Farm, Garden and Household. Dotueetlo Reolpet. Pickle for Hams. For one hundred pounds of limn tnke six gallons of water, nine pounds of suit, one quart of mo lasses, tlireo ounces of snltpeter and one ounce of snloratus. When ready to smoke, they can be soaked and fresh ened to taste, if too salt. Soft Soap with Potash. Excellent eoap may be made by the following re ceipt: Use a pine barrel, for a hard wood barrel will warp and leak. An old fish barrel is commonly taken for the purpose. Put ten to twelve pounds of potash, and throw upon it two pailfulls of boiling wnter. Lot it digest awhile, end then put in two pounds of grease to each pound of potash. Have the grease hot. Let that digest awhile, then add a third pailful of hot water. Keep doing thisuntiltho barrel is with in six inches of being full. Stir occa sionally until the whole is mixed. It should stand three months before use. Stir oecasionally during the first week. The longer it stands' after making the better the soap. Delicious Codfish Balls. Put the fish to soak in lukewarm water, and soak half au hour, then pour off the water a second time, add more fresh water, and let it remain on the stove till it just comes to a scald. Pick the fish free from skin and bones and chop it up fine. Boil and mash your potatoes, take one-third fish and two-thirds potatoes, and mix evenly together. If not salt enough to suit the taste, add a little pepper. If too dry to make into balls, wtt with a little milk till you can work it well. Make into small 'balls with the hands, roll in flour, and they are ready to fry. Have your fnt very hot, using pork fat and suet. Some dip the balls in tho white of an egg or roll in bread crams, but they are igood without if fried to a rich brown. Oatmeal Breakfast Cake. This is made with No. 2 oatmeal, with water enough to saturate it, and little or no salt. Pour it into a baking tin half an inch or three-quarters deep, shake it down level, and when this is done it should bo so wet that two or three spoonfuls of water should run freely on the surface. Put it in a quick oven and bake twenty minutes. It will be as light and tender as the best " Johnny cake," or else you have wet it too much or baked it too long. This is one of the most aeeommodating baked dishes that can bo made. It will do very nicely with a little longer time if the oven is not quite hot. If it will not bake there at all, pour it into a frying pan, cover it close, and stt it on top of the stove, wkero it will even bake in fifteen minutes. For a hurried break fast and a slow coal firo it is invaluable. Scarcely any wholesome thing in the bread line can be prepared more read ily. It can bo made still thinner aud baked quicker. It is good either crisp or moist. For emergencies alone, every housekeeper will find it convenient to be able to make tho breakfast cake. Many use oatmeal mixed with buck wheat, wheat or corn for griddle-cakes. For this the writer prefers it cooked first. Take, suy one pint of the por ridge or the mush, diffuse it in one quart of water aud add the wheat meal, sifting it in aud stirring slowly. Kitchen Garden. Where drains are needed, tho present month is a good time to lay them, un less the laud is so wet by the fall rains that it cannot be worked to advantage. Cover asparagus with a thick coating of manure, first cutting the tops and burning. If the tops aro not burned, the seed, if scattered through the ma nure, will sprout and prove as trouble some to exterminate as many of our common weeds. Cold-frames for tho protection of cabbages and other plants should not be covered except at night until very severe weather. The plan shonld be to keep the plants from growing as well as from freezing. The best plan for storing cabbages is to invert the heads and cover with four to six inches of earth, leaving the roots exposed. A dry place where the water will not stand should be selected. Storo celery in trenches a foot wide and deep enough to receive the stalks, placing the plants as close as possible without using any earth, and cover with boards and straw, gradually increasing the thickness of tho covering as the weather becomes more severe. Spinach will be all tho better in the spring for a Blight covering of hay or leaves, applied just as the ground be gins to ireezo. The hardy sorts of lettuce which were sown last month will need a litter thrown over them to preserve them. Manure is tho main stav of the car. dener as well as the farmer, as without it nothing can bo done, while with it wonaerlul results can bo accomplished Apply all that can be carted out this month. Agriculturist. " Doctored" Barley. The Chicago Tribune says: Two of mo nuns ior aoctonrig barley with sul phur aro understood to bo located, one at Lena and tho other at Sycamore. It is said to be more diflicult to detect barley that has been doctored than it was last year, as it is now steamed after Having been sulphured, which takes away all but a faint trace of the smell. Nevertheless, the inspectors have de tected several cars of tho stuff, and pasfied it as 'unmerchantable,' and, thus far, no appeal has been taken from their decision. As tho inspectors will adhere to tho rule in everv case, the game will probably be soon found to be a losing one, as iar as ima market is concerned. One instance was reported to us, which it is both a duty and a pleasure to chronicle. A commission man in this city, who is not a judge of barley, nor does he profess te be one, received a consignment of this stuff a day or two ago, wnicn he sold by sarn i ie at su.via per busnei. jjetore the ill was paid he discovered from out side sources that the barley had been sulphured, and went around to the buyer to inform him of the fact, offer ing voluntarily to deduct 15 cents per bushel from the price, if that would be satisfactory, and expressing his regret that he had been imposed on. We be lieve that that barley came from the neighborhood of Lena, 111. Winter Fues. The fashionable set of furs for the coming winter will con sist of a boa end muff. The boa is from a yard and a half to two yards long; seal-skin boas are made flat, while those of longer furs, such as fox, marten, and lynx, are round. Fur collars are little worn exoept by old ladies, invalids, and those who are exposed to long cold drives in the country. Muffs are of medium size, just large enough to hold the hands, and too small to be burden some or clumsy-looking. To this set those who can afford it add a fur wrap, usually of seal-skin, which is eacque ehaped, and from twenty-fhe to thirty inches long, VIrture of Tar Water. Bishop Berkeley published a work " On the Virtnres of Tar Water." and later in life just before his death he published a sequel, entitled " Further Thoughts on Tar Water." The common way of making it was to put a quart of tar into a gallon 'of water, stir it thoroughly, let it stand forty-eight hours, then pour off the water. A half pint in the morning, on rising, and a half pint on going to bed was the common dose. In those days it was almost as common to call for a glass of tar water in a coffee-house ns a dish of tea or coffee. It was not only regarded as a sovereign remedy tof many grave diseases among men, but was much used in treating the diseases of horses and cattle. "I never knew," said Bishop Berkeley, " anything so good for the stomach as tar water; it cures indigestion aud gives a good appetite. It is an excellent medicine in an asth ma. It imparts a kindly warmth and quick circulation to the juices, without heating, and is, therefore, wsefnl not only, as a pectoral and balsamio, but also as a powerful and safe deobstruent in cachetic and hysteric cases. As it is both heating and diuretic, it is very good for the gravel. I believe it is to be of great use in a dropsy, having known it to cure a very bad anasarca in a person whose thirst, though very extraordinary, was in a short time re moved by the drinking of tar water." The bishop published his great work "Siris ; or a Chain of Philosophical Reflections and Inquiries Concerning the Virtues of Tar Water," in the year 177-1. Notwithstanding the opposition and ridicule, of physiciaiiB,philosophers and men of Bcience, tar water had an enormous success. Slicrp liaising:. The greatest sheep-raising and wool growing countries have long been Aus tralia, California, and Texas. In Cali fornia, the present number of sheep is estimated to be 2,500,000, and tho amount of wool raised annually 12,500, 000 pounds. More recently, New Mex ico has become a great field for the in dustry, and stands among the very first countries in the world for its enterprise and success in this direction. As to the amount of capital necessary, we are unable to inform you. We may, how ever, state that a gentleman in Califor nia, who invested 87,000 m the purchase of seventeen ewes and two or threo rams of the Merino breed, is now in the an nual receipt of 85,000 regular income therefrom. As to the "probability of success," that depends so much on in dividual characteristics, ou locality, on the chances in the selection of stock, and on a thousand other side issues, that it is quite impracticable to prophe cy with regard to it. Industry, self denial, perseverance these qualities will go far in stock-raising, as in any other enterprise, if allied with judg ment, knowledge, and determination to succeed. Exchange. Artist and Editor. Quite a conflict has sprung up be tween Nast the artist and the New York Herald. Nast burlesqued the Jfcrald's Crcsarism and the Herald in retnrn,got up a relief scheme for the artist, who it claims is in indigent eiroumstauces. The " friends" of the scheme make re turns of postage stumps, lead pencils, old clothes and small script. The artist proposes to illustrate young Bennett's life in Paris, Icq., and the conflict prom ises to be leugthly and stupid. The artist has the advantage. People read pictures especially personal pictures who cannot read newspapers, and here the artist hus the advantage, despite any merit in tho conflict. It is said that in the Tweed conflict, men who never read the papers, would gather in front of the news stands and their ex clamations " Oh, see the Boss, with bracelets on aiid the striped clothes," had a stronger effect than any words oould have, printed. The quarrel be tween the type and brush should cease before it reaches tho extreme to which it is fast tending. Retaliation. Regarding the probable condition of the workmen, due to the reduction of force in many Iron establishments, says the Scientific American, we notice with regret that the sentiments of one of our most prominent firms breathe a spirit of retaliation and a lack of sympathy for the men, on acoount of the part taken by the latter in the strikes of a year ago. Such expressions tend but to re-open old wounds, and employers will find that, instead of thus planting the seed for future feuds, they will serve their own interests best by considering the welfare of their employees. By assist ing their men in a time of trouble, to the extent of their ability, they will en graft in them a feeling of gratitude which will serve materially to diminish the ctances of future dissensions ; while it will be but ordinary charity to endeavor to alleviate the condition of fellow beings who, from no fault of their own and for an indefinite period, are thus forced ont of employment and compelled, as best they may, to lace the hardships and miseries of the coming winter. A " Prize Swindle. A correspondent says ho saw an ad vertisement of an association in New York "chartered by the State." As tickets were but twenty-five cents, he sent, and received in reply a ticket.sny ing his number had drawn a piano valued at 8350, but asking for 9 to pay expenses and packing. He does not know what to do. The association will not send the goods C. O. D., but want the 89, before doing anything. A man who will be foolod out of his money by any advertisement that offers to give a gold dollar for a brass penny ought to lose his money, and has no business to complain of the loss. The newspapers have done all they could to warn peoplo against the swindles. Pain in the Ear. As soon as any soreness is felt in the ear, let three or four drops of the tincture of arnica be poured in, and the orifice be filled with a little eotton'to exclude the air, and in a short time the uneasiness is forgot ten. If the arnica is not resorted to un til there is actual pain, then the cure may not be as speedy, but is just as certain, although it may be necessary to repeat the operation. It is a sure pre ventive against gathering in the ear, which is thcjusual cause of earache. Consult Women." Much of the ex travagant risk of speculation, " observes a writer in the Woman's Journal, " Would never be incurred if women were consulted. That reckless and un scrupulous use of money and of credit, which sows the wind to reap the whirlwind, does not at all commend itself to the conservative temper of woman." We see now how panics and fi&ftacial collapses jnay be aywded, The Birth of the Snow-Drop. 1 Far away among the nne-olad hills of sunny Franoe, there lived a poor weman with her only child. She was a soldier's widow, and gained a scanty subsistence by working in vineyards. Little ltenie was only able to follow his mother in her labors ; but he loved to sit under the vines and see the rich pur ple clusters of grapes that hung among the green leaves like bunches of aino thvsts. The widow dearly laved her little son, and often, seating him upon hoi knee after the labor of the day was over, she told him of his father ; how he was a good man and a brave soldier, who had died fighting for his country ; and then she Would sob and press the child to her bosom, as she related how hand some the soldiers looked, marching on to tho sound of fife and drum, and how not one of that gallant band ever re turned again. Renie was much too young to under stand all this ; but as he grew older, he learned that his mother had left lrtr home with a yenng soldier, and tint her father never forgave the marriage or saw his daughter again. The ol man was living still in a distant prov ince ; but, though the heart of th lonely woman yearned for home, am with a mother's pride she longed ti show her boy, yet she knew the stenj nature of her father, and dared noi, seek him to plead again for the pardon so often denied. At last the poor widow fell ill. and though it was the season when the rich hue of the grapes deepened into perfec tion beneath the warm sunbeams, she knew full well that she should not live to gather them. The dying mther bade little Renie come very near to her, and then, in faltering tones, whispered that she must leave him, and perform a long, dark journey alone. But the child, with violent sobs of grief, clasped his arniB about his mother's neck, praying to go with her and not to be left be hind. ' Then the widow, whose strength was failing fast, comforted her child, " I will not leave you forever, my son ; we shall meet again in my Father's house." She spoke no more, and soon poor little Renie was an orphan. The peasants made the poor widow a grave in a quiet spot, and gave the little boy a bono among themselves ; but day after day he threw himself up on his mother's grave and wept, refu sing to be consoled. Children gathered about and pressed him to join their sports, kind women drew him to their bosoms and promised to cherish him. strong-hearted men raised him up and bade him be of good cheer, but Renie turned from them all to the cold, damp sod, exclaiming, " She will not leave me forever ; my mother will come back. I will wait for her here." When they saw all their comforting words were of no avail, they left him, trusting that the natural joyousness of childhood would overcome his grief ; but when weeks passed on and brought no change, they learned to respect the child's sorrow, and the grape-gatherers, 83 they returned from the vineyards with baskets of the beautiful fruit, paused in their vintage song as they saw little lienie with his arms clasped about the woodon cross upon his moth er's grave. The leaves at length dropped dry and sere, and tao snow rested upon the hills : then Renie himself fell ill, and for many weeks ho could not rise from the little cot where a kind peasant and his wife nursed him tenderly ; during the tedious hours of illness his mother's image was ever before him ; and, re membering her words, " We shall meet in my Father's house," he resolved, when he grew strong again, to go and seek her, as she did not return to him. The snow had not yet melted in the valleys, though the sun was shining warmly, when Renie feebly turned his steps once more toward the spot where lus mother slept. He knelt down be fore the little cross, and his warm tears fell fast upon the snow, when, lo ! just where the tears had fallen, appeared a tiny blade, struggling to pierce the crusted ground. The boy tenderly scraped aside tho snow that the little plant might feel the sun, and another warm shower of tears fell upon it as he did so, for he remembered his lost mother's love for the flowers. When Renie came again to the grave he saw with surprise a group oi lovely whito blossoms, that seemed to bend sorrowfullv ovnr tlii roiI. Tho child knelt beside them, and a strange feeling of penee crept into lus heart. " My mother has sent them from the land where she dwells." he thought, " to show that she has not forgotten me ;" and a smile of hope beamed on his sad, pale face, as he looked fondly on the flowers. But when the peasants beheld this mysterious little plant blossoming in the midst of the snow, and of a kind they had never seen before, they were filled with astonishment and awe. " It is sent from the spirit land," they whispered, " and born of Renie's tears. See how each snow-drop quivers upon its stem like a tear about to fall ! His mother knows his sorrow, and would console him thrift. " Gradually the grief of the little boy became more subdued, and hope and cheerfulness beamed upon his face once more. He loved to water and nurture the tender blossoms, and soon the grave was eiowded with the delicate and grace ful flowers, gently bending towards the earth. When tho next spring time came, the hills were covered with the delicate blossoms, and for many years the peas ants named them " Renie's Ceusola tion." ' An Apology. The editor of a Western paper onoe gave a notice of a ball, and happened incidentally to mention that the danc ing of Major Heeler's better half was like "the cavorting of a fly-bitten cow in a field of cucumbers." The fact that the editor had not been invited to the ball may somewhat detract from the value of the simile, while at the same time it accounts for his establishing the figure. The major, accompanied by his better half and a six-shooter, called on the editor to complain of the poetical nature of the image. On learning that the lady was the one he had described, the editor besought her to raise her veil. She did so, saying, " Now, Sir, I expect yeu to apolo ffize." " Apoligize ! I should rather think I would." was the answer, as he seized his hat and rapidly left the room. The astounded major rushed to the window: "Stop, you Sir ! you have not apologized I "All right: I m going to do it in a minute !" " Wh t do yon mean ?" shouted the major, a ventilating the note of interro gation with a pistol-bullet. The answer was wafted back from round tha next corner " Can't you see I'm looking for that J00?, Antlqnl1 of flan. . .. -i Thousand Years at Least Wallace. In an issue of Vature, Mr. Alfred Russel Wallace indulges in some specu lations on the probable antiquity of the human species which may well startle even those who have long since come to the conclusion that 6,000 years carry us but a small way back to tho original homo. In fact, in Mr. Wallace's reckon ing, 0,000 years are but as n day. He begins by complaining of the timidity of scientific men when treating of this subject, and points out the fallacy of always preferring the lowest estimate in order to be " on tho safe side." He declares that all the evidence tends to show that the safe side is probably with the large figures. He reviews the various attempts to determine the an tiqnity of human remains or works of art, and finds the bronzed age in Eu rope to have been pretty accurately fix ed at 3,000 to 4,000 years ago, the stone age of the Swiss Lake dwellings at 5,000 to 7,000 years " and in an indefi nate anterior period." The burnt brick found sixty feet deep in the Nile allu vium indicates an antiquity of 20,000 years j another fragment at seventy-two feet gives 30,000 years. " A human skeleton found at a depth of sixteen feet below four buried forests super- fiosed upon each other, has been calou ated by Dr. Dowler to have an antiqui ty of 50,000 years." But all these esti mates pale before those which lient s Cavern at Torquay legitimates. Hero the drip of the stalagmite is the chief factor of our computations, giving us an upper floor which "divides tho relics of the last two or three thousand years from a deposit full of the bones of ex timet mammalia, many of which, like tue reindeer, mammoth, and glutton, indicate an arctic climate." Names cut into this stalagmite more than two hun dred years aeo are still legible i in other brds, where the stalagmite is twelve lift thick and the drip still very copious n't more than a hundredth of a foot has bin deposited in two centuries a rate of dive feet in 100,000 years. Below thi, however, we have a thick, much olclfer, and more crystalline (. e., more sloyly formed) stalagmite, beneath which again, " iu a solid breccia, very diflerent from the cave-earth, by which he Arrives at the " sum of half a million as representing the veors that have prob- - 1 1 T. - ll-A 1 1- auiy eiapsea since mnts oi milium work manship were buried in the lowest de posits of Kent's Cavern." Sat ion. The Driver's Story. 'Ah, sir, this is going to be a hard winter, " said a great burly car driver to us, tho othor evenintr: " and I saw ves- tetlay what such as you don't see very oiu-n, and hardly helieve when it s told tape, une ot the men that drove on this lino nigh three years sent his little gal to ask mo to come seo him, and I laid off last evening and went. "Now I heard how he was sick with consumption but I didn't know how sick unJ 1 got there. "as sure as i live, sir I there was that fellow what one year ago was as strong and hearty a young man as you ever law, with his legs no bigger than my vrist and him a lyin on the floor and lieavin and chokin all the day and nignt. "He told me ho hadn't sent forme until ke had to, and on looking round, sir, I saw there wasn t anv furniture left ; and altho a year ago he had his little room fitted up comfortable-hko, he had sold even the straw in his tick and was a lyin' on the floor. 'I wouldn't care to live. Jim,' said he fspenkin vpry hoarse and troublesome-like), ' but for my pnor wife and children; for altho' I am only in their way I like to seo 'em round, and I shan't trouble 'em much longer.' And here ho looked at his wife aud smiled when she cum up and, takin' hold of his hand, told him not to talk like that, but to pluck up hope lor her sake and the little ones. "Well, it seems he hadn't had any thing to eat that day, so I gave him two dollars (all I had) and sent for some bread, and a bundle of straw, and, best of all for him, I do believe, I got his babies a stiek of candy and a whistle, and left 'em almost happy. My old woman lias been over to-day to take 'em an old bedstead we ain t usin , and have collected eight dollars for 'em from the drivers, and we re thinlnn ol get ting up a ball, hoping to make enough to send him to a hospital and give his wife a start. So they're not so bad off now as they might be. But there's lots just like 'em, sir, lots just like 'em, and there'sgoiu' to be more afore the w inter's through. "Hold on till 1 slow up a bit, sir. There I Good-night, sir; good-might." And we walked away pondering ou the terrible words of that kind-hearted man : "There's lots just like 'em." ir. I'. Evening 1'onl. The Choctaw Slaves. The Choctaw Indians aud the negroes in that territory are at lugerheads. It is known that the Indians owned many negro slaves, and that these had inter married with the Indians. When the slaves were liberated, Congress agreed to give the Choctaws 8300,000 for the strip of country known as the "leased district," proviededthe Choctaws would within two years, adopt into the nation and make citizens about 3,000 negroes, formerlv their slaves, aud give forty acres of land to each individual. The time expired without action having been taken, and from Council to Council the erovernment has extended the time, This money, with interest, now amounts to more than 100,000 ; yet so strong is the nreiudice or fear of sectionizinK and allotting their lands that they have again relused to pass the act of adop tion. Every other nation of Indians have adopted their former slaves and given them equal right of land and an nuities. A Strange Disease. A singular aud unrecognized disease has just caused the death of a girl in bhoreham, t. The patient was completely paralyzed could not move her little finger and all her hair, including her eye-brows. came off, a thick incrustation forming over her entire body. This was snow white, aud regularly every month would drop off, leaving the skin white and tender. The new incrustation, however. returned within 21 hours. All this time the appetite remained good, and the patient suffered very little pain. None of the attendant physicians ever saw or heard of such a case. Poor Gibia The working girls of rew York city, according to the Alar, are in a distressed condition, and out of the 90.000 girls who work at the dif. ferent branches, earning on an average from $4 to $8 per week, fully 25,000 Lave been thrown out et employment. and those who remain are w orking at greatly reiluced prices. A large nunv ber are being retained until the61ose of (he holidays, when fully 20,000 more fcill be thjown ut of work, - The France of To-day, Affairs in FrAnnn Bra anillv mirnil tin Out of the five large parties composing the Assembly, says the New York ueraid, eack one is compromising m some direction to gain in the end a triumph over all the others, while be low these the nartv subdivisions are almest innumerable. The legitimists are compromising with the Orleanists on a constitution and a flag, that through Henry V. they may came to power at once ; the Orleanists are com promising with the legitimists on the royal succession, being content to take second place for the present, that their day may come when Henry V. dies ; the Bonapartists are divided between the royalists and the republicans the first coquetting with the monarchy in hope of naving a share in the expected power and playing Fouche's part in a more respectable way, the second hold ing on to the old Napoleonic tradition that the proper way to capture the natiom is to suddenly gag it when it has thrown oil its guards m a repuDiic; me conservative republicans, led by Thiers, apparently certain tltat time is fighting for them, nccept adhesions anywhere, that they may live until their hour arrives j the radical republicans com promise with the conservative ditto, that their time may comewnen me peo ple have outgrown their more cautious brethren. It is a sad picture, but not without its strong beams of hope. Out side of all theso parties the people wait with wondering eyes and are making strong sign as to where their sym pathies are. The late elections have shown very pointedly tnai r ranee is republican, and it needed but little to show the monarchists that France, to be made a monarchy, must be so trans muted by sudden work, with the strong hand aud in defiiance of tho people a people having a '93 in its history, as well as an 18th Brumaire, a July, 1830, and a February, 1848, as well as a 2d of December, 1851. It needs no little desperation to faco this people a des peration that can scarcely be communi cated over a party of weathercoeks like the Right Centre. The Army might be counted on, with MacMahon at its head ; the clergy led by Archbishop Quibert, of Paris, and Bishop Dupan loup, of Orleans,miglitmoke an efficient royalist chorus, and the Prefects of the Due de Broglie might gag the out spoken press, but the coalition would bo frail indeed, with all this conceded. Small wonder, then, that it should be shaken down with a piece of paper covered with the divine right preten sions to absolutism, written by the Count de Chambord. Settled. Tho difficulty in Henry Ward Beecher's church seems to be drawing to an end. Not long since a resolution was presented before a busi ness meeting of tho church to drop Mr. Theodore Tilton from the roll of mem bership. Mr. Beeeher earnestly pro tested against its adoption. He had no quarrel with Mr. Tilton, and had no charges to make against him or any other member of the church. There is no Death. If it be true that Nature abhors a vacuum, it is equally true that tho Great Creator ab hors death and glories in life. There is really no such thing as death the term is a misnomer, used to designate the changes which occur in life. Life, eternid life, is created by the laws of Almighty will-power, which aio as im mutable in their application as is the existence of the Creator Himself. When God made life. He made everything ne cessary to sustain it, but left it for man's nrocrressive intellicrenefl to rliooovor, con vert and utilize. Good medicine is to the ailing physique, what gtod fuel is to the expiring flame ; the better the fuel, the quicker the file tho better tho medicine, the quicker comes relief from pain. California Yinkbab Bit ters is life's elixir for old or young, Use this medicine properly and you will live to a cood old ago without those physicid ailments which make seventy years a burden. torn. At an hotel table one boarder re marked to Lis neighbor: " This must be a healthy place for chickens." "Why," asked the other. "Becauso I never seo ajiy dead ones hereabouts," was the reply. TO CONSl) M PTIVES l The advertiser, having been permanently cured t that dread dtsaise. Consumption, by a simple remedy, is anxious to make known to lus fellow sufferers the means uf euro. To all who desire it, he will send a copy of the prescription used, (free of charge.) with the directions for preparing and usintr the same, wbich they will find a subb Cl'Kti for CONSUJdl'TION, Asi uua, Bkonchitis, c. parties wismiitf me prescription win please address, Rev. E. A. WILSON, r.'t I'enu aireet, wiiuamsuurgu n. x. TI11HTV YEARS' KYPEIUEMU UF AN OLD SlllSK. MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYEUP IS TUB PRESCRIPTION OF one of the best female Physl clans and Nurses in the United States, and has been used for thirty yeara with never falling safety and success by millions of motherland children, from the feeble lnfunt of ono week old to tha adult. It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind colic, regulates the bowels, and gives rest, health, and comfort to mother and child. Va believe it to be the Best and Surest Ketnedy in the World In all cases of DYSENTERY and DIAVRIIlKA IN CHIL- DHe.n, whether it arises from Teething or from any other cause. Full directions for using will acuompany rach bottle. None Genuine unless tie far-simile of CURTIS 4 PEHKISB is ou the outside wrapper. 'Sols sy all Medicinm Dbalkrs. BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES on COUGHS AND COLES. A COUGH, COLD, SORE THROAT Requires immediate attention, and should be Cherked. If allowed lo contiiHie, In itation of the Luums, a Permanent Throat Affection or an Incurable Lung Disease, tsypfteu Itlie result. BltOWN'B BRONCHIAL TROCHES Havinir a direct influence An the parts, give imme diate reiii-f. Vor Bronchitis, Asthma, CMarrli, Consumptive and Turoit Diseases, Troches tue used tvith alivays good aucctss. SINGERS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS Will find Troches useful in clearing the voice when taken before Ringing or Speaking, and relieving the throat after au unusual exertion of the vocal 'organs. Obtain only "Bbowi'i Bronchial Troches," and do not take any of the worthless Imitations that may be offered. &ild Everywhere. CHILDREN OFTEN LOOK PALE AND SICK from no other cauta than having worms in tha stomach. BROWN'S VERMIFUGE COMFITS will destroy Worms without Injury to the child, being perfectly WHITE, and free from all coloring or other Injurious ingredients usually used in worm preparations. . CURTIS 4 BROWN, Proprietors, No. 219 Fulton Street, New York. Sotd by Druggisti and CVifinij, and dealer! i Medicines at Twktt-Fiv Cwts a Box. THE HOUSEHOLD PANACEA, AHD FAMILY LINIMENT Is the best remedy iivthe world for the following complaints, vis : Cramps inane Limbs and Stora aoh, Pains In the Stomach, Bowels or Side, Rheu matism la all its forms. Bilious Colie, neuralgia, Cholera, Dysentery, Colds, Flesh Wounds, Burns, Sore Throat, Spinal Complaints, Sprains and Bruises, Chills and Fever. For Internal and Ex ternal use. ' Its operation Is not only to relieve the patient kut entirely removes the cause of the complaint. It penetrates and prevades the whole system re storing h.althy atliou to all its parts, aud u,urcken-lug-t.he eloodi THI HOUSEfl'il.D PANACEA IIS PURELY VEO stable and All Healing. Prepwed by , CURTIS t 1IHOWN, No. ili Fulton Street, New York, .loiiaii kylAU.Druggiiti, Not long ago, two gentlemen started from London on a bicycle trip to Land's End. a distance of three hundred miles. Their trip occupied them jubt one week. They were forty-two hours and twenty-five minutes actually upon their vehicles. On their journey they created quite a sensation. Cristadoro's Excelsior Hair Dtb standi unrivaled and alone. Its merits hav been bo universally acknowlodRed that it wonld be a supererogation to discant on them an; farther nothing can beat it. Com. Flaoo's Instant Relief has stood twenty years' test. Is warranted to give im mediate relief to all Hkenmatio, Neuralgia. Head, Ear aiid Back aches, or money refunded. For loss ot Appetite, Dyspepsia, In digestion, Depresnion of Hpirits and General Debility, in their various forms, Feriio-Phos-proiiatd Elixir of Camsata made by Caswell, Hazard 4 o., New York, and sold by aiidrugg gist, is the bent tonic As a stimulant tomo for patients, recovering from fever or other Bickness, it ban no equal. If taken during the season it prevcats fever and ague aud other Intermittent fevers. Com. Influenza, Bronchitis, cough, cold and catarrh, yield at once to Hale's Honey of Hwiikhoitnu and 'Pah. Pike's Toothache llrops cure in one minute. Com. Tr-nuviAS Hynur for Dpspepsia and Iiebility. - Com. A CoNSfMFHVB Cured. Dr. H. James, while experimenting, accidentally made a preparation of Cannabis Indies, which cured his only child of Consumption, This remedy is now for sale at first-clans DmggistB. Try it ; prove it for yourself. Price $2.50. Hcnd stamp for circular. Craddock A Co.. proprietors, 1032 Hace St., Philadelphia, Pa. Com. Samples Free. The Saturdav Even- inn 1'ntt. 319 Walnut street. Philadelphia, gives a beautiful Cubomo to every yearly subscriber. Peirless Clothes Wringer. L. Hevniirer .V Co., 18 Fulton Street, New York. Com. Butter and cheese are almost indis pensable articles of food. Properly used, the are nutritious and healthy ; but an inordinat. hho of either huikcs indigestion and dyspepsia, Parsons' Purjaire Pills, Judiciously used will remove both of thene troubles. Com. Have you ague in the face ; and is it badly swollen ? Ifnve yon sovero pain in the client, back, or Fide ? Havo you cramps or lams in the stomach or bowels nave you bilious colic, or hovere griping pains? If so, use Johnson's Anu'lync .iniinrni internally. Com. RICH F A R M I N G LANDS! FOU SALE VERY CHEAP I XIIK 11KST ISIT.STMENTI No Fluctuations ! Always Improving in Value The Wealth n the Country is made liy tttt Alvince in he'd rls'ute. NOW IS THE TIHKI Millions 'f Ar-rsofth" flnf-st liinjs on the Conti nent, in KASTKKJl KKHRASKA, now fur Hale tuff nu of tlinn never before in murkct at in ices that DEFY COMPETITION. rive and Ten Years Credit Given, with Interest at Six per Cent Th Land Orant Ttonds of the Compnny taken at mr for lands. They can uow be pui-diusi'd at a arp discount. Full uarticntnrs ifivcn.now Guide with new Mans mailed free, ty sdilressiiiB O. V. HAV1S. j.yna tjontintsstnncr t . '. it. it.. Omaha, Neii. I1Y MAIL,. POSTPAID! Gov'! Concl Mornla nml Cen!le Mnimcm. pl.ii. Sample C uny to Teacncrs, M cents. IlnllniRii'a Kiiidei'Karti'ii Culture, lllus- Vciinbli's School Singe. 7 Juvenile flays. trutml. ' cents. Illustrate!!, tu.za. The mniiiiiior, or Tearhrr'a Alrt.f ccr.ls. WILSON H1SKLE CO., Publishers 1.T7 Walnut St., Cincinnati. O. ife Bond St., K. Y AtiKXTS WANTED FOlt T1IK UNDEVELOPED WEST OH, Five Years in the Territories. ! Rpiourcot, CUmatft, Inhabitant!, Natural rnrkiBitiea. etc. It contains '4 ii fine engravinui ( f tha Bcenery, Lanria, People and CurioaitifB of tho Great Weit, and is the spiciest and best nellinu hnnlr avpi riuliliri4M. BnH fur pecluum imgiB ana circnliro, with termi. Adilrecs NA LION At, Pt B 1I9HINO CO., PhiUaclphta, Pn. , THE BEST r,0,ThVn ,he ,Vo,,,, TOLEDO WEEKLY BLADE Nabt'8 Pai'KH. Durhitf th coming year Naput will write a st-ilet of artelos iu his vein, on.gen cralaswell us political toiic. Snceiineu coj ies free. St nd fui une to LOCKK 4 JONES, Toledo, Ohio. Pass This By H ou are a fool or lunatic. n aro sane and ako money, ad- nr.S. I 'lIAIt?.. 1 V St f Ver Day Commission Mtl Sl-.ry, a', d exP'Mist,. lk Co., St. Louis. Silo a week ff. r tt and will lny it. Apply now. G WE1IHKR A CO., Morton, O. SKC'ttKTOF SI l l'KSW IX WALL ST." putfes. RullH. Beurs. VrotUs ou puts and calls. stli u I0 to jUio. Mailed for stamp by Valentine Tuuihridge Co., Bankers, UrokerOK Wall BtN.Y. ANY sending us tha address of ton persons will receive, Jnc, a beautiful Chrmno and in structions how tu pot rich, post-paid. City Xoctlt'i Co., U South "th 81., I'li ladelphia. ONE Woii.nii.Meii.OhU an i B"y wanted,to iell our t b i in eh and Antenvuu Jivlry, Books, flames, Ac. No capital iipe- Citiletrn Terms Ac, sent free. P. W. VICKERV A CO , Aiitftifcta, Me, ;onts XTViixxtcd. Domestic Sewing Machine Co., N. Y. SbSU FUR CArAl.oot. Q PrrDnr. lira Agents wanted. Bend ' I J stamp t.. A. II. Bluir ,t (.'-., St. Louis, Mo, Thea-Nectar aW'J IS A PL'ItR tS3S'"'tiiiilJt''-':.-"U ,t With ilie Green Tea riavor. FU1: H l'f i The best Tea imp ntc t. Fo ij&Z:T?-r-s'! tula every where. And f.ir sal A8S&M-i wholesale only bytheGKEtT fvtT ATLANTIC A PACIFIC '1 KAOO fcj (gJ&ASjV.j No.l'JI Fulton St. 4 ' 4 Church V1 KJ: ' New York. V. O. Box, b.lOi. Si!- Bi nd for Thca-Neetur Circular, S72.00 Rusin EACH WEEK AGENTS WANTED liness lowtima'e. Particular 3. WORTH. St. L' uis. Mo. Box 1 .3S. Bi:t a man enn earn with this WELL ATJOFS. $25 Per Day foWTSa any lze,and at tharataof lfrKettperdar. Anger made orCat-tclnd warrauUd. Alvrsynuo cesiiui in qui'!aviana. uecuooi in sne world tol prospecting for coal and ore. Farm,TowDihip bwjia limine) ji( aiuic oruu nirw. Hiuui P. O., Co. andhtntr,aridretdeacriptlyt3bo)lcvUa tum-uviiA. uaren Auger 4uitMi ft ffiURDER? 1L- a u I.--1 NEW YORK, 173-1. WEEKLY, SEMI-WEEKLY, AND DAILY. THE WEEKLY SCX is too widely known to require any extended recommenda tion; but the reasons wbich Love already given it fifty thousand subscribers, and wbich will, wo hope, give it many thousands more, are briefly as follows: It is a first-rate newspaper. All the news of the day will be found in it, con densed when unimportant, at full length when of moment, and always presented in a clear, intelligible, and interesting manner. It is a first-raio family paper, full of entertaining and instructive reading of every kind, but containing nothing that can offend the most delicate and scrupulous taste. It is a first-rato story paper. The best tales and romances of current literature are carefully selected and legibly printed in its pages. It is a first-rate agricultural paper. The most fresh and instructive articles oa agricultural topics regularly appear in this department. It is an independent political paper, belonging to no party, and wearing no col lar. H fights for principle, aad for the election of the best men to office. It es pecially devotes its energies to the exposure of the great corruptions fhat now weaken and disgrace our country, and threaten to undermine republican. institutions altogether. It has no fear of knaves, and asks no favors from their supporters. It repoits the fashions for the ladies, and the markets for the men, especially the cattle markets, to which it pays particular attention. Finally, it is the cheapest paper published. One dollar a year will secure it for any subscriber. It is not necessary to get up a club in order to have THE WEEKLY BUN at this rate. Any one who tends a single dollar will get the paper for a year. THE WEEKLY SUN.-ight paget, afty-iU Column. ' Only fl.OO a year, bo diacourits from tbia raw. ' THE hEITH-WEEKLY SUN. -Same alt a tha Dally Sun, 2.00 yeat. A discount of ItO pur ODliL lo CJabs of 10 ut over, . s'HB bAlJt allN. A large four page newapapar of twenty-eight Columns. Dally Circulation over 1 !io,OIU. All the news for 2 cent, babeeription price 60ceiiuamonth,or its a Tear, 'i'o Uuj. u( 1 Ou met, a dUcount ol 20 percent. , AAU, "TUB SUN," New York CUy. Dr. J. Walker's California Yin pjrar Witters nro a purely VogetaUi preparation, inado chiefly from the na tive herbs found on tho lower ranges ol tho Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, tho medicinal propcitiea of which are extracted therefrom without tho usn of Alcohol. The question la almost daily asked, '-What Is the cause of the unparalleled success of Vrxr.eiArt Hrr tkkst" Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and tho patient re covers his health. Thoy are the great blood purifier and a lifo giving principle a perfect Renovator and Invigoruir.r of ths system. Never before in the history ct' the world has a nicilii.-ine been compoiui.iud posseting the romnrkabln qualities at V .mjoak llrrriSRS in ho ilin? tho liick ot cveiv '.i-cue man is lii'ir to. They are a rm tlu Purgative as wuil n a Tonic, relieving tViigcsllon or Inflammation ot the liei ami Visceral Orginn, in Hiii.ms Diseases, The properties of Dp- Waikkr's VlNKGAl: Htri'Kits uiv ,"'iicnt. liailior!tic. Carminative, Jiutntimts, baxiiiive, 3iuretio, Sedative, t'ountor-Irritiiut, Sudorific, Altcre tive. and Anti-Bilions. 11. II. MrDOSAI.r .V CO.. iriifrtr!'ts mi'ldon. Arts.. S,tn Fnm.'ispn. C-.'i.'nrmn, lind ror. uf WnsMnutun nml Ch trllnn Sis. X. V. SuWl liy nil lrti?irf.t- ittul Hi nl,-r. Km V No Vi t , ron in the Blood MAKES THE WEAK STRONG, The Peruvian Syrup, a Protect ed Solution of the Protoxide of Iron, is so combined as to havo the character of an aliment, as easily digested and assimilated with the blood as the simplest food. It increases the qtiantittj of Nature's Own Vitalizing Agent, Iron in the blood, and cures "athousand ills," simply by Toning up, Invigorating and Vitalising the System, The en riched and vitalized blood per meates every art of the body, repairing damages and waste, searching out morbid secre tions, and leaving nothing for disease to feed upon. This is the secret of the won" tlerful success of this remedy in curing Dyspepsia, liver Com plaint, Dropsy, Chronic Diar rhoea, Boils, Nervous Affections, Chills ami Fevers, Humors, Loss of Constitutional Vigor, Diseases of the Kidneys and Bladder, Female Complaints, and fill diseases originating in a bad state of the blood, or ac companied by debility or a lout state of the sti stem. Being freo from Alcohol. In any form, its energizing effects are not fol loived by corresponding reac tion, but are permanent, infu sing strength, vigor, and new life into all parts of the system, and building uj an Iron Con stitution. Thousands have been changed by the use of this remedy, from weak, sickly, suffering crea tures, to strong, healthy, and iutppy men and women; and invalids cannot reasonably hes itate to give it a trial. See that each bottle has PERU VIAN SYRUP Mown In the glass, ramplilets Freo. SETH W. F0VLE Sl SONS, Proprietors, No. 1 Miltou Place, Boston. Bold by Druggists generally. CONSUMPTION Audi Its Cure. WILLSON'S Carbolated Cod Liver Oil Is a scientific combination of tvo well-known medi cine. Its theory Is first to arrest tho decay, ilieo build up the flvstcni. Physicians And the doctrine cor rect. The really Htartliiig cures performed by Will son's OlLare proof. Carbolic Artd tatti?e!tj arrest Decay. It Is the most powerful antiseptic In the known world. En tering into the circulation, tt at once prapples with corruption, and decay ceasea. It purifies iho sources of disease. CodLtoer Oil U Aa(r best avttstant In resisting Consumption. Put up In lnrff wed 30x4 n a peri bottles, bettrintf tHe invt ntor'tt "digital uiy, ami la told by tlie bent Druit. 1'reWrcd by WXIjIiSOiV. 83 .Inlin Street. w Vor Iff rjIKI.KOUA PlllfVO-A full course for 340 sn X office oonuectod with Jones Com'l College, fit Louis. Mo. For circulars address, J. W. JOHNSON, Manauinv Principal.