Farm, Garden and Household, Seasonable Hints, Spring wheat is usually the first crop BOW11. Oats or ppfts do better on a recently inverted sod than barley. But if the pod is old and tough it is better to plant it to corn. ' ' ' Animals require special care at this season. The weather is very change able and horsrs and cows are shedding their coats and liable to catch cold. Mangel Wurzel is a favorite crop with us. It requires rich land. Should bo sowu iarly in drills, 2J feet apart, and thinned out in the rows, 12 to 15 inches apart. If drilled in, 4 lbs. seed per acre; if dibbled in, 15 inches apart, 2 lbs. is sufficient. In the latter ease soak the seed for 48 hours. Barley can not be sown too early, pro vided the land is in the proper condi tion. It should be made as fine and mellow as possible. Sow from lj to 2J Dusnei3 per acre, liarlcy and spring , wneat are both good crops with which to sow clover and grass seed. Make the land as fine as possible by repeated borrowings before sowing, and then roll after the grass seed is sown. On sod land it is far more convenient to plant potatoes in hills, three feet apart, than in drills. On mellow, rich land, where furrows can be onened with a plow, it is a good plan to make the furrows 3 feet apart and drop the sets m tue lurrow every 10 or 18 inches and cover with the plow. If the land is rich enough a larger crop can be obtained in mis way man by planting in hills. Harrowing the potatoes with a liriit harrow, just as they begin to break the ground, will kill millions of voung weeds and favor the growth of the po tatoes, un our own farm we use a Thomas harrow for this purpose, and go over the ground three or four times. We have frequently used an ordinary harrow. It pulls up a few bills, but not enough to do serious damage to the crop. Sheep must bo managed according to circumstances. If the vards are lnrrro and dry and you have plenty of roots it is probably best to keep them out of the pastures until there is a good bite of grass. If the yards are small and muddy it will be well to let them run out every fine day. A sod field that is to be plowed for corn will make a cood r j.1 i -i. , i uu ioi- mem ana win save the regular pasture. Feed all the hav thev will eat. It is a great mistake to stop feed ing hay and grain as soon as the sheep are turned to pasture. Potatoes require dry land. A rich, clover sod is excellent. But if the land is rich enough, says the Agriculturist,' potatoes can be successfully grown after any crop. If manure is used it should be well rotted and flue, and the more thoroughly it is mixed and incorporated with the soil, the less likely it is to in jure the quality of the potatoes. Peru vian guano is one of the best auxiliary manures for potatoes sny 200 pounds per acre sown broadcast, or a table spoontul dropped in the hill and mixed with the soil before dropping the pota toes. The latter is the better way to apply it, provided tho work is done carefully. Peruvian guano, if a good article, will burn the potatoes if they come in direct contact with it. Lubricators. Pure sperm oil is the best known lu bricator, but many other substances are used, because they cost less ; the following are some of the substances : Caehiaqe Axle Grease. Take half a pound of sal-soda and dissolve it in a gallon of water just at the boiling point, now add 5 pounds of tallow and C of lard, and stir the whole together until they are well mixed. An iron ves sel is the best to use for this operation. When these ingredients are thoroughly amalgamated, tho vessel should be taken off tho fire and its contents stir red until tho compound has become cool. A very good and simple grease fur the axles of carts can also be made by stirring half a pound of powdered black lead in six pounds of melted lard. India Eubbeb Lubricator. Take one gallon of rape-seed or of lard oil, and heat it to about 212 degrees Fah., then add half a pound of ludia rubber cut into fine shreds and stir the whole until the rubber dissolves. This is held to be a superior anti-friction lubri cator. Lubricator for Clockwork, Arc. Helmed glycerine is tho best lubricating vehicle for clocks, watches, and other very fine mechanism ; it is a substance which never becomes hard like some oils when exposed to the atmosphere, und it does not freeze in cold weather. Effect of Cold in Fattening. A producer of pork in' Muskingum county, Ohio, who has made an experi ment with a view to ascertain how far cold retards the rate of fattening, re ports the following results : Carefully weighing the hogs fed and the oorn fed to them, and estimating hogs at four cents a pound, he found that what he fed out during the first week in Octo ber returned (in pork) 80 cents per bushel; the first week in November, CO cents ; the third week, 40; the fourth week in November and the month of December, 25 ; the first half of Janu ary, 5 ; the last half, 0. In the Octo ber week of the experiment the weather was pleasant and warm. It gradually grew colder till the latter part of No vember, from which time it remained about stationary till the 1st of January, after which it ran down to zero and be low in the latter part of the month. The hogs were well sheltered in a good pen with plank floor. A Farmer' Production. If a farmer's productions are of really good quality, as they should be. they will be sought in preference to what others have. There is the greatest dit ference in the world between choice butter and middling ; between assorted well-kept potatoes and haphazard lots ; between grain that is ripe, clean and plump and shrunken foul grain, and so on through tne whole list, and when a character is established there will be always men willing and anxious to pay extra prices. Georgia Convicts. The Georgia convicts were farmed out a few days ago to the highest bidders. They num bered 630, and there were offers for a much larger number. Fifty were taken to work in iron works at $20 a laud for one year, 100 for coal mines at $11 a head, 50 to labor on a railroad for twenty-one months at $11 a head, and 200 for the same worK at $11 per year. Messrs. Smith, Middle, and Taylor. planters of Washington county, took 100 for farming purposes at U per bead. The State will receive about $9,000, without having to contribute anything toward the support of the convicts. The parties employing them will be responsiDieior vueir security, " StMltARY OP SEWS Seven-tenths of the ticket which drew tha capital prize in tlie Louisville Library pottery was hold in Memphis A fire broke out'svl Millerstown, Butler County, Fonn, in the Central Hotol, by whioh seven persens .were mirnea to oeatny 'i ue -fcodieB were recovered ...Wm. 8. Sohofield, convicted of embez zling money-letters from the Boston Tost Office, has been sentenced to three years in the Btate Trieon. The U. 8. House Committee on Territories by a vote of 6 to 1, have agreed to recommend th pannage of a bill for the admission of New Moxico aa a State m the Union A London A'tws special from India says that incondiary fires wore alarmingly frequent in the neighbor hood of Steotamow, in the Gwalior district. Two large viilagos have boon entirely destroyed. Large numbers of inhabitants are emigrating from Nepaul in consequence of the famine. . . At Middletown, Wis., whilo exercises wore be ing held in the school bouse, a lamp exploded which set fire to the building. About 300 per sons were present and became panic-stricken. In the rush for tho doors about forty porsous wore injarod, four seriously. The firo burned about half an hour and was then extinguished by two plucky women, who smothered it with overcoats and carpets The U. S. Senate having agreed to issue $40,000,000 additional national bank currency, the aggregate volume of that currency will be 5100,000,000. The voto having fixed the legal tcudor circulation at 8100,000,000, tho eniiro volume of currency ni uh auu,uuu,uw. mm is me amount sug gested by Mr. Ferry, of Michigan, on tho fourth day of December, in tho propoeit'on for finan cial relief he then offered Christopher Iiockstein, of Austin, Nev., had been for along timo jealous of his wife ou account of the attentions of a young man named Norton, and they had frequent quarrels - about him. One Osterbaus went to Hccksteiu's honso, and receiving no response to his demands for admission, broke open the door. On tho floor lay the nakod body of Mrs. Iteckstein cut to pieces, with the head split open. At her . feet were tho bodies of their two little girls, tho heads nearly sever ed from the bodips, and near by were tho bodies of r.eckstein and young Norton, grap pled as in a doatu straggle. Iteckstein grasped in his right hand a largo bowio knifo covered with blood, and in Norton's right hand was a dragoon pistol, two chambers of which wero discharged. All wero dead and there is no liv ing witness to the affair. Two conductors in the Bervice of the Penn sylvania Itailroad pleaded guilty to the charge of stealing from the company, and wero sen tenced to afineof $500 each.... rhilip Jones an old farmor, tried to make peaoo between a party of roughs who wero quarreling over a game of billiards in the only drinking saloon that has not yielded to the women's movement in Bluff tou, Ind. One of the rowdies Btruck Jones ou tho head with a billiard cue. crushing his skull. He kicked him in the face when down, and then fled. Jones died soon after. Tho excitement over tho affair is intense As seven men wore loading a barge with sand at Fort Pickering, at the son thorn boundary of Memphis, about a quarter of an acre of bluff fell upon them, burying the barge, and Dave Tracy, Dud Wove, and another, name unknown beneath the slido in 100 feet of water. The other four men barely escaped tho whirlpool formed by tho huge mass of earth falling in tho water Tho proceedings in bankruptcy against the A. & W. Sprague Manufacturing Company by the National Bank of Commerce of Providen3e,has been settled, by tho Spragues making a legal assignment of all their property to Zachariah Chaffee, who has acted as trustee under the trust deed executed four mouths ago. The assignment will bring the Spragues under tho State bankruptcy laws and is satis factory to the bank. The lied Klver Raft. In removing the Red Eiver raft, a great deal pf money and time have been expended, and until recently with poor prospects of success. First, logs and trees have lodged in the stream, amid which flood wood accumulated, and the mass becoming so great, the sediment oi ine water and the' decayed wood formed a soil in which seeds sprouted, and finally willows three feet in diame ter wero found growing, and this for a distance of thirty to forty miles, while the water of the river ran underneath and through this mass in devious chan nels. The work of removal was begun over forty years ago by Capt. Shreve, and during much of the time since Congress made an annual appropriation of from 810,000 to 150,000, but tho river was kept open for only- brief periods. Meanwhile, some of the finest cotton land in Western Louisiana and Eastern Texas were of scaroely any valuo. Later, Lieut. Woodruff was put in charge, and he found that islands had actually been formed on the drift wood, under which the waters of the river flowed. Tho old logs wero sawed and chopped in two, and steamboats were built especially for the purpose, having saws worked by the engine of the vessel. Ordinary blasting proved useless. Dynamite, supposed to be a most powerful agent, was tested, and it failed to explode even with an elec trical apparatus, i At last nitro clveer- iue was tried, and it proved so effectual that now the river is almost cleared, and it is expected that before long ail the tow heads and islands will be re moved, and a fine cotton country ren dered accessible. It is to be regretted that Lieut. Woodruff could uot have lived to see the great obstruction formed during many centuries re moved, lie fell a victim last October in Shreveport to the scourge of yellow fever which swept that unfortunate town. The Odor-Uiving Chinee. A San Francisco paper says that " a Miss Hemme, a few evenings since, had occasion to enter the kitchen of her father's house, and in a few mo ments returned to the room where her father was with the startling informa tion that she smelt a Chinaman in the kitchen, Mr. Hemme laughed at his daughter, but she insisted that she was sure there was a Chinaman in the house ; so the gentleman went down stairs with her, and to his astonishment saw a wash tub turned bottom up on the floor, and beyond the edge some thing which looked very much like a queue. He raised the tub and found underneath it, crouched all in a heap, the owner of the queue, who had burglariously effected an entrance into the house. The individual, whose name is Ah Chen, was duly held by the Police J udge to answer to a charge of burglary." The Organ as a household instru ment has been rapidly growing in favor and the yearly sales are now enormous. A good Organ remains in tune, is easily kept in order, and blends naturally with the quality of the voice. The advertise ment of the Smith Ameiican Organ Co.. in another column, is referred to the con sideration of our readers. This house has an enviable reputation for good wortf ana lair dealing. -:XLind CONGRESS.' " ' - v V c- SJENA.TB. rj , x r Mr. Hwror, of Cal.! pfni"ntei resolutions of the' Legislature of that State asking Congress to require railroad companies which received ? rants of land for the construction of railroads ront the Mississippi-river wost to the racifio Ocean, under the not of JBG2, tot report to the Secretary of the Iuterior the quantity and de scription of the land sold and disposed of, and that au not disposed of tie open to settlement and preemption. ; f - ' Mf." Shot-man "bf Ohio, said upon the basis of the currency given to Maine the additional circulation would be about $203,000,000 ; upon the basie ef that given to Now York, $110,000, 000 s and upon the' basis of Pennsylvania it would be over $110,000,000. Mr. Morton, of Ind., Baid the pooplo wanted more money, and the country would oome to specie payment when it could. There wbh no use to talk about specie payment now. He had noticed in a loading Now York paper that inflation meant wart that lirfl atiou would be resisted by force of arms. Such statements were not more un reasonable than similar ones made on the floor of the Senate. Mr. Jones, of Nev., said the rebellion would have been put down for $1,500,- 000,000 loss than it did cost had it not been for paper money, which, instead or being the spade of the husbandman, was the dice box of gamblers. The amendment of Mr. Morrill fix ing the volume of fractional currency at $40, 000.000 was rejected yeas. 10 ; nays, 30. Mr. Davis, of Y. Va., offered a substitute to the finance bill providing that $50,000,000 in national bank circulation shall bo withdrawn from tho States in excess and issued to the States having loss than their proportion, llo jected Yeas 20, nays 81. - Mr. Merrimon, of N. C offcrod. as a substitute for the third Bcction of the bill as reported by the committee, tho following : That $16,000,000, in notes for circulation, in addition to such circulation now allowed by law, shall be issued to national banking associations now organized and which may be organized hereafter; and Buch increased circulation shall bo' distributed among tho several States as provided in section 1 of tno act of July 12, 1870. This was adopted by a voto of 33 to 19. Mr. Johnston.Jof Virginia, introduced a bill giving jurisdiction to the Court of Claims to heRr the claim of G. W. Custis Lee, son of the late Gen. Leo, to tho Arlington estate, which was referred to the Conimittco on the Judiciary. A petition accompanied the bill, in which the petitioner says the property was devised to him by his grandfather, and that the title of the Government to the property is defective. He. however, recognizes tho sacred uso to which tho Property has been put. and has no desire to disturb it, but thinks be should bo compensated for his right therein. The bill to provide for the payment of the bonds of the Louisville and Portland Canal Company was taken up, the pending question being on referring it to the Committee on the Judiciary. MeeHrs. Colliding and Freling liuysen advocated ; such reference Messrs. Thurman and McCreery opposed it. and favored a committal of the subject to the Committee on Finance, which was adopted after some discus sion. Mr. Coukling's amendment to the currency bill is as follows : " That nothing in this act shall be construed to authorize an increaso of the principal of the publio debt of the United States," was rejected by a vote of 24 to 27. Mr. Scott, of Pennsylvania, moved as an amend ment to the section authorizing the increase of $40,000,000 national bank currency, the follow ing : " And each national banking association now organized, or hereafter to be organized, shall keep and maintain as a part of its reserve required by law one-fourth part of the coin re ceived by "it a;i interest ou tho bonds of the United States deposited as security for circula ting notes on Government dopoHits ; and that hereafter only one-fourth of the reserve now prescribed by law for national banking associa tions shall coiihist of balances due to an associa tion availablo for the redemption of it-8 circula ting notes from associations in cities of redemp tion, and upon which balances no interest shall bo paid. Adopted by a voto of 29 to 24. Tho bill was then read a third time, and passed, by yeas 29 to nays 24. The bill, as passed, reads as follows : That the maximum amount of United States notes is hereby fixed at $400,000,000. Section 2. That $46,000,000 in notes for circulation, in addition to such circulation now allowed by law. shall bo issued to national banking associations now organized, and which may be organized horoaf ter, and such increased circulation shall be distributed among the several States as provided in section 1 of the act entitled " An act to provide for tho redemp tion of the three por centum temporary loan certificates, and for an increaso of national bank notes," approved July 12, 1870, and each national banking association now organized or hereafter to be organized shall keep and main tain as a part of itH reserve required by law, one-fourth part of the coin reserved by it as interest on bonds of the United States, de posited as security for circulating notes on Government deposits, and that hereafter only one-fourth of the reserve now proscribed by law for national banking associations shall con sist of balances due to an association availablo for the redemption of its circulating notes from associations in cities of redemption, and upon which balances no interest shall bo paid. HOUSE. Mr. C'lymer, of Penu., from the Committee ou Public Lands, reported a bill to enable tho Meunonites of liussia to effect permanent settlements on the public lauds of the United States. The bill was made a special order. It authorizes tho Secretary of tho Interior to sell to them such quantity of public lands, not mineral in character and not otherwise appro priated or reserved, as they may require, at the minimum prico payable in five annual install ments. Mr. Hawley, of Conn., discussing tho cur rency question, said he was not satisfied with any bill which did not bear in mind the great primary duty of returning to tho true standard of value. The practical redemption proposed in this bill he had seen on the line of the Pacific Itailroad, but there they termed it " three card monto." He would vols every dollar of mere paper money out of his town and out of his State, before he would consent to tou cents of inflation, and he would sta'y at home from Con gress all the rest of his life rather than do it. -He. Crossland, of Ky., from tho Committee on Elections, made a report in the Kentucky contested election case, that Mr. Young, the sitting member, is entitled to his scat. A riucky Nobleman. An Ashantee correspondent sends an oeoouut of one of the skirmishes to the Montreal Herald, from which the fol lowing is extracted: ';Loid Gifford, the chief of scouts, savs that when he had ascended half way up the hill ho rousted out of ambuscado some half a dozen Ashantee scouts, who shouted out to him to keep his men back, otberwise they would fire on him : but as the young nobleman pressed on his men the Avhantees cave waVi reluo- tantly reversing their guns, or, iu other words, turning the stottks of their guns to Gillord's party, as a sign tbat they did not wish to force hostilities. The summit of the hill was thus gained without bloodshed, and the most im portant position whioh the Abhantees could have held was surrendered with out a blow. On the top of the hill an elaborate fetich ceremony had been performed to thwart, if possible, the views and prospects of the ilritish ex pedition. Two goats had been im paled and buried alive, surrounded with sticks placed in a circle horizon tally, their pointed ends directed to all points of the compass ; and a centre- pole, standing upright, bore a paper. on which was written with Moorish characters a most horrible curse upon each and every man who crossed the Adansi Hills into Ashantee land, ig norant of the nature of the dreadful penalties he was incurring at the hands oi the insulted and dehed fetish diety. Lord Gilford plunged down the slope with his scouts, and at the base sur prised some more of the enemy at the village of Quiza, who retired with guns reversed, as before, from the vil lage, saying that they were going to ask permission from the Chief of Po- mannah to light. , Fooled Them. A man in Lee took it smilingly. They serenaded him with horns and drums, and he asked them in. ' Provisions were scarce, but would they ah would they drink. They drank, wished health, and departed But in fifteen minutes they were all leaning on fences and lamp-posts, re covermg from the eaects of ipecac, Consumption. Br B. V. Fiekcb, jf. D., Vontn's Distensaby, ' ' BmrFAto, N. T. . " ; ' "' ' . The groat prevalence of this disease, and its fatal results, are woll calculated to enlist our beet efforts for Its cure. What Is Consumption? It is ft disease of the lungs produced by an acrid and Impure condition of the blood, which circulating through these most delicate organs, poisons and irritates their tissues and invites the scrofulous humors of the blood, oauslng the deposition of tuberoles and establishing looal sorofula. Another prolitio exciting cause of the development of sorofulous disease-of the lungs, or turbercular consumption, is Chronic Nasal Catarrh, which extending along the mucous lining membrane of the throat, trachea and bronchial tubes, finally attacks the substanoe of the lungs, and here establishes such an irritation as to invite the blood to deposit its burden of impurities in theBe organs. Consumption itself is not so often hereditary as is gonorally supposed. That a condition of low vitality may be transmitted from parents to children is unquestionably true. It is this deficiency of vitality which is inherited a weakness which makes nutrition imperfect, and loads to the deposit of tuberclos. But thousands of persons who inherit feeble vitality would never suffer from consumption if the functions of the system were kopt correct and tho blood pure. When the liver becomes torpid, and but very imperfectly pours off the effote, poisonoUB materials of the blood, tho lungB, as has before been shown, become irritated. Tho general health becomes broken down, and the person loeis languid, wean, faint, drowsy and confused. Pain in the right side, in the rogion of the liver, and sym pathetic pain in the shoulders and spine, and through the lungs, is generally complained of. Tho pationt has a dry, hacking cough that liver Cough! Small minute tubercles are developed iu the lungs, and perhaps exist for months all unknown to their victim. Nothing is done to remove the tuberclos by the ordinary treatment. Cough is only a symptom of the disease, yet this only is aimed at in the usual treatment. There Is no rational way to cure consumption rnmt. tn nnrify tho blood. TllOSe poisOHOUB materials in the blood which cause the tuber cles must be thrown off by exciting the liver to action. Vitality must be Biippoiieu, iu bjs tern nourished and built up, and the develop ment of tubercles thus prevented. Hemove tho blood poison by restoring the action of the liver, and the oough. which is only a symptom of the real disease, is relieved, lou thereby strike at the root of incivicnt consumption and cure the patient. From the properties and remedial effects of my Golden Medical Discovery, the reader will readily understand why it has been so success ful iu curing tins latai mamuy. With it 1 nave arrested tun uuukiuh Hib niuht sweats and hoctio fever of the consumptive invalid, snatched from the jaws of death and restored to health and happiness manv who, but for my Discovery, must soon have fallen victims to that relentless foe. God, I believe, has instilled into the roots and plants from which this wonderful medicine is extracted, the healing properties, by the use of which Consumption, tho scourge of the human family, may iu its early stages be promptly arrested and permanently cured. I do not wiBh to delude, flatter, and then disap point the afflicted by asstrting that this can bo accomplished when tho lungs oro half con sumed, as many ao wuo, oemg uuvuiu vi an oouRCionco, aim to humbug tho afflicted that thev may Bell their often worse than worthless ompouuds. llut if mv Golden Medical Discovery is em ployed in the first or ourly stages of the dis ease, I know from ample observation and actual tests in hundreds of cases, that it will positive ly arrest the disease and restore health and strength. From its wonderful power over this terrible disease, 1 tuougnt Btrongiy oi caiung it my Consumptive euro ; but from the fact that it is a perfect specific for tho soro throat and hoarseness to which ministers and other publio speakers and singers are subject, and also lor jjroncnuis, ana mi severe vuugns, aim is au invaluable remedy for diseases of the Liver, ana also as a Blood Purifier, I deoided not to apply to it a namo which might mislead and prevent its use in other diseases for which it is so admirably adapted. I wish to mention a most wonderful nutritive property which it nossesses. and which so peculiarly adapts it to tne wants oi me consumptive aim tuo acrum lous. The nutritive properties possessed by Cod Liver Oil are trifling when compared with those possessed by my Disoovery. It is aston ishing to see how it buildB np the solid musclo, and increases the flesh and weight of thoso whose systems are reduced below the UBiial standard" of perfect health. The following testimonial f ully confirms all that I claim for my Golden Medical Discovery iu the cure of Consumption. Bleeding rnoM Lungs, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Consumption. A Wondekful Cube. Rocnr.STEit. N. Y., Jan. 13th, 1S74. It. V. Pierce, M. D., Buffalo, N. V. : J)ear Mr l liad sutlereu lrom Catarrn in an aggravated form for about twelve years and for several years from Bronchial trouble. Tried many doctors and things with no lasting beue- ut. in May. '7a. becoimna nearly worn out with excessive Editorial labors on a paper in New xork Lity, t was attacaed witu lironciiitia in a severo form. Buffering almost a total loi-s of voico. I returned homo hero, but had bee-i home only two weeks when I was completely prostrated with Hemorrhage from tho Lungs, haaiiiq four sccere bleediwi spells within ('0 wevks, and. first thrro inside of nine days. In the September following, I improved sufficient ly to bo ablo to be about, thou"h iu a vory feeble Btate. My Bronchial trouble remained and tho Catarrh was tenfold worse than before. I very effort for relict seemed fruitless. I seemed to be losing ground daily. I continned in this feeble state, raising blood almost daily until about tho first of March. 73, when 1 he came bo bad as to be entirely confined to tho house. A frioud gnsritested your remedies But I was extremely skeptical that they would do me good, as I hail lost all heart in remedies, and began to look upon medicine and doctoiv; witn disgust. However, I obtained ono or your circulars, and read it carefully, from which came to the conclusion that you understood vour business, at least. I lliuilly obtained ouantitv or Dr. Bairo s t atarru itemeuy. your tioldou Medical Discovery and Pellets, and commenced their vigorous use according to di rections. To my surprise, I soon began to im prove. The Discovery and reueis, in a snort time brought out a severe eruption, which eon tinued for several weeks. I fult much better, my appetite improved, and I gamed in strength and ilesh. In three months every vestige of the Catarrh was crnne. the Bronchitis Had nearly disappeared, bad no Cough whatever and I bad entirely ceased to raise blood s and, contrary to the expectation of somo ot my friends, tho cure has remained permanent. 1 uavo nad n more Hemorrhages from tho Lungs, and am entirely free from Catarrh, from whioh I had suffered so much and so loin?. The deht of cratitu.de I owe for tho blcsinu' I have received at your nanus, knows no bounds. 1 am tnor oughly satisfied, from my experience, that youi medicines will master tho worst forms of Unit odious disease Catarrh, as woll as Ihroat and Lung Diseases. I have recommended them to vory many and shall ever speak m thoir praise. Gratefully yours, v.M. n. tiixatui, P. O. Box 507, Jlochester. N. Y. Iu another lettor Mr. Hpencor says : "I liavo had a remarkublo experience. Those familiar with my past illness look upon my present con dition of health as au almost miraculous resto ration. The physician who treated me during a part of my Illness, and who is probably the best surgeon and old school physician in this city, Baid to mo, last eummor, that ' according to the usual course of things, a man in the condition you were in a year ago ought to have diod.' " Those who are inclined to bq skeptical and who may doubt the authenticity of Mr. Bpenoer's testimonial, will have thoir skepticism removed by addressing a short note to him. 1 bono no one, however, will annoy him with long letters, as although he feels very grateful for his re storation to health and" is willing to aid in spreading the glad tidings of relief to other sufferers from Catarrh, lironciiitia and Con sumption, yet if one out ot a thousand who read this testimonial, should write hira a letter ask ing au answer, he would find little time to do anything else than write replies. I hope, there fore, any who do write him will say but few words, and not for get to enclose a postage stamp for a reply or you cannot expect him to answer. Mr. Spencer is a gentleman very widely known and, among those who know him, no one would pretend to question his statements, nor doubt his sound judgment. His testimonial is only a fair sample of thou sands of others reoeived from those who have been cured of Lingering Coughs, Catarrh, Bronchitis and Consumption, of eevere dis eases peculiar to Females, and many other forma of disease, bv usinK my Family Medi cines, after they have been pronounced in curable bv eminent uliv-iciaiis. 1 nave more testimonials of this kind in my office than one man can lift, yet I had no room for them here, having already trespassed upon the columns of this paper mere largely than I had intended when commencing this article upon VJOUBUUH'UUH What a Shys er Is. - i In tha deposition of Mr. Thomas Dent, a prominent Chicago lawyer, taken in a suit by a' St. Louis lawyer against the Republican, of St. '' Louis, for calling him a r shyster, Mr. Dent says : " Shyster is a term of reproach applied to such lawyers as were sup posed to resort mainly , to the , Police Courts and Magistrates' offices to seoure the escape or acquittal, by sharp or law practice, of criminals or persons held under arrest. The first recollection I liuvo uj buu wuiu xh biiuu lb wan uncu iu tho Chicago Democrat, then under the 1 control of John Wenwtorth, of this City. Its application, when so used, was to derogate and bring into disrepute suoh persons as, without the use of legal learning or professional ability, pre vented the holding for trial or the con viction of persons accused of offenses either against the laws of the State or the oity ordinances. The word has had a grent ooourrency since tho earliost use of it in the Democrat now within my recollection, but it has always been used as a term of reproach, and as in dicating one whose practioes were not those of a well bred attorney. Come, and Let Us Ifeasou Together. To the afflicted in body, we offer a lew words ot plain, practical reasoning. No matter under what form of sickness you labor there is one great truth yon should ever Keep in mind, viz: All dis ease originates in an impure condition of the blood. Purify that, and the dis ease must depart, for it has nothing to I feed on ; but you cannot purify the blood by the use of poisonous drugs, and exhaustive stimulants J the relief which these afford is temporary and deceptive, leaving you worse off at every interval. The best Blood Puri fier ever discovered is Dr. Walker's 1 amous Vinegar Hitters, compounded of simple herbs. JNo matter how hope less your case may seem, try the Vine- oar Bitters, and a few draughts will convince you of their virtue. Dr. Walker the discoverer of this priceless remedy, had been given up to die by the Physicians, and is now a sound and healthy man from their use. torn Tor Debility use Peruvian Svavp. Com. Without doubt hundreds of people who will read this item are sufferiiif? with kidney Disease iu somo form, which miirht' be cured with a bottle or two of Johnson's Ano dyne Liniment, used internally. Why not try it I voni. l'arsons I'uraauve fills, which ore now being extensively sold in this Stato, aro purely vegetable, ana are nula and crentlo in their operation. One is a doso. Good quali ties, certainly. vow. TlllllTV IKAliS' KXPfeKlKKCK OF AX OLD KUUSK. MRS. Wlt.BLOWS SOOTHING STRUT IS THR PRESCRIPTION OF one of the best Female Phy si olana and Nurses In the United States, and Ms been nsod for thirty years with never failing safety ana incests by millions o mother! and children from tho foe bio infant of ono week old to the adult It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wlrm oolio, regulate! the Vowels, and gives rost, bealtli and comfort to mother and child. We believe It t. bo tho Boet and Surest Bemedy in tho World in all cases oi ji rRTKttX ana 1MAKH1KKA IN CHTL uttttft, wneiuor it arises rron. Teething or fror any other cause. Kail directions for uBinsr wiliat comnany each bottle. None GemiiiiA noif.n th. fiie-Bimilo of OUKTld A I KKKtlxo is on Mteoutttdu wrapper. SOLP BY ALL MEDICINE DBALP.RB. HOUSEHOLD Wliy will You butter t PANACEA. AND FAMILY LINIMENT. To all persons Bufforlng from Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Cramps In the limbs or stom ach, Uillutis Cillc, Pain in tho back, bowels or sido, we would say Tnu Household Pahacka and Family Lisimest Is of all HOUSEHOLD others the remedy you want i'ANAOEA AND FAMILY LINIMENT, for intornal and external use It has cured the above com plaints la thousands of casct. There Is no mistake about it. Try It. Sold by all Umgirists ' IVO'I II I Vi BKTTER." Cutler Bros. Rnatnn lr. Jtilm Wiire. celebrated Vkgetablb Pttlmonaky Balsam, lor coiiia ana consumption. t UILUiN UtfTKN IAMUS VA.Ia& AMI- SICK from bo oihar cause than Having viorDU lu tn, ntcm'h. EfiOWK'8 VERMIFUGE COMiITU will destroy worms without. Injury to the chili being perfectly WHITE, ud froo from all colorlno or other Injurious tuyi-c diouti usually asoa worm preparation!. CCKTIS 4 BROWN, Proprietor!, Ko. S is; Fulton Street, New To: t '''' I ftv Drunuistt onf Chemists and dealer) ii Itemrtixs at xwKftTY-fc'ivK tJ(Ti a box. MOST IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT to Kurruitcu rerfons. KewB'id peifoctltemo dv for HeruU. Tha In vention cf The Elastic Truss is without doubt the most ininort4ht niediciil oisrovory of the upntury. -juo retains of this new discovery for tho certain reikf una cure of Hernia are most as'nuUhinK and (tnitifyliiK. This now Truss IB woru with poifect coinfort Htff.t rirnf d,7i. It yicMs to evoiy motion nf 'the bojy, ulwnyB'rotaluinif the ltuutuie flurinf the hardest excrciseor severest strain, and It tue directions are followed u nermanoi t cure will soou bo effected, r-'o well li.fovmu 1 person will now w ear any of the olJ fiibhioucd metal tprinir trus'es that were for- mntluOG..,! hnlnnxliaonrilod. Till S I16W TrilBS 1 B sent by Mail or ExpreBS (o all pans of the country with fnU (lireotions for flttinH. A full dcscriplivo cliculjrw.il ha sent free if rrnnesttd by Mail. Tlo Slasiin Truss will bo snnnlied through the Bur- m'Oii-Qoneral'j office on request, to any pensioners wlmarA ,tlit loH In. Truaa from the Government. Age or the lnih of timo a patient has been rup tured win not prevent a cure. Prom tho numeroui testimonials in our posses sion woappond the following : " After the experience of months, patients testify Btronnly to its tflirary, as will n to tho ease and freedom from tiiconvi'iiience with which the in Bli'iiiiit ii ih worn. With supeilor advantages, the Maslttl l ritss possesses in snun uiKmo re utiiHita and n iinliliciitions ciuitiiriZ for other inven- tionp. 1 have no hi sitiilion in reRardlnu it as an important means for the rt li' f and cure oi ll ruin. Kx-Iitalth Officer of Ih.i l'ort of Now York, Sur- Ki'on-iii-UMcf of New York bliuo iioupini, bte., etc. Npu Vnnir. March 10th, 1W4. fUn V nnTTtiir M Tl . Sin. I. V.lnntio TrUSB O. Ji,. S'iV -Aftor BoffWiiiir for thirtv veiirs. in my own person from the uso of every form of Metallic Truss procurable In tnia country, anu in r.uioi'o, , two yciiiB a(to, applied your Klastic Sinus, and satisfaction, and been tnuuiit the truth, that the Klastle Truss is the only Instrument that should be used for the reli. f and cure of Hernia ; anu now tfter iiioro than thirty years continuous pra, iico, nnri htvinff aiiiu,Arl manv hundreds of TrUSSilS, (and for the last twenty months yours exclusively) T uratefullv rieelnra it in lie mv deliberate opinion, that uuur Afiistic Truss is the only one cntitlud to theooiindeneeof tneptibllci that (laBticity tl the only power at all adapted to the requirements of a rn.B np Sluiirwtrtitr. nrtd nm convinced that lOMr h' attic Truss actually cures a larue propuruou in all cases to w hich it is applied, not only anions children, nut in numerous rent's whim vv knowledge of patients f mm mi to vn years ui um. " ' w II UlIMNHiM. M. I). Professor of Anatomy ami 8urery, N. V. K. Medical College. Address THE ELASTIC TRUSS BS3 BROaDWAY, NEW YORK. CO,. S20. We will give a Man, H y, Woman or Girl tn every villuo iu tha United States, A (toce to Make $20 iu Two Days. Write postal card will do to LOCKR 4 JONES. Toledo, Ohio. CiTO Kaoli Week Affpntt wanted, rartieu 4 larifree. WOETli A CO.. Bt. Louis, MO 8'5 per day Gommliston or S30 a week Salary and expanses. We offer it and will pay it. Apply How vveuuttr i u.) mariun, u. M'AUtatar'a Patent ARTOFTICON. The must powerful Mato Lantern ever made; witu a brilliaut Oil Lamp; for Homo. Buttdav Bchool and Leo tures. Stereopticons, Ao. 81ids at I reduced prices. A vrojitahle business tor a man U'tit sau cawiai, oeiia tamp for Catalogue. W MITCUVLL Al'ALLIB- BUY J, & P, COATS' BLACK Millions of Acres RICH FARMING LANDS IN NEBRASKA, NOW FOR SALE VERY CHEAP. Tea Teari Credit, Interest only 6 per Cent, Descriptiv PamphUf.iMth Sectional Uapt, tent THE PIONEER, , A han 'some Ulustrfttod Paper, cnntRliitug the Homestead Law, mailed fre to all parti of the world. Address O. K. DAVIS, Land Commissioner u P. R. R., Omaha .Nr.n. rOllTAULIi Soda Fountains ! 80, 850, $rS db glOO. GOOD, DURABLE ARD AF Shipped Ready for Use. Manufactured by J. W. CHAPMAN & Co., Madison, Ind. ty Rend for a CntfllogiiP..rf A gent AVnntfd. Men or women. SWaweek. or $100 forfeited. Valuable samites free. Write at once to K. IM. Khl-;i), rilgiun screoi, new i urn. AQENT3 WANTED FOR THE HISTORY OF THE GRANGE MOVEMENT OB. THD FARMER'S WAR AGAINST MONOPOLIES. Bnlntr ft full nnrl authentic account of the Strug- trin nf rhftAmnrlps.il Fftimnn Kiratnfttthe extor tions of tho Bull road Companion, with a history of the rlsa mid proTPs of tho Order of Patrons of fiunnanary ; its oujocts ana prospects, n hi-ub n. siffht. Bend for specimen paves and terms to AKOQtH. ana see wny it stms TiiBter tnnn any omer bonk. Address NAT ION AU PUBLISHING CO., Philadelphia. Pa. 1 A TTIl f 1T Unscrupulous puhllshers ViV LJ X IVxl nave token advantage of the trrcat demand for th-s Histowy of the Grance Movement, to issue unreliable works on the sub- j ct mere rompvationa from agricultural newswa ptrs. Do not be imposed upon. Bee that the book you nuy is inaorsca ny tno leading grangers. LOVFJOY'S New Pttlr UI-ASS CI1TI KR & PUTTY liNIKK. Cuts Klass better than a diamund. Everybody Bhould have one. Any child can use it. Bent to your Address on re ceipt of 50 cents and stamp nv auvan Li. LOVF..TOY, 2-'i) Washing ton Ktreet,Bostnn,MaBB. Liberal discount to Store- keepers. Appleton'S) Illustrated AMERICAN CYCLOPAEDIA. NEW REVISED EDITION. Edited hv U khkoe Ri pTjKY and Citah. A . Daw. Tn I be completed In 10 volumes ; profusely Illustrated. mvo volumes now reany. issuen Hi-montniy. si i Dy euDsenpuon oniy. teua tot specimen pages. u. ArrijKiurt i;u., l'titmsners. 540 and Gfll Broadway, Now York DR. SAM'Ij 8. FITCH'S FAMILY PHYSICIAN Will he sent free by mail to any one sending their tvaurcBS iu 1 oruauway, incw iorK. GENTS WANTED to sell our Justly celebrated ATTiciesior ijauiDR' wear, innispensanio auc absolutely necessary. 10,000 SOIT MONTHLY. Thev tfire comfort and :itm. f h e t i o n . M F KM A Ij fi C A N DO WITIt , OUT THICIH. Sample sent on receipt f S'-i.OO KKKKi. Send for TlluBtratoi1irfii. jW f I'.iiijK kubbkk vAi.t w Chambers St.,N.i NOVELTY PRINTING PRESSES. The Iiet Vrt Invpntffl. For Amateur or HuuinesB Pur poses, aim uusurpaBseu for gon- DIKl tl'IU i-i lilt 111 Over 10,000 In Use. 3! BENJ. O. WOODS. E i7 Kf- n I every description of f fJTtlH -L-LV tr MATKH I A I Kei1.-ral mxl 152 Knee- 1.. K MncKusick. OMiirmv 8!..Niw Yorl: land ?t.. IfitMfmi. KtMley, Hov-eli A l.ud.i, 1H7 M irlci't St., PMlade- pin, o. j-. rtminos, 1,0 Aiunroe St., Cliicago, Sen - , tor im.Mraica catau-fcuo. THE SMITH AMERICANJRGAN GO. EstalslieOcarly a Quarter of a Century. 50,000 Organs Sold! rtlHK Policy of this Company is to ubo tho best JL materials without regard to cost. Its em ployees, eept.cia.ly t hone in leading position p. niive ueen mmuiHi1 wim me mmiiiacinro oi rt'iu LuBtruments from tho infaucv of the LiiBiness. 1 hr caees are soliuly constructed, and from New nn tiLKUANi irjcsiUNP, The manufacturers claim that thev havn suc ceeded in pro-iuelnif the most satisfactory harmony ever neurit irum iiceit.v ; nuiiu t ma M ime i mi their uigaus nave never been equated m rower. AN 0KGAN LEADING 3,000 SINGERS! Tho following letter, from the Most Eminent Or ganist in the United States, refers to an Or (an now UBcd in the Rfiv. Dr. Talmage's church. The Organ formerly used, made by another houso, had provea msuuicieut ; Dfah Bib : I owe ycu personally my best thanks for senrtiutf to us fthe Brooklyn Tabemaclfl Con Rrecratton) one of the Smith American Reed Organs to the Academy of Music It is perfectly wonder ful that so small an instrument in size should have sufficient p )wer to lead a Congregation of so many thousand people. The Trustees, as well as mvself. are much pleased with ir. The quality of Tonic is also all that can bo ocHired. It sneaks for itself: and all 1 have met with, who utteiul the Bervicon, spetiK cr u as moBt satisractory Accept my tnanKS.ana relieve me to rtmaiu most respect- luiiy youia, iii; w, AiuituAiv, vrgamsr. New York, Feb. 4, 173. New IriBtrumcnfa of a Itcfli:ed (Jtialltv of Tone. JAU I I I Vail) nuuoi D, Catalogued sent to any address on application. Tremnnt St., (opp. Walttiam.) Boston, Hnss. I GREAT REDUCTION. TEAS AND COFFEES AT WHOLESALE PRICES. ncreased Facilities to Club Organizers. aeixi for ftew l'ricelit. THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA CO. P. O. Box 5043. 81 and S3 Vcsey St., K. Y. Ill SCHOOL Inn e"nK du I ILIL tiisini.'SB in A SI 50 per J I'KAl-IIKKS WARl'KD urlnK Spt inland Summer m a :i thi:ir own counties, ri&yina uei-Mol.tll. Aililress ZlKCiLKKA Mct'UUHV l'liil.-.dflphiu, l'i., or F)rinKfleId,aUfe8. KUAINT, KUEER & KUMOUS Is the vain ble book wo give to all. Full of facts, flirurcs and fnu : 4 p (tres ; fiO pictures. Inclose two stumps and address Ulackicat Co., 40 u r o a n w 1 y , , N . Y iTLr PKll OAY Coin mission or fitiO a week tjmi9 Salary, and expenses. We offer tt and will 111 11. Apply 1IUW, s. w Miistn ix iiu., aiAi mu v 15.000Soldin60Bavs. nUl.11 I O II nil I fcUMUinjoooa ! By Mary Clemmer Ame. It ttrayB the ?" inner !.," voadari, maiwcls, toiiiterci, acoret do- man Been them." i n;.tt, Lnyntfs. mi uew Ixwk out, aciually overflowing wall ;c ' Uuuri lor fill. It la popular Tervwliws. viUi evffrvi is ellu Ir and wide by thouiauda. One Apeut .44 oi'r o 0D0 lownBhip; not!ier has vergt-'d A- rack wttk for Q j. .m it his tin iif.-f- , aumuetitur : II liilca dlJIy illuitrated; iiipertly bou--- . Now is iho tm for sit Ciuraucra, bulb laillc mn.t utlciuoa, to luako tnoaer. Aatnf panted in trtry f :i:.ship. P'-mt for eircuUrs now. ftud M fci li'U'lid tfstimo.Mi.ta niitl oar ltm; termi. Aaarett A. i .i.u'luN 4 liar i. or 4, Couo, ProfifableEmTJlovment Work for Evervbodv. Good Waerei. Perma- le .1 Employment. Mou and Women wanted. . all particulars free. Addruss. W. A. HENDERSON 4 CO.. Cleveland, i., or HI. i puis, Mo. GENTS WANTED fur the new book, LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF Kit Carson l9 fata com r.ul ind friend. D. W. C. Fetr. H'lwt Lt. dot Mid Surgeon, U.S. A.t from fcU dicud by him IL The oniy Thus and Auihkntio lifol America's IKIUMit nuniivn, i ir en, owv out viii ever DubliBhed. ltcontniue full and complete deacrlp. wbe lived amotiK thvui all bis life. It givj full, reliable sr count of th MOl IOCS, and the MO DOC W A it Ai a work of H1STO RY,ltieiDvalunble. A giJ opportunity foregenUtomakenioner. I flur lllufttrald rtn ulr i.nl free to all aDDlicanU. Write andtw Core territory at ouce. bbbTIN, OILMAN A CO., Hartford, Conn. Dunham 'it Sons, Manufacturers, warerooms, 18 East 14th Street, EeUbUshed t83. NEW YORK. Sendor WuitraM Circular ai JYict IUU mm 1 IK i-' 5 IM7 mnvsWishlmti it THREAD for pr MACHINE. I Dr. ,1. Walker's California Vin egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, mado chiefly from the na tive herbs found on tho lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, the medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without tho use of Alcohol. Tho question is almost daily asked, "What is tho causo of the unparalleled success of Vinegar Bit ters?" Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient re covers his health. They are tho great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Innovator and Iuvigorator of tho system. Never before in the history of tho world has a medicine been compounded possessing the remarkable qualities of Vinkoar Bitters in healing tha Bick of every diseaso man is heir to. They are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation ot tho .Liver and visceral urgnns, in union Diseases. Tho TtroDPrties of Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bitters aro Aperient, Diaphoretio, Carminative, nutritious, Laxative, Diuretio, tivo, and Anti-Bilious, it. ii. nirnoiAiin i n,. DniirjristB find Gen. Acts.. S:m l-Y.mcipco. CrLlifnrnii. and cor. of Wn.sliintrtttn nml CIuuHmm Srs.. '. Y. hold ly nil Druffsrlstq nml IViiim-k. A'. '. ,V. U.- -AVi. IB. and INSECT POWDER FOR Rata, jlicc, Kouches, Ants, Bed-bugs, Moths, &o. M'.llK.Mlt)ttlUUX& CO., N. Y., Solo AjjentR. OBOE wlllout! Trii.hTrliimphfl.it. Ajrents, old and ymin, m -ilo uu i (V m -V. make mure nioru'V Fullinir our Fit'iich mid Atiurii an , u y, linuln nml (i-nn- thilll at aavlllini' eUi (Jronlrt mhIiikoI Incuts to Agents and Purclnuoi a. f , 'rcrni-,i.nil tu" particulars sent free to all. P. oVu ii:itv, A'iu'usta. Main;" A WOTH TO AGK1YTS to so the I.MPHOVKD HOME SHUTTLE PEW ISO MACHINE, the only low pi iced Lock Stitcn Sewing Mnfhlno fver in vented. Aldrcss JdHNsnx. ( I ARK A CO., Boston, Mass., N. Y. City, or Pittsburgh, Pa. TEA AGENTS wanted In town and country to sell TKA. or get up club orders for the largest Tea Comnanv in America. Importers' priceB and Inducements; to Agents. Rend for circular. A'Ulrrsp. KOliKRT WELLS, 43 Vcsey St., N. Y. P. O. Box, 1287. THE Agents Make $150 & Ovor por Month, soiling our new APS P1CTUUKS, CHRO-JlO-i, &.C., nrw Mnp ofSKW VOHIv STATIC. Send for 1174 Catalogue and boo our now offers. H. C. liltlllOMAN, 6 lUrcluy Street, N. Y. BEST YET ANY I sundiutf us the address of tvn pei-suns with "i 1 1 10 ct s. wih reooivo, ree, a beautiful Chn. mo nitr I instructions now to (fet rich, post-paid Ult I tJitvXivelfv C:i., ma South bth St Phlla, Pa HMIOPiTHfC DOMESTIC MEDICINE. BV LAUUIfc: MeCI,ATCIIKY. The fifth edition within three- years ; Just re ceived. It is the most complete and reliable work In print; 1.0:i7 pages, substantially bound, prico $5, A mahogany case .with complete set of 104 medicines for fl'2. Book and case sent to any pi.rt of the United States and Canada on receipt of $17. N. 13. It saves twice Iib cost iu every lamily with children each year. Address i.UKliitiVK oo TAf L, iiomrco Bhahic Pharmacy, 145 Grand St., New York, liusi- ness established iu lb35. Send for descriptive cir cula r. 3000 WORDS. The Pronouncing Hand-book of Wr rds often Mis pronounced, as niven by the bet-t authorities. DOUl iu any auaitUB on i-hc;iiit o nixiy ci-ius LV.E A SHBPA It l, Boston. THIS PRINTING INK was manufactured by W. D. Wilson & Co., It is for Bale by N. Y. Harpers Umiuiiigal w. v. Nowsapcr Union, lfO Woi 2filb. packaif s. Also a full assortmc nt of .lob li bs nv4.i Htrtat ill 10 ih mill HO! FOR COLORADO! With its glorious climate, matrniflcout scenery. mining reguuiccs, stock growing, fa.im.ntf ana health advantages. Genera) and vpcctal informa tion given free. Addrt aa A. U. PATTEHSON, Fort Collins. Colorado. I often leads to a Fortune. No I to Allrl) inv.'stfil in Wnll.Rf. nK. iij-iiaK'1 puinpmet tree. I Bankers and Brokers, 3y Wall-lit., N. V! THE I 4 UKMS Wanteil for this fefirlflsB bir.k. it xV cunuiriBos Ilia Adventure s am! ExticriGnirs of a Mormon Prophet: dlscluslr.ff all tloit Is tnyBte- a Worn ii written bu herself-Uu- vi:m r tl-o vif.i f loua. wtfkC'l and startling. Full of tlmllit'ir od ventures, humorouB and patnetic scenes : the most fascinating book extant, portrait f.f the Authoress and.of leading Alonuoiis, men and u-oien ; Life nud Scenes i Utah. For C'ronlars, adoiesi HART- FORI) PUIILlSHlSft C O.. Hartford, Conn. AGENT make morn mo.py selling SIL VE1I8' PATK.NT UllOO.M.tllu.l auy other aitlcla. Ono Auent mado 9,1 iu 3 1 days. Hoeommended by .Am. Agricul turist and over 100, OOO families ub iiK them. Circulars free. CIEOft & CO., aiCortlandt Bl 1, Y. WHY Bond 26 cts. with addresses of 6 others and receive postpaid u Fine t'hromo ,7x!) worth NOT. fl.oo and instructions to clear fill day. 1-i.uMB & CO., iuo south Bth St., Phi la., Pa. NEW BOOK. Nothing Like It In Literature AffOutB wanted for Science lu Storv. bv Dr. K. 71. Pooto. Select your terrtiory, Ac Address, Jlur ray HtU Hnhltehing Co.. 129 Kitst th btreet, N. Y. ColoraJo for Invalids ana Tourists. Ita advantages for Couaumrttivea and Asthmat ics, Full particulars givpn free. Addreea, A. U. PATTERSOK, yort Collins, Colorado. 2E"Per Day guaranteed ueinrtwf Orient Safety Lamps, Kutli-ely of Metal, ore tlie only lauipa la use wltivli can neither break, leak, nor explode. Are oi namenf al il t i iia ii. liit to all lioii.elinltl uaesi nl.o to tore, factories, churches, ele. AGENTS MAKE $10 A DAY Selling These Lamps, AGENTS WANTED 111 every county la the United SUUs. -A-idioss WALLACE & SONS, WO Clmiiihei . itr.et,Mew York BOOK of Medical Wonders. Should be read by All. Bent free fnr 2 stnmps. Addriss UK. BONAPARTE, Cincinnati, O. IromntheBlood THE PEEITVIaN . 8YBCP Vitalizes and Knrlches tlie Blood, Tones up the pysu'in.miHaauviu.j llixikeuHlown, Cures IFeuuile Comnialnts, ltyBpt-IlsiiL &o. ThoiiBuniU imva been changed by tha use of tills remedy from weak, elekly, BufferlnL' creatures, to strong, healthy, snd happy men and women; mid invalids cannot reasonably ues'.:.te to pive it a lu:vl, Cait(o. Be sure you smiths right artlelo, 6e that "Peruvian Hyrup la blown in the phtx Painphle'iiree. rk-nd for one. HETll 'W-KOWLK A bOSa, Proprietors, liostua, Maas, 1'ot sale br druggist) generally. Wanted, Persons Who wish to seeurs a permanent business snd make money sb auent, or otherwise, seilius my NEW BTEAM. WAtUBB, so extensively advertised la pave and donble-oane advertisements U00.O00 old), to address for Ctroular snd terms, J, 0. XILTON, Pittsburgh, Pa, $100