The Elk County advocate. (Ridgway, Pa.) 1868-1883, July 10, 1873, Image 4

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    Farm, Uardm mid Household.
Potato Culture.
At the Into meeting of the Bucks
County fPn.) Agricultural Society,
Thomas Rhallcross renl nn essay on
Totnto Culture," in which he detailed
his success with vnrious varieties last
venr. The Teprless he placed ntthe
head out of eight sorts, it yielding near
,ly 300 bushels per acre of mnrketable
tubers. The Climax stood next, yield
not so good, qunlity better, and almost
equal to the Early Hose in enrliness.
Monitor third in yield and. profit, but
liable to rot, and large ones often hol
low. Early Rose poor in quality and
small, large enough in yield season
unfavorable. Early Goodrich yielded
well, quality poor. The Trolific (new)
about as good in quality and yield as
the Climax, but inclined to set too thick
on the vines, and kept green till late.
Jackson White, good quality, popular,
but yielded poorly, llinman did not
do well. Feuehblow, though good, can
not compete with the . Peerless where
profit is the object ; Teei-less will pay
better at 50 cents than Peachblow at $1.
Cuzco, prolific, but poor generally dis
carded. Four things he thought neces
sary to first-class crops, viz., a light,
loamy soil, plenty of good manure,
(stable manure the main dependence)
fifteen to eighteen tons per acre, good
seed (such as has not been planted
more than two or three times) and
thorough culture. Put on the manure
whenever you have it no matter if
the ground is frozen or covered with
snow, provided it is not a sidchill.
Land full of vegetable matter is excel
lent for this crop. In following corn it
is a good plan to plough in the fall, and
then begin manuring ; weeds will be
less troublesome in this way. Plant
when dry and warm. One or two eyes
are enough to a piece of seed ; plant in
every other furrow, and ten or twelve
inches apart ; where certain vnrieties
incline to grow too large, like the Peer
less or Monitor, plant closer. Cover
about two or three inches ; use the
roller only on dry ground. A substitute
for the roller would be a large door
drawn over the ground, which will level
without packing. Harrow before the
potatoes come nn. Hill nn inst hnf
the vines fall with a potato plough. Dig
as soon as the vines die ; store in a dark,
cool cellar. Mr. S., thinks potatoes the
most profitable crop of his section. In
1871 he sold 1,055 bushels for $909, the
product of eight acres. The manure
cost S38 per nere, besides hnuling.
Feeds his small potatoes, and did not
include them or his seed in the figures
and estimotes given above.
Obstruction in a Cow'i I'dtlrr.
Is there any remedy for a cow that
has a chunk in the bag, " at the root of
the tent," so that the milk runs down
vory slow. S., "West Clarksville, X. Y.
Reply by L. B. Arnold, .Secretary
American Dairymen's Association'.
The bunch is occsaioned by a thick
ening of the valve iu the milk tube,
near the junction of the teat and udder.
Such enRes are seldom perfectly reme
died. They can be improved by taking
a large steel knitting-needle and flatten
ing a spot an inch or so from one end
and making the edges sharp. Insert a
tube or quill in the teat just large
enongh to admit the flattened spot, and
let the upper end of the tube reach
nearly to the bunch. Pass the needle
through the tube and cut the hard lump
one way going up, turning it to make
a cross cut coming down. The tube re
maining in the teat, pass a small swab
or sponge, wet with iodine, up through
the tube, and brush the wound. This
will deaden the surfaces nnd tend to
prevent growing together while healing.
This will niford temporary relief and
sometimes permanent. Occasionally
the thickening of the valve will contin
ue and spoil the teat in spite of treat
ment. I have seen a statement of sim
ilar treatment, when the cow was dry,
a silver tube remaining iu the teat till
healing was well along, that was said to
work well. The plan looks feasible,
but I have never experimented at that
season.
BR lor Orchard!.
If a man wants fine fruit he should
keep a dog under the tree cut up in
pieces 'and buried among the roots.
The carcass of even the average cur is
declared to contain about one pound of
phosphorus an important element of
fertility. In view of the curtailed con
dition of the sheep trade and the im
paired health of orchards, there ought
to be more shipwrecks on the sea of
canine life ; more barks gone down for
ever. Women as Students.
A lady writer in the Boston Traveler
pays: ua nn average my girls at twelve
were as advnnced ns my boys at fifteen ;
and who shall dare say, if an equal
number of those girls with the boys had
been told at that age, or custom had
rendered it common, that they were to
seek professions for life and support
themselves by their intellectual efforts,
that they would have lagged behind
any of those boys ?
It is all noiiseuse, this talk about
women naturally possessing inferior
mental capacity. A ho does not know
that the mind of man grows and
(strengthens by use, nnd so would the
mind of woman, but just nt the age
when a few boys and youncr men becin
m earnest to study for a livelihood or
to make themselves fnitfous, young
women are taken from school with their
" education Jin inhcd," so called! Just
give them an equal chance in colleges
of their own, separate from Hnrvaid's
proua sons, and banish sickening novels
and odious fashions from the domains,
teach them that they ought never to
marry for a support, but nre self-sustaining
themselves, and if Harvard boys
are not compelled to be " fast " in or
der to win and not to be left lagging
behind in the race for literary honors,
then my-woman's prevision is as false
as the assumption that women desire
knowledge because men are learned,
wish to fill their places, or -take " all
the privileges of men."
Drnnkards by the Thousand.
It is asserted on the best authority
that only a few evenings since a scheme
for starting 100 saloons in the poor dis
tricts of the city of New York was seri
ously considered by two capitalists as
they sat over their dinner in one of the
most fashionable up town clubs. The
projector of the enterprise had the ex
pense calculated to such a nicety that
he could warrant a remunerative in
come to any one who would engage
with him in the traffic The speculator
did not calculate the number of mur
derers or wife beaters which these 100
gin mills would annually produce ; but
he did ascertain to a dead certainty
that $250,000 clear profit could be mnde
each year. And this, too, in a city
wl ose gin mills now ruMning, if placed
in two lines, would fill both sidea of
Broadway from th Battery to Central
A Infernal Machine Sent by A Husband
to his Wife.
In stories of Italian running and
malevolence one often reads of death
dealing boxos being sent ostensibly as
appreciative presents to princes and
others in authority whose extinction is
deemed desirable. To-day fortunately
there is not rmtch risk of one's being
the recipient of so fatal a gift; yet nn in
stance of this romantic way of attempt
ing assassination has but recently oc
curred near Edinburgh.
A Mr. David Macrea. a contractor.
Jiot long since sent a box to his wife,
wno lives at saugnton iiall, near Edin
burgh, at the snme timo writing to her
in the name of hrr mother thot a box of
wearing apparel had been forwarded,
and could be found at the railway sta
tion. Mrs. Macrea suspected that her
husband was the one who had sent the
box, and was apprehensive as to its
contents. She therefore had it opened
with great cure by the employees of the
railway company. A loaded nistol at
full cock, with a cap on the nipple, four
nnu a nan pounds of blasting powder,
and broken glass made up the contents
of the box. A string was fnstened to
the trigger of the pistol in such a way
that on an attempt being made to open
the lid the string would be pulled, the
pistol fired, nnd the powder thus
exploded.
Mrs. Macrea preferred a charge of at
tempted murder atrainst her htishnnd.
but when the cose was called before the
High Court of Edinburgh, on the 2nd
of June, he failed to appear, his bail
bond was forfeited, and sentence of
outlawry pronounced ncraiust him.
This treacherous method of assassina
tion is even worse than poisoning, for
while in the rearrangement of the de
stroying ngeucy there is shown the long
deliberation which is an element in all
cases of poisoning; there is shown, too.
in a case of this kind, where an infernal
machine is used, a terrible disregard fur
the lives of many others besides that of
the hated individual.
For the Cholera,
More than fortv rears nco. suvs tho
New lork Sun, when it was fouud that
prevention for the Asiatic cholera was
easier than cure, the learned doctors of
both hemispheres drew up a prescrip
tion, which was puousneu (lor working
peopie; in tne iew xorL bun, and took
me name oi tne "bun cholera mixture.'
We have seen it in constant use for
nearly two score years, and found it to
ne tne best remedy for looseness of the
bowels ever yet devised. It is to be
commended for several reasons. It is
not to be mixed with liquor, nnd there
fore will not be used as an oleoholic
beverage; its ingredients are well known
among all the common people, and it
will have no prejudice to combat; each
of the materials is in equal proportion
to the others, and it may therefore be
compounded without professional skill:
and, as the dose is so very small, it may
be carried in a tiny phial' in the waist
coat pocket, and be always at hand. It
is
I met. opn,
Capsici,
Rheico.,
Menth pip.,
Campho.
Mix the above in equnl parts; dose,
ten to thirty drops. In plain terms,
take equal parts tincture of opium, red
pepper, rhubarb, peppermint and cam
phor, nnd mix them for use. In case
of diarrhoea, take a dose of ten to twen
ty diops in three or four teaspoonfuls
of water. No one who has this by him,
and takes it in time, will ever have the
cholera.
The National Cemeteries.
The War Department has issued gen
eral orders in which it is said: "The
national cemeteries are to be venerated
as the resting-places of the noble dead
of the nation, whose memory the people
desire to honor by making their graves
beautiful, and by preserving them from
injury or desecration." Particular in
structions are given for this purpose.
While Superintendents are required to
be men of intelligence, and zealous nnd
faithful in the discharge of their public
duties, they are also expected to be tem
perateand moral in their habits, and
upright and honora-ble in their private
transactions. The Secretary of war has
decided that the United 'States will
transfer the remains of such Union sol
diers ns nre now buried iu the Ever
green Cemetnry, nt Gettysburg. Penn
sylvania, to the Natiional Cemetary in
the same place, upon application of
friends of the deceased, who have the
right to make the request.
President MncMahon.
The Paris correspondent of the Lon-
don News describes President MacMa-
hon as "a man of militnry appearance.
his carriage erect, but he walks stiffly in
consequence of the hip-wound he met
with at Sedan. His blue eyes, which
nre set close together, express quickness
ot observation, but neither keen pene
tration nor intellectual power. The
physiognomy is Irish, but without a
gleum of Irish mirth or humor, the
countenance being sorrowful." The
same writer declares that "MacMahon
has not the faintest perception of the
ludicrous, and that his imogination is
easily led away by the pomps and shows
oi me. iiis miuu nus a certain epic
tendency which, if allied to intellectual
power, would make him one of the
greatest men of the century. But un
fortunately his will and intellect are
both feeble
A Divorce iu the "Good Old Times."
isefore the war, in the gold mining
regions of Burke County, North Caro
lina, lived an industrious,' well-to-do
colored woman, named Nancy Boyce.
She was engaged to marry Jack, a slave.
and in order to have everything pleasant,
she put her hand in her pocket, and
bought him of his master. But she was
shrewd enough to take a bill of sale of
him, fortunately as it happened, for
Jack turned out to he utterly worthless,
and a perfect sot. But little need was
there for Nancy to go to the Courts for
relief by divorce; she knew a better way
than that. She owned her man, and
she simply sold him to a slave dealer
who carried him off to the far South
west, so that sharp Nancy was not both
ered by him again. Husbands have
been badly sold before, though not in
this particular way.
How to make a Harp. Use horse'
hair. Fasten one or twg of these hairs
in the opening between the two sashes
of a window and mark the result at
night. It will make a harp.
The Grocer in Augusta, Ga., who sold
a can of potash for condensed milk, is
to be prosecuted as soon as his unfor
tunate patron recovers sufficient cool
ness .to employ a lawyer.
The New York State Editorial Assc
ciation, bald ibis year at Poughkeepaie,
decided to hold the next annual meet
ing at Lockport, N. Y.
Tbe Conquest of Khiva,
What I lCipeateri In ft mult from It A
Sketch of the Country.
The conquest of Khiva, says Thomas
Knox, is a certainty, and from my
knowledge of the policy and prowess of
liussia, and the extent of her prepara
tion, I shall be disappointed if the
Russian ting does not wave over Khiva
by the time this article comes from the
hands of tho printer. The emperor
will extend his dominions as rapidly as
possible, and after Khiva has fallen
there is fair ground for expecting the
conquest of Afghanistan. Tlenty of
time will be taken, though something
may occur to induce haste. In such
case Russia will not be found wanting.
The conquest of Central Asia up to the
frontiers of British India is likely to be
made within the next ten or twenty
years, nnd possibly it wm be accom
plished m the present year.
That the Russians will attempt to
push into India I do not believe ; they
have no wish to provoke a war with
Great Britain by any aggressive move
ment. What the latter power holds she
may keep ; Afghanistan may possibly
become a bone oi contention, and pos
sibly Russian and English troops may
meet in her territory, but they are not
likely to fight it out there. The dispute
that arises is more likely to be settled
by diplomacy than by war, unless Eng
land takes the aggressive. Besides the
onquest of Central Asia, Russia seeks
to establish a port on the Indian Ocean;
she already hos a project for a railway
to India, and the Bubject of navigating
the Oxus and Jaxartes has long been
under consideration. The chief diffi
culty iu the way of running boats on the
Oxus is the absence of water for several
mouths of the year in some parts of the
river, and the daily shifting of the sandy
channel iu other parts. Water is gen
erally regarded as a nine qua non in
steam navigation, and for most practi
cal purposes the Oxus is useless. The
Jaxartes is somewhat, though not much,
better, but it has not yet been deter
mined to what extent it is available.
The railway is the only certain means
of rapid communication, but the dis
tances are so great and the local re
sources so few that it can not be looked
for at present.
The khanate of Khiva is defined by
the geographers ns lying between lati
tude 30" and 45 north, and longitude
52 and 64 east, bounded north by the
Kirghiz Steppe and the Aral Sea, east
by Bokhara and the Kizikum Desert,
south by Khorassan, and west by the
Caspian Sea. It has an area of 150,000
square miles, and a population esti
mated at 2,000,000. Most of the land
is an arid desert, and the fertile portion
of Khiva is mainly along the Oxus,
where there is considerable agriculture.
Cotton is extensively cultivated, and
great numbers of sheep, goats, horses,
and dromedaries are raised. Silk, cot
ton, and woolen fabrics are made, and
large quantities of the raw materials are
exported to Russia by caravans. Most
of the work is performed by slaves.
and the capital of Khiva is a great slave
mnrt.
The Russian conquest will doubtless
break up this traffic, and it is for this
reason that .Persia favors instead of op
posing the Muscovite ambition. More
than twenty thousand Persians nre
held in bonuage in Khiva ; occasionally
these slaves escape to Hussia, and are
nrotected. and it, is this protection of
fugitives which has cnused much ot the
' ... . -t ; - ..
ill feeling between Russia and Khiva,
In Barnaul, Western Siberia, I saw sev
eral persons who had thus escaped, nnd
from the lips of one of them, nn officer
of the l'ersinn army, I heard the terri
ble story of his sufferings during a
seven years' captivity, and of the cruel
treatment visited upon him and his fel
low-prisoners.
Khiva, the capital, is situated on a
plain near the Oxus, has a population
of a little over 12,000, and is surround
ed by mud walls, easily broken by the
modern opplionces of war. iho lurco-
man slave-hunters bring their captives
to the city, where they are sold in the
public square in the same way that
sluvea are sold at the barracoons oh the
African coast. Sometimes when tribes
iu various parts of the khanate are in
revolt, the troops of the emir are sent
to chastise them. lhe heads of the
slain are brought in by the victors, and
paid for at stipulated prices, lhe pris-
oners, such as nre under forty years of
age, are sold into slavery ; the old men
are beheaded or tortured, according to
the will of the khan. Vanibery thus
describes the treatment of a party of
rebel prisoners brought into Khiva at
the time of his visit: " The young men
were chained together by their iron col
lars in numbers of ten to fifteen, and
led away ; the old men awaited submis
sively the punishment awarded to them
While several were led to the gallows or
block, I saw how, at a sign from theexe
cutioner, eight aged men placed them
selves down on their backs upon the
earth. They were then bound hand
and foot, and the executioner gouged
out their eyes in turn, kneeling to do so
on the breast of each poor wretch ; and
after every operation ho wiped his
knife, dripping with blood, upon the
white beard ot the hoary unfortunate,
The Khivaus have all the appliances
of torture known to ancient or modern
times. The bare enumeration of them.
with the briefest description, would
cause the most stoical of readers to
shiver with horror.
Humanity will be greatly benefited by
Russia's absorption of Khiva. The
Crescent must give way to the Cross
and the mercy and love taught by the
Nazarene must be substituted for the
cruelty enjoined by him who preached
death to unbelievers, and spread his re
ligion with nre and sword.
A Drunkard's Warning,
A young man entered the bar-room
of a viilage tavern, and called for
drink. " No," said the landlord, " you
have too muck already. You have had
delirium tremens once, and I cannot
sell yon any more." He stepped aside
to muke room for a couple of young
men who had just entered, and the
landlord waited upon them very politely.
j.ue otner nau stooa by silent and sul
len, and when they had finished he
walked up to the landlord, and thus ad
dressed him : " Six years ago, at their
age, I stood where these young men
now are ; I was a man with fair pros-
nects. Now. at the nrra nt twor,t.c1rrl,f
I am a wreck, body and mind. You led
me to drink. In this room I formed
the habit that has been my ruin. Now
sell me a few glasses more, and your
work will be done ! I 6hall soon be out
of the way : there is no hone for me
But they can be saved ; they may be
men again. Do not Bell it to them.
Sell it to me, and let me die, and the
world will be rid of me ; but for Heaven's
sake sell no more to them I" The land
lord listened, pale and trembliner. Set
ting down his decanter, he exclaimed :
" God helping me, that is the last drop
I will ever sell to any ona I" And he
kept bia word.
A Great Library Under the Hammer.
The Terkins library was disposed of
at auction at Hanworth Park, near Lon
don, during the first week in June, and
the choice Tots, as a rule, seem to have
realized consideraHv above the estimate
of booksellers and bibliomaniacs, lhe
two Mazarine Bibles, the one printed on
vellum and the other on paper, formed
lhe great feature of the sale, the fomer
fetching $17,000 nnd the latter $13,450,
which is far ahead of any sum hereto
fore paid for any printed book. The
copy of Faust and Schoffor's Bible of
1402 fetched $3,900, mid that of Miles
Coverdnle's (1535) $2,000. The first
folio of Shnkspenre, on the other hnnd,
brought only 2,il25, or severnl hundred
dollars less than the price obtained for
a copy no more, perfect than this iu
18G4. Tho Cnxton editions sold full up
to the estimate. The illuminated man
uscripts were iu great demand, and
Lydgate's " Sege of Troye" was
knocked down for the handsome sum of
S6.G00. The " Hundred Tales of Troy,"
by Christine de Pison, brought $3,250 ;
the " Evangelisterium," a MS. of the
tenth century, $2,825 ; a " Romance of
the Life of Christ," &c, of the four
teenth centurr. $2,000 ; " Horro ad
Usuni Romanum," a vellum MS. of the
fifteenth century, $2,000 ; and tho
" CEuvres Diverses" of Jean de Menu,
a splendid MS. of the fifteenth century,
on vellum, copiously illustrated, $3,450.
mi ii i a. j. n.
inese prices will serve to niusiruie me
zeal of contending collectors and also
the abundance of money in England, in
which country most of the bibliogroph
ical treasures" brought together by Mr.
Perkins seem likely to remain. We are
not aware that any work of special
value was purchased on American ac
count.
There are nine wife whinners in the
Indianapolis county jail at present, and
one morning the other prisoners held a
dress parade of this class. hen stand
ing all in a row, a whitewash brush was
applied to the person of each as a dis
tinguishing mark, even the most hard
ened of the criminals desiring to be set
apart from so degraded a brute as a wife
whipper
Jcst taken his Bitters. We heard a
seedy-looking individual with an alarm
ingly red nose remark to a brother
sooker that he had "just taken his bit
ters, but he did not mind taking another
nip. His remark suggested a train of
reflection. How was it, we asked our
selves, that the word "bitters" had
grown to be a synonym for cin. whisky.
rum, and other alcoholic stimulants, to
winch it was applied indiscriminately.
Bitters, we reasoned, suggested the idea
of a healthful tonic, not of a poisonous
stiniulont ; something invigorating to
tne system, not an alcoholic irritant.
tun oi lusel oil, producing present in
toxication and ultimate insanity, idiocy,
or premature death. Moreover, our
idea of bitters was totally irreconcilable
with "gin cocktails," "rum punches,"
and "brandy smashes," which, we are
informed, are sweetened with sugar,
and rendered doubly injurious with es
sences colored by means of mineral
poison. This was bitter-sweet with a
vengeance. We mentioned this problem
to a friend. He solved it by exclaim
ing: "Why, don't you know that most
of these bitters advertised as remedies
are only drams in disguise. Topers
know it, if you do not. I must make
one- exception, however." he added.
"ond that's i3. Walker's California
Vinegar Bitters ; there isn't a particle
of alcohol or fermented liquor in it, nnd
it is the best vegetable tonic and alter
ative in America." Com.
Jahajoi SmACss.the famous composer
of Waltzes, who came over to the Boston
Jubilee last year, has written a note to
the mason & Hamlin Organ Co.. m
which he says that their instruments
richly deserve their great reputation ;
and that he knows no other instruments
of the class in this country or Europe,
at all comparable to them. Com.
A terrible tragedy occurred near Santa
Rosa, on the line of the Northern Pa
cific Railroad. Charles Hoefner and
Valentine Scheiner weru sleepincr to
gether in a store. Hoefner dreamed
that a man was robbing the store, and
shot Scheiner, killing hiin. Tho men
were on the most friendly terms, and
after an investigation Hoefner was dis
charged from custody on tho grourd
that the shooting was accidental.
PAIN1 PAIN ! 1 PAINM!
WHERE is thy reliever?
Readen, you will find it ti that Favorite Home
Kemedy
PERRY DA VIS' PALY-KILLER.
It has been teited In every variety of dimAte. nnd
by almost every uatton known to Americans. It is
tbe almost constant companion and inestimable
iriena oi tne missionary ana traveler, on sea and
land, and no one should travel on our lakes or rivers
without it.
ITS MEaiTS ARB UK6fTR PASSED.
If von are snfferina from INTERNAL Pitv
Twenty to Thirty Droits inn Little H'ufer will al
most instantly cure you. There is nothing equal to
it. In a few moments it cures
Colic. (Vamps, Spasm. Heart-bum, Diarrhaa,
Vynentery, Flux, Wind tn the H,iuels, &,ur
Stomach, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache.
Cures CHOLERA, wben all other Remedies Fall.
It gives Instant Belief from Aching Teeth.
In sections of the country where Fever mn
Aors prevails, there is uo remedy held in ureater
esteem.
FOR FEVER Attn AniTR -T.lfe-A thr.. tM0.rwA.i,.la
of the Pain-Killer in about half a pint of hot water,
wen sweetened witn molasses ns tne attai k Is com
inirnn. Batbintf freely the chest, b.-tck, and bowels
with the Pain-Killer at the same time. Repeat the
dose in twenty minutes if the-Hist does not stop
the chill. Should it produce vomiting (and it prob
ably will, if the stomach is very foul), take a little
Pain-Killer in cold water sweetened with sufc-ar
after each spasm. Perseverance in the above treat
ment has cured many severe and obstinate ca ses o
this disease.
GREAT " CIIOLBRA" REMEDY
PAIN-KILLER.
It is an External and Internal Remedy. Tor Ram
mer Complaint or any other form of bowel dtseuse
in children or adults. It is an almost certain cure.
and has without doubt, been more successful ill
orlnif the various kinds of CHOI.FRA than any
tber known remedy.or the most skillful nhvuli i .1,
In India, Afiica and China, w here this ilreaiifnl dis
ease is moreor less prevalent, the Pain-Killer is
considered by the natives as well as by European
residents in those climates, A SURE REMFDT ;
and whileit is a most cmrient remedy for pain, it
is a perfectly safe medicine In the most unskillful
hands. It has become a household remedy, from
the fact that it gives immedinteand permanent re
lief. It is a purely vegetable preparation, made
from the best and purest materials, safe to keep
nnu uao 111 every iitiiiiiy. ji is recommended ly
physicians and persons of all clauses, and to-day,
after a public trill of thirty years the average lifo
of man it stands unrivalled and unexcelled,
spreading its usefulness over the wide world.
Directions accompany each Bottle.
Price 23 cts., SO cts., and 1 per Bottle.
FERRY DAVIS t BON, Proprietor!,
Providence, R. I.
J. X. HARRIS A CO., Cincinnati', .,
Proprietor! for the Western and South Western
states.
for lale by all Medicine Dealer!.
yea sali wholesale bt
JOHM P. HENRY. New York.
OF.O. C. OOODWIN t CO., Boston.
JOHNSON, HOLOW AY it CO., Philadelphia.
KIDNEY DISEASE, DROPSY, and all diseases of
tne iLianeys sua jiiaaaer, can be cured by the use
of Hoar's Besihi. Thousand! tbat have Deeu
given up by their Physicians tn din. haya hnon
speedily cured by the use of Hunt's Hsmhit. Sent
to any address securely packed on rec ipt of one
dollar and twenty-five fl.25) cents. Bend fur tlliia-
trated pamphlet to William E. Clabki, Sole Pro-
ir.'."r, rnivinniirr. n- 1.
Best ami Olilesl Family Mrilli Inc. San
fora s i,lver invignrator-s, purely vegetable lUtthur
tie and Tomc-for Dyspepsia. Constipation, Debility
Sick Headache, Bilious Attacks, and all derange
ment! of Liver, Stomach and Bowels. Ask your
uruKSiii 1111 1,. jjvwiiit uj imiiuoiini.
Will TBI Lityb ii out of Order use Dr. Jayne'i
Sstiltive Pilli i yom will bring back this organ
te healthy eoaditlon, and f t rl of many dli-
trssilag lympt .
EiaerTEiji years have established the fact that no
or Ague, or rains ana Fever can withstand
aueui.igsr'i rills, u takes as iieta.
A Portland man was caught fishing
for trout on another man's land the
other day; the owner remonstrated, but
retired in silence before tne majestic
answer. "Who wants to catch your
trout? I'm only trying to drown this
worm."
Stacvville, Iown, Ins tho small-pox
directly from Germany by mail.
For Loss of Aitetite, Dyspepsin,
indicoHtion. DnprosHinn of Spirits ilnil (ioneral
Doliilitv, in their various forms. l'Kiiiio-rnos-
PORATKP F.T.1X11! of ( AT IKWA mailC I IV l.ASWKM.,
Hazaiid A- Co.. New York, and wild by all ivnx-
?itttu, is the bout tonic. At a stimulant tonic
or patients, rccovcrine from fever or otli'-r
siekncRK. it lias no ciiial. If taken during too
season it prevents fever and ague and other
intermittent fevers. Coin.
Dooley's Yeast Powder cannot be ex
celled for making light sweet Itolls, 13iKouits.
Waffles. Corn lireau, iVC. n is aiwnys rcany
and reliable. Com.
Flaoo's Instant Belief. Warranted
to relieve all Ithenmatio Afflictions, Sprains,
Neuralgia, etc. The best, the surest, and tbe
quickest remedy for all Bowel Complaints. Re
lief guaranteed or the money refunded. Com.
The cathartics used and approved by
the plivnirianB comprising the various mcdie;il
associations of this Htate are now compounded
and sold under the name of I'arson't Purga
tive Pills. Com.
The Browns and Blacks produced by
that sterling preparation, Ckistapoho's Excel
sum Haiu Dye, cannot be excelled by Nature ;
its tints' challenge comparison with Nature's
most favored productions, and defy detection.
Com.
We copy the following from nn ex
change, which is important, if true : Chronic
diarrliira of long standing, also dysentery, and
all similar complaints common at this season of
the year, can be cured by the use (internally)
of joluifon't Anodyne Liniment. We know
whereof we aflirm. Com.
Mentnl Depression.
Mental depression is a disease of tho nervous
system, and, of all tho ills flesh is heir to, it Is the
one that excites the least sympathy. It is a subject
of frequent jests, and is called by various deiisivo
terms; but although it is often laughed at, it is
not etisy to laugh the patient out ti ii u.InX .ii-.'.
his ills are all real, for it is a real disorder the
general features of which are constaut fear,anxicty
and gloom. Tho external senses, as well as the
mental faculties, often manifest symptoms of de
rangement. Noise, sa of falling water, and ring
ing in the ears are complained of, while blai-k
specks and fiery sparks frequently flit before the
vision. Admonitions like these should not be dis
regarded, as they may, if neglected, terminate in
insanity. The scat of the Ciscase is tn the brain
and nervous system, and to control the malady it
is necessary to use a poweiful tonic and alterative,
which will correct and tone those organs without
inflaming the brain. This is the secrc of the suc
cess of Ilostetter's Stomach Bitters in cases of this
kind, for which it is the safest as well as the best
of restoratives. In fact it is the only pure and
reliable tonic stimulant known. Many nostrums,
purporting to be tonics, are puffed up from time to
time la the newspapers, but the sufferer had better
let them alone, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters has
proven itself, by many years' trial, to be iu every
respect what it is re resented to be.
Tho Markets.
NEW ror.K,
Beef Cattle Prime to Extra Bulloeke$
Firnt quality
ftecond quality.
Ordinary tlnn Cattle...
Interior or lowei graclo
Milch Cows
Uoga Live
PreHSed
Sheep
Cotton Miihlliim
Flour Extra Wi-ntem. . .
htate Extra
Wlicat Hed Wotcru . . . .
No. 2 Spring....
Rye
Barley Malt
Oatn Mixed Western...
Corn Mixed Western. .
Hay, per ton
Mruw, per ton..
Hops
."72's 33u45-
Pork Mess
Lard
Petreloum Crude
Butter State
(riiio, Fine
" Yellow
Western ordiuary..
Pennsylvania flue. .
Cheese State Factory
bxllumeu
Ohio
Eggs Bute 17
BUFFALO.
Beer Cattle 5.25
Mhoep 4.n0
Hogs Live 4.90
a fl.KO
a 5.C0
a 5.IH)
OlO.IHI
a l.;)ft
a ,4j
a .:ih
a .so
Flour 7.011
Wheat No. 2 Spring 1.35
Corn
4(1
:(4
M
Oats
Rye
barley
Lard
84
.98
.10
ALU ANT.
Wheat
Rye Ktate
l.SS
.57
.88
.44
a 2.10
a
a ,fi8
a l.in
a .44
Coru Mixed
Uarley State
Oats State
PHILADELPHIA
Flour
7.50
1.65
.B8
0 B.fiO
a MM
a ,r8
Wheat Western Rod
Corn Yellow
Mixed
,40)la .45
Id-fined .19
Petroleum Crude 13
Clover Seed 7.00
a 8.00
a 4.00
Timothy 4.00
BALTIMORE.
Cotton Low Middling 19
a .inv
a 7.50
a l.t-5
a ;' l
a 611
Flour Eitra e.M
Whert 1.45
Coru fil
lata ti
WAST Fverybody to have one of WniaHT's
Patent Sluing Beds. FoMing Bedstead, aid
Folding Cranli- and ('lib. B-nd f-ir Pictures with
prices. Bam 1 H. Jenkins. Agent, 207 Canal St., rO .
VlOH. YOl It HOMES with the new Chi o
ino Awake' and "Asleti." Sells like wild Are.
The pair sint for 60 cts. A 1 irgi- discount to ageutl.
Auuiess w. r. L intll'tA t f.K. 1' oxn-iro, siass.
Z?1 A Tfl Qfl " PaXW'r.'rre,
J)lU IU OsflV AH Blair d Co., 81 Louis, Mi..
$40?
Her Wtfk IN CASH to AffPiiU.
EvtMjthinufuriiiBhed uud expenses paid
CONSUMPTION
And. Its Ouro.
Carbolated Cod Liver Oil
Is a scientific combination of two well-known medl.
clnei. Its theory I I rut to arrest the decay, ilien
build up the system. Physicians find the doctrine cor.
reet. The really startling curca performed by Will
son's Oil-are proof.
Carbolic Acid luvdttttly arrests Decay. It li the
most powerful antiseptic in the known world. F.n
tcrlnx into the circulation, it at once preppies with
corruption, and decay ceases, it purifies the sources
of disease. , ...
Cod liver Oil is Nature's best cusistant la resisting
Consume tlon.
Pat up In large wedge-shaped bottles,
bearing the Inventor's signature, und is
old by lb best Druggist, rreearea oy
t. xx. wiiiiiaoit",
3 John Btraat, New Yorks
V" ' I
ny a .1 1 v
a .ID
hoir.
X.J'
TBE GREAT ALTEEATIYE
AND ELOOD rtJIUFIER.
It is not a quack nostrum.
Tho ingredients ore published
on each bottle of medicine. It
is used and recommended by
Physicians wherever it has
been introduced. It will
positively cure SCROFULA
in its rariotts stapes, I'JIEU
MAT1SM, W1I1TJJ SWEL
LING, GO I T, G 01 TEE,
LEOKC111T1S, KEK VOL'S
DEBILITY, IXC1P1EK1
CONSUMPTION, andall dis
eases arising from an impure
condition of the blood. Bend
for ourEoBADALis Almakac, in
which yon will find certificates
from reliable rnd trustworthy
Physicians, Ministers of the
Gospel and others.
Dr. E. Wilton Carr. of Hammer?,
fnjfl re lo d it in cases cf Frrofula
nn'd other discasea with much satisfac
tion. nr.T.CPnili.ef Ssltimere. recom
m
mends it to ail persons suffering with
direaeed niood, saying it is superior to
ariv rrrrnrsticn I,p 1 asevrrupea.
iev. Bflbnev Ball, of tie Baltimore
M. E. tonlerince feotith, ssja lie lisa
1 een so much benefitted f y it" tipe, flint
1 0 cheerfully rreoniriisdi it to all his
friends and acquaintances.
Craven & Co., rirnp pifts, et Gordons
ville. Vs.. uy it never has failed to give
gatiFfnction.
6am'l O. Kcradden, MJmwwm;
TeiinrFf-ee, sua it cured him of ltheu
matitm w hen all else failed.
THE KOSADALISr IN CONNECTION WITH Om
will cure Chills and Fever J,lver Complaint, Dys
pepsia, etc. We puarante71?nADAi.is superior to
all other Blood Purifiers, bend for Descriptive
circular or Almanac.
Address CLEMENTS CO.,
6 S. Commerce Bt.,LaU!mcre,lId.
Remember to ask your Druggist for r.osADAi,ii.
N. Y. N. U., No. 2fi.
SCHENCKS MANDRAKE PILLS.
These Pills are composed exclusively of vegetable
ingrei. tents, and although they entirely lupin lede
tilt- use of nii'rcui y, do not leave any of ltl injurioul
effects. Tlnv act c irectlv uoon t he liver, and are
a v.ilu:.ble remedy in all ctm of derangement re
sulting from a tiisrdered state of that organ. Liv -r
Complaint. Bi!i"US Disorders, Ituligi s i -n. Sick
IIi'i:;ai he. Typhoid and other Fevers. Ac. Ac, nil
succumb to the free use of Schkhck'b MandhakX
Pll.l..'. For sale by nlljlruinriltl and Penleis.
ACENTS WANTED FOR
BEHIND "SCENES
IN WASHINGTON.
The spiciest and best selling linnk ever published.
1 ti ns mi nU 'ilt tne great ireflir ju""mrr oiiiiiinii,
Senatorial Briberies. Congressmen. Kings. Lobbli s,
and the W 'underfill Sig'tts of the National Capital.
It sells quick, bend for circulars, and lee Mir
terms aim 11 full dincrintion of the work. Address
rONHSF.N'I AN PCBUSHINO 0 ,4 Bond SI., N.V
VV-A P 1
.' - - 1 . 1 I
THE BEST IN THE WORLD H
WILS0N.SEW1aVGMACTIINEi
1 1 1 1 ',-jAjiurvoTU.eJEr(.s 1 . i.; 1
raii. a tka AHFNT8 wantad In town and coun-
L try to Bt ll TKA, or net up club orderi, for tha
lmgest Tea Company in America; importon' prices
and intiuci'inouia toauonts. bpihi lornrcumr.
AdorubS, ROBERT WELLS,
43 Tcsey Btreet, New York.
1 OXKY Jdrfe rnptVTy with Btftncil 4 Key Check
lit. outnts. I'ata.ogUfB, lampiei ana nui p
nliirs Free. 8. M. Bpeiirer, 117 Hanover St., B
$1,000,
REWARD
For hit rase of Blind- Bleetl
luff. Ifc-hiiiff. or Flceratfid
Reward
Piles that IR RING'S FILE
REMEDY fulls to cure. It is
.i Hpareil expressly to cure the Piles and nothing
CIS HOL.1J lit AIjIj UtlUUUIBlB. rnn;n
Thea-Nectar
IB A PURK
Wnh the (ireen Tea Flavor. Ths
best Tea Imported. For sale
everywhere. And for sale
wholesale only bv the GREAT
ATLANTIC 4 PACIFIC TF.A CO.
No. 11 Fulton St. A 2 A 4 Church
t.. New York. P.O. K" ,6,10
Bond tor Thea-Neetar Ctrenla
WORKQ CLASS week jrutranteed. Respecta
ble et!iilo,Yinent,aL home, day or u veiling ; noi-jipital reqair
d;fi;!l instruct ions and valuable imcknpeo: poods seat
-awl- j i -nt wnii ?u rem rttiuni manin,
M. VOTi; , (;(.. ItiOtT'JaiuiUNew Yurk.
Sin Pr,yl Atrents wanted I Alt classes
JllJ vfi-v uf working people of either sex, youiig
or old, make more money at work for us in their
spare moments or all the time than nt anything else
Particulars free. Addretj G. BTIKSON 4 CO., Fort
and, Me,
Timm Oieat Offer t 1
K II V N Samples nnd 14
UU 1 U J AT GOULD, 10
fietures I Tramesl New
PHire Catalogue 6 etg. J
Bromflel St., Boston, Ms,
npVSpC Of Swindlers. w re relisbls, snd
"'""' will pay nil Aents a raah $40 a
wsflt s-ilaiy. . w r-sisn g lu., aiauun, u.
I; ,) nil EACH WEKK AGENTS WAKTKD
C I 'OO Huslursi
lbtriuniate. Partivnlsr
WORTH. Ht l.i
S. Mil Hi WM
rrrpnred by a Itegular ltiysielnn.
.mfm riT.ii..i..Livr
ComiLlnt. Kevrr sad Asus, X 0
U tiurllle tbs Blood. Musliies ths
oircul.tioB. umef lb. huiuscb, pro- I
motM U1K..UOD-. laduce. s r.rulu-1 I
inovem.Dlbf lb. Boell.s..l.tlN.turi.l
in tb. proper dtKbsrf or .11 ber tune-1
tlon. and imparts a. nt. and vigor f 3
ueular will Badiuoccailoaal uie i
,0 kiblr boniscLI. Prompt,
V x -v, -v ineadT. re SDlaaaa.ale.il '
yia" w u a u
33.MI Kill I .-: NW". - 'je TO : "..r- Vfl si
. 10.00 020.11 f;ii ' 3L n Li - Pi-J-r7
:::::: :fJ I ;m
sllili!
Half a Dollar Pays for'
THE "WEEKLY SUNi
A In mo Haiti mac flfty-fti ccilnmn ncwKpnper, of the best clrisa.
from now to Jnn. 1, 1871. Hcnd 80 crnla, nnd Try It.
Addrcan TUB STJN, New York city. .
Dr. .1. Walker's CnliTornia Vin
egar Hitters nro n purely VcRctabln
preparation, made- chiefly from tho na
tive herbs found on tho lower rantjes of
tho Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor
nia, the medicinal properties of which
are extracted therefrom without the nso
of Alcohol. Tho question Is almost
daily asked, "What is tho causo of tho
unparalleled success of Vinegar Rit
tkrs?'' Our answer Is, that they reruovo
tho causo of disease, and tho pationta-'
covers bis health. They are thorttt
blood purifier and a life-giving principle,
a perfect lienovator and Invigorator
of tho system. Never before in tho
history of' tho world has a medicine lieen
compounded possessing tho reninrkalilc
qualities of Vini;!ar UrnrKRs in hi'iilinjr tho
sick of every dir ciiso man is heir to. They
are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation of
the Liver nnd Visceral Orgnns, iu Bilious
Diseases.
The properties of Jn. Walker's
Vinegar Hittkhs me Aperient, Diaphoretic,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,
Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Altera-
tive, and Anu-Jtilious.
Uratenu I l.ousanus proclaim v ix-
koar Hitters tho most wonderful In-
vigorant that ever sustained the sinking
system.
yo I'erson enn take tnese timers
according to directions, and remain long
unwell, provided their bones aro not do
stroyed by mineral poison or other
means, and Vital organs wasted beyond
repair.
Dillons, Keiimteirt ami tuier-
liiittent Fevers, which arc eo preva
lent in tho vifVeys of our great rivers
throughout the United .States, especially
those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri,
Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan
sas, lifd, Colorado, Brazos, Hio Grande,
Pearl. Alabama. Molule, avannaii, Ilo-
anoke, James, and many others, with
their vast tributaries, turougnout uur
entiro country dining the hummer ana
Autumn, and remarkably so during sea
sons of unusual heat and dryness, aro
invariably accompanied by extensive do-
rangCTicnts of the btmnaeli and liver,
and other abdominal viscera. In their
treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow
erful influence upon these various or
gans, is essentially necessary. Thero
is no cathartic for the purpose equal to
Dr. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitters,
as they will speedily remove the dark-
colored viscid matter with wlncli tno
bowels are loaded, at the same tune
stimulating the secretions of tho liver,
and cenerally restoring the healtliy
functions of tho digestive organs.
Fortify the hody against disease.
by purifying all its fluids with inegar
HITTERS. io epidemic can uib-u uuiu
of a system thus fore-armed.
Dyspepsia or Indigestion, ncad-
ache, Pain iu the hboulders, uougns,
Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, hour
Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste
in tho Mouth, Hilious Attacks, Palpita
tation of the Heart, Inllainmation of the
Lungs, Pain iu the region of tho Kid
neys, and a hundred other painful symp
toms, aro tho otlspiings ot uyspepsia.
Ono bottle will prove a better guarantee
of its merits than a lengthy advertise
ment.
Scrofula, or Kinz's Evil. White
Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Keek,
Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent
inflammations, Mercurial Alloctions, uiu
Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sovo Eyes, ete.
;n these, as m an otner consiuuiiouiu i-
lases, "Walker's vikeoar Hitters navo
shown tneir great curative powers m "
most obstinate and intractable cases.
For Inflammatory and Chronic
Rheumatism, Gout, Ililious, Remit
tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of
lhe Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder,
these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases
Me caused by Vitiated Blood.
Mechanical Diseases. Persons en
caged in Paints and Minerals, such as
I'lUinuers, Type-setters, uoiu-ueaiers, nnu
liners, as they advance in life, are subjuet
to naralvsis of the Bowels. To guard
against this, take a dose of Walker's Vin
egar Bitters occasionally.
For Skill Diseases, Eruptions, Tet
ter, Salt-Khenm, Blotches, Spots, Pimplos,
Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms,
Seald-bead, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch,
Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Ilumors
and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name
or nature, are literally dug up and carried
out of tbe system hi a short time by the use
of these Bitters.
Tin, Tape, and other Worms,
lurking in the system of so many thousands,
are ettoctually destroyed and removed. No
system of medicine, no vermifuges, no an
thelminitlcs will free the system liotu worms
like these Bitters.
For Female Complaints, In young
or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo
manhood, or the turn of life, these Tonio
Bitters display so decided an influence that
improvement is soon perceptible.
Cleanse tho Vitiated Wood when
ever you find its impurities bursting through
the Bkhi in Pimples,- Eruptions, or Sores;
cleanse it wheu you find it obstructed ami
sluggish in tho veins; cleanse it when it is
foul ; your feelings will tell you when. Keep
the blood p'.'.re, and the health of the systoia
will follow.
it. ii. Mcdonald co.,
Dnifirista anl Gtn. tgt., San Francisco, California,
ana cor. oi asninct'in nui i tiiuilun Ms., jn. it.
!! hv nil 1
urn
,r:lsfi u ml tt-ulrra.
MThflnDV "irtdL Hron ; Bashfulnas STersomtt
YlCalVlUnT How to onriuer Habits th mind
trnui!vened; thtt hotly made tough and Tijroroua. Vlu
Ahln li'iok lOcta. Mailed by A- Luowift. Jerey OilcfteX
(Ad moat beautiful its
le and perfect in tone
i-rr made. JTieCON
KHTO s. TOP is the beet
vcr piaeea in any
'i'ran. It is produced by
intra set of reeds poeu
llnrly voiced, tAd
J Hil l' or ul.trh li
SlOlsT ISAIOI IXti
and fcOlJb a'l'IIU
It I A O, ti:'.,le Us litl.
I UIIObI 'the III'-
jiA, void-; is e.
l l.lt II. Terms liberal.
A GREAT
JiOFFER. llt'nAiE
rW AiYXy t SUM, 481
liroadw; . K. 1'.. viil
siitKus of lots PIANOS end SJlUit,XS of first
elaaa makers, including UATtCs', at ex
tremely low prleea for eah, or pt X caih, and)
balance in amnll mnnthlr joaymeiK, N"V 1
Octara nrsl-clasa l'lAlVOS, all mode a una
Brovementa, r$37r cash. OramnssyM 179.
OI'BLK-KF.KIl OHKAIVA, SlOOl -S-S'IOP,
HO) H-HTHV, ViK,irwardi. ILL VS THA TED
0ATALOQUE8 MAILED for one stamp. A large din
toumi to Ministers, C'aurcAsl, Sunday- Schnols, Tempers
nod AwvMU. Lodms. ate AITs WAXIIi