Farm Garden and Household, Care of Mlleh Cowl, The hot months are npon ns, and it becomes dairymen to see that their cows nre not suffering from heat or the lack of pure water, two points that re quire special attention. Great heat, if the cows are exposed to it, Rets tip a fevermh condition of the system, and the effect is communicated to the milk. The milk imparts vt to the cheese, which accounts for much of the bad make which we find on the shelves in July and August, in a bad season, as was the summer of 1872 ; less so the past season, which was comparatively cool. The remedy is, shelter from the snn. This but for a few hours in the hottest days, green cut feed being given at such times. This will also encourage the habit, too little practiced, of "baiting" our dairy stock. Clover, corn, and other material may be nsed, and should be used even if it lessen the stock of hay, for in no case should cows be left scant of food, so as to lessen their quantity of milk. It is difficult if not impossible to regain what is lost. The falling off seems to have almost a peculiar, certainly a persistent effect. Every observing dairyman must have noticed this. In many cases, iu a dry time, water becomes scant. Of course stock will suffer from this cause, particularly milch cows. And it often leads to worse tho use of foul or stagnant wa ter, which breeds mischief. Bather drive tho cows in the cool of the day somo distance where good water can be obtained ; or resort to wells anything rather than objectionable water. Some times where there is no lack of good water, stagnant pools occur in the range of the pasture. Cows will some times avail themselves of this. Drain or fence off nil euch spots. Indeed, milch cows should be excluded from all marshy or"; wet land. Its herbage is coarse and sour, and its water unfit to nse. It needs but a few cases of this de scription, or a few careless patrons, to hurt tho whole make of a factory, the guilty parties suffering with the rest, so that it is for their own interests, as well as for the other patrons, to seo that this is remedied. The thing, if traced out, will be found to have more important bearings than it may seem. Correct tho littles, the few instances, and the whole, inoluding the offender, will be benefited. Live Slock Journal. Wheat. It is always well to look out early for the Eocd for a future crop of wheat. It is quite as important for the farmer to seek to improve his grain as his stock. There yet remains as mnch room for improvement in our cereals as in our cattle and horses. There is as much "scrub" grain in the- country as " scrub " stock. Improved stock brings improved prices. An improved cow or bull will, for breeding purposes, bring extraordinary high prices. So will im proved grain for seed. The average yield of wheat per acre, in this State, does not exceed twelve bushels, while, with improved seed and improved cul ture, it might be raised to thirty bush els. There is no law of nature more universally applicable than that " Every plant produces seed after its kind. The best culture possible will not pro dnce superior grain from inferior seed. Every farmer should make a special effort this year to sow better seed than last. Let every grain be full and round. Use the screen, and separate from the seed every little, shriveled grain, and all foreign matter. Let none but the best amt purest grain be sown. It 13 not go-xl husbandry to take your seed wheat from the common stock prepared for the mill or m-rket. Select from the field the patches containing the largest and fullest heads for seed, and thresh and keep separate from the market grain. Do this for tho present, bnt do not rest satisfied with this. There is large room for improvement. The same care that is used in improving stock will improve grain. Select the best heads from your best grain heads that are large, long, and perfectly tilled Sow this seed on ground thoroughly prepared. Though the patch may be small, it will furnish a beginning for improved grain. Follow up this pro cess year after year, and the result will be grain that will compare favorably with the most improved breeds of short iiorns, and will command correspond' ingly high prices. Indiana Farmer. A Scotch Purchase. Here is another Scotchman who did not understand a joke : In the Sheriff's Court, at Aberdeen, William Jamieson, a carter, sued William Walker, a fish dealer, for 20, being the price of a mare which the pursuer alleged the de fender had bought from him. It ap peared that the pursuer had accepted , an offer of " twenty notes" for the ani mal, bnt when the pursuer went to get, as he supposed, his 20, he was disa greeably surprised by the information that it was twenty " knots" on a piece of twine that the defender meant, not twenty bank-notes. The offer was, in fact, as tLe defender explained, simply a joke on his part, the jest consisting in tho play on the word "notes," which, as every one knows, is iu Scot land pronounced " knots." The pur suer, however, instead of being con vulsed with laughter at the joke, took the matter seriously to heart, and with painful earnestness applied to the court to compel the defender to pay him 20. Several witnesses were examined, among others the funny fish-dealer himself, who said he never intended to buy the mare. He had, he added, no use for it, and if left on his hands would not know how to "put on its clothes." The Sheriff gave decree in favor of defender, .with expenses. Tuhe-Drinklug. During these warm days the tempta tion always is to drink more liquid than is best for us. A good way to obviate this, and at the same time to slake the thirst fully, is to take water, lemonade, or iced tea through a small glass tube the smaller the better. By this method the liquid seems to reach the palate more directly, and certainly queuohes the thirst with half the quantity taken after the ordinary manner. You may test this to your satisfaction by using and dispensing with a tube on alternate days. A number of persons of our ac quaintance who have been in the habit of drinking so much water in summer as to render themselves uncomfortable, have tried the tube, and been surprised at the reduced quantity needed, and at the increased satisfaction gained. An old-fashioned " straw" will answer the purpose well enough. Passion and Honesty. He who is passionate and hasty is generally honest. It is your old dissembling bypoorite of whom yu should beware. There's no deoeption in a bull-dog. It is only the our that sneaks np and bites you when jour back is turned. flO.000,000 WASTED. The Derlalon In lha Grant Coal Land StiltTwenty Yaara or Preparation for a Trial Tha Claimant' Adven tures, The great $40,000,000 eoal land law suit of Turnbull against Tardee and others, which baa been pending in Pennsylvania for two years, and which occupied the lawyers twenty years be fore it was in a position to warrant a hearing, has been decided in favor of the defendants, under the provisions of tho Pennsylvania law governing the gaining of title to land by treasurer's deed. The question at stake was the title to several thousand acres of coal land in lower Luzerne oonnty, in possession of the defendants, and claimed by James Turnbull, as the heir of Alexander Turnbull and James Turnbull, Sr. The land is in the heart of the coal fields, and was the property of the Turnbulls, once an influential Philadelphia family, long before it was known that it con cealed untold wealth. The last of the Turnbull family in whom the title vest ed was James, the father of the claim ant. Unconscious of its value, he neg lected to keep the taxes paid, and it was sold at treasurer's sale, as provided by the State statue. It subsequently went to Ario Pardeo, Asa Facker, and other capitalist!). Turnbuil, tho elder, died in Philadelphia before coal was discov ered on his tract. He left a divorced wife and the claimant, then a child. Some time after the decease of his father, young Turnbull went to sea. His mother, being a woman of more than ordinary activity, in 1852 began to inquire about the land her husband had owned, and concluded that her son was the rightful owner. She found a friend in O. H.Wheeler, of Mauch Chunk, who shared her confidence in the just claim of her son. Wheeler recommended an ejectment suit ; but it was first neces sary to find the missing heir, it was twenty years before he gained any clue to Turnbull, and then heard of him by accident at Mazatlan, Mexico. He was summoned to his native land, arriving in Philadelphia early in 1872. Mis career had been one ot danger and hardship. On his first voyage he was shipwrecked. With eight others he floated nine days in an open boat on the ocean. The boat was picked up at sea near the island of St. Thomas. Every inmate was dead except Turnbull. When he recovered from the effects of this voyage he went to Central America, and subsequently, in 1849, to Califor nia, where the gold fever was at its height. Remaining there n year or two, he succeeded in saving considerable money, working in the mines, and ad hering to an early formed resolution to abstain alwavs from strong drink and gambling. From California he went to Mexico, engaging in the construction of a canal at Mnzatlan. While there he was robbed several times, and was once left for dead by a gang of natives who had aRsr.ulted him, with twelve daggers sticking iu his body. On his way from California to Mexico he was blown up by a steamboat explosion, being one of a very few who were saved out of the hundreds on board. He was several times shipwrecked, but lived to sur mount all tho perils about him, and to answer the summons to return home. Since his arrival in this country he has worked faithfully in the prosecu tion of his claim. He takes his great defeat philosophically, and if he does not carry it to higher tribunals, will doubtless again seek new adventures. The Famine In Bengal. A correspondent of the London Daily Telegraph, writing about the famine in Bengal from Mudhobani, says: " Truly the ways of the people in this country are hard to understand ; they seem to set but little value on their lives, as the following tale will show: Hard by the hospitable house of a planter, near Mudhobani, stands a dilapidated native hut ; the planter himself assists the local authorities in distributing charitv in the shape of grain or money to such as seem in want. JJuily in the com' pound of his house rice cooked or plain is served out at a fixed hour to the needy. The hut being, by its propinquity to the house, somewhat of an eyesore, the planter one evening strolled over to it, with a view to en deavoring to make somo arrangements for its removal. No one appeared in answer to his repeated calls, so he en tered the hut and found two women and a little child gaunt, miserable spectres who had lain down to die there. No atom of food was found in the house, no cooking pots, and but tho scantiest rags for clothing. One woman was so reduced that she could not even sit up, while the condition of the child was very terrible. These peo pie, in the midst of plenty, with whole some food at their very doors, so to speak, were actually, for no earthly reason, dying of starvation. No caste prejudices prevented them from ao ceptmg government charity, and yet there they were, living skeletons, too careless even to walk one hundred yards to get their daily food rescued from their self-imposed fate by the merest chance. Had not tho Indian government embarked on its errand of mercy in time, how many hundreds of thousands would have perished an complainingly and uncounted 1" Disaster by Flood. The great destruction of life and property by the storm at Pittsburgh is alone sufficient to rank the evrnt among extraordinary occurrences.- In tropical regions, and on vast plains like those of the West, the occurrence of a destructive hurricane in which wind, rain and hail unite in inflicting damage, can scarcely be called unusual. JNor is it a matter for the greatest sur prise when a city built beside a river is more or less involved in destruction by that river's sudden overflow. Least of all is there any reason for surprise when villages that nestle near the base oi an imperfectly constructed reservoir, are swept away when the pent-up waters burst their barriers. The force of a hurricane is accumulated over wide extent of sea or plain, usually tasing tue iorm oi a cyclone, and ao quiring intensity with the increasing speed of its rotary motion. The flood that raises a river above its banks or bursts the bounds of a reservoir, is the accumulated rain that has fallen over a large district. But no such explana tion seems fully applicable in the case oi iritisuurgn and Allegheny uity, Situated in the midst of an amphi theater formed by balf-enoiroling mountains, these cities appear to have beon whelmed in the torrents from a simple rain storm ; and the wonder is that the volume of water thus suddenly Eoured down their streets should have een sufficient to sweep away so many Duuaings and in met euch loss ox life, Why do women talk less in February than in any other month ? Because it la the shortest month in the year. THE BOY-MURDERER. Conf euton of Hla Laet Crime A Hhccklng Tale ot Thirst for Innocent Blood. Jesse Poraaroy, the Boston boy-murderer, has confessed that he murdered little Horace Milieu. Ha says that on the morning ef the 22d of April he arose early and went to the store and afterwards to the city, returning home about nine o'clook. He remained at the store until half -past eleven olclock, when he told his mother that be was going to the city. She gave her per mission and he went over to his mother's house, where ho remained a few memenls and then started for the city proper. He, however, went np Dorchester avenue to Eight street, where he saw the little Millen boy, and im mediately his evil passion got posses sion of him, and ho determined to tor ture him, if not kill him. He asked the boy if he wonld like to see the steamer and the boy said he would, and both started off in the direction of the marsh. When they arrived at the spot where the body was subsequently found Jesse told Millen to lie down, and the little follow, not suspecting his danger, did so. The young fiend then immediately sprang upon him, pressed his left hand over tho little fellow's mouth to stop his outcries, and then, with the same jnck-knifo that a month before he had used to murder Katie Curran, the monBter deliberately out the throat of the little boy that had so implicitly trusted him. The child struggled fearfully, and the murderer, desperate at his failure in not killing him at the first blow, stabbed him re peatedly in the bowels and chest. He mutilated the body in a frightful inan ner, but does not know, as he says, to what extent. He Una II v loft his victim in a dying condition. He cleaned his knife and person, and then took a car for Boston proper, going to the Com mon, where he remained some time,and then returned home. The young murderer gives the same reason for committing this deed that he did for killing Katie Curran that he couldn t help it. lie had no intention of killing any one up to the time of meeting tho Milieu boy, and then the horrible plan entered his head on the instant. He says conscience or some thing would turn him back after he had started, and he would leave the boy where he had found him, but something seemed to draw him on, and he had to go. The confession was told in the same cool maimer as the story of the murder of Katie Curran. Jesse further stated that he made the confession not because it gave him pleasure, but be' cause he feared his mother, brother, or some one else might be suspected. Hanging a Boy. Lynching a boy eighteen years of age for any crime is a barbarous business. The St. Joseph. Mo.. Herald describes the murder of the boy James Boss, who had been arrested for making free witu the steeds of the farmers in that vicin ity. Boss, in the custody of an officer, was on his way to lau, when he was seized, in spite of the constable's re monstrances, by a mob of armed men, ltesistance was useless. Boss was dragged from his horse and taken into " the timber. Then, for the first time, this boy seemed to comprehend the awful fate which awaited him. He shook with fear and cried for mercy, With ono end of the rope about his neck, he burst into tears ; he admitted that he had stolen horses ; but then he added piteously that " he was a mere boy, and wanted time to reform." The only answer to this was the stern warn iug that he " had but five minutes left;" and four stout men significantly took hold o the rope. The lad was so agitated that he would have fallen to the groufcd if he had not been support ed. Then he rallied again, and again besought mercy. He might aj well have spoken to the deaf. Then came " silence for a moment, broaen only by the tick of the watch in the spokes man's hand. There was no pity in their rigid faces. The shadows of night were gathering, and only a minute re mamed to him, when the boy began to pray, although in a tone so low that his words were indistinguishable. Then came from the executioner the cry of ' lime s up ; aud after the single ex clamation, " O, my God 1" the body of the young horse thief was dangling ten feet from the ground. His hands were thrown wildly up to catch the rope, but a moment after they dropped lifeless on each side, and the boy horse thief was dead. The executioners mounted their horses and rode rapidly away. leaving the corpse there alone with the night. Killed by a Rattlesnake. A. S. Heep and some friends started out with a view to examine some land to determine its adaptability for grazing purposes. They had traveled some dis tance, when their attention was aroused by a sharp, whirring noise. Not being acquainted with tho sound of a rattle' snake s warning, the party kept ad vancing, and only stopped when the venomous reptile, which was coiled and secreted in a dense tuft of dry grass and weeds, sprang forth and buried its poisoned, death-bearing fangs clear through the woolen clothes Heep wore, into the main artery of his left leg, just above the Knee, iuvolun tarily, as he felt the pain of the bite of the snake, he leaned forward to ex amine the wound, and as he did so, the reptile, which had again coiled up sprang forward and struck him on the right cheek, about an inch below the eye. By this time his friends came forward and soon despatched the rep tile. No remedies were at hand. Bapidly the deadly poison diffused it self through his veins : his limbs- aud body began to swell ; the pupils of his eyes to distend, and soon he was in the throes of death. He died in twenty minutes after teing bitten, Fresno (Cat.) Expositor. The Cholera. Dr. McClellan, of the TT;t,..i ui.. A 1,00 Y.. , ,7J; , . staust cs snowing was during tne mb. year tne cuoiera maae us appearance ana gamea aiooinoia in mre emin area places in the United States. He pur- poses visiting every place visited by the dreadful euidemio, which appears to have its principal hold in Tennessee. The special object of bis journey is to asoertain the causes which render the disease epidemics, and when he shall have gathered all the facts together, he is to make a report npon the subject with such sanitary suggestions as he may deem proper. An English Dinner The Danbury man says : " One English dinner, taken at eight o'clock at night, in the inexperienced American stomach will produce that night twelve cross-eyed lions; eight bears, with calico tails eleven giants, with illuminated heads ; one awful dog, with twelve legs, and fourteen bow-legged ruffians chased by a host oi piratical cauliflowers, mounted on saddles oi Deef, roasted.' NEWS OP THE DAT. A total estimate for the damage Inflicted by grasshoppers that appears to be approximately eorreet In, for value of crops destroyed In Minnesota, S.000,000) in Iowa, 2,600,000. About 4,000 persons in both States will require help to Ilia total extent of aoout 1 900, 000 The London, Timet dispatch from India Bay the prospects of the crops are most favorable, notwithstanding the recent floods. Many deaths from cholora are reported in Burdwan ...Gorman Journals say tbat war between Ittissia and China Is inevitable in consequences of designs of the latter npon Kasbgar A special dispatch to the London Daily S'ewi reports tbat tho destruction of property by the floods in Moravia is immense. At least 200 houses have been swept away A dispatch from Vienna announces the death, in the Austrian capital, of Anselm Kothcliild, the eminent financier and bankor. Ilia life history was about tho same as that of tho other mem bors of tbe family, lie was industrious, honest and frugal, and became, iu consequence, a man of mark on 'Change. .The quarantine physician at Ponsacola has reported that a majority of the cases of Bupposcd yellow fever which have occurred at tbat port were iu reality attacks of CliagrcBB fever It is difficult to conceive of a calamity more distressing than tbat which occurred in Pittsburgh, Pa. It was one of those events which caunot be for neon, and which no human caro can guard against. A euddon fall of raiu iu Buch quantities aa to flood the atreotB, burnt the sewerB, and fill tho neighboring streams until they bocomo de structive torronts, sweeping through a thickly peopled city aud carrying death and ruin in their path, is something the like of which, happily does not often fall to the journals of our couutry to record. A terrible thunder Btorm passed over Sarnia, Out , from 1 to 3 o'clock in the morning. A number of bouses and barns were struck by lightning. , Tho Presbyterian Church was also struck aud badly damaged. The streets were flooded with water and many sidewalks carried away. Reports from various places iu this section indicate that the storm was of a most Bevoro character, and the loss of property very heavy An incendiary plot was discovered at 219 North Clark street, Chicago. A lighted candle was found in the midst of a pile of kindling wood, which was saturated with kero sene Forty-one Carlists, most of them ecolesiastics or members of the nobility, have been arrested at Barcelona, by way of reprisal against tho inhuman conduct of tho Carlists. The Carlists have again been beaten by the Hopublican troops, and have sustained vory heavy losses. Two companies of Carlists who refused to surrender wero cut to pieces The Committee of the Agricultural Laborers' Union iu England, have adopted a resolution declaring " that aB we are not Justified in appealing to the public for support for the locked-ont laborers, in the eastern counties during the harvest, therefore wo offer thorn the alternative of emigrating or depending on their own resources." The committee is negotiating for easier terms of emigratiou to Canada A epeaial dispatch from Vieuna, giving an account of a storm in Moravia, says that the town of Azagra was overwhelmed by a torrent; sixty-four bouses were demolished, and a few of the inhabitants escaped with their lives. The railways wore badly damaged every direction. Moravia is a province of the Austrian empire, bounded by Galicia, Hungary, AuBtria, Bohemia, and Silesia. It is almost surrounded by mountains, and, lying as it does in the basin of the Danube, its Btorms are very destructive. Roping In the Grasshoppers. The people in the counties which I have visited, writes a correspondent of the Tribune, made little effort to drive the grasshoppers away, but the farm ers of Nobles county gave them no rest from the time they discovered them upon their fields until they took their flight, and the result is the prospect of saving at least four times as much grain as they otherwise would have gathered. One of the most effectual means em ployed was to "rope " the fields that ia, to hitch each end of a rope 200 feet long to a horse and drag it over the gram. This disturbed the " hoppers and brushed many of them eff of the heads of the grain upon the ground, where they would remain until the swarm got ready to ny and doing little damage. Others would return to their work of destruction, but would be al lowed to remain but a few minutes be fore they were again disturbed. This roping was continued until tne locusts beoame disgusted and!flow away 1 saw to-day two helda of wheat with only a ten-foot road between tnem. lie fore the grasshoppers came, one prom ised equally as well as the other. The pests alighted on both fields at the same time, and one was roped while the other was not. The former will yet yield from 10 to 15 bushels to an acre ; ttie latter is not worm Harvesting. Some farmers found smoking very effec tual. When the grasshoppers were fly ing, they placed damp prairio grass on the windward side of their fields and set fire to it. The grasshoppers either did not alight, or if they did, did not stay long. But this was not always successful. A farmer in a county east of here who tried it told me that, at first he thought the "hoppers" about to leave ; lie went away for a fresh load of grass, and when he came baek he found the rascals roosting on tne fence and warming their feet by his fires." After that, the hotter he made the fires and the denser the smoke the better they seemed to like it. The Chicago Times boasts that that oity has the finest assortment of ruins in tne world. Just Taken Ills Dltters. We heard a seedy-looking individual with an alarmingly red nose remark to a brother soaker that ne had "lust bad his bitters, but he did not mind taking another nip. His remark sug gested a train of reflection. 11 ow was it, we asked ourselves, that the word bitters had grown to be a synonym hni; Jt;mior,iL 'nrViinh if. an I .. . r . " .". f plied indiscriminately, letters, we masoned, suggested the ideaof a health ful tonio n-ot of a poisonous stimu. lant . something invigorating to the By8tem, not an alooholio irritant, full of fusel oil. produoing present intoxi cation and ultimate insanity, idiooy, or premature death. Moreover, our idea of bitters was totally irreconcilable with " gin cocktails," " rum punches," and "biandy smashes," which, we are in formed, are sweetened with sugar, and rendered doubly injurious with essences colored by means of mineral poison. This was bitter-sweet with a vengeance, We mentioned this problem to a friend, He solved it bv exclaiming: "Why, don't you know that most of these bit ters advertised as remedies are only drams in disguise f Topers know it, if I you do not. I must make one excep tion, however." lie added, " and that'i Db. Walker's California Vinegar Bitters ; there isn't a particle of alco hol or fermented liquor in it, and it is the best vegetable tonio and alterative la Amenoft," Com. A teacher asked an advanced school girl why beer in French was feminine. She replied that it was probably owing to the faot that the boys liked it so well. Every man in buying a paper collar wants to cnt as near an imitation of linen as possible. The only collars that look like linen are tne Kimwooa ana warwicK. mis is mn only In the folded edges but in the finish.-Com. Dr. ricrce'g Favorite Prescription Is very strongly rcoommendod by the Medical f aculty, ana is largely prescnoea among meir Female Pationts. It is worthy of all confidence, aa may be seen from the following testimonials: Dr. u. u. unapman, riattnmoutti, nod., writes t I have under treatment a' lady, who, for tho past seven years has been aflliotod, and. after trying several physioians without receiving benefit, is gaining rapidly on your Favorite l'rcscnptlon. Atlanta, 111., July 14lh, 1872. Db. It. V. riF.ncK. Buffalo. N. Y. Dear Sir I I have not words to express ray gratitude to vnn fnr vnnr arlvinA fmri ftHRintftncn in tnv case. There is not one who has used your medicines Bince thev bave beon brought here, bnt that can say with me they bave beon greatly bene- ntod. hi i ice i nave been so neipeu uy its nse, six or seven around me left off doctors and other medicines, and now use it in their fami lies, after being cured of the same disease as mine. You do not know what a wonder it created in our city. iy its restoring my Bister I wrote yon about, for she lias been under the care of three of our best doctors, but could not sit up but for a few minutes at one time. I begged of her to try your medicines, and bofore she had UBed half the bottles she could go all around the yard, and has now Just oorao home from a visit five miles away. Mns. Thomas MoFAni-AND. From Miss Lorinda E. St. Clair, Bliade, Athens Co.. Ohio. Oct. 14. 1872 t Dn. It. V. TiEncE, Buffalo, N. Y. Your Favorite Prescription is working almost like a miracle on me. I am bettor already than I have been for over two years. From Ella A. Bchafer, ZancBvillo, Ind., August 8. 187a : Da. 1'iehce! I received the medicine you sent me, and began using it immediately. As a result of the treatment I feel better than I have for three vears. From Mrs. John K. Ilamlim, Odoll, IU, March l. Wii : Db. Piekce: The Favorite Prescription has done me enod. which 1 am very tuanmui lor. Favorite FrexcriDtion is sold bv all dratrrists. Dr. Tierce's Treatise on Chronio Diseases of Women will be Bent to any address on receipt of two stamps. r?nm. Not Unite So Fast, Dir. Joiieal A hone- doctor in Philadelphia was caught changing tta celebrated Mexican Mustaho Liximeht into other bottles, and tiling It aa hla cwn recipe, naneaty Is always the beat poller. Those medicine men like to follow tip each fellows. It cured the lame ono all the same; bat.lt damaged the Doctor's reputation, end benefited the proprietor lu pro ortlon. We have heard of many Rheumatic poraona and lame bonel being cured by the Mrs tano LmiusTT that we ad viae every housekeeper liveryman and planter to Invest In a 60 ct. or 11.00 'ittle, against accident. Beware of counterfelta It la wrapped In a stool engraving, signed ' O. W. thrnnk. Chemist." The Ladles' Sorosle Club, of New York, ire cenlly changed their diacnastons from Woman's uffrage to Hair preparations and Pimple Banish- era. They declarod that where nature had not endowed them with beauty, it was their right yea, their duty to aeeklt where they conll. So they voted that Magnolia. Balm overcame Sallow- eaa, Bough Skin and Rlngmarka, and gave to the .implexlon a most distingue (Soroalau) and mar ble-like appearance (dangeroae to men, no doubt) and that Lyon's Kathaiboh made the hair grow thick, foft ana awlul pretty, and moreover pre vented It from turning gray. If the proprietors of theae articles did not aend the slaters an Invoice, they are not amart. The Great Revolution is Medical Treat mf.ht, which waa eommonced in lsoo, la still In progress. Nothing an atop It, for It Is founded oa the principle, now universally acknowledged, that physical vigor Is the moat formidable antagonist of all human ailmenta, and experience haa ahown that Pla.ttatiok Bitters la a peerleaa lnvlgorant, as well aa the best posalbleaafeguard agalnat plriemln riiaoaaea. , CtllLDBKN OFTEN JL.OOK PAL.E AN SICK from r-o other oanit than having worms Is the stomach. BCOWK'3 VSBMIVUQB COMFITS will destroy worms without Injury to the ohild, being perfectly WHITB, and freo from all coloring or other injurious Ingredients usually nsed In worm preparations. CU&TIS A BROWN, Proprietors, Ho. Ills Pulton Street, Mew York. Kik'tf fttj Druoaista and Chemists and dealers, TT-!Ie nWT a Box. HOUSEHOLD Wnjr will You Suffer 1 PANACEA AND FAMILY LINI1IEXT. To all psrsoni suffering from Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Cramps In the limbs or stom ach, BlUons Cello, Fain In the baok, bowels or side, we would aay Thb Household Pasaoba aitd Family Lmif bbtt la of all others the remedy you want HOUSEHOLD PANACEA AND FAMILY LINIMENT. for Internal and external-use It has cured the above coir, plaints In thousands of casei. There Is no mistake about It Try It. Hold by all Drnffglata. I'll IU. IB VKAKS' JfiXPtUlilKNClu O AN OLD NCRSK. KltS. WIN BLOW'S SOOTHING BYRUP IB TUI PRESCRIPTION OF one of the best Female Physi cians and Nnrses In the United States, and has been used for thirty years with never falling safety and sncceas by millions o mothers and children irom the feoble Infant of one week old to the adnli It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind colic, regulates the bowels, and gives rest, health and comfort to mother and child. We believe It U ba the Bnit and Surest Remedy In the World In all caoeaof DYBBNTKKY and DIARRHtBA IN CHtb- Urtlfl, whether It arises irom Teeming or irom any other cause. Full directions tor using win ac oompany each bottle. None Genuine nnleas tht tac-simile of OCBTIS A PBRK1NS Is on the outsldt wrapper. BOLD BT ALL BlBDIOINS DBALBRS. The Markets. NEW TOBB. BmfOatUe Prime to Extra .HWa .12V Common to good Texaua 08 a .lis Inferior Texaua na .11 Milch Oowa 0.00 aTS.OO Hogs Live 06's .Ofi uresaea .vn,a .uhm Bneen .Cava .06 Cotton Middling 17,a M xiour r;xira v eeieru. ...... .. o.u ao.no Bute Extra e ss c.o? a 1.32 a 1.30 a .98 a l.fift a .71 a .80 a2H.no al8.oo a .ley S21.6U Wheat Red Western 1.31 Ho. 2 Bprliig 1.29 Rye .96 l.M .71 .'9 14.1,0 8.00 .08 21.00 Barley Man Oats Mixed Western Corn Mixed Western , Hay per ton Straw per ton HOPS .. IBB, .AOSOU DVB Pork Mess Lard .13a aOSBenued MX .12 .86 .27 .20 .19 .32), .13 .09 .11 .24 Petroleum Crude 06 Butter Btate si a Ohio Fine Yellow Western Ordinary Pennsylvania fine. .25 .19 a IT a .si a .12 V a .of a Cheese Utate Factory " bainunea Ohio Eggs 8tate ALBANY. wheat Bye Btate Corn Mixed Barley Btate Oats BUte BorrALO. .31 1.65 l.2 .to l.S .68 a 1.66 a l.ia .80 a 1.90 .68 Flour... (M 6.7S Wheat No. 3 Spring Corn Oats.... Ky Barley Lard BALTIMOBB. Cotton Low Middlings Flour Extra Wheat Corn Yellow..... OaU.... 1.23j,a 1.24 .71 a .71 .61 .61 1.10 a 1.10 1.90 a 2.00 .12 a .12X .18)fa .18 i.ou a B.UU 1.35 .83 .65 a 1.42 .83 .68 FHtXASBLrEOA. Flour Penn. Extra C M Wheat Western Bed 1.11 Corn Yellow .61 7 25 a 1.29 a .84 a .82 Mixed 81 Petroleum Crude. .WyaWKBeflnedU AOBNTS WANTUU FOR Prof. FOWLER'S GREAT WORK On Manhood, Womanhood and their Mutual Inter-relations; Love, Its Laws, rower, ete. Aiieitts are selllne; from 13 to 145 coiea a day, Send for apdolmen p. gee and terms to agents and see wny it err ra.itir n.n any niner ofiom. Aa dress, NATIONAL rUBLlpnlHU) CO.. f nils., Pa. A 1 T7 TAT f PC )u0 per eent. Bioftt, Addrees A. VH As jl u . v. uarausr, seuevuw, n, I Money Making fCmnloytnrnt. offered Addreaa, M. M LuVBLL, neat ever Brie, Pa. ADVS RTISKRS I Am. Newspaper Union rrpre eema over l.ftOO panera, divided IntoTauortt- yiaiona. Send 8-cent stamp fr map ahnwlng oca tlon of panera, with combined and aeparate Hate, nnm'B r r com oi -nvertiatng, Ainreaa r. HANROBM, US Monroe Street, Chicano, ill. "7iDimi8 nvniTCTomrm. A Powerful Price. 6.00, Bend fur Circular. a i-.icctrioal Hnociina co-i, THE Agents Make 8150 & Over per Month selling our new HAPS, PICTURES, ClinO H(IS,f.,nw Map of NRW VOHK MTATJ3. Bond for 1874 Catalogue an see onr new offers. K. C. BRIOOMAN, 6 Barolay street, K. T. BEST YET 4tR P $9fa per day at home. Trms Free. Ad's H- f u jeo. Btinaon at Co., Portland, Maine. Ok,' PKIt DAY Commlsalon nr AUO a week Salary and expenses. We ofler It and will pay It. Apply now. 6, WlBBBa A Co., Marlon.Q. BTHII'S o Pookot Photoscope, Bakfla&QaHl Hftl CTfl&tMAOrTirTTNa cower, tin ftd far rtetertlno Connterf )lt Mutiny, Bhoddf In Cloth, forettm sub ii-Dcei in mm r.ye, in w.iunai, oio.,ana io examine Insecti, Flowerg unrt PUnti, to detect flaws in Metals, flnonnisof wood-grain i to decipher writ its otherwise llleiitble: and for the Inmmrtlnn of (Train, minora, eta. Uieful for erery body. Double Con Tex Lena, 1 1-2 inches tn diameter. Mounted In leather, anil carried In the vest pocket. Price AO Centn. two for 91 free by mail. Aobnts Wamtxd. Illustrated Cliculars ann terms free. Addreig M h. BYRS, P. O. Bfx4,Wi9, New York. Office, He. 4fl NafmAn Htreet fltatn whete yon saw this. iirbUaLH-Hii THE NEW IMPROVED REMINGTON Sewing Machine. AWARDED The Medal for Progress," AT VIENNA, 18T3. Tbb Highest Ohffr ov" Meoal" Awabdbd ai TUB SXPOBITIOB. Ao Sewing ifachine Received a Higher Prist. A FEW GOOD HEASONSl 1. A Aew Invention Thobocohlt Txstxo and secured by Letters Patent. a. Makes a perfect lick stitch, alike on bot Bldea, on ail kinds of goodt. 3. Runs Lioht, Smooth, Noiseless and Rapid heat combination of qualities. 4-. PrRAnLK Rune for Yeart w.thout Bopalrs. a. Will do all varieties of Work and i'aney Stitching In a suporlor manner, O. Is Most Easily Managed by the operator. Length of atitch may be altored while ruunlns;, and machine can bs threaded without paaaing thread through holoe. 7. Des1gn Simple, Ingenious, J&egant, forming the stitch without the uae of Cog Wheel Gears, Rotary Came or Lever Arms. Baa the Automatic Drop Feed, which insure uniform length of stitch at any speed. Has our new Thread Controller, which allows easy movement of needle-bar and prevents injury to thread, 8. Construction most careftd and ytnibheo. It la manufactured by the meat skillful and experi enced mechanira, at the celebrated Remington Armory, lllnil, IV. Y. New York Oilier, No. O. Plndlann Scinnre, (Kurtz's Ilullil lllg.) BRANCH OFFICES! U83 State St., Chicago, III. '470 Superior St., Cleveland, O. IMI Knurl li St., Cliiclnnntl, O. 406 Main St., BulT.ilo, N. Y. iit Washington St., Boston, Mass. 810 Chestnut St, Philadelphia, Pa. t 80 Sixth St., Pitts burgh, Pa. 1)enimy I vnnln Military Araderur.Chf ater Pa. Opens Wednesday, Rppt. Uth. Couisaol Studies, extensive Civil and Mechanical Kn. inter lng. The Classics and Bnglisn thotoughly taught. Fur circulars epply to Col. Tneo. Hyatt. President. SDoatlB reft pnict-UBT RK.DEDERICK &CO . ALBANYN.Y ASS hilt two T0N bales either hay or Pi cotton without tramp- t i ids or stopping. Thirty bales of hay per hour. Twenty Da;es or cotton per hour. 'pcrpeiualbaikis mn RICH FARMING LANDS IN NEBRASKA, NOW FOR SALE VERY CHEAP. Ten Tears Crodit, Interest Only 6 Per Cent Send for " The Pioneer," A handsome llliistrard paper, enntatninff the Homestead Law. a NEW NUMBER Ju-t publish ed, alailod freo to all parts ot the world. Adrtrcss, O. F. DAVIfl, Land Commissioner, U P. B. B Omaita.Neb. EAT TO LIVE." F. E. SMITH A CO.'S WHITE WHEAT. Atlnntift Mill. Tlrooklvn. N. Y.. i the Perfection of Pood. Wholesome, Delicious and Kco- nointcitl Miikt'i a variety ot (mlies. t or children ami invaluls, enperisilty the DvFpeptic, it is unequalled. P U by till Grocers. Hpscriptiv" Pninnhlem, with valu thle uifurmutiou mi Kooil and Health eut free. BEST IN THE WORLD. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS Tir'i'XriT'V Eislly made by aelllng TEAS a iTlAJAl till. 1MPORTKMS' PRICES or ftalttri up Clubs In Towu and Country, for the cl 1 at Tea Co. In America. Greatest Inducements. I end t"r circular. CANTON TKA ( O., 148 Cnambere Bt., N.T kf IT rSRSPV t7 "la comrade, D. W. Peters, IMI VHnoiill. s tbe only Authentic and Authorised T tfo puniuiiea ; GIIO p&ues 1 beau ttfnlly illustrated. Aget-ts wanted eicrywhtre 90,(00 alresdy sold Circulars 1 1 all our wuiks free Address T'USTIN, OI..HAN A CO., Hiirtf.irn. Conn ofMedical Wonders. Should be read by all Bent free for Si stamps. Addrcaa BR. BONAPABTK, Cincinnati. O. WATERS' CONCERTO ORGANS Are ibi) molt beautiful in iiryle and erfct iu lone ner uiaile. Th t O.VCKIl TO Bjl'OP la the bt.t ever ilHceil In any Oiian. It Is produced by an extra set of recti, peculiarly vnlcfl. thn hi v k r T t.e which i. rfi'fi CIIAIOIIXU and tOUI.-sllKKlXi. nhili in mii iiiu.l I tne VUICHS Is SIIPKKH. Terms Liberal. WATERS' Philharmonic Vesper and Orchestral ORGANS In t'MUlU Fit h. INC II CAK, are among the lifat mil INU with P Itl.Oi ne, ai-a comniiie ruKITt vt VOIC- lurenr volume of lone. Suitable for WATERS' NEW SCALE PIANOS Hve great pi.wer and a flue aInaliiK feme. li. I lllilll nor intsiu as ALL. wttn nil modem Imurovtnienu, audare the BUST 1'IAIVOS IIIAI1K. Theae UrtTane and Plxios are warranted for O yeara. HltlCKsl K.X VlllCNil.LV LOW f r cavil, or part caarl au bnlance in monthly or auarterlv .v. menu. BecoiKl-haii.t Instruments taken Colin cllfcco SchixAi Ma-let. IIOKACK WA & bON. tl Breadwsy,nwYork. l.o Hox 3H6T A llomeliold without Tabea.vt'1 Biltsi Apee;bht wtthtu reach, Ufki aa important aafe guaru cf her l'h and life. A few doift of thtt aland ard remedy ff indtneitioii, couetiptHou and bll- lousneie. relieve every dUtreeetijg tymptom and prevent dangerous eoueequeuoea. Fur taie by the iium v rug ui, HO! FOR COLORADO Wtthltt glorious climate, magnificent aoenen mining resources, stock growing, farming aut health advantages. General and upeclal Inform tion given free. Address U. riTlKEBOH, Fori MIUlUli VUlUlBUUt sTi -9ST.EAI.KB HAT I I'l IIBIIMI ll n, ifl'.rilm BUY J. & P. COATS' BLACK THREAD for mr MAflHM Hr.J. Walker's California Vin egar Bitters are a purely Vpgetable preparation, made chiefly from the na tive herbs fonnd on tho lower ranpen ot the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, the medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked, " What is tho causo of the unparalleled success of Vinegar Bit TERSt" Our answer is, that they remove the caxise of disease, and tho patient re covers his health. They are tho great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Iionovator aud Invigorator of the system. Never before in the history of tho world lias a mediuino been rompounded possessing tho rcmnrkable iraa,litica of Vinegar Bitters hi healing tha sick of every disease niun is heir to. They are a gentle Purgative) a well as a Totuo, rolioving Congest ion or Inflammation oi the Liver and Viscera! Organs, in Hiliour Diseases. The properties of Dn. Walker's VlKKOAR UiTTKns are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Dinrefo, Sedative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Altera tive, and Anti-Iiilious. Grateful Thousands proclaim Vin egar Bitters the most wonderful In vigorant that ever sustained th sinking system. No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not do Btroyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. Bilious. Remittent and Inter mittent Fevers, which aro 60 preva lent in tho valleys of our great rivers throughout tho United States, especially those of tho Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro anoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our tntiro country during tho Summer and Autumn, and remarkably eo during sea sons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive de rangements of tho stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow erful influcnco upon theso various or gans, is essentially necessary. Thcro is no cathartic for tho purposo equal to Dr. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitters, as they will speedily remove tho dark colored viscid matter with which tho bowels aro loaded, at tho eamo time stimulating tho secretions of tho liver, and generally restoring tho healthy functions of tho digestive organs. Fortify tho hody against disease by purifying all it3 Uuids with Vixegar Bitters. No epidemic can tako hold of a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or indigestion, Head ache, Pain in tho Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of tho Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in tho Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpita tation of tho Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in tho region of tho Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symp toms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise ment. Scrofula, or King's Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial A flections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Soro Eyes, etc. In these, as in all other constitutional Dis eases, Walker's Vinegar Bitters have shown their great curative powers iu tho most obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, theso Bitters have no cmiul. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases. Persons en gaged in Paiuts and Minerals, such as I'lumucrs, Type-setters, uoiu-uoat,ors, ana Minors, as they advanco in life, are subject . to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a doso of W ALKEtt s Vin egar liiTTERS occasionally. For skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tet ter, Salt-ltheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, King-worms, Scald-head, Soro Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever nans or nature, ava literally dug up aud carried out of tho system in a short time by tbe use of those Bitters. Fin. Tane. and other Worms. larking in the system of so many thousands, are eflectually destroyed and removed. No system of nicdiciuo, no vermifuges, no an- inoimiuitlcs will tree the system aom worms like these Bitters. i or Female Commaints. in younz or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo manhood, or the turn ot ale, these Tonio liitters display so decided an lulluence that improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when ever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul ; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. it. h. Mcdonald Si co Dragfrlate and Gon. A gta., Sun Francisoo, California, and cor. of Washington and Charlton Kta., N. Y. Sold by all DruggUt and Dealer. N. Y. N g o. SI Coloratlo for luvaliOs ana Tourists. Itl o.fjnU(rea for Conaumptlrei ac4 Aathmkt iCa. nil particular irlvrn free. Addreaa, a. II. PATTERSON, yort Colima. Colorado. ADVERTISERS I Send !4 eta. to GEO. P. ROW. ELU A CO., 41 Park Bow, New York. f'ir tkjr famyldet of Viu pages, containing Halt cf aouO new, . p.pura.auq eatimat. a aUowliw coat of artyertiaing GENTS WANTED FOR Bf Mr.. T. J. H. bunhou... for 2 S Je.r. wife ol a Uor. Hit&.Prleit. Willi .a totrouuilioo b, UarrlH I Beacher Stowe. T ye.n .a to. auiLur wrot. . v..vux. ,u riu)siDj uico ticlbKl ma Mormon ''i.P.f " "" ''"" r o ril a In ...ft aa ui .ed her l. accept le challenge, bbe did ao, aud T m 1 1 ! ill u the mill. It ! a wor of eitrinrdloarr In,...,". .', , IS tartUnf raeelatioai. truthful, bold, aud (ood lae ex. oooi . tk,..Mlj,o ...r written bj a rea I Jformoa woman. Yh. .torr J r r -f --. . . . u . , , i iu, mo.i DODUl.F boon .tot Mid by agenu, ouuellm, all othen taru to one It takea ilka wlldr.. C3-1U0.0UO (U I. Kid. , J' par. aoura ror mm or woman (3 a mouthea.il. mada. Our DucriptivpamphUt. terms, it., .0,1 fr to au I "tn Itnvethit. Addreea A. D. WOltTHIhOTON A (JO.. UarUord Cu Agent wanted. -Men or women. 134 a weak er 100 forfeited. Valuable a,..,J.. fZZl " 3..?Fj atones to R. M. itanen. ii.k.k c... r.:. Bend is centa and the and re. a if fire ner aout and receive by mall a Be.umul CuVo. ano, ...e 7 by -w rtu i.6ja"d full fUT NOT Plumb A Co., uooumnetn at., i-nila., Pa