopie sintering iroin disease require food as much as those in health, and 'more so in certain diseases where there is a rapid waste of the system. Fre ' quently all ordinary food in certain diseases is rejected by the stomach and loathed by the patient; but .Nature, ever beneficent, lias furnished a food that in all cases is beneficial ; in some directly curative. Buch food is milk In the East ladies, warm milk is used to a great extent as a specific tor diar rhoca. A pint every four hours will check the most violent diarrhoea, stom ach-ache, incipient cholera, and dysen tery. The milk should never be boiled, but only heated sufficiently to be agree ablvlwarm not too hot to drink. Milk which has been boiled is unfit for use. The value of milk in cases of scarlet fever has been fully tested, and is now recommended by the medical faculty in all cases of this often distressing chil dren's disease. Give all the milk a pa tient will take. Even during the period of the greatest fever it keeps up tho strength of tho patient, acts wen upon the Btomaoh, and in every way is blessed thing iu this sickness. Parents, remember it, and do not fear to give it if your dear ones are atllicted with this disease. Affairs in grease friei oysters. An Exlentlvc Canning Establishment. It is located at Rochester, N. T., and is a large, threo-story brick building, with basement and extension. The company employ, during the long can ning season, from 150 to 200 women, who work by tho piece, as far a prac ticable, and earn from 75 cents to f 1.50 per day. About 30 men are kept busy with the heavier, work. Thev have canned thus far this year 5,000 quarts of strawberries i 2,000 bushels of cher ries ; 20 acres of peas, probably about 400 bushels j 300 bushels string beans ; expeot to can 3,000 bushels of plums ; over 6,000 bushels of tomatoes; 1,000 bushela of peaches ; BOO bushels quinces; and about same of Bartlett and Virga licus pears. They have contracted for the pickles of 33 acres. Allowing these to average 80,000 per acre, the yield would bo 2,800,000, which at f 1.80 per 1,000 the price paid would amount to the snug little sum of $5,040. X lie goods are sold inainlv to whole sale dealers in our large cities, but some orders are on file from Europe. Four tinsmiths are at work the year round on cans, and they can make about 2,400 a day, but this year it has been necessary to purchase several thousand outside. Ihe American Rural Home describes at length the processes, or at least such of them as are not " secrets ot the pro fession." About 30 barrels of best granulated white sugar are consumed daily at this time in making sirup to sweeten plums. The sugar is dissolved in, boiling filtered water until the sac charometer indicates the requisite strength, when it is strained through white flannel, and is ready for use. Square wooden boxes are used for boil ing the cans, which are filled by hose irom the cisterns, and heated by steam from the boilers below. Nearly 5,000 can be boiling at the same time of the smaller two-pounds size. They are filled in the lower story, and 25 largo or 35 small ones, placed in a large iron pan, with chains crossing diagonally irom the four corners to bo used in handling them. When a dozen pans are filled they are raised by an elevator worked by steam and placed 111 one 01 tho boxes. When sufficiently cooked they are raised trom the boxes by hooks worked upon pulleys, and slid off upon long tables upon wheels. Here cold water is show ered upon them, and they are wheeled into the front room and stored. The front part of tho lower story is used for weighing and assorting tha fruit, filling anal soldering the cans, &c. Ihe rear part contains the two bailers, and tho engine used in pumping the water, working tho elevator, &c. The wing is used at present for taking in and husking tho corn, and scalding, prepar ing, and canning the tomatoes, ihe basement is used entirely for tackling cucumbers. Here they take in about 50,000 cucumbers a day, which they salt down in empty molasses barrels, and large tanks. Atter the canning season is over, they take tho pickles out of the brine, assort them, putting tho smaller sine in bottles and the larger in barrels, tilling with the best vinegar. 1 ho day the writei visited tho factory, they were running principally upon plums and corn. Thi oe long tables were used in assorting ihe plums, andfilling ihe cans. They were taken from wagons into a side door, weighed, and emptied upon two of the tables, where they were care fully assorted and carried to the third table, where they were filled. Much pains are taken to fill the cans full by jaring and packing, and the company claim that their cans are ruled the best of any in market. When filled they are taken to another table and filled with hot sirup, and.thence parsed to the tin smiths, who solder on the caps. They are then placed by boys in the iron pans on trucks, wheeled to the elevator, and sent up to tho boilers. When the cans are thoroughly cooled, they are handled over, and the ends, which bulge out in boiling, are pressed in, and it they re main concave they are all right, but if they spring back to their convex form the air is not completely expelled, and they aro thrown aside. About five m a thousand are thrown out. They can handle about 000 bushels of plums a day with present facilities. This year they can none but the yellow egg plum, as they can obtain all they wish of that sort. Most of those they use are grown near the lake shore. They always pre fer light-colored fruit, and use no other, when they can obtain all they wish of white or yellow. They used none but white cherries this year. iStowell's Evergreen Sweet Oorn is tho only va riety they preserve, justly regarding that as the sweetest and largest grained of any. They can handle 500 bushels a day of ears. They can handle from eight to ten tuns of tomatoes in a day, which at CO pounds to the bushel, equals from 2G0 to 333 bushels. They are assorttd into large baskets, in which they are lowered into a tank of boiling water until suffi ciently scalded, removed to tables where they aro peeled and the hnrd coro cut out, removed to another table, where they aro forced through Ltvge tunnels into the cans, and Boldered up:n another table. As much as possible of the juice is expressed and wasted so that the cans may contain as much solid pulp us pos sible. y. Y. Tribune. Facts About Djsj)eis!a. ' Dyspepsia is a weak stomach, made weak by overwork, and, like a man made weak by overwork, it needs rest, needs repose ; but, as we cannot live without eating, tho necessity must be met by giving the stomach as little work to do as possible, and that work should be easy, just as we ourselves, in the weak ness of recovery from disease, invite our strength back by doing but little work, and that which can be easily done. The cure of roost cases of dyspepsia becomes extremely simple, and very cer tain, if these few first principles are ju diciously applied in any given caso to wit : Give the stomach but little to do; let that little be of a kind which is easily done, and let both be so arranged that the stomach may do its work easily and soon, and have abundant time for rest. The work of the stomach is called " di gestion," and means the proeess of pre paring the food for yielding its nutrient portions to the system, to give it warmth, growth, and strength. As a general thiug, dyspeptics should net drink anything at meals, because there is a liquid iu the stomach which dissolves the food in a sense, melts it. If cold water is drank it cools this stomach-liquid, and it loses its power of melting the food, so to speak ; as the cooler tho water is, the less is it able to melt the ice in it. Of course, every phys iologist knows that this comparison is not critically true ; but it conveys the essential practical idea to the minds of tho masses. rimpkln Tersns Bodkin. Jeremiah Timpkin was an honorable citizen and a householder, and among his class he was an oracle. He flattbred himself on his shrewdness. He often declared that he should have been a law yer. He fancied that Solon Bodkin, Esquire, would have fared but simply against him in forensio contest. Pimp kin raised turkeys, and upon a certain occasion it happened that a prowling dog made a raid upon his flock and kill ed four fine gobblers tha, were being fatted for the Thanksgiving market. Fimpkin made due inquiry and investi gation, and satisfied himself beyond a peradventure that the marauding canine was tho property of Lawyer Bodkin. Hero was an opportunity he had long ooveted. He waited upon the lawyer in his office, and Was warmly welcomed, and invited to a seat. " Squire," said Pimpkin, " s'pose a neighbor's dog should kill a lot of my turkeys, could I recover damages by law?" "Certainly," replied Bodkin, "you can recover, that is, if you cm prove tho lact." " O, I can prove it. I've got the evi dence all right and tight. And so you think there can be no doubt '" " Not in the least. And now, what are the circumstances ?" "Well, Squire, last night your dog killed four of my best turkeys. What d'yo think about it now 'r" " Why, my dear sir, I think you can recover. That is the law. What is the amount of damage '(" " Them turkeys was worth a dollar apiece, Squire. Four dollars will settle." " All right," said Bodkin. " I wish to deal legally. Here is the sum." And the lawyer handed over the four dollars, which Pimpkin took with a chuckle, and then departed. Jeremiah Pimpkin had reached his home, having related his Bharp practice with the lawyer to all his friends whom he had met on the way, and had just told the story to his wife, when Deputy Sher iff Eeacher unceremoniously entered his domicile. " A small bill, Mr. Pimpkin, which Squire Bodkin says I will collect or ho will sue it to-day." " A bill ! Squire Bodkin '. " echoed Piuipkin, aghast. " Yes," smiled tho Sheriff," a bill for professional services in the case of ' Pimp kin vermis Bodkin.' He says you sought advice upon legal points bearing on the case. The bill is five dollars, sir, ex pense of officer, ono dollar total, six dollars." Pimpkin scratched his head vigorous ly, but he could scratch no path out from the trouble. He paid the bill, and from that time he was never heard to speak boastingly of his legal acumen. He Knew Him Like a Book. This story comes from Bangor, Me : Near Bangor, in a little village, there dwelt, many years gone by, a lay mem ber, who kept week days a country store, and on Sundays ho would preach or exhort around among the neighbor ing towns, whero ho could rind a vacant pu'pit. He was a man of limber tongue, and could sell Yankeo notions and preach tho Gospel very handy. It was his way to load np a wagon and peddle all through tho country, leaving his store in the charge of his wife during his absence. Finding himself, late in tho week, upon a certain time, too far from home to get back, and having sold oat his load, which at that time consisted of dried apples, which, by the way, were a little wormy, ho gave notice that he would preach tho next day, which was Sunday, to the people. Many gathered to hear him. His text was : " And by their fruits ye shall know them." He handled this subject in his usual gallant manner, and, closing up his sermon with a glittering para graph, he repeated the text. " Yes, my friends, and by their fruits yo shall know them." Just at this point up jumped a retail grocer in the place, who had dealt with the exhorter the night before, and said, loud enough to be heard if tho church had been twice as large : " Yes, friend, and hythc worms in their dried apples, too." Waves of Sound. Experiments prove that sound is sim ply upplying force to tho air, which moves in a succession of undulatory vi brations. Every word spoken is a breath force, pushing a column of air from the exterior of the mouth. When sound is produced in a long organ pipe or a short one, the difference is made thus : the vi brations are made slow in the first and quick in the othor. Vibrations or waves are one thousand in a second in one, for example, and four thousand in the other in the same second. But wavelets of sound move off in space with equal ve locities, and both arrive at the ear at the same instant. On tho law of acoustics depends the pleasure derived from music. If the notes did not travel with equal speed there would be utter confusion, all harmony being destroyed if one sound arrived too late for carrying on the chain of acoustic vibrations within the ear. But the apparatus for receiv ing sound and analyzing it, so as to de rive ui th gratification and instruction from its impulses on a few threads of nerves finer than the smallest thread ever epun, is one of the curiosities of animal organism. Tho Baldwin Apple. Not more than one in ten of thoso who enjoy the superior flavor of the Baldwin apple, knows from Whence it originated, ror the enlightenment ot the ignorant nine, we will inform them that this peculiar species of fruit cauie from a seedling planted by Josiuh Pearce, Esq., of the town of Baldwin, Me. From this stock innumerable grafts have extended the fruit far and wide j but from a well-known law of extension, the Baldwin apple is rarely found in perfectiem when far removed from the place where it originated. In Maine, the color, texture, aroma, and solidity of the apple leave nothing to desire, be ing in truth so delicious, that it might have been akin to the one said to have brought difficulty upon our mother Eve, In other localities, where the soil, cli mate, or culture may have proved un- ti'iendly, what is called the Baldwin ap pie may often be found a total failure, being puffy, insipid, and Bubject to early decay. " What dogs are these, Jasper '(" in quired a gentleman of a lad who was dragging a couple of waspish looking terriers along Prince street, Edinburg. " 1 dinna ken, sir," replied the urchin, "They came here with the Dumfries coach, and they ate the direction, and dinna ken where to gang." AGllICULTUllAIr Frof. Riley gives it as his conviction that if a dozen of our most common birds couid be swept from existence, wo should no longer be able to grow the principal crops, and insects would riot and multiply beyond the possibility of restraint. From, thirty trees, six years planted, standing 12 feet apart, and covering one-tenth of an acre, a Michigan fruit grower gathered this year b) bushels ot plums, of the Canadian Egg and Car's Golden Drop varioties, which were sold in the Chicago inarkot, and netted $4 a bushel. The R. C. Tarvin Steam Motor, pat ented tho present year and placed before the pnblio as " a successful traction en gine, capable of drawing plows, heavy loads on ordinary roads, and for all heavy draft purposes," has been receiv ing marked attontion at the Western fairs. Profits of Farming. If a merchant in the city is able to earn a competence of ?3,000 to $5,000 a yar, he is consid ered wealthy by most farmers ; yet this entire sum is often expended in provid ing the ordinary comforts of living ; and at the end of the vear he is, in propor tionate progress, but little ahead of the tarmer, who has not been compel lea to pay a rent of $ 1,800 a year for his home, but rather has got his living from tho homestead as he went along. Although occasional fortunes are made in the larg er cities, yet we venture to say that the average comfort of farm life and freedom from anxiety for obtaining a livelihood, aro far ahead of most city residents. In the case of the farmer, his own hands make tho food he eats j while the city consumer is at the mercy of thousands, who constantly absorb his daily earn ings and give little back. City lifo is ono of constant expenditure Farm life is self-sustaining and preservative. A young laborer 111 tho country, working at one dollar per day and board, is pro portionately better off and more inde pendent than a clerk in a city on $700 a year, who has to expend sftfOO for a liv ing. One can save at the end of the year just as much as the othor ; and, if there are chances in favor of either for obtaining a good name and competence, they aro on tho Bide of the country lad. Any farmer who can Biipport himself on a farm comfortably, and make it pay a net income of 7 per cent, on its cost, is far ahead in competence of the citizen who lives in a brown stone front on a magnificent salary, and has to spend it all for life and "appearances." Ex change. now Much Pork will a Busiiel of Corn Make? Some years ago, when I was just beginning to farm, I was desir ous of knowing the best way of fatten ing hogs, and I determined to try the different plan, and also to ascertain how much pork a barrel of corn would mako. I made a floored pen and cov ered it in. Weighed three hogs and put them in tho pen. I also weighed three of tho same size and put them in a dry lot average weight one hundred and seventy pounds. I fed six barrels of corn to tho six hogs. They were forty days eating the corn, with a plenty of salt and water. Their average gain was seventy-five pounds. The hogs in the lot gained tho most. One that was fat tened in tho lot gained eighty-eight pounds. Ono in the pen gained eighty four pounds ; the other four were not so thrifty. These hogs were about fourteen months old when slaughtered. I put them up the 25t,h of October. There was a good deal of sleet and snow during the month of November, which gave the hogs in the pen an advantage they would not have had if tho weather had been favorable ; they were each fed on the same quality of grain. It also shows that ono bushel f corn will make fifteen pounds of pork, and that the six barrels of corn made cloven dollars andtwenty fivo cents worth of pork, at two and one-half cents per pound ; and that tho farmer gets twelve and one-half cents for his labor 01 leeding per bushel, over selling at twenty-five cents per bushel. Hogs will fatten fatter in September and October than they will 111 cold weather. Another very important question or inquiry suggests itself from tho forego ing, and that is, What is it worth to raiso hogs to the average weight of ono hundred and seventy-five pounds ? It may be difficult to determine tho exact value of the grass, clover and grain fields that the hog leeus on while growing to a gross weight of one hundred and seventy-five or two hundred pounds, but with these assistants I can raiso a hog to weigh one hundred and seventy-five pounds and over, with one barrel of earn. It will be seen from these estimates that two barrels of corn, with the advantage of grass, clover and grain fields, will produce about two hundred pounds of net pork or two hundred and fifty pounds gross. Hogs do best in large fields, with plen ty of water, and the farmer who cuts up his corn in the months of September and October, and hauls it out 011 his fields, will bo amply paid for his labor, in tho improvement of his land, from the stalks and manure of hogs. It is a great sav ing of labor to turn the hogs in the field when the quantity of hogs and the size of the field suit. Correspondence Ohio Farmer. Trices Extraordinary. A Bale ha3 lately taken place in Scot land of the greater portion of the cele brated herd of short-horned cattle bo longing to the Earl of Dunmore, and tho prices given were such as could hardly have failed to satisfy the mtst exacting seller. " Bright Eyesr' sold to Mr. Brassey, son of the great contractor, for $2,000 ; another to tho same gentleman for $1,- 850 ; " Sid.lington " to Lord Kective lor f 2,500 ; another to the same, $1,050; " Marchioness of Oxford," $3,050 ; Ox ford Duchess, $7,500; another for $1,500. The forty-eight heifers sold fetched $60,000. The lowest sum brought for a heifer was $225, and the highest $7,500. The sale comprised the entire herd at Dunmore, save a few favorite old cows retained as the nucleus of a future herd. At this rate cattle farming ought to pay, ono would think; the enormous high average is more remarkable than the prices given for single animals. Lord Dunmore, who is a young man, passed some time in Canada a lew years ago, when in the Guards. He is married to the daughter of the greatest nobleman farmer in England Lord Leicester, boh of " Coke of Norfolk." This is the worst year that hag ever been known in Kansas, for pulling guns out of wagons muzzle first. A woman in Jewell county has just pulled one, and now hag to part her hair on the side that her only arm is on. How te Scrnre ft Pleasant Expression. Ono of our New York city papers is responsible for the following : Mr. Charles Williams has lately attained ce lebrity as a sneak thief. Having stolen a lot of laces from a shop in Grand street, been arrested, escaped from the officer, and been recaptured, it was or dered by Superintendent Kelso that his pciture should be taken for the celebrated "rogues' gallery." To this Charles, modest as regards his pretensions, no doubt, demurred. When placed in the chair, and tho .instrument brought to bear on his face, he fell to making the most horrible grimances, shut his eyes, opeued his mouth, and resorted to other devices not improving to his naturally prepossessing countenance. On a sec ond attempt, tho unwilling sitter kicked over the camera and knocked out one of the lenses. Finally, by dint of hand cuffs and a strap under his chin to keep his mouth shut, a picture was got of the engaging youth, tho sole defect of which is that the eyes are closed. Thus the "counterfeit presentment" of Charles, wrapped, to appearance, in infantile slumber, now graces tho wall of tho rogues' gallery. If all ihe peojile gifted with no greater share of beauty than this ornament to society wore equally averse to its reproduction, the number of hideous countenances at the doors and in the rooms of the photographers would be vastly diminished. How Trees aro Killed by Lightning. All who have examined a tree which has been destroyed by a " thunderbolt " will have noticed not only how tho lay ers of the wood have been shattered and separated into strips, as if full of wind shakes, but also the dryness, hardness, and brittleness of tho wood, as though it had been through the process of cur ing in a kiln. This is attributed to the instantaneous reduction of tho sap the moisture within the wood into steam. When this moisture is abundant, as in May or early June, the amount and force of tho steam not only bursts and separates the layers and fibres, but rends tho trunk in pieces or throws off a por tion of it, down a line of greatest power or at least resistance. And when the amount of steam thus suddenly genera ted is less, owing to the drier conation of the stem from continual evaporation and leaf exhalation, there may be no external trace of the lightning stroke ; yet the leaves will wither in a few days, showing that tho stem has been render ed incapable of conveying supplies, and the tree will either partially or entirely die. Still lighter discharges may be conducted down tho moist stem, without any lesion or hurt. lluilding Setcs. You can obtain a weekly report of tho New York Money Market by enclosing a stamp to Charles W. Hassleu, No. 7 Wall Street, New York. Bronchitis and Kindred Diseases by Editor Hall' Journal of Health, X. Y. Pi-. J. it. Hall's cure of Catarrh iu ol) days, Is eminently fcciuntille. tw Yorli Wholesale Murkcln. IlUTTElt-State, fine flrklnt H) fie !i til 13 10 6 90 8 10 7 80 8 30 8 00 9 00 II 10 4 on 3 Ml u ao 7i 1 ui a 7d 1 7i 1 t,0 1 CO 1 Dli 1 711 13 l,i 10 7i 9 10 11 I'll ii (ill Western.. H Ck CHEESE Stale factory Ohio do., Farm dairy COTTOX-Oidinary... Low to good middling.. EC1GS-N. V., N. J., & I'eima.... ' Llr.iuil Hi (i( FLOUR-Supcrflne... .. 6 CJ Extra to fancy State 7 60 Ohio round hoop.. 7 SO r.iru amocr Spring wheat Extra Genesee St. Louis double extra.... Ci'OX Mkal Western & Jersey.. Rnmdywiue G RAIN Coax Western Southern Barley Western Canada 0Tf , Rye WUE It Western No. 1 Spring-.. Do. No. 8 do Do. Amber Do. White White Gonesee ritOVISIOXe-l'orU-NVw mess.., W 'u prime., Br.EF-l'lain Kxtnt nic'S lioef hum. , lUcox (fltKKN llAM.4 LaiiII SEED Clover Timothy Flaxseed WOOL-N. V.. Pa., O. and Mica... Vt. and Iowa Texas urn' Calii-rnia BEEVES-llest (ioo'l Common to lair..... .. SHEEP & LAMI1S- .ieep 7 ti 6 711 7 30 8 ill 3 411 3 li 13 SH !, mi a 1i 1 M 1 ii 1 5a 1 80 1 5.'. 13 in li iu 7 U0 9 00 SO (III 1'i a i 37 CO li ill 0 fie fie ( fie fie tt fie fie fi'e fi'e (! 60 (! tui fill ('li fi'l (' (!! t" Cut 61 I .1 I li ill 13 in''' I 12, e II fie 8 fa i Cot (.' i fi li G l.umi , SWINE-LI .c I) reused CoMK, AND l.KT US REASON" ToOETIIKR. To the ulllicted in body, we oiler a few words of plain, practical reasoning. No matter under what form of sickness von labor there is one great truth you should ever keep in mind, viz.: All disease originates in an im pure condition of the blood, l'urify that, and the disease must depart, for it has noth ing to teed on ; but you cannot punlv the blood by the use of poisonous drugs, nnd ex hnustite stimulants ; the relief which these utl'ord is temporary and deceptive, leaving you worse oil' at every interval. The best lilood l'urifier ever discovered is Dit. Wai.kkk'h Famous Yi.neiiau Uittkr, compounded of simple herbs, ' By Heaven dc.ltucd for Man's Kreat use." Xo matter how hopeless your case may seem, try the Vinwiaii Uitti-.ks, und a few draughts will convince you of their virtue. Dli. Walkkh, the discoverer of this priceless remedy, had been given up to die by the Phy sicians, and it now a sound and healthy man from their use. Tub Latest Swindle. Certain sancti monious charlatans would faiu persuade the world that dill'iii-ivc stimulants have no me dicinal value, and that detestalilo slops, com posed of (rr.ping acids and drastic purgatives, uru better tonics Unn the liuest vegetable in gredients combined with the purest and mel lowest products of the still. But this sort of thing won l go down. The stomach of our common sense rejects it, as the physical stom nch of every man with an nudeiiruved valale rejects, with loathing and abhorrence, the nau! eeous aliouiiUiiliuiLS. " free from nlcnhnl " which Humbugs are tning to thrust down the throats of Temperance Invalids under the pretence that the tilth will do them good ! It is not likely that while Plantation Bitters, the Standard Tonic of America, is anywhere accessible, suck sickening liaiids can make much headway, but it is as well to put the public ou their guard ugalust Iticiu. Many valuable horses, die from the effects of colic. Ihe best thing to do in a case ot this kind Is to pour a bottlo of Johnson't Anodyne Liniment iuto a loug-uecked juuK bottle, add u UI pint molasses and water, then pour the whole down the horse s throat. Ju ten min utes the Imrte will begin to eat. rarsonf Purgative Pilli will greatly re lieve, if not entirely cure, dyspepsia when evei ylbiug else laws. They Have been tried iu seme, desperate case?, and have given more reliel lliau any other medicine. There was a man in our town, Andhe was wondrous wise, lie had a pain from ear to ear, Another between bis eyes ; And when he saw ha bad Catarrh, With all bis might and main He purchased Sage's Remedy And has bis health again.' It is sold by druggists everywhere. Contmlmcnt nnrt hnpnlnoM tvlirna In nil households whern DooUy Ypnef. J'owdor Is iii'd. Try it. Your proci-r bit U. Vnt up full weight. I0!lt TO F!TR M1NUTRB, Hfnlftfht'. Elffioho. '(M rnlirln, Lriiip Hiirk. linn ho a. C!oup-, Spminn, and nil utinlliirconiplti'ntn. are relieved by Ftagg t Instant Ke lief, or money Kuf'midod. Ap oniric Ad A rLAsnorLioHTNisodoM CrUtnr!oo' Excflgfor Hair Dye net npon tho Imlr, whlfknr nnd mutftchon; no chameleon tintp, but the purnstRafen or the most eiquinite Drowns will be evolved. - A Tkvu Balbam. Dr. Wistar'a Balsam of Wild Cherry in truly a Imlsnm. It contain tho bnJunmic nrincinle of thn Wild Clifrrv. tho bahntutr nronorties of tar and pine. Ito ingredient are all bid nam 1c. Con eh. Cold. Sore Throat. Bronchi (If, and Con sumption tpocdlly disappear under iU balramic tuflu enco. PnvsinrAfB ark Awakrd. Putlontu 1o11rhfeJ. ibn doubtful iiltjnct'd, and all who have eves to see. orcnr to hear, more thnn ntMiod fcv tho absolute certainty trtth which Ilalc'e tloncy of jlcrchaunfi and Tar euro Conrh?, Cold-. Uoancnt'Sf. and every adection ot th9 hingi and throat, tending to Consumption. Piko Tonthnchn Drops enre Toothache in ono win to. Hold by all itruntrists at 9i com p. Defend Tour Health. Tho fall of tho leavos not only eymbolizcs human decay bnt promotes It. In other word?, the effluvia from dying and rotlliift vegetation Is unfavorable to health. To this and other cau;cs opcciallyxcei of moisture In tho atmosphere may bo apcribed tho prevalence of acute disorders of tho stomnch, boweln and liver at thin season. Every person of bilious habit ts liab'o to be very bilious In tho fall. Then, too, all porions whoe digestion U weak aro moro than ordi narily dyspeptic, and individuals predisposed to colic, diarrhoea and dysentery are particularly likely to bo attacked by thoee complaints. The most complete de fence acain-t oaoh and all of the so digressing ail ments Is bodily vigor. To obtain this blessing in all its plontltude whoro it does not exist, and to prcservo and porpotuato It where it does exist, Ilostctttr'a Htomach iiitters Is earnestly recommended. It Is the poculiar office of this preparation to reinforce and reg- ulato the important organs which digest and temper tho food, and convert it into life sustaining blood. Dodlly vigor depends npon the nourishing qualities of that fluid, and tho nutritiomnei'S of the blood deponds npon the functional activity and regularity which it is the special province of tho Hitters to secure Hcnco it U the best defence of health at this season, and In doed at all seasons. When dynontery, dinnhuca, bil ious colic, and othor violent affections of tho bowels, bctomo epidemic, as they often do In certain parts of the oountry in tho fall, it will bo found that persons who have Uoen wlio enough to roeort to tho Hitters as a preventive are almost invariably exempted from the Fcourgo. TO CONSUMPTIVES. . The advertiser, having been perrranently cured of that dread dleao. Consumption, by a simple remedy, Is anxious to make known to his fellow suiferers the means of cure. To nil who deIre It, h will send a eopyf tho prescription uod, (fieo of charge), witli wie uirecnons ior preparing aim uinp me smuls wmcii they will find a tfrnn Cchb Fun Cok.umptios, Asf n ma, HitoxcniTia, Aro. I'uvtius wishing the prescription will plcuj'e uudrefcs 194 PennSt.. vYillmmburi:h. X. T. FOREIGN EHTATLS Epecully collected ly d.f.iKii.:urr, ATTornev ai fcaw, Columbia, Lancaster Co., Pa. WASTED. Agents for the fastest polling article it in ihe world. One aerent cleared $S3 in one enk, nnd has averaged Sri :to per montn uuring tne past year. A ad re RANDALL A CO.. 7C7 Broadway, New York. AGENTS WANTED FOR LIFE IN UTAH BEING an EXPOSE of tlie SECRET RITES and MYSTERIES of M0.1M0NISM. With n full unit authentic histnrr of Polrtrauiv, by 1. II. ItEADI.E. IMiuir or the fait Lake Kupurt.i' Ai?euu are m;elinir with unprecedented FU.cecfi. one renortp 1S subscribers in lour dav?. another 71 in two dnyii. Si nd tor Circulnrn nnd see what the pro fnv. of .1... .. 1. .J.l .. v iviiivit .I'lll IIIIKll ia Philadelphia, I'a., Cbivneo, 111., or St. Louis. Mo. TI1E GUEAT REMEDY FOB CONSUMPTION and acknowledged by many prominent physi cians to be the moiit HelhiMu I'repnrntion ever lutroducedfor the UELIE1' aud CL'ltEof all LUNG COMPLAINTS. This well-known remedy is offered to the public, sanctioned by the experience of over forty years, nnd when resorted to in season, seldom fails to effect a speedy cure of Coughs, Colds, Croup, Bronchitis, In fiuciiza.W hooping Cough, Hoarse ness, I'ains or Soreness in tho Chest nnd Side, Bleeding lit the Lungs, Liver Complaint, Ac. CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED by a timely resort to this stnndnrd remedy, as Is proved by hundreds of testimonials received by the proprietors. DR. WISTARS BALSAM CF WILD CORY doe not dry vp a Cough, and leave thn cuit behind, un in tint cao with most ItreiMivtttioHH, hut it tooHens and cieantir the luiifn, and allays irritation, thus removinff the cauue of the complaint, CIXSGYKEN, LAWYEES, SINGERS, ,nd all those whose occupation requires nn un usual exercise of the vocal organs, will find this the Only rni:PAt:.Tios which will cfUet ually nnd instantaneously relieve their difficul ties. Beware ol Counterfeit:!. remember that the genuine ll'istar't linUam hnt on the outside wrapper the eignature of . J1UTTS," nml the printed name of the pro prietors, "SETJl II'. t o M'LE if SOS'S, HOA TOX." All olhcrt are bane imitations. Exam ine the uriipner enrefullg before purchasing. Cue tuhti Bottle. Bit Bottl-i for Tift Mart ri:Kr.Uii;u hy BETH W. rOWLE fit, S0KS, Boston, Man., And sold by Druggists and Dealers generally. You want TABLE KNIVES nnd FORKS 1 IV 80, FSQUiKB FOR "Meriden Cutlery Co's" btanip. TbT are (iUUU. Srikl REWARD. All book and mainuilne can- Jtf viisHon peud your uildrui. immediately to aittun j eifar juaxiuins. . i ur. rery important, U i l-ViliUABLK-Sfnl thrce-opnt stamp fi.r t. Louie. Honet,onerireUcGod-feartrijinennil Humeri mo iib.o yicu-uiu, piTjuuiuio wyrK i no nsK Or c.ipiliil. ii me iu u. ... uiuuuiih IV biuuftu CU ttO0lon. Mil GENTS WANTED. No moiuT requirW In ai' - VOllVV. AUUillN LA 1 j a ot I.U., rlubourjfB, r. U1.UUS. lit r'apertanit Majmilnei. Want Areati, Baud DUnip. L. L. S AIRCUILD, Rolling PraUW.W li, Vlnrunr Ulttcr nra tint ft vile 1'incy Drink, made ot iKr Rum, Whiskey, l'rouf Spirits and Keftise Liquor dcctorccl, snicei find sweetened to please Hie aste, called ' Tonics, " Appetisers," ' Restorers,' &c, that lend Hie tippler oft to drunkenness and t uin, bnt are a true Medicine, m.vle from the native roots and herbs ofCalifornia, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the Great Hlood Purifier and a Life-Riving Principle, a Perfect Renovator and Invigor.itor of the System, carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring tlie blood to a healthy condition, enriching it, refret-hine and invigorating both mind nnd body. They arc easy of administration, prompt in their action, certain in their results, sif- and telialile in all forms of disease. No Prison enn lake those Bitter accord ing to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by nimera! poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. I))'Hpptln ot IittligrcMtlon TTcadncne, Pain in the Shoulder. Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dit zini'ss, Sour Eructations of the Stwmach, llad Taste in the Month, Hilious Atucks, Palpitation of the Heart, lullaiuiuatiou of the Ltnvs Pain iu the regions o! the Kidnevs, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. In these complaints it hs mi priiial, and one bottie will prove a better guar antoe of its merits than a lencthy advertisement.. For Femnlo Complaint in young or old, married or sinule, at the dawn of womanhood, nr the turn of life, these Tonic letters display so decided ai influence that a marked improvement is soon percep tible. For Tnfltimmnf orv nnd Chronic Kllieii mntittin and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Ui lions, Kcmitteot nnd intermittent reveis, J-'iscases 01 tne Blood. Liver. Kidnevs and Bladder, these Hitters have been mot successful. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blond, wlrch ts generally produced by derange ment of the Digestive Organs. Thoyitre a'Ocntle Purgative nmvell nn Toiklc, nossessinir also the iiecuiiir merit of netine as a powerful agent mi relieving Congestion or Inflam mation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, and in Iiiliou' Diseases. For Skin Dinensci, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules. Buils. Car' bunrfes. Ring-worm, Scald-Head, Sore Kyes, Ery sipelas Itch, Scurfs, Decolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system in a short time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle in such cases will convince the most incredulous of theii nrative effects. l-fitUH ilic Vitiated niool whenever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sore; cleanse it when you find it ob structed and sluggih in the veins ; cleanse it when it is foul ; your feelinus will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the heahh of the system will follow. Grateful thoitniiil' proclaim Vinegar Bit ters the most wonderful Invigoraut that ever sustained the sinking system. Pin, Tape, ami other Worm, lurking In the system of so m:i:iy thousands, are effectually de stroyed and removed. ' Says a distinguished pnvsiol. ogist: Theretsscarcei-yan individual upon the face of the earth whose bdy is exempt from the presence of worms. It is not upon the her'ahy elements of the body that worms exist, but irion the diseased humors and slimy deposits that breed these living monsters cf disease. No system of Medicm?, no vermifuges, no anthelmin tics "ill free tlie sy ue:n from worms like these Bit ter. Merh an ten I Disease. Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-selters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance m life, will be subiect to paralvsis of the Bowels. To guard against this take a dose of Wai.khu's Vinegar Bitturs once or twicj a week, as a Preventive. HiHoti, Ilemif tent, anil Intermittent Povcrt. which are to prevalent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United Slates, especially tho.je of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Ten nessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile. Savannah, Roan oke, James and many others with their vast tributa ries, thrmighout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably 50 during seasons ol unusual lieat and dryness are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and oibsr abdominal viscera. There are always more or less obstructions of the liver, a weakness and irritable state of the stomach, and great torpor of the bowels, being clogged up with vitiated accumulations. Iu their treat ment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upot these various organs, is essentially necessary. There is 110 cathartic fr the purpose equal to Dr. J. WVclkek's Vinr'cak Bitters as they will speedily remove the dark-colored viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of Vhc liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Srrot'uln, or ICtus; Kvil, White SwelHngr LTlcers, Erysipelas, Swlicd Neck, Goiter. Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations,- Mercurial At- fections Old Sores Eruptions ot the Skin, Sore Eve?, etc., etc. In these, as in ail other constitutional Dis eases, Wai.kkh's Vink( r Bittkks have shown their great curative powers in th: most obstinate and intract able cases. Dr. Walker's California VincirnrllHtci'ii act on all these cases m a similar manner. By purifying the Biood they remove the cause, and by resolving away the cTects of tlie inflammation fthe tubercular deposit) the atTected parts receive health, and a permanent cure s cnecieu. The iiropertloa of Dr. Wai.kkh's Vinrrar PitTTRRS are Aperient. Diaphoretic and Carminative, Nutritious Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-irritant. Sudorific, Alterative, and A nti-Bilious. The Aiierlcut and mild Laxative properties of Dk. Walker's Vinrgak Hitters are the best safe guard in all cases of eruptions and malignant fevers, their balsamic, healing, and soothing proerties protect the humors of the fauces. Their Sedative properties allay pain in the nervous system, stomach, aud bowels, either from inflammation, wind, colic, cramps, eta Their Counter-irritant influence extendi throughout the system. Their Diuretic properties act on the Kid neys, correcting and regulating the flow of urine. Their Ami-Bilious properties stimulate the liver, in the secre tion of bile, and its discharges through the biliary ducts. and are superior to ail remedial agents lur the cure ol Bilious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc. Kortiry tlie bony against aisense hv pn- yintj all its fluids with Vinkgar Bitters, No epi ieinic can take hold of a system thus forearmed. Th iver, the stomach, tlie bowels, the kidneys, and the nerves are rendered disease-proof by this gre.it invig orant. Direol Ions. Take of the Bitters nn going to bed at nigUt from a half to one and one-half wine-glassfulL Eat irood nourishinc food, such as beef steak, mutton chop, venison, roast bevf, and vegetables, nnd talc out-door exercise. 1 hey are cmposeo 01 purely vejjei able ingredients and contain no spirit. J.WALKER, PropV. R. II. MiDONAI-D&CO.. Druggists and Gen. Ajjta. , San F rancisco and New Yorfc W SOLD BY ALL DRUGOISTS & DEALERS. AGENTS WANTED FOR HARRIET BEECHER STOWE'S cainpuin book, irh lives of Ihe candidate! anrl UwUiitr im-n tv aujtariies. j wrniff .wet rortniin. rtvrto iiccnty iMuart a ntt'f ittti nmi'Hv and ra-ily nwlc Write mid wp. Purticulttrii free. i Ult rlll.u 1 U., ijlmi. Si lu., iiariii'irti.conii. A New Colony in Kansas ! At ''SKIDDT." In Nosl.o Vallfv, on MISSOURI, KANSAS AND TEXAS RAILWAY. I'ndor thu ausalcea of iln NATIONAL llUREAIT ' au ItlllUlTlilV WM. P.'toMLINSO.N, Local Agent. THE AMERICA COLONIST AND HOMESTEAD JOURNAL, containing map, with lull ijarliculara ad to the Organization of tlie Colony, the L:intls. Prodac lions. Climate. Wood, Water, etc., SENT FREE, on nniilicatlon to S. R. Wells, t)ec's N. U. of Mii-rulioll, 389 Droudway, New Y'ork. THIS OUT and tend 85 ccnU for a tii kot and draw a Watch, Sewing Machine, Piano, or some article of value. No blanVa. Six UckoU $1. AddrcM PACKARD CO., Cincinnati, O. THEA-NECTAR IS A FI RE III jAt-Jt TEA with the Oreen Ten Flttvtr. The best Tea Imported. For sale everywhere. And lor mle whulo mle only hy the Great Allnn tic ami PhvIAu Tea I o., No. Ml Fullon Si., and i i Church St., Now York. F.O. Box.SOOU. bend for Thea-Sectar Circular THE COIN FISSION'S OF A NERVOUS INVALID. Publlnhed tor tho benefit of young men anil othen who .nrler from Nervou. Debility, etc., .applying Tllf UEiss ur vklv-ci'rk. Written by one who cured hiui 8e 11, anil scut free on receiving a uoi.t-paid directed envelope. Addrea, NATHANIEL MAIFAIR. liiuiA. lyu. N. Y. DR. WHITTIER, SflA Pen ii Street, PlTTSUl'KGH, Pa. Longest engaged, and most successful phyiciau of ii,e agu. Consultation or naniphlel I'ne. tall or write. 1 u.t publUhed for benelit ol young men a tio.ullur In u Nervoa.-ne., Dubility, Ac, a treati.e of 3(i paxes fo 1 lamps : a book of iuo piura illustrated, tor ju centi . $30 FER WEER and sxpense paid. Wewa it a reliable agent In ever, County in the J S. Addrea. Umsni Htvea Wibk Co. Ilr Maiden Lane. N. Y- or Chicago. 111. 3 KEOEIPTH, which coat tlM-M, wnt on receipt of 10 eenta. Ad area BY. BENJAMIN, 8u Lout., Mo. AGENTS Wanted. Agent, make mora money at work for u. than auytUlug tin. Particular! frre G Utimsis" fin., tin Art euMshen, Portland, Ua Octuher li 1J7 1