furtt, Gardsn and Hnscaldk ' The Peed In Voting Turkcj-s, "Why it i that one farmer will raise nearly sjyci-y turkey-chick that comes out of tb shell, and do this nine years out of ten, without ranch respect to wet or dry seasons, whilo another loses from half to three-quarters with about the same uniformity? We know of men with whom success is the established rule. They are very systematic, in this, as in all their other business. We visited one of these thrifty farmers, who raised 165 turkeys last year from nine hens, and upon inquiry found he did about the same thing every year. We d Mired to know just how ho managed to secure thistiniform result, and found him com municative. He insists tipon good stock to begin with the best always se lected to breed from. Then lie places great reliance upon regular feeding dur ing the fall and winter, so that the flock becomes very gentle, and the hens make their nests immediately about the sheds and barns iu places prepared for them. This is a great safeguard against fox es, skunks, crows, hawks, and other crea tures that destroy the birds or their eggs. When the young first come off their nest they are confined in pens for a few daya until they are strong enough to fly over a board enclosure one foot high. He feeds frequently with coarse corn meal and Bour milk until four o'clock in the afternoon. He found in his experience that he lost a good many chicks from the food hardening in the crop. There is danger from overfeed ing. As the chicks grow, the sour milk diet is increased, and during the sum mer it is kept constantly in a trough for them. They are exceedingly fond of eour milk and buttermilk, and they grow very rapidly upon this diet. An incidental advantage, and a very impor tant one, he thinks, is that the young birds are prevented from straying very far from the house. They return many times during the day to the buttermilk trongh for their favorite food. This, with Indian meal, constitutes their principal food until about midsummer, when insects are more abundant, and they wander further from the house. This method can easily be tried on dairy farms. American Agriculturist. Fnrni Notes. The grasshoppers went through a portion of Minnesota, cutting a swath thirty miles wide. The best bearing orchards we have seen thia year are surrounded on all aides with forest trees. Good vinegar can be made from the juice of watermelons by letting it staud as if it were cider. A new way to learn calves to drink is to nail the linger of an old glove in the bottom of a trough. Tho Quarterly lieview, an English publication, says that " the soil of Eng land is in a state of exhaustion." The wool crop of Iowa is larger than ever before, for the farmers have dis covered that sheep are much more profit able than grain or cattle. Set it down as a fact that hay, corn, oats, and fodder of all kinds are worth 50 per cent, more if fed out on the farm than if sold to be fed elsewhere. One of our friends is saving all the egg-shells he can get to give his hens next winter to make them lny ; he did so last winter, and had success. A good summer drink is made by pouring hot water on cream of tartar. A sprinkling of lemon peel helps the imagination, and the finished article is nearly as good as cold water. During all the dry weather some farmers had green crops. Their wheat and clover were first-rate, and their po tatoes still grew. This is because they plowed deep and manured well. To Bon, Rice. Take four times as much water by measurs as rice ; let it boil very fast, then put it on the back part of the stove and let it dry off. Don't forget to put salt in it. At Talma City, Iowa, a horse was found prostrate, with his left hind foot in his mouth, the heel of the shoo so caught in the teeth that the poor ani mal was utterly helpless. It took three men to get the foot out of that horse's mouth. Whitewash applied to walls, ceilings, fences, etc., has a highly sanitary influ ence at this time of year. In the coun try this covering is applied with good effect to the sides of barns and farm outhouses. It is cheap, easily applied, freshens and improves tho appearance of things, and is salutary in its influence upon tiie health. : The Sugar Beet. Herr Horsky, the well-known Bohe mia farmer, a correspondent who visited his farm says, has always been a firm advocate of the beet-root sugar, and since his acquisition of the farm the number of sugar manufactories in Bo hemia has raised from 59 to 160. His extensive establishment in Kolin was erected and fitted up at a cost of $250, 000, and it pays annually a large inter est although it must lie idle a good part of the year. The process of making the sugar as practiced in this manu factory may be thus briefly described : The roots are washed and elevated to the upper story, where they are finally Biiuru turn Hre maceraieu witn water un til the sugar is dissolved out, and the fibre is afterward pressed to extract the liquid ; to this liquid is added lime, which forms with the sugar sacchyrate of lime, and all impurities fall to the bottom and are removed. Carbonic aoid is next introduced, which precipi tates the lime, and the solution of sugar remaining is subjected to the ordinary method of evaporation and bleaching. Arresting Decay iu Potatoei. Various plans for arresting decay in potatoes after digging have from time to time been made public, such as dust ing with quick-lime, gypsum, charcoal dust, etc. Prof. Church, of Cirencester, England, the eminent agricultural cheuiis., announces that sulphite of lime appears to exercise a very remark able influence in arresting the spread of decay in potatoes affected by the potato disease. In one experiment the salt was dusted over some tubers, partially decayed from this cause, as they were being stowed away. Borne months afterward the potatoes were found to have suffered no further injury. A similar trial with powdered lime proved to be much less effective. The Boat Itace. It is rather a curious result of the University boat race that the referee finds it necessary' to come out with a card explaining that the crew that won the prize did not come in ahead owing to the fact that the line across the stream at the end of the course was drawn diagonally, so that the Yalecrew reached it first merely because they were nearest the eastern bank, and Harvard really was ahead. What a botch these fellows made of everything ! They should not have drawn the line iu this absurd man ner in the first place, ar d if it was so drawn, the crews should have known it. Dr. Carpenter on the Gulf Stream. The influence of the Gulf fitreirn bn the temperature of jirMhterh Europe is, aoeordirt to Dr. Carpenter, usually very much exaggerated. In that enter taining work, "The Depths of the Sea," the course of the Gulf Stream is well described. It may be considered as be ginning on the west coast of Africa, within the region of the trade winds. These cause a westward flow, which is known as the equatorial current On reaching the coast of Bratil, the greater portion of the current bends northward, carrying with it the waters of the Ama zon and Orinoco, and passing through the Caribbean sen into thegulf of Mexico. In that great basin, into which no north ern counter-current can enter.il 1b further heated. Until it rUBhfes out through the only outlet, the straits of Florida, with a force which carries it a certain dis tance along the American coast, whence it crosses the Atlantic toward the north ern coast of Europe. In the gulf of Mexico the Water is 83 deg. in summer, and 77 deg. in winter. Over the bauks of Newfoundland the water is still 20 to 30 deg. warmer in winter than the sur rounding sea, It is now as?ertnsil that by the time tha stream reaches the middle of the Atlantic "it is thinned out almost to a film." In accounting for the eom.pnra tively mild and rnoM climate of the coast of Ireland and Scotland, Dr. Car penter and others assume a more gen eral agency than that of the Gulf Stream. Wyville Thompson says: "On working up the temperature results o the Por cupine expedition of 1869, Dr. Corpen ter satisfied himself that the mass of comparatively warm water, 800 feet deep, which we had established as ex isting, and probably moving in a north easterly direction, along the west coasts of Britain and the Lusitanian peninsula, could not be an extension of the Gulf Stream, but must be due to a general circulation of the waters of the ocean comparable with the circulation of the atmosphere." Thus the cold water of the polar seas would be constantly sink ing and flowing toward tho equator along the bottom of the ocean-, and the warmer and lighter waters on the sur face of the tropical and temperate re gions would be ever flowing poleward. Summer Brinks. The general want in summer of some refreshing drink is widely known by the return to the shop windows of the ice cream advertisementsand here let it be remarked that no more injurious cus tom obtains man tnnt ot eating or drinking iced preparations ; the sudden check to the stomach has, n mere than one occasion, caused death. Thirst is commonly caused by the loss of fluid from the blood, through the pores of the skin ; therefore aj certain amount of water is required to counterbalance such loss i and this requires to be piquant and palatable, for, owing to the enervating influence of warm weather, the mouth becomes constantly dry. The fluids which best quench thirst are, first, hot tea, which, if sipped, slightly inflames or stimulates the mouth, anil causes a constant flow of saliva ; second ly, rerated waters, which are very re freshing, but they lack an important element. Another pleasing drink is made by adding to a tumbler of water two teaspoonfuls of lemon syrup. This last may be made as follows: Obtain two and a half ounces of citric acid, and two scruples of essence of lemon ; boil four pounds of loaf sugar in a quart of water, skim it carefully, and add tha acid and essence. This will keep for any length of time in well-corked bot tles. Ordinary beer, spirits, etc., do not quench the thirst effectually, the first, savored with salt, really tends to increase it, while spirits, by inflaming the coats of the stomach, increase the want ; weak wine and water is a refresh ing draught, but is not reqnired except in enfeebled systems. Iu huge iron works and other factories, where the ine,n are exposed to great heat, oatmeal is mixed with water and drunk with great benefit ; we fear it would not re commend itself, however, to a fanciful palate. For children, toast and water is very wholesome. Toast slowly a thin piece of bread till extremely brown and hard, but not the least black.'then plunge it into a jug of cold water, and cover it over an hour before use. The waer should be of a fine brown color before drinking. " Cloud-Bursts." Waterspouts are generally formed in the shape of a double cone, having its least diameter in the middle, and reach ing from a low sloud to the surface of the land or water. When created at sea by the action of the wind, they begin to form at the surface of the water, ri sing gradually until they meet the upper portion, which, nearly at the same time, begins to descend from the cloud. On land they almost invariably commence in the under surface of a cloud and de scend rapidly until they reach the earth. At sea the spout or spouts, when formed, move in the direction of the wind, with a horizontal whirling mo tion ; and when several of them are ob served together, as is frequently the case, they present a majestic spectacle. Even when thereis apparently no wind, the spouts may be seen to move along trie sunace ot tne water, sometimes in different directions, and to bend and twist as if violently agitated by some inferior foree. The formation of these spouts is accompanied by a dull, rum bling noise, like that of a heavy cata ract heard from a distance ; the part ing is sometimes followed by a loud re port. Many of the most remarkable waterspouts have appeared on land, and these are frequently very destruc tive in their march. We have an ac count of one which is said to have broken in Lancashire, England, which for the distance of a mile tore up the earth to the depth of several feet, as if it had been furrowed by. some gigantio plow. In the autumn of 1859, a waterspout burst near Calcutta, India, inundating a graesy plain to the extent of half .a square mile to the depth of six inches ; two weeks were required to drain off the wate In the Sick Boom. Invalids are naturally querulous, and as good a motto as can be adopted by those who minister in the sick room is one of Charles Beade's : Put yourself in his place." This may render thenf patient, thoughtful, kind, tender, and assiduous. To all of us come, sooner or later, pain and languishing, when we, too, need the gracious offices of loving attention, the cup of cold water held to feverish lips, the healthful hand on the aching head, and the healing presence of a genial and wholesome nature. We should give all these when we can, and trust that we shall have the same in time of need. A bouquet, a pleasant picture, a beguiling book, an inviting delicacy for the appetite, these relieve the tedium of the sick room and enliven its fatiguing monotony. Those who wish to impart cheer without weariness to the invalid, can by these little tokens of remembrance do more sometimes to charm the long hours of pain, tkan by their personal presence. T'? Shah of Persia. R.tiont for the lienors Paid Him In Europe. It is understood, says Murray, that the Shah of Persia is merely a curiosity which is being exhibited by Baron Renter to enable that shrewd porson to float certain railway and other schemes, for the realization of which the Huron has received the most extraordinary concession ever granted to a financial speculator. It" does not really matter much, for the concession can be and certainly will be cancelled as easily as it was eiven and the silly business has been to much talked about that it is needless to insist upon it again. It will probably suit the turn of Baron Beuter and his friends ; then by and by we shall hear that there are endless wran gles about it, till iu due time' the British shareholders and workmen will be bun dled neck and crop out of the country together. However, the Bliall is a promising (subject at present. He is unquestionably the absolute, raler and master of hi countryk ntid ho has a legal right ttJ pledge and alienate its resources, at least, during his lifetime. After that Baron Reuter's concession will be waste paper. The Shah, how ever, has certainly got hold of the right end of the stick. He is a very porsi monious prince, and took excellent care to have his traveling expenses paid by his showmen before he set out on his travels He gnti it is mi, dbdtit two hundred thousand pounds for his trip, and it is not likely that Baron Reuter will lose by his bargain. Persia has no national debt. The Shah is about to create one. Plenty of greedy people like to fancy they will get ten or twelve per cent, for their money, and will lend it as eagerly on these terms to the Persians as they have done to the Spaniards and the Turks. Many persons will make con siderable fortunes out of the first in troduction of Persia to the Stock Ex change, and then all at once there will be a talk of dividends in arrear and re pudiation . It might be also as well, too if widoWsk half-pay officers and trustees, who are geuerallv victimized in these cases, would reflect, before it is too late, that Persia is a very poor country. The little money that there is in it is buried away for fear of the government, and certainly no Persians will place the smallest Confidence in any security guaranteed by their own gov ernment. The greatest trnrt of Persia is a parched and uncultivated desert. It has no commerce worth mention, and the population is scarcely numerous enough to render railwav remunerative. The cost of making iron rails over al most impassable mountains and stony plains will be immense, and everything required to make them, from the labor ers to the steam engines, must be brought by land carriage, on the backs of mules and pack horses from abroad, Nor will managing men of the right stamp be very anxious to take places in Persia. The climate is abominable, and so unfavorable to the health and vigor of the European and American race that after a short residence there they are invariably attacked with dys entery, which commonly proves fatal, and their hair falls off, their teeth drop out or decay, and they are racked by fever and ague. It is all very well to say that business men will do anything for money. So they will ; but a sensible man will want a good deal of it to do Baron Reuter's yvork for him, aud his shoreholders can only expect the riffraff and sweepings of the labor market upon anything like the usual terms. It is quite true that living was formerly cheap in Persia, and perhaps it is still so as compared with the prices of New York, Paris and London ; but it will be cheap only so long as foreign consumers are kof t, as they have been hitherto kept., out of the country, by the difficulty of getting into it. Teheran is more than a thous and miles by land from Trebizond, the nearest seaport to Europe, and the journey must be performed on horse back, through pathless roads and over mountains which cannot be passed without extreme danger and difficulty. Jjuring na't tne year tuey are covered by snow ; for three months more they are perilous from mud and slush. In the hot season the sun and the east wind beat pitlessly on the traveler. There are no inns on the way, nothing but a Tew empty and desolate barns and posting nouses, which swarm with ver- min and afford nothing but a dubious shelter. The wild tribes on the fron tier between Turkey and Persia are al ways in movement, and wander about in armed bands thousands strong. They are ferocious and filthy robbers. Woe to the snus railwav clerk or well fed engineer of plump aud rosy aspect who falls into their hands. Some years ago they caught an English attache (a Mr. Tod) and ate up his pomatum What was worse for him, they made him eat some of it too, and stripped him naked, tied him to a horse b tail. pricked him up behind with a spear's point when he flagged and ultimately neid mm to ransom. Uaron Iteuter s friends will be a rare prize for the Koords, some of whom, by the way, are worshippers of the devil. Then, if the English speculators are ever allowed to get to their journey's end their comfort will be small. Until the railways are made (an end of the business which will hardly come about in the present century) everything winch constitutes the comtort of civilized household mu6t oe imported, and land carriage is expensive. A moderate man, too, will be obliged to keep a dozen servants and half a dozen horses, neither of which articles are cheap or good, and upon the whole salaries must be calculated much higher in Persia than even in India. Nothing under a thousand pounds sterling yearly will keep a family decently ; and to go to I'ersia for mere victuals and drink, without being able to save a dollar, would be a poor business, indeed. There is no mistake about tke actual cost of living and moving about in Persia, and tents, cooks, guards, tent pitchers, interpreters, food and wine are not to be had and carried about for nothing. There is, indeed, a certain queer sort of respect paid to the Frank in I'ersia. .tor instance, tne soldiers presents arms to every man who wears a chimney-pot, under the belief that he is a foreign ambassador or one of his suite ; but the fanatic Shiites, or here tical Mohammedans, will not allow a Christian to enter their publio baths lest he should defile them. They will not drink out of a cup or glass which he has used or sit upon him. a carpet after When the coal-heaver in "Nicholas Nickleby" wanted to get shaved, the barber replied that gentlemen in his line could not be shaved at that shop. "Why, I see you a shaving of a baker when I was looking through the winder last week," said the coal-heaver. " It is: necessary to draw the line somewhere, my fine fellow," replied the barber. " We draw the line there. We can't go beyond bakers." A Lawyer Leper. The Honolulu Gazette nays' that Mr. William P. Ragsdale, who has been living for three years at HilOi practicing law Tina Vipjima innflritied lener. and was oohVeyed to Mdlnfcft', DT tho ln8k trip of the steamer. Daring the first ten davs of June, it sat s. the disease developed very rap iu min: iiuu he iiie saddest caSs nas become one oi now in the hospital. As soon as he found that the disease was rapidly de veloping, he acted with noble courage, made up his mind, to sepfttate himself from his family, and remove to Molokai. He wrote a letter to the Sheriff, sur rendering himself to the authorities, in which he said: I feel it my most painful and heart breaking duty to inform you of my full conviction that I am afflicted with the fearful disease called leprosy, and I therefore surrender myself to yon so that I may be disposed of as by law di rected. The. past three or four days have so developed the disease that there is no doubt, left in toy mind as to my being affected with it. No- one can fathom the intensity of my grief in be ing compelled to separate from my be reaved family ; but others have suffered the pangs of separation as well as my own family and myself, and therefore we mnst look to our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ for help and consolation in this our hour cf grief and sorrow. He alone is able and willing to alleviate our suffei'liiai Mr. Severance, allow me to thank you most sincerely for the many acts of kindnoss which I have received at your hands, front time to time, during the past two years or so. 1 have tried hard to repay your kindness by trying to do everything in my power to merit your respect and the continuation of your kindness. If I have done anything to hurt you in any way, either as an official or otherwise. I betr vou in the name of God to forgive me, that I may be by my God forgiven; With the hope that vou will enjoy a long life and a happy one, I remain your aluicted servant. Ingenuity of an Insane Man. The Lancaster (Penn.) Express re lates the following in giving an account of an attempted escape by an insane man: " In the insane department of the Lancaster County Hospital there is connned a man named jonn jjicnoume. He is not dangerous, but is not safe to be let at large. A short time since he managed to scale the yard wall, four teen feet in height, but was shortly afterward captured. Yesterday evening one of the assistants, in making a tour of the yard, discovered hid under a pile of stouts in a comer, a singular looking ball, which he took to Superintendent Cox. On examination it was found that this ball was made up of a rope, some thing thicker than broom twine, and that the material used in making it were tho leaves of peach trees, with which the yard is studded, the bark of the small limbs and some grass. The rope when unwound is nearly 300 feet in length, when ia a ball it is as large as a twenty-four pound round-shot. It is so tough that the strongest nanus cannot tear it apart. The man must have been working upon it for several weeks, his obiect being to escape from the institution by its aid. "Ah Sin" In New York. The New York correspondent of the Chicago Journal relates that J is a well-known broker who is given to constant poker-playing. He has be longed to the aristocratic circles and various clubs,and has for some time en joyed the reputation of being a most expert player, and navmg a wondenui run of luck at cards. But now he is in terrible disgrace, the topic of scandal in society and Wall street circles, dis carded by acquaintances, and refused admittance to his old haunts. As the story goes, he was, not long since, play ing poker with one of the Lorillards at an up-town club. "lJoor after "pool had been " raked" in by him, until his earnings for tne evening footed up be tween 89,000 and S10.000. Lorillard's countenance lengthened. He looked fierce and savage, as if suspecting some thing was wrong. Suddenly springing from bis seat lie seized s nand and, throwing down the cards before the lookers-on, showed them that Mr. Blank was a cheat." PAIN 1 PAINM PAINIM WHERE IS THY RELIEVER? Readerl, 70a will find It In that Favorite Home tiemeoy PERRY DAVIS? 1'AIX-EILLER. It baa been teated in every variety of climate, and by almuat every nation known to Americana. It ia the almost constant companion and iueatimable friend of the missionary and traveler, on sea and land, and no one should travel on our tukeaor rtvera without ir. Iti Merits abb Ukscbpasbbd. If ynu are suflerlna; from INTERNAL PAIN, Twenty to Thirty Drops in a Little Water will al most instantly cure you. 27iert ts nothing equal to tr. in a iw luuuieiiis 11 cures Celic, Crampe, Spasm. Heart-burn, Diarrhaa, jjyacnftry.rntx. n ma in tne nouem, ouur Stomach, Vysptpsia, Sick Headache. Cures CHOLERA, when all other Remedies Fan. It giuee Instant Relief from Aching Teeth. In sections of the country where Fevbb ard Anus prevails, there la no remedy held iu greater esteem. Pok Pbvkr AtfD AouB.-Take three tablespoonfuls of the Puin-Ktller in about half a pint of hot water, well sweetened with molasses as the attack la com iuir on. Batbinff freely the chest, buck, and bowels witb the Pain-Killer at the same time. Ki'pcat the dose in twenty minutes if the Hist does not stop the chill. Should it prnouce vomiting (ana it prob ably will, if the stomach is very foul), take a llttlo Fum-Killer in cold water sweetened with sugar after eaeh spasm. Perseverance in the above treat ment has cured many severe and obstinate ca aes 0 tuts aiseaae. QBBAT " OUOLBBA" KEMEDT P A IN-KILLER It is an External and Internal Remedy. For Sum mer Complaint or any other form of bowel disease iu children or adults, it is au almost certain cure, and hue withotit doubt, been more auceessful In urluit tbe various kinds of CHOLERA tban any liter Known reiueuy.or tne most SKUUUl piiystciau. In India. Afiica and China, w here this drea.lful dis ease is moreur less prevalent, the Pain-Killer i considered by tbe uativesas well as by Kuropenn and wblle it ts a most pfllfieiit remedy for pain, it residents 111 tnose climates, A bUKK HKaltux is perii'ctiy aaie ineuicilie ill toe most unsBiiuui bauds. It has become a household remedy, from the fact that it ffives immediate and nermanerit re- Uel. It ia a purely vegetable preparation, made from the best and purest materials, safe to keep ana nse tn every lamtly. itta recommeuaea ny physicians and neraonB of all clauses, and to-day. aftera public trill of thirty years tbe average life of man it atauds unrivalled and uuexcelled, Bpreaoiug its uaeiuiness over me wine worm. Directions accompany each Bottle. Price SS cts., CO cts., and f 1 per Bottle. FERRY DAVIS a, BON, Proprietors, Providence, B. I. J. N. HARRIS A CO., Cincinnati, O., Proprietors for the Western and South Western B tales. For sale by all Medicine Dealers. rOB BALB WHOLBSAXI BY JOHN F. HENRY. New York. ORO r. not id WIN CO., Boston. JOHNSON. HOI.OWAY A CO., Philadelphia. KIDNEY OlSEASK, DROPSY, and all diseases of ine jtvii)s and UUdder, cau he cured Dy tne use of Hunt's SEMttoy. Thousands that hve been lllren tip by tbeir Phaiciais to die. ha been - . . . . . .1 . dollar and twenty-five ($1 2S) cents. Bend for Illus trated pamphlet to William E. Ci-aski, Sole Pro- prietor, rroviqence, B. I. Beat and Oldest Pa-Dtily Medicine. San ord's Liver Invianrntn- nnrelv Vegetable Cathar tic and Tonic-for Dyepepeta.Coiistipatton, Debility Sick Headache, Bilioua Attacks, aud aU deranne nienta of Liver, stomach and Bowels. Ask your uruKKisi tor it. Beware of twiiHittows. Never allow etthr Diarrbcea, Dyientftry, or any Bowel AflYctiun to have in own way. or ieri oqi t'onitqueitcea may result; with Dr. Jayne'a Cstminativa Bulsain at h"d, these nffucMons msy pa promptly, tf.-iv and prnc''rH"ny rtiti. Why tttke pints of nausont floid remedies for eu,hen a few doses of 8hUenberger'a Pills wmouieyou atoucsr o sickness, aud no purg- The Gosg Murder Case. The Baltimore American announces that the mystery of the Goss murder has finally been cleared up in all its parts, and sums the case up as follows : We think it may be saieiy biuu uim the Goss mystery has been solved. The poor fugitive has been tracked through all his devious wanderings, from the time that he fled from his burning shop with SffiJ.OOO insurance upon nis me, until he took his seat in his carnage with Udderzook and drove away from the tillage; of Jennervuie to nis aeam ill tha jiioht, The fraud upon the in- surance cmpanl M tt,-utt?j S the burning of a dead body p.....ureu in New York, in a little board shanty at Waverly, which he called his labora tory. His brother took him to the pres ident of the Street Department, in a buggy hired from Dr. Thome, and he set out on his travels northward. He passed through the State of New York, and crossing over into Canada, spent a couple of months at Montreal and other towns in the provinces. Then he went to his old home in Ten nessee, but the pending ease agaiiist the Mutual Insurance Company, like a bale ful loadstone, drew him back to the vi cinity of Baltimore, and the other con spirators were obliged to provide him a hiding-place where they could commui cate with him aud prevent him from be traying the Secret. Uddrook first ob tained a home for him in Chester Coun ty; iinrt whlri he had tforn out, his credit and his welcome iii tlittt neighborhood, he went to Newark, N. J., and spent a portion of the winter and spring in that city. When Judge Bond postponed the hearing of the motion made by counsel for the Mutual Insurance Company for a new trial till November, Uddetook became alarmed lest the plot should be discovered, and then poor Uoss was tie coyed back to Chester county, and when the dark plot Had luny maiurea, uin handsome body was cut and hacked into the shano of the unsightly trunk which he had imported from New York seventeen months before to personate himsblfi that he mnzht defraud the in surance companies that had the risks upon his life. An Act op Jcstis. Doubting Castle was a sad stumbling block in the path Of Blinyan S Christian, though It COUldU t bar his way to Tiuth. We can sympa thize with the Tilgrimj forPoubt always besets us when we are asked to believe anything particularly extraordinary. Consequently, when we neard, some eighteen months ago, that a physician iu California had compounded, from the juices and extracts oi certain herbs found there, a medicine that cured almost every variety of blood disease, we were incredulous. Since then we have had opportunities of testing the accuracy of the report, and are free to admit that our doubts nave vanished. Seeing what we have seen, knowing what we know, it is impossible for us to question the remedial properties of Da Walker's Vineoar Bitters. That this famous vegetable Tonic, Alterative, and Antiseptic is a specific for Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, Chronic Constipation, Fever and Ague, Bilious Intermittents, Scrofulous Taint in the Bloc d, Incipient Consumption, Local and General De bility, Rheumatism, Sick Headache, and Diseases of the Kidneys, seems t be a matter beyond the pale of contro versy a fixed fact in medical history. The statements of friends, in whose veracity and intelligence we have full confidence, corroborated by our own personal observation, compel us to ad mit the surpassing merits of the prepara tion, Cow. A Pittsburgh clergyman found a nice gold watch in his strawberry bed the other morning. He made no attempt to discover who had been there. Flaoo's Instant Keliep. Warranted ts relieve all Iihoumatio Atihctions, Sprains, Neuralgia, etc. The bent, the eurext, and the quickest remedy for all liowel Uomplamta. lle- licf guaranteed or the mouev refunded. Com. Cristadoko's Excelsior Hair Dve stand a unrivaled and alone. Ita merits have been go univerrially acknowledged that it would be a supererogation to descant ou tliem any I m iner notnins can ueat it. com. Wibtab's Balsam of Wild Chebey. Chapped Hands, face, rough skin. pimple", rins-worm. ealt-rbenm, and otber cutaneous affections cured, and the skin made soft and emootb, by using tbe Jcxiieu Tab noap, matle by uaswll. IHzaiid & Co., rew 1 ork. ISO certain to cet tbe Jumper 2 fir Soan. made by us. as there are many imitations mode witn common tar wbicu are worthless. Com. A wnnt has been felt and expressed by physicians, for a eafn aud reliable purgative. tsucu a want is now supplied iu 1'arsons rur- gatice J'tlls. Coin. Henry K Bond, of Jefferson, Maine. was cured of Hpittintr blood, eoreness and weak ness of the stomach, by tbe use of Johnsons Anodyne Litimem. coin. Dooley's Yeast Powder is convenient. economical and always roliable. No waste of food prepared with it, as it is always of the best quality. com The Wear and Tear of Life. Tbe cares, anxieties and misfortunes of life have aB inucb to do with shortening it as disease. Tbey are in fact tbe source of many ailments and physi cal disabilities. Nervous weakness, dyspepsiu, affections of the liver, disturbances of tbe bowels, neaaacues, nypocnouatia aud monomania are among tbeso distressing fruits. It is, therefore, of great importance tbut persons whose minds are oppressed witb heavy buaiuess responsibilities, or harassed by family troubles, or exoited by spec ulation, or perplexed by a multiplicity of enter. prise, or in any way overtaxed or overworked should keep up their stamina by the daily use of a wholesome ulc. Thousands if persons thus cir cumstan ced are enabled to bear up against the dim culties iu which they are involved, and to retain their strength, health aud mental clearness, by tbe regular use of Hi stutter's Stomach Bitters. Dis eases which are prone to attack the body when debilitated and broken down by ever-much brain- work, or exhausting physical labor, are kept at buy by the resistant power which this incompara ble tonic endows the nervous system and the vitil organs. At this seasou, when the beat is evaporat- lug tbe elements cf strength from every pore, an iuvigorant is absolutely essential to the safety and comfort of the public, and la required even by the moreiobusttf tbey desire to keep their atheletic capabilities In status quo. Hence a course of His tetter's Biiters is particularly useful at this period of the year as a defence agaust tbe invisible dis ease afloat in tbe aultry atmosphere. It ia the most pntetit cf all prcTentitre medicines, aud fir all com M'aiuts which anVct thn st'imacb, tha livur and the bowels, and iutei fore tfc lih the netted liiurstiuu and assimilation of fod, it is tha standard remedy. fl TTIT fl "nd Boys, to sell La It K I .X hums, i Oem Cbrora UlilUIJ loifuefte. J.Javu andscape Ohromosat rumm and 32 patfe rata- OULD, 111. stou. slats. CANVASSING BOOKS SENT FSEK FOR Prof. FOWLbR S GREAT WORK On Manhood, Womanhood and their Mutual later-relations; Love, IU Lawi, Power, eto. Affentfl are tfllliuff from ttO to 3U cnuiei of thU voi k a day, aud we ieud a cunvusiing book free to any book agent. Address, ttatinw experience, etc.. W Y0MIN G SEMINARY AMD Commercial College, Oner f the largest Boarding Schools for both sexns in the Cnl tea States. Six courses of study. Mili tary Tactics, Commercial College Course and Tele- ?rnihlng. 'ernisloar. Fall term opens September .1873. beud for a Catalogue to Her. D. C'OPKLANB, A. M. or L. L. BP B.AHVU, Kingston, Pa. MOJfKY lfnrffvi(riivwll ""T Chtei Outfits. Cutnltxrwff". sumples nil frill jiartle Ulurl free i. M. Bpenenr. 117 HanoTfir St., ttnatoi MC.t..--F "T3F COSH AM VHEAT NHS, Keedy for in. .Price $140 M Bu.beift ground pr bour, 15 6. Edwsrl Duiiwi, New Uavrn. Conn THE GREAT ALTERATITE AND BLOOD PU11IFIER. It is not a quack nostrum. The ingredients are published on each bottle of medicine. It m nscd, and recommended by rhysici'ans wherever it has been introduced. 2 J"1 positively cure SCEOFtx,. in its various ttaoc, RHEU MATISM, WHITE SWEL LING, GOVT, GOJTEE, BEOKCJUTIS, A'EJfVOUS DEBILITY, JKCIPIEK1 CONSUMPTION, andalldis eases arising from en impure condition of the blood, Send for 6urBos.Att.ms hiMKttxo, in w hich you will fihd certificates from reliable end trustworthy Physicians, Ministers of the Gospel una others. Dr. B. Wilton Carr. ef rltlmore, Mj bf ln ''! ft In infra cf Scrofnle mid etlitr diecaeei with much tUfnc- 'l)r.t.C.f nth) ' Baltlircw. recom ineiida it to ail tierrout ruflermu with difcaprd Blood, faying 11 li tupcrfor to av rrcrnraticn li1 l as vrf tired. jfcev. Babney Ball, of the Baltimore M. E. CciiHtfnte otb( nj lie laa Veen to much brnrflttcd r ! tiei Hint Lo cheerfully rrroirmcsda it to alible frtfudaand arquafiitarfpi". Craven ft Co., Ernppfnta, at Oordonf tilTfi '.i cy it sever linn failed to slve satipfariirfl. ,. , . , 8am'l Q. MCiSOOen, .v'r" TcmuPMT-, ma it cur-a mm oi uneu- rratittn hen all elee failed. the bosadalis IN CoKUKCTION with OPB Wlteiro Chills and Fever, MTer Complaint, Dyi npnali, He, We inmrnntee Kojadalis inferior to all other lllnod PiiriSera. SauU fvr ScicriptlTe Circular or Almanac. Addrcai CLEMENTS 4 CO., S S. Commerce St., .Baltimore, i!S. Bcmemtef 4n a.K ypnr fmB8lt to noun-ma. VORKISQCLASS.!!'.. ,eeim)l9luont,athome,diiyoreTenin; M Ati! Of FBMAT,K, 80 a tronteea. nwc If? tree bjr PiaiL AMre!s with six cent return stamiv, ML. YOUNG no.. it OortUnrtUtU New York. PHTSICIAHSOPmiOrlJ. Sir- C Knorr, Auburn, PHaltj Cf., Ind., pnn tlifnf plryrfUn ef twenty year' Jttcdlfig, MM Xhhhr't Herb Bitferf la a mfvl.'Mffthftt IctHCOnV 1 V I hurt ud It la mf pf tlr for s number f TWTI. nfl know frnm cxperl-nre that it ( a Rood rcmi-df. N. II. MorrUon, M.IK, North Kant . CVcIl jN. -J-: O" pntfs'u-: 1re IiuvcaRoorl demand for MI8H ITER'S HERB BITTEP.3. I bore u1 It ta mr praetlca with good rwulu, aud do twi hcitBta ti r:rmii!t"iicl it aa valuable remedj, par- licularlr In alfc-iiUom i-f thB kldncta, J. T. Milker. M. .. I-' niter. Pi. I PorlnK Ibe part tea nr. t Invi- 1i:iJ frnoui'ti! ont.n rt'inlti ot wltBoflslnit tbe elTtct ITTER9. I hnve known H M of MISHLEK'S HERB HITTER8. proe succes.siul 1" tnniiy ca T-' Iitc All 'PStnic, Hi'imrepltuia and ifv.lrrj.iitmo tremn.. rt fdflort. I eonuMtr It the rooft etllcaciuus rptiuMr j-vt ilhcovereil ft-? M.efllH .rlMog from a Disordered Sluiniich, Liver. Kidneys or Bntfrl. THE UTt HON. THAODEUS STEVENS, t . Pronounced MI8HIER'S HERB BITTERS "this mM wond.-rfyl combination or Mwdlclniil Heron he ever iRw." He mf fercd for miuir yenrs from bq orgnnlo .flection of the kldneye, and hundred, nf nil friend, nt WaBhtugwn and I.nnca.ter know tl.nt ho attributed the prolongation of ilia life to tbia Ureal Dioretie. Nothln2 ele relieved him. SOLD ONLY IN BOTTLES, BEARINQ ABOVE TRADE MARK. . Ttf. Plnrca'a PlSVnrit Pnrflratlve Ifcllcta or Sugat-Coalecioncniratcd Koot and Herbal Juice. Anti BilVia Granule the ' Little Glint" Cathartic, or Tnullum in Mno Physic, Scared r larccrltlian muti tard 8CCI yet representing h much cathartic power at large repulsive pills, bciff ttiotttearthttig and thorough, yet gently an J kindly eemtinf. ueins euitroiy vcijeiuoie, noparuc ular care is rcqutrearife using them. For Jiiaiitllcc. lliidaclio, Impure Ulooil, Conjfttpatioila Pain In Miouliiern, ViglitncHK Ot Cheat, lilzzilicaw. Still r JEl-liftritlonut IStld tasto In PIoiVli, ICiliouH tttinclts. I menial I cv-, II null of Klood to Head, ItlonVd Stomach, High Colored r;i-in',Vlooiiiy lorebod" iiifjn, take Ir, I'ierWn Pellets. One or two, taken dailXfor a time, will cure Pimples, IllotH, Eruptionx, Ijoiis, Scrofulous NtVes "nd vlrn lent Affections of V It. ill, Throat and Uoiirs. No cheap wold or paste board boxes, but kept fresh ana rellble in vials. 25 cents, by drufrists, or $a adozen. Manufac tured at the World's Kipotmary, Nos. So, 82, O4 and 66 West Sonec.--t.. LiuFFAt.o, N. Y. CONSUMPTION Arifi Its Cures WILLSON'S Carbolated Cod Liver Oil Is a sclcntlflc combination of two well-known tnedl. clnes. Its theory 1. t nst to arrest the decay, then build np the system. Physicians find the doctrine cor. rect. The really startling cures performed by 111 son's Oil.are proof. Carbolic Acta posittcehj arrests Decay. It li the most powerful antiseptic In the known world. Bn- lertna into me circjuiunou, i. v.. '"j'i" corruption, aud decay ceases. It purines the sources 0fCwtLi&r OilisXaturt'ebest assistant In resisting Consumption. Put up In large wedge-elmped bottles, bearing tlie Inventor's signature, and 1 8:) Jolin Btrcet. New York. corcns.Bor.s TIinOAT.INFLU ESZA, W HOOP ING C OUO it, Cboup, BaoMcntT xs, Asthma, anil every affection of tho TrraoAT, Lt'itas and ciiasT, aro speedily and per manently cured by the use of 1)b. Wi tab' JJauasi or Win Cue BUT. vWch docs not dry tip n coup-h and leave vto causa behind, but loosens It, rlfniftVa tho lunirs and BJlaya Irritation, tbua removing tho cause of tue compAnt. CONSUMPTION CAN BE CUBED tya timely resort to this standord remedy, as is froved by hundreds of testimonials It bus received, 'i'ho aeniine Is signed ". Butts" on tbo wrapper, 6ETI1 W. i'OWLE ds SONS, Pboprisiobh, Ikia. Toa.SLAsa. Bold by dealers generally. $1,000, REWARD IFn anv ease of Blind- Bleed inn. Itchtnir. or Ulcerated Reward Piles that DK RING'S rlLK RKMKDY falls to cure. It is prepared expresBly to cure the Piles and nothing els BOLD BY ALL DKUGGIBT8. PRICK $1. m THE BEST IN THE WORLD Dr. J. Walker's California Vln- Offar Bitters are a purely VeRctablo Dt)aration, made chiefly from tlio na tive herx found on the lower ranges of the Sierra NeTa mountains of Califor nia, the medicinal Properties of which are extracted tborefro without the use nf Alcohol. Tho question is almost daily asked. "What is tho c.o wo unparalleled success of ViseoJR UIT" teksT" Our answer is, that they rernovo the cause of disease, and the patient re covers his health. Tbey aro the great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator aud Invigorator of the system. Never before in tha b.intory bf the world has a mcdieirrn been coinpoundfed posscssinff tho rcirmrknbla qualities of Vineoar Un-rww in hi-aline tn sick of every tlisenfo iiftinis heir to. lhey tire a gtmtle Purgative as wt-11 aa a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Iniliimmatiori cf the Liver aud Visceral Orgtiun, iu Bilious Uienftstis. The proiierUes of Dk. i.ker'3 Tinkoar Bittkks iiiu A iii'i'k'iit, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Betlative, Couuter-lnitaut, Sudorific, Altera tive, aud Anti-Bilious. Grateful Thousands proclaim Vin egar Bitters the most wonderful In vigoraut that ever sustuiueil the siuking system. jMO rerson can take mese jmiers accorJfnjJ to directions, and remain long unwell proThk'd their bones aro not do strovcri by mfr.,c''al poison or other means, aud vital orgVU wasted beyond repair. Bilious. Remittent and Inter mittent Fevers, which aro so preva lent in the vallcvs of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of tbo Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan sas, lied, Colorado, Hrazoc, Kio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ko anoko, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughoHt our entire country during tho Summer find Autumn, and remarkably so during sea sons of unusual heat awl dryness, are invariably acrompauied by extensive de rangements of tho stomach and liver, aud other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow erful influence upon tbeso various or gans, is essentially necessary. There ' is no cathartic for the purpose crpia.1 to Dr. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitteks as thfty will speedily remove the dark colored Vlacid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at tho same time stimulating the secretions of tho liver, aud generally restoring He healthy functious of the digestivo orgaH4 b ortlty tne body against uiswasw by purifying all its fluids with Vixegak Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed. l)yspepsia or Indigestion, ricad aclic, Pain in tho Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chost, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Tasto in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpita tation of tho Heart, Inflammation of tho Lungs, Pain in the region of tho Kid neys, and a hundred otber painful symp toms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy aCJvertise iuent. Scrofula, or King's Evil, whita Swellings, Ulcers, Krysipelas, Swelled Keck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, .Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of tho Skin, Sore liyes, etc. In these, an iu all other constitutional Dis eases, "Walker's Visegar Bitters havo shown their great cnralivo powers iu mu mostobstiuate and intractable casos. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Keinit tent aud Intermittent Fevers, Diseases oi the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Hlnduer, these Bitters havo no eoual. Such Disease are caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical IMscascs. persons en gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as numbers, Type-setters, uoiu-ueaH-Ts, aim Miners, as they advaneo in life, are subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of Walker s v in boar Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases. Eruption. ot ter, Salt-Kheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, ning-woirus, Scald-head, Sore Eyas, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Bumora and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system m a suon irniu vy mo uno of these Bitters. Pin. Tane. and other Worms- lurking in the system of so many thousands. are effectually destroyed aua retnoveu. no system of medicine, no vcriuit'ugus, no an thelmiuitics will free the system limn worms like these Bitters. For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo . ' j ...... ,.r i.e.. t,oo mannooa, or iuu mm u im-, Bitters display so decided an mnuenco min improvement is soon porceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Wood when ever you find its impurities bursting through tha skin in Pmioles. Emotions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstructed and sluggisn in t no veins; cieause it wneu it, is foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep tbe blood pure, aud toe ucaitu oi tue system will follow. it. h. Mcdonald & co Druggists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California, and cur. cf Wiutbuiirton and Cuurltor Hu., N. V. bold sty nil DruifgUi stiitl iJeislers. N. T. N. D., No. 80. ACENTS WANTED FOR BEHIND SCENES IN WASHINGTON The spiciest aud best atlling book ever published. a t eiar!' ui'ui tJjej ihi ircuii summer ocuttaatjr Senatorial Briberies. Cougressinen, Kings. Lobbies, and the Wondarful Bights of tbe Nations! Capital. i acita 4u.i;k. obiiu mr circulars, ana see tur terms aim a full description of tha work. iirirtii CONTINENTAL PUBLISHING CO., 4 Bond Bt., N.Y Thea-Nectar IB A PURB Illacls. TEA With the Green Tea Flavor. The best Tea Imported. For sal everywhere. And for sale wholesale only by the ORKAT ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TKA CO, No. l'Jl Fultou St. S Church St., New York. P. O. B ,6,60, M'.nri for Th-TTntar Circular lUCAMIi AGENTS wanted In town and coun-1- try to sell TEA, or get up club orders, for the largest Tea Com pauy in America; importers' prices sua inducements to agents. Send for circular. Addrea , ROBERT WELLS, 4S Vasev Street. New York. CCtn 9n per day I Agents wanted I All classes ij v of working peopleof either sex, young or old, make more money at work fur us in tbeii pare momeuts or all the time than at anything else Particulars free. Address . STlXttON eS C., Port end, Me.. $10 TO $20 per stay. Agents wanted STerywhere Particulars free A.H.Blair A Co.,8t.Losis.M, it 17 a Ail 1ACH WEEK AGENTS WANTED tP I AelaVP" Business legitimate. PajUeulAf . si. WOitia, ft (.Louis, a, saw. jiua asei.