Farm, Garden and Household. Winter unit Spring Wheat. The distinction between winter and spring wheat is a difference in the time of Rowing and not in variety. Any epring wheat can bo changed into win ter, or winter into spring, merely by gradually changing the time in which either is sown. By gradually sowing Bpnng wheat earlier every season, in a few years it can be sown in the fall, and become winter wheat. Or just before the close of winter, bow winter and let it germinate slightly, then let it freeze up till spring, and next year it can be successfully sown in the spring. And as it is universally conceded that winter is better than spring wheat, it is a nat ural conclusion that the sooner wheat can be safely sown in the spring the nearer will it attain to the quality of winter wheat. The difference between red and white wheats is not in variety, but is owing chiefly to the variety of soil on which it is grown. It is said that the hard wheats are all natives of warm climates, such as Italy, Sicily, and Bar bary. , The soft wheats are 'from more northern climates, such as England, Russia, Belgium, Denmark, and Swe den. There is, however, one exception to this general rule, as the celebrated Polish wheat is hard, and from this rea son it has been contended that it was not a native of Poland, but was intro duced thero from some milder climate. The English atmosphere is so humid that it is impossible to ripen any wheat hard, but in many cases it requires ar tificial heat to harden it before it can be ground into flour. Different soils nnd climates .materially change the na ture and variety of wheat. Aa. Dent. Xcport. . vi Feeding Oat. to Colts. A writer in the Maine Farmer says : I have always found that generous feed ing pays the best, and I have found nothing so good for colts as a generous supply of oats, regularly fed. There is not much clanger in feeding too many, the danger is in the opposite direction. The most critical part of the colt's life is perhaps the first winter, when lie should be liberally fed with oats or oat menl, with a few potatoes, and have daily exercise. One of your corres pondents prefers carrots to other roots for feed. This does not agree with my experience. After giving cairots a fair and thorough trial, extending through tluee winters, I come to the conclusion (and I think intelligently) that carrots as a feed for horses are entirely worth less. The more oats you feed to yonr colts the more muscle, the more size, the more power, the more endurance, the more style and speed you obtain, and the more money you get when you Bell them. Pigeons In Jelly. Make some jelly of calf's foot, or, if you have the liquor in which a knuckle of veal has been boiled, it will answer the samo purpose; place it'in a stewpan with a bunch of sweet herbs, a blade of mace, white pepper, a slice of lean ba con, some lemon peel, and the pigeons, which, being trussed and their necks propped up to make them appear na tural, season to your palate. Bake them; when they are done, remove them from the liquor, but keep them covered close, that theircolor may be preserved. Remove the fat, boil the whites of a couple of eggs with the jelly to clear it, and strain it; this is usually done by dipping a cloth into boiling water, and straining it through it, as it prevents anything liko scum or dirt sweeping through the strainer. Put the jelly rough over and round the pigeons. The Wealth of Pennsylvania. Mr. Tliomas J. Bigham, Commission er of Statistics of Pennsylvania, has prepared, in advance of his annual re port, a very interesting tabulated state ment of the "vrealth, taxation, estima ted and true valuation of the public in debtedness of Pennsylvania." From this we learn that the aggregate as sessed value of real estate in all the counties is 1,087,793,814, and the as sessed value of personal property $85, 699,42!), making the total assessed value of property of both kinds $1,172,968, 077. The Commissioner, however, as serts tho well-known fact that this fictitious value is very much less than the actual value, and he has attempted upon his own responsibility, without having positive data with which to work, to obtain an approximation to the real value. Tho result thus secured places the real and personal estate of Pennsylvania at 83,475,831,851. Mr. Bigham informs us that "in a few counties Chester, Delaware and Erie, and measurably in Montgomery and Philadelphia, the assessed creditably approaches the real value, while in others the assessed is shamefully below the cash value. In one. county, Luzerne, it is only one-fourteenth. To the real and personal estate of Phila delphia he attributes an actual value of ! $1,022,049,304. The next largest has 255,890,522, Luzerne coming in iuiru wun sMM.YUu.gys ; .Lancaster fourth, with $127,078,488 ; Berks fifth, with 8123,947,238; Schuylkill sixth, with vi,vivtuui, una tester seventli, with The Yellow Fever. Tho ravages of the yellow fever in orlions of the southwest have been orrible. A New Orleans Picayune special ironi fciireveport, .La., says the disease which is raging there is genuine yeiiow lever ot a very malignant type. It is supposed to have broken out Ironi miasma rising from the breaking np of the noted Bed River Raft, a mass of logs, earth, etc., which has blocked up the river for years. A sudden change in tne weather from liot to eold proved fatal to those sick with the fever, and tne deaths' in' the little town within a few days reached one hundred and fiftv. Six hundred persons were sick at the time, so that there is little hope the mutiny ims reaiuieu its limit, inose who could have left the place. A dis patch to tlje Howard Association, sign ed by Drs.. Smith, Finny and Reilly, Bay : " No report you havs received from here can possibly exaggerate the conumon oi auaira. xuey are, inileeu, deplorable." The Howard Association, in response to further appeals from Shreveport, Bent a number of drug gists and mora nurses. . The fever in malignant form is growing in other sec tions of the south and southwest. Terrible . Fatality. A dispatch has been received at the Admiralty Office, London, from the commander of the British eteam-sloop Daphne, announ cing the capture by that vessel, in the Indian Ocean, near ' the Seychelle Islands, of a slave-ship, ' upon which' there had been horrible Buffering. -. The mall-pox had raged on the ship, and out of tha' 300 slaves taken on board, 250 had died. The remaining fifty were terribly emaciated from the disease and want, Urge Priced CatUo. ', ) Y. Their PcdlgreiMi-Fifteen Cows Bring 1 400,000. At the large KnleT of improved cattle near Utica, N. T., the following named cows brought the highest prices : - EIOnTH DUCHESS OF GENEVA, red and white ; calved July 28, 18G6" got by third Lord Oxford ; dam first Duchess of Geneva by second Grand Duke, seventy-firRt Duchess by Dnke of Gloster, sixty-sixth Duchess by fourth Duke of York, fifty-fifth Duchess by fourth Dnke of Northumberland, thirty eighth Duchess by Norfolk, thirty-third Duchess by Belvedere, nineteenth Duchess by second Hubback, twelfth Duchess by tho Earl, fourth Duchess by second Ketton, first Duchess by Comet, Duchess by Favorite, by Daisy Bull, by Favorite, by Hubback, by J. Brown's Red Bull j sold at $40, G00. TBNTH DUCHESS OF GENEVA, roan j calved May 15, 18G7 : got by second Duke of Geneva, dam fifth Duchess of Geneva, by Grand Duke of Oxford ; sold at $35,000. TENTH DUCHESS OF ONEIDA, red and white ; calved April 7, 1878 j got by second Dnke of Oneida ; dam eighth Duchess of Geneva, by third Lord Oxford ; sold at 27,000. THIRD DUCHESS OF ONEIDA, roan ; calved March 19, 1871 ; got by fourth Duke of Geneva ; dam eighth Duchess of Thorndale, by third Duke of Airdrie ; sold at $15,000. THIRTEENTH DUCnESS OF THORNDALE, red ; calved February 25, 1807 ; got by tenth Duke of Thorndale ; dam tenth Duchess of Thorndale, by second Grand Duke ; sold for 15,000. EIGHTH DUCHESS OF ONEIDA, roan ; calved November 18, 1872 ; got by fourth Dnke of Geneva ; dam tenth Duchess of Geneva, by second Duke of Geneva ; sold for 10,000. NINTH DUKE OF ONEIDA, roan ; calved March 2, 1873 j got bv second Duke of Oneida ; dam twelfth Duchess of Thorndale, by sixth Duko of Thorndale ; priced obtained 10,000. SEVENTH DUCnESS OF ONEIDA, red and white ; calved August 3, 1872 ; Kot by second Dnke of Oneida ; dam first Duchess of Oneida by tenth Duko of Thorndale ; price 19,000. TWELFTH MAID OF OXFORD, rich roan ; calved October 18, 1872 ; got by fourth Duke of Geneva ; dam second Maid of Oxford by Grand Duke of Oxford ; price 0,000. TWELFTH LADYj OXFORD, red and white ; calved December 15, 1809 ; got by tenth Duke of Thorndale, dam seventh Lady of Oxford by sixth Duke of Thorndale; price 7,000. FIRST DUCHESS OF ONEIDA, red and white ; calved. January 24, 1870 ; got by tenth Duke of Thorndale; dam eighth Duchess of Geneva by third Lord Oxford ; price 30,000. FOURTH DUCHESS OF OST3IDA, red : calved Jannarv 1 7 1S79 f fourth Duke of Geneva; dam thirteenth Duchess of Thorndale by tenth Duke of Thorndale ; price 25,000. THIRD COUNTESS OF OXFORD, red ; calved July 3. 1871 t cot bv IWnn of Oxford ; dam second Countess of uxtorri iy second Duke of Geneva price 9,100. SECOND MAID OF OXFORD, , roan ; calved October 22, 1S02 ; got by Grand Duko of Oxford ; dam Oxford twentieth by Marquis of Carrabas price 0,000. LADY KNIGniLEY, roan ; calved July 28,- 1871 ; got by second Duke of Tregunter ; dam Lady Knightly second by third Dnke of vjemeva ; price o,uuu The Utica Observer contains the fol lowing reference in ihn nlvf nolo . The sale of Hon. Samuel Campbell's uuequunea uera oi thoroughbred short horn cattle, which took place at New York Mills, two miles from Utica, will attract attention ami provoke discussion throughout tho world. It was tho most important sale of the kind ever held. It drew hither a number of English stock-breeders and numerous represen tatives from KentnnW and other States, and also from the jjommion oi uanada. The prices real ized were exceotionallv hio-l. Tim enm of- 40,000 was paid 'for one cow the i-ignui jucness oi ueneva by Jlr. V. Davis, Gloucestershire,- England. The call of this cow was sold in Mi A in. ander, of Kentucky, for 27,000. These uguics seem ianuious, but they were paid bv men. who pnmirf.il ti, -mi- before they made the bids. In England it i impossible to secure any thorough bred short horns ; not because there are none of the pure blood Duchess breed in the kingdom as a foolish cou temnorarv sntrff-Kta hut. ,ar j. - V. V UII'IU LUO owners will not Dart with rlir-m fnr W or money. There has not been a sale of short horns in England for twenty years ; there is not likely to be rich a salo for an hundred vnnm in ni.mn The London Field, the'representative journal of the stock raisers in Great Britain, atlemritfiil tn rli English purchasers from' attending the iauiueii sine, arguing that cattle of equal exoeaenco could be seen in Eng land. But it is one thing to see them and another thing to own them, and several enternrisinr Knrrlicli . i r, f-,......niv ii, n appreciated the difference, were hero to i . i ma&e purchases, The Farmers' Movement. Perhaps the best of the farmers muvemeui, Buys ueecner, 18 that It IS teaching each leaguer the power and Value of fellowsllin. Alrpflrlir tlie-ir lint-a learned to buy and sell and ship, to prom anu not to loss, isolation and ignorance, which have been their curse, cannot withstand cn-rmrntirm nnrl rlia. cussion, and purposeful thinking. When they discovered that their cir cumstances were all wrong, the farmers had eonefiir on tlin rnnrl to tlioir hihi1d When they shall have found out that mo Kroner wrong was in tneir own shortcomings, and Bet themselves to amend them, tha ennsn. will ha mn For no tyranny bf corporations or -of 1 1 1 i 1 -i . .. weauu can stanu ior a aay against the determined will of the intelligent culti vated, rend v-witted ' hnnafit nooYxmHlo liberal federation which the guild of American farmers now promises to be come. ' ., A FnuGAT. Tfrvn A hnrtott rta fvAnt. . ""nn"n o "i-" hAlnnc-inflr to t.llA Kfjlt.A rnnvl AiaA yianf- ly in Atlanta. The attaches of the road made provision for his burial expenses, furnishing amoBg things a .nice suit of black broadcloth in which to dress the corpse. His wife objected to having CrOlind " anil tirmicrVif Ant aaiyia 'r.9 Viai. husband's old apparel, in which he was prepared for sepulture. The following Hflbliatb tliA tiaro.vdil wifo'a VtvtliAw wore the clothes furnished by hQ dead tnan'n nnmnnninnn fn mvVi ' , t . . . . The panther, of Germans In tho tlnltcd Slates. Nearly all statements published about the number of Germans living in the United States differ from each other very considerably. This is owing to two causes: First, because there are two meanings to the word Germam Some understand by it uch persons who by descent, by language and by habits and manners are Germans, while others un derstand by it all persons who are Ger man by descent, without reference to language, it-c. The second cause of this difference is this, that every statement about the number of Germans consists necessarily of two parts; one is the pro duct of counting, and therefore mathe matically correctwhile the other is the result of estimation, and can therefore never bo correct. In the following we will attempt to give, as correctly as pos sible, the number of Germans in the United States In the Bummer of 1870, the time of the census, meaning by the term all persons of German descent, whether they speak, think and feel as Germans or not. ; , From the census lists we find that in the summer of 1870 there lived in the United States 1,090,410 persons born in Germany (. e. in tho present German Empire). But to this we have to add the German Anstrians, Swiss, French, Russians and Luxemburghians,' while we have to deduct from it our Prussian Poles, an operation which can, of oourse, only bo performed by estima tion. The census lists show immigrants from Antria 30.Sns, probably Germans 30.000 Uoliemia..... 40,a8, probably Germans 15.000 France llfi.402, probably Gcrmaua 80.0UO Hungary 8.737. probably Germans 2.000 I.nxemburgh 5.802, probably Germans 4.000 Switzerland.. 75,153, probably Germans C5,000 Total 196.000 The only remark to be made on this estimate is on tho number of Germans from France. It is a well known fact that of the number of .French emigrants before 1870, fully two-thirds were from Alsace and German Lorraine, as is suf ficiently proved by their names in the census lists. The German immigrants from Bussian Poland have beeu left out m the above table as an equivalent to the Prussian Poles. 1 Thus we obtain a grand total of 1,88G,000 persons of Ger man descent, born in Europe, living in the United States. To this number are to be added the descendants of German immigrants born in the States, and here the. census assists, us as to tho first generation, which amounted for all nationalities to 4,740,200 souls. Divided pro rata, this would give 1,608,000 descendants of Germans, and, . added to the immi grants, the number would be 3.494. 000. ' The latter generations remain now to be added. There has been a steadv though feeble stream of German immi gration from 1680 to 1830; from that year the number increased rapidly, as will be seen from the list below. Thn number of immigrants from Germanv was From 121 to 1830.... From 131 to 184(7. . : . From 1H41 to 1K30... From 1S51 to 100 From 1S01 to 1870 7,229 ' 152.451 434. (12i! 951.fif.7 822.007 .From this it will be seen that the later generations (since 1820) cannot be very numerous, because thev cau onlv be grandsons and great granddaughters of those wno immigrated between 1821 and 1850 that is, of 000.000 ucrsons. of whom naturally only ' a limited number nas grandsons and great grandsons. A larger number will be contributed by the former immigration, but, as there are no records about this, estimates will necessarily widely differ. The Canadian census lists of 1871 give 203,000 persons of German descent, while only 24,000 German immigrants were living in Can ada inlHil. Anplvinir this Inch pro. portion to the United States tho num ber of grandsons, &o.t niisrht be set down at 1,500,000 souls. Thus there would be German immigrants, 1,880,- mu; urst generation, 1,U(.'S,000, and other generations, 1,500,000; total, 4,- V94,U0D souls. Tims there wert, in 1870. in round numbers, 5,000,000 Germans living in the United States, a number which is about the mean average of the various estimates hitherto made. It has been said that with the new state of things in Germany since lSOO.emigra tiou to America wonld cease, but the official lists published prove the con trary. The number of German immi grants was, in 180G, 115,802; in 1807, 133,420; in 1868, 123,070; in 18G9, 124, 788; in 1870, 91,779; in 1871, 107,201; in 1872, 155,595, and to those numbers about 15,000 German immigrants from countries not belonging to the German Empire ought to be added. Jackson and Benton. It is a well-known fact that in early life, as parties were launching forth on the- sea of politics, there existed a bitter fond between General Jackson and the Bentons. This at last cul minated in a tavern fight , with pistols and sword canes in Nashville, Tenu., in which Jackson, with his friend, Colonel Coffee, and the two Bentons Thomas II. and Jessie participated. The result was that Col. Benton planted a bullet in the flesdv part of Genera. Jackson's arm, which the old hero carl ried until his second presidential term, when it was extracted by Dr. Jackson, a celebrated Philadelphia Burgeon." ' During the closing year of his last Presidential term, Gen. Jackson had occasional and violent attacks of hemorr hage of the lungs, and Dr. Lewis Field Linn of Missouri. , the . colleoaua . of Colonel Benton in the Senate, was his physician. The bitter feud ; having long before been settled, Col. Benton was a frequent visitor at the White House, and was specially attentive dur ing the illness of his former foe. Dr. Linn, feeling himself justified . by his intimacy with the parties-, ventured to ask their version of the Nashville encounter. " Benson, you tell it,", was the response of Old Hickorv. No. Jackson, I'll leave it to you, for your account will be correct,' and, pending the discussion, the two ancient foemea were crying like children. Wreckers at Work. Commander W. Frost, of the government schooner J. W. Dunsoomb, at Sydney, reports the ship Scotia ashore at Port Rich, Newfoundland, dismasted and broad side on the beach,. . She has a cargo of pine, which ia not disturbed. . The wreckers were exasperated ou account of the action of the crew of the Duns- comb in protecting the wreck, - and threatened to take their lives.- They would endeavor to set tire to. the ship if possible. The Scotia" will1 probably o to pieces the first westerly wind. he was working' and ' striking amid ships. The wreckers have apparently endeavored to- destroy everything possi ble, ; They liave sawed off the bowsprit and catheads, and cut away the ' lan yards to dismast the vessel. The eargo may possibly be saved if attended te immediately. Throe Years In a Creamery, Mr. Weeks. Secretary of National Dairymen's Association, leased a facto ry in a grain region, and fitted it up with about 3,000 worth of utensils for butter making. In 1870, during a Bea sen of 1G1 days, 803,062 pounds of milk were received. Of butter he sold 6,345 pounds at an average price of 30 cents, realizing 5,072.65; cheese, sold 55,834J pounds at 9 98-100 cents, amounting to 5,672. G5. This gave ft pound of butter and cheese to each 10 8-10-. pounds of milk. More butter waa obtained 'when the night's milk was allowed to stand twelve hours in the ordinary steam vats, than when set in cans in the pool. By setting in vats, less trouble was expe rienced. He made a mistake one season in skimming too much, eftyeoially in the early part of the season. The financial result of 1870 was on the credit side, but not satisfactory, the net profit only about paying for the butter apparatus. The price paid for milk was 1.13 1-10 cents per hundred pounds. ' . . The season of 1871 went over a period of 180 days, and 1,032,322 pounds of milk were received. Amount paid for same 9,379.87, or 90 9-10 cents per hundred pounds. Butter made, 20,200 pounds ; sold at 28 J cents, net 5,776.29. Cheese made, 72,400 pounds'; sold at 81 cents, amounting to 6,250. It took eleven pounds of milk for a pound of butter and cheese. Some of the skim milk oheese were poor and others better than the whole-milk cheese. They were sold, in all cases, upon their merits. He advises that skimmed cheese be made of the same thickness as whole milk oheese, because this cheese loses more moisture. A larger profit was realized in 1871 than in 1870, but the result was not yet satisfactory. In 1872, 1,024,310 pounds of milk were received, making 18,262 pounds of butter and 76,818 pounds of cheese, and it took 10 77-100 pounds of milk forgone pound of butter and cheese. For the butter, $5,303.23 were received, or an average of 27$ cents per pound, and for the cheese, $7,341.48, an av erage of 9 56-100 cents. The cost of milk this year was more than in 1871, being Sl.215.91 above 1871, though the quantity was less. This swept, away all prospect of profits. Mr. Week's states that much poor cheese was made. and the oreamcry was managed very loosely, and he was satisfied that money could have been made by correcting faults connected with the factory . and its management. Ho believes the day is not far distant when a good, meaty, palatable cheese cau be made irom niillt partially skim med. Tho Troy Press says the profits of the day boat line to iNew lork, for the season of four months, will average SSo.UUU per boat. A SOVKltKlCiX BAL.?I Can hs found In that great and raliatlo family medicine ALLEN'S LUSO BALSAM, ' : By the use of which health and hfippivm I, reitored t thuse ufiheted with any Lung ur Throat disoaBe, suota b: . . Cotgh, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Consumption. UNSOLICITED EVIDENCE OF IIS MERITS. READ THE FOLLOWING : Du. A. L. SCOVILL i tho lnvrntor cf several mediml prcparatioua whtrh hvo beenmo very lionulds und have t-epn liliorully uBad. Among his invention, nre " Hall's Balaam for the Lungs," and " Liverworts, and T:ir. For the past ten years a bettor remedy Inn been offered to the public Read the following lettorfroin Db. ECOV'ILL leferriug to it : . - . MRK.ita. J. N. JInitiR C . : Ueutal mike tho f IIowIhk fttntcment from a perfect oonvlution and knowledge cf the benefits of Ar.LKN'fl I. UNO ItALSAM ill CUl'ilip the most deup-8-j:ite! Pulmonary Cnn.sumptwn ! I tiavo witnessed its effects on the ynuntf aim the old, and I can truly any that it is by far tho beBt expectorant remedy with which I am arqnaiutrd. For CourIis. and all tho early stes cf Luiik Complaints, 1 believ it to be a curtain cure, and if every family would keep it by tlrcm. rea-y to administer upou the firBt ap pearance of diBense about tho Limits, there would be very few cases of fatal consumption. It causea tho phleum and mattor to Taise without irritating those delicate organs (tho Lungs), and without producing constipation i f the bowels. It also gives alrength to tha syBtein, Btops tho night-sweatB, and changes all tho motbid socrdtiuns to a healthy state. Yours, respectfully, A. L. SCOVILL. "IT BAVEO MY LIFE." Columbia, Ax A., March 8, 1673. J. N. Hahkib Co. : Jieur .Sirs 1 am takinir Ai.tEN's Li-no Bat.fak for a disease of the !ti7i ol thirteen years standing I h ive used every reme.ly offnred, and this is the only remedy that hnB (fiven mo any relief. I know it saved my life last spring. At that time I com menced lining it, iind 1 received immediate relief It stopped on my Inns in ten hours. You nre at pmf. i t lib' ity to publish this letter, for the beue lit of suffering humanity, aud with respect, I rcmuiu, Yours truly, D. D. Pool. Such, my suffering friends are tho letters receiv ed daily, and do you doubt f jt a moment the effica cy of th s valuable medicine. Be in time, and take to your homo a bottle f Al.LUH's Lcno Balsax. You w ill Und in it a glorious prizo, aud a uevur fiuling fricud in time of need. CAUTION. - '. ; Be not deceived. Cull for ALLEN'S LUNG BAL SAM, and take no other, - -PircctiouB accompany each bottle. -. J. If. HARRI3 4 CO., Cinolnjiatt, 0., PUOPBLETOBf. . , roi uu wuouuu n V. JOHN P. HENRY, New York. . -3K(. O. OOODWIN t CO., Boston. ' ' JonNSON, UOLOWAY CO.. Philadelphia. ,. : THIRTY YEARS' liXPmKlEJJCE OF AX OL.D; MUSK. Mrs. WhiBlow'g Soothing ymp la the prescription of one of the best Female Physi cians aud Nurses in the Putted States, and has been used for thirty years with never failing safety and success by millions of mothers and childreu, from the fecblo infant of one week old to the adult. It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind colic, regulates the bowels, and gives rest, health and comfort to mother aud child. We bolt eve it to bo the Best and Surest Bomedy in the World la all rnsCB of DYSBNTBBY and DIAIIHUCEA IN CHIL DREN, whether it arises from Teething or from any other cause. Full direotlons for using will ac company ench bottle. None Genuine unless the fac-simile of CUfiTIS it PEBKJNS is oa the outside wrapper. Solilby all Medicine Dealers.' CHILDREN OFTEN LOOK PALE AND BICK -- rom no other cause but having worms in the stomach. .- BBOWN'S VEBMIFUOB COMFITS will destroy worms without injury to the ohild, being perfectly WHITB, nd free from all coloring or other injurions -ingredients usually used in worm preparations.. CIRTIS fc UKOWN, Proprietors, No. Ml 3 Fulton Street, New York. Sold by Drupoists and CTiemi'sfs, and dealers in Mea.cinea at 'IwEMrY-r'iva Cms A Box. TIIK HOUSEHOLD PANACEA. AND FAMILY LINIMENT Is the best remedy in the world for the following complaints, vis.: Cramps in tho Limbs and Btora. sen, Fata in the Stomach, Bowels or Bide, Rheu matism lu all its forms, Bilious Colio, Neuralgia, Bore . Throat, Spinal CoauBlttints, . Sprain au4 Bruises, Chills and Fevet. foe Internal apd Ev ternaluae. . Its operation is not onlv to rellove the natient. but entirely removes the oause of the complaint. It penetrates and pervades the whole sjrstuiu, re storing healthy action to all its parts, aud quick ening the blood. , , The IIoiiHt liold Panacea, ts purely Vear- Stable and AUUealiug. " Prepared by CUHT1S dV BROWN, i No. !1S Fulton, Street, Nev York, For sale bf all Druggists. " 1 ' Beat and Oldeat Family Nedlclne.-San t frd't fAVtr lnviguratur-a. purely Vegetable CutW .in and Jonic-for Dyspepsia, Constipation, Debility Sick Heacache, Bilious Attacks, and all derange nients of Liver, Stomach and Howell. Ask your Druggist for it. Beuian of tmitatiows7 A eiiOOMT &TATB of IhA Miii1 a. Tintl UnBilu.li. a want of aiiergy, a cisposiiiou to magnify every evil, a sensuof weariness, and a disinclination te motion, are some of the symptoms hick indicate a derangement of ihe Liver or Bilious System. Speedy relief from So niarahla knaniitinn Hn ks obtained by resorting at once, to l)rv Jayue's.sana- mw sou " vuiiis, periodic neauacne, or any Dad failing caused by malaria, Bhalleubrger's tills a t Jtle0T double at once. Jhey are an A Subscriber '.' Worth -IIavinci. A man who was for some tina subscri ber for the Kingston Journal, last week showed the protit of sotne kinds of back pay. He was thirty-one years in arrears, and called, paid the amount, And also for ten years in advance, and subscribed for another copy for hig mother for twelve years ahead. At least this is the story the country papers tell. Try It. A Tonic and ; Alterative medicine, the invigorating and regnla tingpropertiesof which actually length en life, find add to the acapoity for its enjoyment, is within tho reach of every member of the community. No invalid who has had recourse to Un. walker s VineoarBitters will hesitate to concede to it these invaluable qualities. It is a stomachic and a corrective of unrivaled efficacy, yet being free from alcohol, it is not an excitant. Its anti-bilious operation is more direct, speedy, and certain than that of any of the danger ous mineral salivants, and as nn aperi ent, it gently rehioves any obstructions tnat may have accumulated in the low er intestine, without producing either irritation or pain. In fact, its wonder ful remedial effects are unaccompanied by any , drawback. Of all medicines; it is the most harmless and salubrious. As au appetizer, is is far ahead of any of the alcoholic nostrums that momen tarily stimulate the palate ; while as a means of renovating a weak and torpid stomach, it stands alone among modern remedies. Com. . The Emperor of Germany intends to return the friendly visit f King Victor Emmanuel about the end of October. We advise those desiring to become Aceutsf or really Valuable Bookn to address pos tal card to T. Ellwood Zell. l'hila., for circular. . Cbistadobo's Excelsior Dye is the most sure and complete preparation of its kind in the world) its effects are magical, its charao tor harmless, its tints natural, itn qualities, eu during. Like Lightning are the miraculous Cures effected with Flaggs Instant Helief. Aches, Fains. Sprains, Bowel Complaints, etc., cannot exist if this preat medicine is used. Be lief warranted, or money refunded. Com. For loss of Appetite, Dyspepsia, In digestion, Depression of Spirits aud Genera Debility, in their various formB, FEitno-Puos- phorated elixir of uamsava made by Caswell, Hazard A o., New York, and sold bv all druu- cists, is the best tonic. As a stimulant tonic for patients, recovering from fever or other sioknoss, it has no equal. If taken during the season it prevents fever ana ague ana other in lermuieni levers. com. Wistar's Balsam for tho lungs. Com. There is no disease flesh is heir to more troublcmoso to manace than rheumatism It comes when you least expect it, and general ly remains till it gets ready to go away. The most conspicuous remedy for this complaint is joimson s Ationync Liniment. Loin. Two or tliree doses of Sheridan's Cavalry Cowlilinn I'oicdcrs will cure a horse of any common cough or cold, aud the very worst ciwes may bo cured in a few weeks. Vr'e know this from experience. Com. Frank Millar's Harness Oil is the best. Disease Recoils From the system that has been invigorated and regulated by a coutbo cf that most boueflccnt of all elixirs, Jlostettor's Stomach Bitters. Such, at least, is tho inference we are compelled to draw from the testimony cf thousands cf persons resld ing in unhealthy districts, who attribute their escape from tho cpldcriiio aud other complaints which prevail thoro in tho spring and autumn solely to tho us cf this great protective and pre ventive medicine. Many western and southern farmers nnd plantors, as invariably as they sow and plant in the spriugand reap and gather in the fill, administer it at those seasons to their fjmllic and employes, and take it themselves three times a day. The demand for it in the fever and ague districts bordering on the Mississippi, Ohio and Arkansas Rivers is itnmenso: and whercvor the natural conditions are such as to generate inter mittent or remittent fevers, it is hold in the high- est esteem, both as an antidote to the atmospheric virus which provokes them, and as a swift and cortaln remedy for thoso distressing forms of dis case. It is almost unnecessary to say that thl renowned tonic and renovator is now generally accepted as a standard specific for indigestion binonsness, nervous distemper, rheumatism physical weakness and mental despondency, not only by the rublicat Urge, but by all unprejudiced meaicai men. The viut popularity of the Bitter has of course led to many counterfeits and imlta tions, against which tho commuulty aro requested to be ou their guard. . . Dr. fox's Illvo (Croup) Syrup has oeen known and uec-U by (lie medical profetbiuu over 100 years, and as a remedy for Colds and Coughs has an older and better reputation than any other Cough mciliiino ever ottered to tbo public. It 1 known on the Compound Syrup of pquill, and a formula may bo Xound iu every medicul diepengatnrv. r, Katmoiii' Illro Syrup ami' Tolu, In aililiiiou to tho inicdicnls tor Cos's llVVO Svi'im. COntflina ThllsirmnfTiiln rlr-r,Mlnnnf Kkuiikt'tibbugo Root mid Lobelia, a combination must columella n, in every one as a superior rumedy for Croup, Whooping Couzll, Aslliruu, ItroiK-ltiiiH, toughs aud olds, incb-ed for nil altrcttons of the Throat aim ijin-s wkim-q a t dti.-n .Memeiuo i liccccearv. Tllix Syr llr Im l areiullv Piurcii UnUei- llio pcrtonul ilirecuim of a regular l'llysi- i.ui oi uicr iweniy e:.rv pracllce, W noC SlfiUU' turc is attached to tins dirfctiona on tho hottl in'" ,a8t0 ls Vi1'v X,lcua "U children Every family should keep it as a ready ""(j'dy "r Croup, Cold, etc., among the U. Hanbom, So:t & Co., Tropr's, Buffalo, N. Y. DR. J. R. MILLER'S . .. . VJilVSRSAI. MAGNETIC BALM. IM-I.I hhLh, iNouralu.i:i aud all pain, und is A therefore -very properly termed " Mafrnctic llahn.T It is purely a vegetable piuparatiou. it naa no 4-qunl as a remedy for Cholera, Cholera Morbus,- Diarrhoea, Dysen tery, Colio and all Bowel Complaints. Its timely uno will cure ttolils, Croup, l)lph theria. i unity, mid all Throat ajleclions. When properly uned, Fever and Afrae, and other complaints incideuwo our western and southern climates, are ciiMly broken up. Nervousl'aln, Rick-IIewtache, and Rheu matism aro cured by this medicine when all others have failod. Toothache, Earache, Burns. Chil blains and jlrniscs are relieved at once by its use, Thecrenuiiie ha tt.lt unaom &( o.'a Srivute ltuvenua Stump on the outside, and Dr. . It. Miller's lluirnctic Bulm blown in the bottle, Examine closely, aud buy uoue but the gen uine. .. , , , . Sold by all Druggists. Price 25 cents per bottle. D. Hahiom, 80s & Co., Propr's, Buffalo, V. X. Br. Pierce's Goldtf) Medical Discovery. will euro a ecu Ah in ouehalf the ' time necessary iy euro it with any , uiuer ineaiciiie.audi'tfom, noteyary. tHt (awe tuoauinr eases of Hoarteuesa, tsirresion or -l.oaa of Voice, IlroiicSslliti, severo C'hroulo or A.iugeriuj Coughns it : will be found tc surpass any u.icine tliat lias Vr l.i.rV.r K nil-. 1 .t- r.1.1; VhlUi 'ethmirvjctea parts, rorall 11 cures ihe severest Coughs, it strerlihens the sys tem ana purine tne lyueu. uy-ut Sreat blood purifying prorystfes, it cures aU , lumora from the Kt Kerof ula to , common Ulotch or JrTuiple. Four to six bottM are warranted to cure Salt Rheum ol'etter and the worst Hnd of Pimples on fie face, II oils, f'arbii n s cle(,Sore,lysipeluuaad Illotcheai -amonz the hair. IVht to twelve hot lies are war ranted to cure It Ann! nar of the IIkih, ' corrupt or Kun uhi I lcers,i'rof uli andthawnrst forms oiWcoildar y aud 'J'er tiart-lHaeaaeai'f JVtasutUttlss.Uvor k Complaint. ' $l.ofW 6 bottles for $fi.OO. by all Druficists. jlfcrmnictured at the World's Diape usury, IVi 80, Ba, 84 and BasWssaasWJeaMsMWbaMsMslaAissfl , THE GREAT ALTERATIVE AND ELOOD TTJRIFIER. It is not a qnnck sostrnm. The Ingredients are published on each bottle of medicine. It is tised and recommended by FhyBicinns wherever it has been " introduced. It will positively cure SCROFULA in iiat arioui stages, JiJIEU MATISM, WJIITJI SWFL LIKO, GOVT, OOJTJiF, BJiOKCJUTIS, JVFJiVOUS DEBILITY, INCIPIEX1 CONSUMPTION, and all dis eases arising from an impure condition of the blood. Send for onrRosADALis Almawao, in which yon will find certificates from reliable and trustworthy Physicians, Ministers of the Gospel end others. Br. B. 'Wilson Carr. of Baltimore, fays be lias tu-ed it in cases of Scrofula end other" diseases with much satlsfac- 0 tj4 Dr. T. C. Pugh, of Baltimore, reoom yi mends it to ail persons suffering with ' S diseased Blood, saying it is superior to llev. Babney Ball, of the Baltimore M. , Conlerince ttouth, rays he has been so much benefitted by Its use, that be cheerfully recommends it to all bis friends and acquaintances. Craven ft Co., Druggiets, t Gordons, villc, Vs., fay it never has failed to giv 1 Batipfaction. Bam ' 1 0. KcPauden , MriTfreeboTO Tenuessee, Fays it cured him of ltheu matism when all else failed. THE EOSADALIS IN CONNECTION WITH OUIt m u will cure Chills and PereT, I.tver Complaint, Dys pepsia, etc. Vv'e guarantee Hosadat.is superior to all other Blood Purifiers. Bend for Descriptive Circular or Almanac. Address CLEMENTS A CO., B B. Commerce St., Baltimore, Hi. Bsmember to ask yonr Druggist for Bobapaus. INDIAN IMAIiniHKA CVHK. The wonder ful SnnsunuR remedy acts i-lim-sc instantly. Pui elv vegetable and oerfeetlv haimlots. Discov ered by R. B. Wolfe, interpreter fir the Shoshone tribe of Tudinns. Sent nn receipt of r0 rts. Address K. is. wubKK, wens, .iko uoutit y, isevaua. TlfOSiKV ainrte r)nd7vf ith Stencil Key Check a. (minis, uataiogucs, snmtucs ana run particu lars 1V. S. M. Spencer. 117 Hanovpr St., Huston couGns.sor.E TlIKUAT.INrl.U- TNZA W 11 OOP. I n o couoir, I'ltorp. HnoNcniT- i is. Artuma. and r-trv nfTcrtion of I tllO TBUOAT, LU0 ' and cuEbT, aro speedily and per manently cured by the use of Iin. Wlu TAr."e Balsam or Tvhtch does not dry una cough and icavo thocaufe V.l.:.l 1 ... 1 . t. l t.A I, ...... .ml nlM,- irritation, thus removing-the causo of tlio complain t. by ft timely report to this standard remedy, fl Is proved by nnmlrerts of testimonials it has received. Tho utnidnfii siened "I. JButtt" on the wrapper, Mill! V. i'OWLK A SONS, Pnm-Ritioia, Uos- 7os, .Mass, bo:d by ""Hers generally. Peerless Clothes Wringer. L. HEYMGER CO., IS Pulton Street, W. Y $200 PER MOM II, CliKAH ! Affeuts im aid or remnii'i wanted etrrywnerf, Address, with stump, JNO. W. JOHNSON ts iju.! iiox xt bit Jjuuib, iuo. W. and C. Bcott A Pons fine Broerh-Londir.il Double Guns l as fnrninh('d to the "Caw Caw" Club ur Milwaukee, and others, hplu'ven to be the best nrepch loader now in use. Also "Vuzzle-IJoadorB,,, every variety nj sfi', site ana price. " W. and C urottir soil b Hew iiaifiti Hted work on Breerh-Load ere," bound iu morot co, 2.ri ceits bv mail. 8end for price iiib anil circular to WILLIAM READ fcONa, y.i Faneutl H1 Square, Boston, Agents. SftlA J fft fl A per klll T,fj llevtTywbere.PorticularBfr day. A pent 9 want ttlftlrr m. Ft. Louts M CONSUMPTION And. Its Cure. Carbolated Cod Liver Oi Is R eHonttfic combination of two well-known medl rinrs. ltn theory la first to arreot tho decay, then butld up the system. Physlclnns (Hid tliednctrlnocor rect. The really startliiig curua ptrtormed by Wilt mn'ii Oil nn urotif. Carbolic Acid poitir1i orrW Decay. -Tt la the most powerful antiseptic Id the known world, tu toring Into the circulation, It at once (rrappls with corruption, and decay ceases. It purlfloa the sources of disease. Coil Lirtr Oil is Xature'$ best assistant In resisting Consumption. Put up In larffe wrdge-ahnppd bottlea, l.nrtn lUc t'iiUir,i is;nuiure, nnd in kULU uy i tie uegi iJi'iiffiRitisi x-ruparuu uj rfl K- WIIjIiSON, m John Street New Yor? Prepared by n Itrgular Physician. vt.X.iC T M .'W D..i.t i lf Complaint, Fever nnd Ajtim, X J ' W and all lMseaseiof tho Kilueys. .1.. DI..I II 1 olroulatiun, tootM the UUimacb. prtvl fuiolci Dice Mi on, tinhicfii a regular! r-iovemeniof tH- Uowt-l,iftNhtsNature I I in the prnir41tcbftrKi' "f on svr f uno-, I tloos md i m par u new lire and vigor I C3 I totboentlre syttem. Ladi in pr- kucularwUinn41taoecalul use i aigbly bcoeSoUI. frutnpt, j .Cf . . auertlT.re .b e.Bda.ra.lt X M JiHidorttd by l'hyalclans and ltruiigiali. (bK in 20 per aT 1 Aseuts wanted I AU olsssss v v of working people of either aex.younfl. or old, make more money at work for rjs In their spare moixenls or all the time than at aiirtnlag els Particulars free. Address a. RXIMBON CO., fort uuu. aia. Thea-Nectar IB A PURB tlacU TEA Willi the Green Tea i'layoi The lest Tea Imported, tol salt? everywhere. Aud for sail wholesale only by the GREal ATLANTIC 4 PACIFIC TEA CO No. 1,1 Fulton St. 2 A 4 Chunt fit., lie York. P. O. Box, 3.501 Send for Thea-Heetar Ctrciila Sjat H - .iiM A" ,J4.1ai.'r ji 1 1 . I I - . J.rf X.--A A M.ig&P tii M..-.td 'lev- .7 ,7; l)r. J. Walker's California Yin egar Hitters are a purely VcRctablo preparation, made ehielly from the na tive taerba fonnd on the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of Cahfor. nia, tbo medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without tho uso of Alcohol. Tho question is almost daily asked. "What i3 tbo cause of tho unparalleled Buccess of Vinegar Bit. terst uur answer is, tuat tney removo tho causo of disease, and tho patient re covers his health. They aro tho groat blood purifier and a life-giving principle, perfect lienovator ana invigorator of the system. Never before la ii? history of the -world has ft medicine been compormdod possessing tho rcmnrknblo quaimes oi v iNKUAiiiii i iekm in iiuuuu iiiu sick of every disenso man is heir to. They are a gentle Purpttivo as well fi9 a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of Ilia liiver ana V lsccrai urgaus, iu isinous Diseases. The properties of Dit. avalker'3 Vinegar Hitters nro Aperient, Diaphnretic, Carminative. Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-irritant. Sudonuc, Altera tive, and Anti-Bilious. (.Si'ufiMul T'm'ussjuIn pi-ocliiim Vi jfiAR ilmxus the ;n--t w.mdfrful In- vignrniit that 'ever r-'.iHluio. t!i :-;nking y.-toni. ' Ko Person ran t;tl:e V. ' llillors iccording to tlirofiiniiK, ;i:i'i n-ivnin lo!ij Jiivfcll, proviilod llii-'ir iioiics t-.it? not de stroyed by liiiiioial ioUi:i or otlior means, aud vital organs watted beyond repair. Jhlions, I! r-iiiiitJ-Jit ami Inter- mitten! l evel's, which are !" prcva. lent in tlio valleys til' our .vat rivora throughmit tin1 L'nili'd F-iali'-i, cpccinily those of tho ili.i.-jisslppi. thin. Missouri, Illinois, Tennesrif c, Clti'Jibudand. Arkan sas, lied, Uoloi ailo. iiv.i".o,, lao oranae, l'enrl, Alabama, Muijilo, t.avannah, I;o- anolce, Jamos, and many othew, with their vast tributaries, tlirougliout our entire country dur'nvu' the Summer and Autunni, and remm-kabry so daring sea sons of unusual beat and tlryness, nre invariably accompanied by extensive do- rangemeuls ol tlio sLciiiaeu and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow erful influence upon these various or- gans, is essentially necessary, lnero is no cathartic fur the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walker's Vinegar Uitteks, as they will speedily remove tho dark colored viscid matter with which tho bowels are loaded, at tho same time" stimulating the secretions of tlio liver, and generally restoring tho healthy functions of the digestive organs. . Fortify the Ixitly against mseaso by purifying all it ? uuidswith Vixesab ' liixi'ERS. .Nu epidemic can taiio uoia of a svstem thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Iiidiiieslion, riead- acbe, Pain iu tho Shoulder, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations or the Stomach, 15ad laste iu tho Mouth, Bilious Attacks, l'alpita tation of the Heart, Inflammation ol" tho Lungs, Pain in the region ot tho Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symp toms, are tho offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy rivertise- ment. Scrofula, or Kind's Evil, whito Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Keck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammation, Mercurial Allectious, Old Sores, Eruptions of tho Skin, Sore Eyes, etc. Iu these, ns in nil other constitutional Dis eases, "WAlker's Vinkgar ISitters havo shown their great curative powers iu the . most obstinate und intractable cases. For Inflammatory ami Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Kemit tcut and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of die Wood, Liver, Kidneys nnd Bladder, these Hitters havo no equal. Such Diseases are caused bjVitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases. Persons en gaged in Taints and Minerals, such as t'luuiuors, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they udvance iu life, aro subject ui paralysis of tho Bowels, To guard (gainst this, take a dose of "Walker's Vf iuar Bitters occasionally. For Skill Diseases, Eruptions, Tet- cr, Salt-Kheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, King-worms-, k-ald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, .-curl's, Diseolorations of tho Skin, Humors :ind Diseases of tho Skin of whatever name r nature, aro literally dug up and carried nit of tlio system in a short tiino by tho use ;f these Bitters. Tin, Tape, and other Worms, .urkinjr in the system of so many thousands, ,ire ed'ectually destroyed and removed. No .ysti'iu of medicine, no vcnnil'ugos, no an-:hehniuitic-s will free the system from worms like these Bitters. For Female Complaiuts, in young )r old, murried or single, at the dawn of wo manhood, or tho turn of life, theso Tonio Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated JSlood when ever you Und its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; oleanse it when you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins ; cleanse it when it is foul ;' your feelings will toll you when. Keep the blood pure, and tho health of the system will follow. ! it. h. Mcdonald & to., Ornpgists and Gen. Aprts., San Francisco, California, md cor. of Wnsliinston nnd I'liui lion Sis., N. V. miIi1 bv nil DriiulNtii unit Dralrrs- H T N U Ho SB BUSINESS That will make your fortune. Address, EL'HKKA PORTABLE TABLE CO., : 1 713 Oliver fctreet, St. Louis, Mo. At; UK AT SKNSATION l-Aoeu's Wanted. Big rackaqe Free. Better than Gold Address at once. It. A ELLS A CO., Chai lotte, Mich. . CANVASSING BOOKS BENT FEEE FOB UNDEVELOPED WEST ' - J : .-. OB, - . Five Years in the Territories, The only complete history cf that sst region bo. tween the atisstsiipii aud the Pacinc-, Its Resour ces, Climate Inhabitants, Natural L'uriosili s, eto, It contains 840 ttue eiiifraTings of the Soenery, La. ds, Peosle and Curiosities of the Great W.si. ""' selling rroin 13 to AH copies a day, and send a ciTubsing book free to any txu k i ga .1. RfMTaiTO IAlllTrn )..,M . ' ' nus, or now in atquirs and Presary Health, by 0. W. Oleaaon, M. O . Study and understand yoursulf. Tu nis liberal. Address C. P. BitaDWAY, Publisher, Pauville, pa. Agenta "Wixtoclp ( 'C t 4,,Ui Business legitunate. Pititc.i ,co nwt?ti;v, 91., iiyi-f Aj.0, fj .WUttXtt,l.Iott!l, Kg, SosMtU,