Farm, Garden and Household. Aiding Chicken'! nirth. A writor'in the Journal of Horticul ture says: " I send with this nn epg-Bhell from which a chick has just bcten hatched. If you examine it you will And it a double Btaell. I do not mean to sny that the hen laid it so, but I forward it as a suc cessful dodge by which I think I saved the life of a chick. Yesterday morninp: the hen in returning to her nest trod upon and thoroughly crushed the origi nal shell. I think it was weakened by a previous small crack in the narrow end, which I had oovered with a little bit of postage stamp edging. I was certain the chick would die if left; as, if not crushed, the skin would bind it and dry to it; but it would probably have been crushed between the other eggs, as I have often had happen. They were due to hatch to-day, and I there fore thought that an outside shell might preserve it for the necessary time; so I took an egg-shell that had. been used at breakfast, raised it a little, and slipped it over the small end, and joined it to me original lop wuicu was not much injured), with poitnge plaster, and put -it under the hen again; it was success ful, as I found that egg and another hatched this morning, and the shell just as I forward it to you. I have written this account because the plan may be useful to others in similar cases." . Killing the Cuckle IJurr. I have had some experience with t hem, but they are not very plenty on my farm. If the weeds are not numer ous, pull them up. If they ore, seed in timothy and clover, and mow in July before going to seed, and mow again in September, and be careful that not a burr ripens sufficiently to grow. This process may need to be continued two or three years, as the seed is said to re tain its vitality in the ground, or on the ground, for that length of time. Some advise pasturing closely with sheep. The weed is a terrible bore. Two good crops of them are more ex haustive in the soil than ten crops of corn, and will make tho land so poor that a plough sometimes will not scour. The weeds need to be legislated against like the Canada thistle ; for the burrs travel too fust and too far, from farm to farm, on cows' tails and on rabbits' backs. Everjr farmer should by law be compelled to prevent these burrs from going to seed, and in case of neglect the proper authority should hire help and exterminate them at the expense of tho land-owner. I believe nothing short of the vigorous execution of such a law will save whole sections of our State. A. J. lllakcly in Iowa Herald. Fnruiers' Dlnries. The Cincinnati Enquirer contains the following: "If our farmer friends knew how little trouble it is to keep a diary, and with what satisfaction they would look over it in a few years, we feel sure they would many of them be induced to be gin one. A simple record of the weath er and the operations of the farm, the writing of which would not occupy two minutes a day, will, in after years, be not only a source of pleasure, but also of great practical benefit. By referring back to the record of former Years one can see how late we have planted cer tain crops, and nt what time they ma tured at the end of each year. One or two hours will enable you to make an uusiraci, which snouiu Do copied m a book kept for the purpose. The diarv may be kept with a lead pencil, but the aostract should bo copied with pen and ink. and should give a brief record of the weather and crops, and also items of interest to tho family, prices. ltc. We began a journal of this kind in the year 1657, and now consider it the most valuable book in our possession." How to Itcplace the Timber. The Ohio Farmer says that trees for timber should be planted along the road side, in clumps in the pastures, or any where you can, and save the timber you have as the most valuable product of the farm. For fire wood cut only the aeau una aymg trees, this and trim' mings make the best of summer fire wood. It says that the young timber left in the woods are so thinned that the trees grow low and branchy and go to leaves and branches instead of body, and for practical use. as construction timber, they are nseless.and the practice of browsing woodlands is both starving the animals and killing the growth of me timber. Ill-ought Back to Life. A curious story of the bringing to life of a man who hud committed suicide by hanging at Valde Grace, Canton Fri burg, is told by the Confcdcre. On the first diagnosis the doctors affirmed that asphyxia was complete; the body gave not the slightest sign of life, it being blue and rigid. One of the physicians present, however, would not leave the corpse without making a final experi ment on it. He uncovered the breast and endeavored for some time to induce respiration by artificial means, but without result. He then applied the pole or an electric battery to the pas sage of the pneumogastric nerves, and caused a strong current to pass at inter vals ot lour seconds. Almost immedi ately feeble signs of respiration reap peai-ed. Five minutes afterward the radical pulse and the cardiac pulse nguin became perceptible. The epiglo- tis was tuminea, and it was necessary to pull the tongue out of the mouth by means of a pair of pincers in order to render the respiration freer. A few ounces of blood were then drawn from the mediocephalic vein. The dilated pupils contracted gradually, and the signs of life became more and more manifest. The patient was then able to swollow a small quantity of alcohol Finally a slight muscular contraction was perceptible without the interven tion of electricity; the sensibility of the cornea reappeared; then the feet be came warm again, and 60on after the regular pulsation of the carotid arteries were easily perceptible. A New Field for Emigration. The American Jtcrtster (1'aris), in noticing Sir Samuel Haker's recent dis- coveries, says that the fertile, mountain' ous regions ot i-gypt invite emigration and points the poor laborers of Europe in thi'.t direction, especially as Canada and the United btates are getting pret ty well populated. If that is the only reason, Buys u uuatuu paper, wiiy emi gration should be turned toward Africa, its arguments will rest on a very unsub stantiul basis. Talk about the United States being well populated. Wh there are acres of land enough, on whii the virgin timber and grass has never been cut, to give every poor laborer and every well-to-do farmer on the Conti- nent a farm, and then leave enough un populated to found several States larger than most ot the countries 01 Europe. A mixture of Paris green and flour has been found useful in Florida in ridding cotton fields of th caterpillar. Nathaniel Itowdllrh. One of the most remarkable traits in the character of this eminent mathema tician was the power he possessed to in terest other men in his favorite subject. When he was captain of a ship sailing out of Salem to the East Indies, almost all his crew became mathematicians, and even the ship's cook made such firogress as to be able to work out a nnar observation. The secret of it was his own intense and passionate love of the science. In one of his early voy ages, when he was little more than a boy, the slrtp was crftsed by a privateer; and the captain making up his mind to fight, assigned to young Bowditch the duty of handing up the powder. In the midst of tho hurly-burly of preparing the ship for action, he was observed seated, by a keg of powder, wholly ab sorbed in his slate and pencil. Such love as that is very contagious. This interesting man, born at Salem, in 1773, came of a long line of tough and valiant Yankee sea-captains ; but his father, after going to sea for several years, came ashore, and settled at Sa lem m the business of a cooper, and reared a family of seven children. He had a hard time of it tlurine the Revo- lutionary War to support so large afivm- ny; so that wneu ins son, JNutliamol, was a boy of ten, he was obliged to take him from the town-school and put him to worn in nis cooper snop. Soon after the boy was regularly apprenticed to a ship-chandler, and served out his time of seven years. l'rom an early age. even while still at school, ho had shown a strange apitude for arithmetic, being one of those boys who learn to do all the hard sums, and help their companions outof their arith metical difficulties. During his ap prenticeship, such was his love of cal culation, that in the long and frequent intervals when there were no customers to serve, he still assiduously employed himself with slate and pencil : I have never heard of such devotion to knowl edge, such energy, zeal and indefatiga ble industry in acquiring it. Hearing one day that there was a way of doing sums by letters instead of figures, he pursued his inquiries until he had found an algrebra. Upon looking over it, he was so fascinated and so agitated, that he could not simp during the next night, and he gave hijnself no rest until he had mastered its contents. Getting access to an Encyclopedia, he read it all through, article after article, in their alphabetical order. ' Ah old sailor set tled in Salcmgave him some notion of navigation, and he pursued the science until he could work out all the prob lems. At seventesn, while still an appren tice, he obtained a copy of Newton's Prine ipia, the most abstruse mathemati cal work then existing, in which the great philosopher develops in math ematical form his theory of gravitation. The curiosity of the boy was instantly roused ; but, alas I the work was writ ten in Latin, of which he knew scarcely a word. Nothing daunted, he began to learn the language, aiid continued until, l ai. - : .1 r i-K - j : .1 ujr iue iuu ui nie uiagrums given in iiie work, ho could read and understand Nawton's demonstrations. Early in life he had acquired the French lan guage, in order to read the many excel lent mathematical works written in it ; as later he learned German, Italian and Spanish, iu order to get possession of tueir treasures 01 literature and science. It was fortunate, perhaps, for this energetic genius that no wealthy patron reieaseu mm irom tne necessity 01 daily toil ; for if the gift of leisure had 111- H II made him a greater mathematician, it might have rendered him a less admir- able man. ltn an his talent, he was left to pursue precisely the same course as the most ordinary youth in Salem. After his apprenticeship, he was a ship chandler s cierK for a few years. At twenty-two he sailed as captain's clerk in an East India ship, and was promo ted, in due time, first, to be supercargo, and afterward to be captain; in tne course of his sea-service visiting most of the important ports 01 tuo world. it could not be said of him that he was merely a book mathematician, lor lie was one of the best and safest practical navigators that ever lived. His son relates that. coming on the coast of Massacuhsetts in winter, alter a long voyage, he arrived off Salem harbor by night, in a tempest of wind and snow. Besides his reckon ing, he had no help except one momen tary glimpse of the light on liaker s island ; but he stood by the helm, and steered the ship safely in. He was not yet thirty years of age when he publish ed his .Practical .Navigator, which was so exactly what navigators wanted that it found its way speedily into the cabin of almost every American and English ship. A pleasing incident of his sea-faring life occurred soon after the publication of this work. While his ship lay in Boston harbor, one day, waiting for a lair wind, the young captain (he was then but twenty-nine) went on shore to attend the Commencement of Har vard College at Cambridge, near by, hen the .President read the names of the men upon whom the college had conferred honorary degrees, dipt. Bowditch was thrilled with delight to hear his own name among those who had received the degree of Master of Arts. This was a great honor in those honest old days, and would have re mained such to this hour if colleges had been chary and conscientious in the bestowal of degrees. In after years. when he lftid received many such dis tinctions and was a member of most of the learned societies in the world, he al ways looked back upon th.it day as the proudest of his life. Yankee sailors of any force and sense are not apt to be sailors long after mid' die life. When Captain Bowditch had followed the sea for about fifteen years, he settled in Salem as president of an insurance company, an employment which gave him as much leisure as he could profitably employ. He was still an ardent and constant student, and contributed frequently scientific papers to me Aorth American lievicw, and other works. These, however, were but trifles compared with the great task upon which ne entered soon after set tling at Salem. There had been coming out for many years the volumes of the extensive work of the French mathema tician, Laplace, entitled, Lc Mecanique Ccteste, or, as we should say, " The Mechanism of tho Heavens." This work, divided into sixteen books, was designed to embody the entire science of astronomy, mathematically treated. It embraces such topics as the Laws 'of f,. . J Al. AAA i.i A r au.ui.iuu, mo auiucuuu 01 itravitauon, tho Form of the Heavenly Bodies, the Revolutions of the Heavenly Bodies, the Moons of Jupiter and Saturn, the Theory of tho Comets ; all illustrated with diagrams, and treated in such a way that only a very accomplished mathematician can read it. As Bowditch says himself : I never come across one of ' La- plaoe's ' Thus it plainly appears," with out feeling sure that I J iave g U fill ot hours oi nara study Deioro me w nil up the chasm, and find out and show how it plainly appears." So abBtruse was this work, that it was supposed at the time that not more than three persons in the United States, nor more than twelve in Great Britain could read it. Bowditch formed the design not merely to tronslato the whole into English, but to elucidate it with notes, and to add to it such discov eries in astronomical science as had been made since its completion. The execution of this task occupied the re mainder of his life. When he had made considerable progress in it, the impor tant question arose, how should he bear the expense of publishing five quarto volumes of a thousand pages each. The plan of subscription was suggested; but, with a sturdy, and perhaps exces sive independonce, ho declined to avail himself of that method, and determined to wait until he could afford to publish it at his own expense, leaving it to the. public to buy the volumes, or leave them alone, as they should see fit. Fortu nately he was invited, in his fiftieth year, to accept the post, at a liberal salary, of Actuary of a Boston Life Insurance Company, which soon put him in cir cumstances to begin tho publication. "I would rather," he used to say, " put by a thousand dollars a year for my book than spend it in keeping a car riage." Tho volumes, as they appeared, met with a better sale than he had expected; but, of course, they did not pay the great expense of publication. While 10 was correcting the proof sheets of the fourth volume, ho was seized with a mortal disease, which ended his life at the age of sixty-five. The fifth volume has since been added to the series by Professor Pierce. Bowditch accomplished the great labors of his life as much by the regu larity a3 by the ardor of his industry. lu winter lie was up two hours before daylight, and spent tho day in labor, happy at its close to receive his friends. in the midst of his family, and pass the evening in cueeriui conversation, it appears, too, that he was an extremely able and sagacious man of business, and conducted the affairs of the com panies intrusted to his charge in such a way as to place them upon tho most solid basis of prosperity. A statue was erected in his honor at the cemetery of Mount Auburn, where his remains re pose. N. Y. Ledger. Foncies by Banbury. One of the most striking features of a mother's care and affection is puttinsr black patches on light colored pants. Of course, you khow better, but when you see a boy riRcred with two such patches you can t help but feel that ho can see what transpires behind him without turning around. A lazy Essex-street man- being re quested to stone some raisins, told his wife to try coaxing nrst. A North Main Street gentleman saw his boy in front of the house throwing ball 111 the air, last evening. He hadn't played ball himself for thirty years, and knew nothing of tha kind of ball base ball clubs have introduced the past few years, but he felt the old spirit rising in him at the memory of former triumphs, and he held up his hands and told his son to " let her slide." She slid. He caught it full and fair, and then dropped it, and started into the house, with his eyes full of tears, and his hands pressed un der his arms. The youth subsequently informed another boy that he could plainly hear tho " old man's " bones snap. A middle-aged lady met a bridish- looking lady in the post-office, yester day, and the following conversation fol lowed : " Mary, is it true that your mother is dead ? asked the former. " It is," said Mary. "And were you married before she died "No," said Mary; "not until three days after." The middle-aged woman stared at the bride for a moment, and then slowly and bewilderingly said: " Do you mean to say that your poor mother died without without seeing what you were married in ?" As Happy ns Cau Be. The city of B , a town on the Big Muddy, in Missouri, has among its principal citizens Captain McV , a man who " knows how to keep a hotel," and who says sharp things on current events. Just before the breaking out of the war a young lady of B was mar ried to a rising physician. He joined his fortunes with the South, and soon after he was killed in battle. After ward the lady married a merchant of St. Louis, who was carried off by the cholera iu 18G6. Returning to her for mer home she met a young man of fine address and entertaining manners, but who had a greater social than business reputation. He was not rich, and had, apparently, little prospect of becoming so. Under these circumstances the en gagement of the twain was looked upon as anything but desirable by the friends of the lady, who, notwithstand ing her double widowhood, was still young and attractive. But in this case, as in innumerable others, love tri umphed over prospective poverty. One evening while Captain McV and some of his guests were sitting on the porch, enjoying the cool breeze of the Big Muddy, the couple referred to strolled by. After they had passed the captain exclaimed, "What terrible sin can that woman have committed that she should be thus visited by all the curses in the calendar? She has had war, she has had pestilence, and now she is threatened with famine." ne might have gone on and added, " bat tle, murder and sudden death." For tunately the last marriage has proved as " happy as they make them." A Rattlesnake's Bite. An Indiana man has recovered from the bite of a rattlesnake. The South Bend Tribune tells his story thus: " Last Wednesday afternoon, Asa Jones, of Clay Township, was engaged in loading hay on a wagon on the marsh at Bonebrake'a farm, when he was at tacked by a rattlesnake. The reptile first struck at the boot on his right foot, but missed it, and he gave the snake a kick sending it off a short distance. It renewed the attack again, and this time struck him on one side of the calf of his leg just above the boot-top, the fangs making a wound nearly an inch long. Mr. Jones managed to dispatch the snake, and immediately bound some tobacco on the wound. Within five minutes from the time he was bitten he was perfectly blind, and it was with great difficulty he was got to his house, which was over a mile distant. He was instantly filled with whiskey, and tobac co was kept on the wound till the day following, when he was apparently as well as ever. He is now suffering no bad effects from the bite. The snake wasagood-siaedone, with seven rattles." Saratoga Poncing. Tho fashion of dancing at Saratoga, says Terkins, is not at all cosmopolite not even national. In Saratoga the different style makes a medley. If you see a two-hundred pound man and woman perspiring around with their pompous bodies tossed lightly and springly in the air, arms swaying, keep ing good "time, and making grand Per sian salaams for a bow in the ijancers, you can set them down as belonging to the old Tweed-Fisk-Leland-Americus Club school. If you see two heated young people tripping fast away ahead of the music, taking short steps, and jerking tnrougu a square dauce as if the house was on fire and the set must bo completed be fore any one could take to the fire-es capes, vou can set them down as irom the plantation districts of the South, or the rural districts of Pennsylvania and the West. It is the steamboat quick step. If Vfill non a blnclc-pved VOlltll with long hair and a young lady with liquid I lack eyes, and she has her two hands on the vounrr man's shoulders at full lenth. and ntnnds exactly in front of him, and they both go hopping arouna like Siamese twins with wire springs under, them, you can wager they are from Louisville, Memphis, or Little Rock. Thev have the square -hold wrestling step. If you see a young fellow grasp a young lady firmly around the waist, seize her wrists, stick her hand out like tne bow sprit of a Sound yacht, and both hump up their back like a pair of mad cats on a door-yard fence, and then go sliding slam-bang against people, over people, through people, up and down the room. sidewise, backwards, and up an down like a saw-mill gate, you can, having learned their dancing, join the Morris- town, Riverdale, and Yonkers sociables. It is the suburban IN ew iork saw-mul iiimp-un. if you see a couple gliding gently and slowly and lazily through the Jjaii- cers, just half as fast as the time, but keeping step with the music, quietly sauntering through tho " grand chain, too languid to whirl partners, talking sweetly all the time, ns if they were strolling in a graveyard, you can rest assured that they are from Jew lork, and from tho most fashionable section between Madison square and the Park. This is tho graveyard saunter step. If you see a fellow clasp a girl melt ingly in his arms, squeeze her hand warmly, hold her swelling bosom to his, and they both go floating down the room locked in each other's embrace, looking like one person, his feet only now nud then protruding from a pro fusion of illusion and lace and so on. rely upon it, you can set the two down as belonging to the intense Boston school. It is the melting Harvard jacket-race embrace. Massachusetts, take our hat! A Hundred Millions. Tho announcement is made that Mr, Alexander T. Stewart is worth one hun dred millions of dollars. Look at the amount in figures 8100,000,000. The mind does not readily appreciate the immensity of tho amount. To take in its vastuess one must pause and think. Look up at the sun, ninety- five millions of miles away ; Mr. Stew art could pay one dollar a mile to go there, and bo a quintuple millionaire when he arrived there. The moon is two hundred and forty thousand miles distant ; if reached by Mr. Stewart he could easily buy out the man in it, and start a branch marble store. Once on a time, in Europe, a man made a wager that with his right hand ho could make one millon straight marks with a pen or pencil in thirty days. Figure this down, it is 33,000 and over every day. Well, the man be- can. continued, aud actually completed tho job ; but he nearly failed. His wrist olmost entirely gave out ; it was bandaged ; an assistant dropped diluted whisky, clear whisky, and nt the last stronK alcohol upon the wrist to stimu late action. But he won the bet by a hair. This was one million only. At the same rate he could have made one hundred millions of marks in one hun dred months, or eight years and four mouths. Let us place Mr. Stawart at 7j years of ace he is a little less. J-ict lain be em to make money at 15 years ot age, Here are sixty years in which to make S100.000.000. or 81.6GG.GG0a year, 8138, 8S8 a month, $1,623 a day, or nearly 200 an hour. And all this to be made by one man in ons life-time. Mr. Stewart, originally a schoolmas ter, began business a bankrupt, so to speak. He took the stock ot a little store to secure himself from loss as an endorser. Relinquishing his school, he plunged into the convolutions ot tapei and laces. He has been almost uni formly aud largely successful until his schedule shows a total of one hundred millions of dollars worth of property, Astor by inheritance, Vanderbilt by speculation, are the only rivals to this merchant .prince, who made his money by the accumulated momentum of years of trade. A Lingering; Death. The Lancaster (Perm., pnpers report the death of a young man, fifteen years old, named Henry Colly, which is in many respects remarkable. He lay upon a bed of pain for one hundred and seventeen days, and during that period . of time never once arose. He was first taken sick with an attack of cerebro spinal mengitis, and this disease finally terminated in consumption of the bowels. After the first day of his sick ness he was unable to hear or see, and a greater part of the time had no power of speech. His attention could at cer tain times be attracted by holding any article of bright material in front or over him, and moving it from one posi tion to another. The fact of the little fellow's remarkable sickness spread all over the country, and numbers of phy sicians had visited him merely tnrougu cariosity. At the time of his death he was a skeleton, with only a dry, parched cuticle drawn over the bones, and that without any perceptible vitality in it. nis muscles haa . actually meiteu away. During part of :the time (particularly during his last days) he suffered with lockjaw, and his mouth hact to be forced open in order to admit the only susten ance he received an occasional small quantity of wine or brandy. The Siocx and Tawnee Fight. Fur ther particulars from the late Indian fight say that the Sioux, when they gained possession of the l'awuees, at tacked and killed a "number of squaws and children, dashing the papooses brains out against the ground. The Pawnees lost the meat of about 600 buffaloes which thev had killed. The Sioux numbered 750 warriors, under the command of Snownake. the successor of Whistler. Tlieir loss was thirty warriors. Troops from iert Mother- sou have forced tham back to their reservation. Tho Colorado Desert. The Colorado desert is an immense arid plain extending from the southern boundary of Utah to the head of the Gulf of Ualnornia. It is about six hundred miles from north to south, and of width varying from thirty to three hundred miles. The dry sands of this great ba sin offer no inducement to the farmer or tock and aro as dreary and inhospita ble as the Assyrian wastes. Tho hot winds from this arid basin affect unfa vorably the climate of the neighboring cultivated regions. Deserts are mostnpt to expand than to contract if let alone, and how to subdue the Colorado desert has long been a problem. Mr. Isaac James, Into engineer of the Truckae and .Virginia City Railroad, left San Diego, California, in the early part of July to explore tho Colorado bnsiu to tho Uulf of uainornia, with the view of ascertaining the possibility of turn ing the waters of the gulf into the ba sin. Mr. James is very confident that the greater part of tho desert is fur be low tide water, and that tho cutting of a cnnnl from the gulf to tho depression would result in the formation of an ex tensive inland sea. The project is wor thy of careful study, for the climate changes likely to be produced by the introduction of such an immense vol ume of water would doubtless be very beneficial to tho "surrounding States and Territories Old Httmbttgs Discarded. Thank heaven, the old-school practice is pass ing away. Ipecac, aloes, calomel, blis tering, the lancet, and (worse than nil), medicated rum, have given place to a remedy, which bids fair to become the universal medicine of mankind. Vine gar Bitters is that remedy. It is des tined to take precedence of all other curatives now before tho world. The pharmacopoeia and conspectus of the regular Faculty contain nothing that will compare with it. Every day hun dreds of the sick are emancipating them selves from systems of treatment which entail great expense, and do no good, and are flying to this cheap and abso lutely certain means of relief. Dys pepsia, rheumatism, liver complaint, periodic fevers, sick headache, kidney diseases, constipation, nervous affec tions, and in short, nil maladies, acnte or chronic, which do not involve the ir reparable injury of some vital organ, are cured by this pure unalcoholic vege tabalc restorative. Com. The fleet of whalers fitted out from Scotland only numbers ten sail, and two small whales were all that had been taken at Greenland up to the 1st of July, where the fishing generally closes about the 1st of July. Like Lightning are the miraculous Cures effected with Flagg's Instant lielief. Aches, I'aius, Sprains, Uowcl Complaints, etc., cannot exist if this great medicine is used, lie lief warranted, or money refunded. Com. A loss of $5,000,000 resulted from the burning of the rice mills at Stepney, Jjiiginud. PAINI PAIN!! PAINN! WHERE IS THY RELIEVER? Readers, you will find it In that Favorite Home nemeay PEE II Y DAVIS' PAlS-KILLElt. It has been tested in every variety of climate, and by almost every natinn kttuwn to Americans. It is tho almost constant companion and inestimable friend of the missionary and traveler, ou sea and lann, and no one should travel on uur lakesor rivers without it. Its Merits are Unsurpassed, If you are suffering from INTERNAL PAIN, Tu-entu to Titirtu Drotia imt Little M'ufer will al most instantly cure you. There is nothing equal to it. In a few moments it cures Culic. Craning, Simsms. Heart-burn. Diarrheal, J)y9enta-y, thiji. II oirf III the 7f.JirefJ9.Nlur titimuich. Dyspepsia, Sitk Headaclie. Cures CHOLERA, wheu all other' Remedies Fail. It gives Instant Relief from Aching Teeth. In sections of the country where Fkver and Aoite prevails, there is no remedy held iu ureater esteem. K ok Fever and AouK.-T.ike three tablosnnonfuls of the Pain-Kitler in about hair a pint of hot water, wen weuieiit-u wiiii molasses us mo ailiM'K IB com intfnn. Bathing; freely the chest, back, and bnwell with the Pain-Killer at tho same time. Rt-neat the dose in twenty minutes if the first does not stop the chill. Should it produce vomitinir (and it prob- aniywui.ir ina stomaen is verv roull. take a little Putn-Killer lu cold water sweetened with sugar auer eacn spasm, i-erseveram-e in tne above treat ment has cured many severe and obstiuate ca ses o mis disease. GREAT 11 CHOLERA" BEMEDT P A1N-K1LL VR It Is an External and Internal Rcmedv. For Sum mer Complaint or any other form of bowel disease iu t-uiiiiren or aauiis, it i s an almost certain cure and has without doubt, been more successful in uriuK tho various kimla of CHOLERA than any tiler known rcmodv.or tho most skillful nhvKlri.-m. Iu India, Africa and China, where this dreaiful dis ease is more or less prevalent, the Pain-Killer is coneiuereu Dy tne natives as well as ny European ...Irtanl. it, tln.Aa ollin.iU, A CI'DV DPUt'nV and while It is a most frhViout remedy to- pain, it is a pei fer-tly safe medieine in the most unskillful hands. It has becomo a household remedy, from iiie laci mat it bitpi immediate ana permanent re- ltel. It is a purely vegetable preparation, made from the best and purest materials, safo to keep and use in every family. It is recommended by physicians and persons of all classes, aud to-dav. after a public trill of thirty years the average life ot man it stands unrivalled and unexcelled spreading its usefulness over tho wide world. Directions accompany each Bottle. Price 25 cts., 50 cts., and fl per Bottle. PERRY n AVIS' 4 SON, Proprietor!, Providence, R. I, J. N. HARRIS & CO., Cincinnati, O., fropriotors for the Western and South Western utatos. For sale by all Medicine Dealers. FOR 8ALS WIIOtiESJvL.1 BY JOHN F. HENRY. New York. OF.O C. OOOOWIN it CO., Itostnn. JOHNBON. HOLOWAY 4 CO., Philadelphia. TUIKTV YEARS' EXPEHIEM'f! OF AN UL.D NlllSK. Air. WIiabIow's Soothing Syrup la lite preacripttoia of one of the best Female Physi cians and Nurses in the United States, and has been used for thirty years with never failing safety and success by millions of mothers and children, from the feeble lnfaut of one week old to the adult. It corrects aci:ity of thestomai'h, relieves wind colic, regulates the bowels, and gives rest, health and comfort to mother and child. We believe It to be the Dest and Surest Remedy in the World in all DREN, whuthur It arises from Teething nr from ses f.f llYKfcJTJ fcrtY ana DIAUIUIIKA III CHIL any other cause, i- uli directions for uslnir will ac company each battle. None Genuine unless the rac-simiie oiiuaia'13 a rz.u&.ina is ou ine outsiae wrapper. Sold by nil Medicine Dealer.. tUILDHKN' OFTES LOOK PALE AND SICK from no other eause than having worm, in th. stomach. BROWN'S VERMIFUGE COMFITS will destroy Worm, without injury to th. child, being perfectly WHITE, aud free from all coloring or other Injurious Ingredient, usually used in worm preparations. CURTIS ti, BROWN, Proprietor., No. ii 1 5 Fulton Street, New York. ftiM by Druoaixtn and Chemists, and dealer, in Medicines at TwEMTV FIVE CENTS A Box. TUB HOUSEHOLD PANACEA, AND FAMILY LINIMENT Is th. beat remedy in th. world for th. following complaint., via : Cramps in th. Limbs and Stom ach, Fain in th. Stomach, Bowel, or Bide, Rheu matism in all it. forms, Bilious Colio, Neuralgia, Cholera, Dysentery, Colds, Flesh Wound., Burn., Sor. Throat, Spinal Complaint., Spralua and Bruise., Chill, and Fev.r. For Iutorual and Ex ternal use. It. operation is not only to relieve th. patient, but entirely removes the cause of the complaint. It penetrates aud pervades the whole system, r sloiing healthy action to all Its parts, aud quicken ing the blood. The House hold Panacea 1 purely Veg etable and All Uualiug. Prepared by CURTIS fc BROWN, No. ii 1 5 Fulton Street, New York. For sale by all Druggist.. Keif it i the House, that it may be promptly ad mini stored in nil sudden attacks of Cholera MoibuB Cramps. Diarrhoea, Colic, or any sim.ltr affection forwhii-h Dr. Javue's Carminative Balsam I. effectual rt-ineay. At this seaaun of the year every family will And It a useful and necessary curative. SHALtiKHBaaoaa's Pill. uur. every form of Chill, aud Fever as oertaiuly a. bread relieve, hunger, ana ar.iu.i a. naruiA.BB. aoia ny a Aiaggi.L. For loss of Appetite, Dyspepsia, In niRPHtion, DcprPion of Spirits and General Debility, in tlieir various forms, Febro-Phos-ritoBATEn Elixir or Oamhata made by Casweo,, Hazard o., now lorn, anu boiu by all araa Kints, in the bent tonic. As a stimulant tnmo for patients, recovering from fever or other siekneHS, it has no equal. If t&ken during the season it prevents fever and ague aud other in termiUeut fevers. Com. CntsTADono's Excet,sior Haib Dvb is the most sure and complete preparation of its kind in the world ; its effects are musical, its character harmless, its tints natural, its quali ties enduring. Com. Fcruviah Syrup cures Dyspepsia. A great many people have asked us of late, "How do you keep your horse looking so sleek and glossy f" We tell them it is the easiest thing in tho world; give Sheridan's Cav alry Con'lilion I'omdtri two or three times a week. Com. A gentleman in the eastern port Qf tho State, who was about having his leg ampu tated on account of its being bent at right an gles aud si iff at tho knee, heard of Johnson's A noibne Liniment. After using it a Bbort timo his leg became straight, aud is now as service able as the other. Com. Medicinal Potions on tit Wane, The patriarchs took no mercury, no bismuth, ns Iodine, no bromlda of patasilum, no itrychoria, no quinine. Happy old gentlemen! they did not even know of the eilttenee of these " ipecl0.es," and yet they lived until It seemed as If Death had forgotten them. Their medicines were herbs and roots. They have left this fact on record, and the world seems to be now taking note of It and returning to the nrst principles of medication. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, lhe purest and most efllcaclous vegetable res torative of the day. Is also the most popular. Thou sands of persons who only a few years aeo believed Implicitly In all the poisons which enure In th phar macrpia now pronounce this palatable tonic and al terative an a 1 1 -s n flic is nt remedy for dyspepsia, ner vous debility, constipation, bilious complaints, head ache. Intermittent fevers, and all the ordinary dis turbances of the stomach, the liver, the discharging organs and the brain. The time is not far distant hen most of the powerful and venomous druss now o recklcsty administered by practitioners of the heroic "school, In cases that might easily b ; control. led by milder treatment, will be utleily discarded by all phllasophlcnl physicians. As It Is, the tlilnklna- public, who are generally ahead of (he professionals, have alresdy put the dangerous preparations aside and adopted Hosteller's Hitters In tlieir stead as a safe anil excellent household nicdnine, adapted to aimosi every ailment except the organic and deadly contagious dliesics. For more than twenty years this larr.ous restorative and yreventive has been annually strenctbening Its hold upon the public con tHIccce and It now takes the lead of every advertised ciea.c.nc manuisciured In tins country. The Markets. stew Tons. Beef Cattle Prime to Extra llullocksf .lajtfa 13 .11JC First quality 11 Ha Hecoud quality Ordinary thiu Cattle.. . . Inferior or lowest ffrade .iu a ,ii .O&'iR .09 .07 a .Oil 25.(0 80.0iZ .0.1 a .or. i .OA1, a .07 ', .0i'4a .00 Mh .53', 11.20 a G.r9', 6.30 a 6.C0 Milch Cows Hogs Live Dressed Sheep uottou Middling ., Hour Extra Western State Extra . Wheat Red Western 1.52 1.52 1.42 .!") 1.115 .55 ,f0 1S.00 10.00 a l.fitf a 1.5 a l.io a .9.r.v a 1.2. V a .friiQ a .51 a 33 (if. alV.Oil a .10 State No. 2 Spring Rve Barley Malt Oata Mixed Western Corn Mixed Westorn Hay, per ton Straw, per ton Hops Hi. .35 a .40 IBs. .12 Pork Mesa 15.no alS.O Lard 07 a -USX lvtroieum uruite e a 0'f rt- nuedia Duttor State 2S .29 .20 .18 .15 .25 .13 .16 .11 .2) Ohio Fancy 19 " Yellow 17 Western Ordinary 14 Pr-nuKvlvauia Hue. . . .23 a .12 a .05 a JOa .18 a Cheese State Factory 41 Hkiwtued Ohio Eggs State BUF7ALS. Deef Cattle 4.(10 4.00 4.75 7.5 1.33 .42 M ,T4 .uo .08 a 8.40 a 5.5ii a 4.90 a 9.MH a 1.37 a .45 a .37 a .75 a 1.0 1 Sheep Hoga Live Flour Wheat No. 2 Spring Com 'l . . Oata Rye Harley Lard '. a .0! ALBANY. Wheat Rye State Corn Mixed , 1.C5 .80 a 2.15 a .H3 , 5.1 a .r.s 1.10 a 1.12 47 a .47 rniuiiixFHiA. liarU-y State Oata State , F'onr-Penn. Extra 7.21 a 8.50 Wheat Western lied 1.45 a 1.60 Corn Yellow 58 a 69 Mirerl 57 a .6!) Petroleum Crude 11 ItefluedlCV lleef Cattle 05 a .07 Clover Seed 7.00 a 8.00 Timothy 3.75 a 4. CO BALTIMORE, Cotton Low Middlings 18 a .18 Fl-uir Extra 6.25 a 7.25 Wheat 1.45 a 1.02 Corn Yellow (ill a .72 Outs a .44 Dr. .1. Walker's California Y in egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made clnedy irom tho na tive herbs found cn the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, the medicinal properties of which are extracted tucrelrom without the use of Alcohol. Tho question i3 almost daily asked, "What is the causo of tho unparalleled success ot vinegar uit- TERst" Our answer is, that they remove the causo of disease, and the patient re covers his health. They aro the great blood punlier and a liio-giving principle, a perfect Renovator aud Invigorator of tuo system, isever before i history of the world has a medicine been compounded possessing the remarkable qualities of Vinegar Bitters in healing the sick ot every disease man is beir to. Tliey are a eontlo Purgative as well as a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, iu Bilious Diseases. The properties of Dr.-Walker's v inegar liiTT'ERS are Aperient, Diarmorelio, Carminative, Nutritious. Laxative, lliuretio, Sedative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Altera tive, ana Ami-Bilious. It. II. Mi-UUVALI) V CO.. Druggists and Gen. A gta., San rrnneisco. California, uuu cur. oi wasninmon aim uuaritnn hts., x. Sold by all Drugutst. mid Dealer.. S1.1D REWARD For any oase of Blind-Bleeding, Itch ina. nr Ulcerated Piles that D KING'S PILE REMEDY fails to our. It is pre pared expressly to eure the Pili-s and nothing .l.s bim-ii m ai.Ii iiKriAttin-ra. I'nn.K si. BRIGGS HOUSE CHICAGO. Thii wf 11 known Hotel, rebuilt upon the old tit con.ur of Bdidolph Street and Filth Avenue, wai opened for tne ruceptipu oi tfueitt Apm 1,103, ele gantly furuUhed, having passenger elevator, bath moint, Ac, with hot and culd water in each room warmed ly atuay. and amply provided against nr by nre Dluus aud huiu ou every flour. Tub niODri tori iuvite the patrouaga of tha public, fet lmg con nuem iiiv rciiuiMimu m uiur iuu 10 year amu"iiif win uciuujr luiiuuctti O'd teima, 83 per day. RICKCORDS & IIUNTOOX, Proprs( A V WF.LT.9. f irmArlv cit Rriua Ruint w tv RP.prr.it uti Af nma. u..a. i Clerks, Taton Female Institute. Xennett Square, pa. 99s year auurm m. a. wayualiar eueuuaxi THE BEST IN THE WORLD ..JhsjaataeaWMu i .. up.i.'.,. wi hj.i yjuu gai tl'JVs WILSONlSEWINGlMAGIIINEf N. V. N. U., No. 33 CANVASSING BOOKS SENT FREE FOR Prof. FOWLER'S GREAT WORK On Manhood, Womanhood and their Mutual Inter-relations; Love, Its laws, Power, etc Agents are selling from 20 to ItO copies of this woi k a day. and we send a canvassing book free to any bf k ntfrnt. A'Hi' ss. stntli'ff experience, etc., national rrnLismsa co., rnmum ma. pa. 4 W. and C. Srott Poms flue Breech-Loud,.! PoiiMei Otitis I" an fimiinhed to th "Caw Caw" Club fif Milwaukee, and other.,, hollered to be tho best breech loader now in use. Xlto " Mnfzle-Loetjeri,'. every rarietu of .tt'tIV, air 4 and prire. " V and C. Rcntt onn' New Illustrated Work on Breeeh-Lnad-ers." bound in moroceo. 25 cent by mail. Bend for PrifC IWs and rtrrnlTa to WH L1AH LEAD A S0N3, 13 FanruilHall Square, Boston, Agent. WYOMING SEMINARY AND Commercial College, One of thelarffpst Boarding School for both 1 exet in the United States. Six courses of stu ly. Mili tary Tactics, Commercial Coiirffc Cours and Toie frrnphtiifr. Terms low. Fall term op 11B September 3. 1873. fcend for a Catalogue to Rev. I). COFKLAND, A. M.. or L. ii. SpRAnuK. Klni7tp, pa. $20 PEH MOXTII, Cl.KtKI A (tents (male or female! wanted everywhere. Address, with stnmp. J NO. W. JOHNSON & CO.. Box ii20, St. tiOtiit, Mo. vy fOBJ WD WHEAT IEL3, ' 'J v Iteady for n. &?V ' ' iPrire$140Aja IM1--- J llutht ls ground a--,W Haven. Coot. S10TOS20K day. A Bents want d wncre. particulars uti latrA Co.,St.LouiB, e. &Tk ACH WERK AGFaNTS WANTRD J7 I WoMP Business legitimate. Particular r .1 WOHTH, Rt. I.i rlO HUT YrM. IF' And. Its Cure. Carbolated Cod Liver Oil Is a sclentlfle combination of two well-Known mem. clues. Itsthemy I i ft to arrest tne ileiav, then build unthe syst -:n. I'hysleinns llnd thednetnne eor rect. Tho really startling cures perfurmed by U1a son's Oil are pronf. Carbolic Arid positively nrrent Peray. It Is th most powerful antiseptic in u.u km.wu wunu. j-.i-terini; Into the i-lrculathin. It at oni e grapples with corruption, anu uecay ceases, n imimw svunta of disease. ... . . . . Cod Lirt-r Ull It mature s oest a.rouwt iu rciuuf Consumption. Put up In lnrire wrtisr-artnpc-a notiica. J li ln ntor'x xiuiuit in e, nnu is old by 1U! best ! ut;!.!. 1'rti.ared by J. H. WIAjUBUav, fell Joins Street. Krw York. Thea-Nectar 18 A PDItK-? X31 nclt TEA. With the linen Tea Flavor. Tha best Tea Imported. For salt everywhere. And for pale wholesale only by the GREAT ATLANTIC PACIFIC TEA CC, No. llil Fulton bt.t -2 A 4 Chunk St., New York. P. O. H. ,6,H(i Be-"' for Then-Nortnr Cirenlsr Shoe and Leather Chronicle $3 a Year, In advance. A VtVi-kly Newf i nper for Hoot nnd Pnoa AlfcN. TA.NNr.UH, l-'lNlUNI!b lKALF.ttS, C LC. V. A. Van Ui-ntliuvsrn. No. C Furry St., Xaw-YoEK. ii fl BEST IN TilK WOULD. JIOV.ni.E.T()OTUEU tllU'lTLAHS, I'liltFOKATEr ClfOSS Cl'TM. Send for Psnmalet to AMEIJK'AN SAW CO., EW YORK. Iron in the Blood THE PERUVIAN 8YBUP Vitalize anil Enrlehe. tho lilood, Tones up tho ttysteni.Buildsuiillio Broken-down, ( tire. Female Complaints, Dropsy, Debility, Hu mors, llyspepsia, Ae Thousands havs been ehanired by tl' use of this remedy from weak, sickly, suiliTiuc creatures, to mm ISP .tronir, healthy, and Inppy men and women; and Invalid, eannut reasonably hesitate to Rive it a trial, Caution. Ho sure you got tho riht article. Sea that " Peruvian 6t-rup" ia blown in th phw. l-ain phlets free. Sendf.irone. BETH 'W-FOWLU & rjOXS, Proprietory lioston, Mass, For solo by drutrglata Koncrally. I IK A. TEA AOEHT8 wanted In town and con n trv to Bell TEA. or Atet UD club nrilnra. fur tha largest Tea Company iu America; importers' price, and induceimut.toatfeutB. Bend for circular. Aaures-, huueht wills. BV-im Rtreet. New York. eefn 1t?fi Per day I Agents wanted I All classc lu of working people of either sex, youn or old, mak. more money at work for us lu their spare moments or all the time than at any particular, iroo. aud, Ma. Address Q. 8T1NBON i CO..P ivthiuff i TJTTLmVTTi'CC Enterprising young and JJUnilt IJiiHt middle-aged men and wo men ambitious to mske a successful start in busi ness, are offered superior facilities for preparing themselves at the Sl'ENCElllAN BUSINESS COL LKOR. Milwaukee. Wis. STRAUB MILL COMPANY tlNtlXAATI, O, MuntifuotHrors of Portn 1I- MillK.M lit-uM urn, r Feed, Mill biiinUle un. lit'i'-riui tiers, cock: head npper-i miners for Fnriii or Jlerelian t Work. Kent! fur 1'uiujjUIuI ami l'llCCS, llnmpsou Wlilti-hlll A Co., AblHl. Wo. 38 Cortlandt St.. N. Y. Wn&lf S?i5S PI ftSS J" AI-ForFEMATK, . ble tiHiiiloyiuatit tiotuu, day orevruiug ; nocapil! rt quir ed; full in&Lt-uctions and valuable package of 8oodae;at tree bjr mail. A '1ln -with six cent return stamp, M-YOU NO HV. imv.rtU.titf X Vrlr. JIM els. ort.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers