The Elk County advocate. (Ridgway, Pa.) 1868-1883, April 08, 1875, Image 4

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    FARM, GARDEN AM) HOUSEHOLD.
Prr. ct'c-nl Hints for I lie Fnrma
The whole grans question, anil a great
many othor questions, nre tmmmnd up in
the aphorism put in the mouth of an old
farmer: No grnss, no cattle ; no cattle,
no manure ; no manure, no crops ; no
crops, no furmcrs j no farmers, no noth
ing. A correspondent of the Jvaniaa Farm
r r says a large hog breeder in Illinois in
forms him that ho lias produced eleven
pounds of pork from a bushel of corn,
and seventeen pounds from a bushel of
wheat. He grinds tho wheat, pours
boiling water over it nud allows it to
stand Borne hours.
J. N. Sturtevant gave a whole lecture
in a few words when ho said: A mowing
machine is an extravagance for him who
is sparing of oil, or doos not keep the
nuts tight. The scythe is more economi
cal, lint when a man has a tit training
to manage the mower the value of it is
very great. So when persons adopt an
intelligent way of keeping cattle,
they will bo appreciative of thorough
bred cattle, and they will be profitable to
them, when not purchased at too high a
price.
There is n great difference of opinion
as to the value of tan as a mulch. A re
cent writer cites several instances in
which upon fruits and vegetables its
effects were disastrous. Several market
gardeners near Paris lost all their winter
lettuce by covering the beds with tan.
Auy ill result must be duo to tho fact
that tho bark was not thoroughly ex
hausted. When tho soluble matter is all
extracted from it the effect of tho tan can
only be a mechanical one. Where there
are such different experiences it will be
Bafe to expose the ton to the action of
rains some months before using it.
In selecting buds for propagating the
peach, I would not give much preference
to single, double, or triple buds, believ
ing that the single buds start the soonest
in the spring, the double buds the surest.
And in budding from yearly trees there
is not much but single buds, unless we
use very large buds. I prefer to have
bud-sticks just a little smaller than the
stocks, without regard to whether the
buds be single or otherwise. In propa
gating from bearing trees I find it best
to us e triplicate buds, as then there is al
ways wood as well as fruit buds. For a
budder that can tell fruit and wood
buds apart it will make no practical
difference, so far as my observations ex
tend. Wherever organic matter abounds iu
the soil a free use of bones and potash
will speedily restore it to its original fer
tility. Iu sandy soils organic matter iu
the form of peat, muck, or leaf mold
should bo combined with tho bones and
potash. The finer the bones are ground
the more speedy their action. If the
bones are ground in a raw state, that is,
without steaming or burning, and ground
very fine and mixed with three times
their weight of fine muck or peat or leaf
mold, and kept moist for three weeks
before being used, they will generate all
the ammonia necessary to the rapid
growth of wheat or other growing crops,
without the addition of other sub
stances. Vnlue of 1'lnNtcr.
An Ohio farmer writes the Wcntrrn
llural as follows: The past four sea
sons have been very dry, as all in this
part of the State will bear me witness;
and a large part, probably two-thirds, of
the clover seed sown in this vicinity dur
ing that time has been lost. Iu the
spring of 1873 I sowed one field of eight
acres to oats, thoroughly harrowed one
way, then sowed on clover seed and
cross-harrowed the field. I then put on
about three pecks of plaster to the acre,
and tho result was a good yield of oats
and a fine catch of clover, which grew
finely throughout tho summer, and last
season produced a large burden of num
ber one clover hay. This I am now feed
ing to my calves, for I prefer it to any
other when properly cured; for calves
should have the best. Tho saiuo week
iu which I seeded the eight-acre lot I
seeded one of four acres, and in precisely
the samo manner, save that I sowed
plaster on two of it. The other two
acres went without plaster. Now for the
result. Where the plaster was sown
the clover grew as finely as in the eight
acre lot, and produced as much hay last
season, while on that without plaster the
yield of oats was much lighter, and
what clover seed sprouted, or nearly all,
died from tho effects of the drought; so
much so that it would not pay for har
vesting. The soil wa3 sandy what we
term here sand-knolls and poor at that.
Apple OrclinrilM Deteriorating.
An interesting paper on this subject
was read before the Farmers' Club of
Now York, by Dr. J. V. C. Smith, which
excited much discussion among the mem
bers present. The prevalent belief ap
peared to be, however, that the condi
tions of cultivating apple orchards had
greatly changed in the past few' years, or
rather within a generation, and that the
greatest cause of the change was to be
found in the thoughtless and wasteful
destruction of forest trees which pro
vided for orchards the necessary cli
matic nourishment. The forests are
justly termed the conservative forces in
nature, in consequence of their power to
harmonize extremes of temperature.
They not only serve for a shelter from
the cold winds, but they maintain the
humidity of the atmosphere, and equal
ize tho temperature so as to suit the de
mands of vegetation. Cultivators of all
kinds of fruits, as well as of vegetables,
will in due time consider the importance
of a fact which has so long been neglect
ed at a risk not now to bo estimated.
Wheeler & Wilson's Sewing Machine?.
We call attention to the Wheeler &
Wilson advertisement in our columns.
This well known company has the most
udvantageons facilities for supplying the
public with sewing machines, on as favor
able terms as the business will allow.
They warrant all their work, and it i3 a
matter of importance to the purchaser to
deal with a company whose position and
permanenoe give assurance that their
guaranty will be fulfilled. They have
agencies and oflioes throughout the civil
ised world, for furnishing needles, thread
and other necessary supplies, and have
an established reputation . for reliability
and fair dealing.
Self-Guldaoca.
It is the assertion of a scientific paper
Jhat self-guidance is the first condition
of a reasonable, improvable being.
Children should learn at school how to
study alone to discover for themselves
what they wish to know. In giving
them no initiation, in denying them
their free will, we prepare them to re
sign themselves to the passive part im
posed upon the nation by governments
that take the initiative in all measures
of social interest. We thus form sub
jects for a tyrant, not citizens of a re
SUMMARY OF NEWS.
Item of Interest from Home and Abroad
Mason, arrested In New York charged with
passing counterfeit money, was one of sixteen
men who conspired to klpnap President Lin
ooln and Becretary Seward from Washington to
Richmond. The plot was discovered, and he
was sentenced to be Imprisoned for life in the
Columbus penitentiary. He was pardoned on
condition that he should quit the United States
and never return In a case in Washington
a colored man who was not allowed a shave in
a barbers shop was refused a writ, the court
declaring that raloons and barbers' shops did
not come under the civil rights act A
conflict has occurred betwoen the troops of
India and China, and twenty Chinamen were
killed The lower Ilouse of the Beichsrath
has approved a grant of $'25,000 for 1875 and
one of $50,000 for 1876 to defray the expenses
of the representation of Austria at the Centen
nial exhibition Charles K. Iiandis, well
known ss the founder of Vineland, shot and
seriously injured Carruth, of the Vineland Inde
pendtnt, in the office of that paper. A difficulty
of long standing existed between the two men,
and the editor, in almost every number of his
paper, had something to say of Land is
The United States government has already
taken the preliminary steps for modifying the
treaty with the Sioux Indians in regard to the
Black Hills In Newaik, N. J., one man
employed another to assassinate hiB wife, giv
ing him $100. The man employed took the
money and then told the story and the in
human husband was arrested.
The Lincolnshire handicap, nm at Lincoln,
England, was won by The Gunner. The
favorite was badly beaten .... The ice-gorge
at Port Jervis was swept out by a freshet
which oversowed the town, causing a damage
of $50,000, and carrying away two bridges, one
a railway bridge valued at $U0,000, and another
a suspension bridge worth $40 000 The
Emma Silver Mining Company has been ordered
to file a bond, to cover costs in its suit for the
recovery of $5,000,000, by Judge Donohue, of
the New York supreme court Messrs.
Siordot & Co., woll-ltnown London merchants,
have suspended payment. Their liabilities are
stated at $2,000,000 The New York Assem
bly paeBcd the bi 1 protecting incorporated
banks by a vote of sixty-Bix yeas to forty nays.
A Camden (N. J.) school teacher was arrested
and put under bonds for whipping a scholar.
We have further reports of Iobs of life in
Utah by snow slides Tho old man arretted
in Arizona confesses that he is John Bender.
Ho denies committing the Kansas murders,
but says that John and Kate, his son and
daughter, did. He says he separate! from
them in Texas, where they all went to from
Kansas, and came to Now Mexico and. subse
quently to Arizona. John, Kate, and the old
woman were together when he left them.
Ten convicts, employed in making bricks at
Little Rock, Ark., overpowered their guard and
escaped. One of the convicts was killed by a
guard. All except two were recaptured
The grand national steeplechase was run in
England and won by Pathfinder. . . .The United
States Senate, in executive session, ratified the
Hawaiian reciprocity treaty by a vote of fifty
one to twelve The Canadian government
will not impose a duty of ten per cent, on tea
coming from the United States The North
Carolina House of Representatives passed the
Senate bill calling a constitutional convention,
to be held on the Cth of September next, and
the bill is now a law In the Cincinnati
Republican convention John Robinson, the
well-known circus proprietor, was unamimously
nominated for Mayor The failure in Lon
don of the General South American Banking
Company is announced. The liabilities are
estimated at $1,500,000 Charley Smith, of
Greenville, an employee of the New Jersey
Central railroad, awoke to find that himself and
family had been chloroformed and robbed of
nearly all their wearing apparel, a gold watch
and chain, and about $75 in money.
Every house but one in Camack, Ga., was
demolished during a tornado The voting
of the Episcopal standing committee of the
United States has resulted in the confirmation
of Dr. Jagger and the rejection of Dr. De
Koven James Gordon, white, and Charles
Ramsey, colored, were drowned by the cap
sizing of a boat iu the Savannah river
Mrs. Avah Oose died in Amherst, N. H at the
age of 105 years, one month and nineteen days.
The United States national bank circula
tion now outstanding amounts to $319,402,801,
of which amount $2,389,000 are notes issued iu
gold banks An Indian 123 years of ago
and believed to be tho oldest inhabitant of the
earth, died at Santa Cruz, Cal The Mexican
government is said to have given satisfactory
assurances to the United States in respect to
the massacre at Acapulco. It condemns the
crime and promises to prevent other out
breaks A mass meeting of thirty thou
sand Irishmen was held iu Hyde Park, London,
and resolutions demanding tho release of the
Fenian prisorers were passed.
Stacy Atkinson, of Mount Holly, N. J.,
slipped on the ice, and the contents of a gun
he carried killed him instantly Mrs. Otteu-
dorfer, proprietress of the New York Wants
Zeitung, meditates the founding of a home
at Astoria for aged personB H. L. Bate
man, the well-known American theatrical
manager, died in Louden On Saturday,
while some fifty persons and several teams
were on the ice bridge at Quebec it broke
loose and floated up the river with the tide.
All were landed safely some distance above the
city on Monday morning Senator Abbett
introduced a bill into the New Jersey Legisla
ture confirming the sale of the Stevens battery
to John Roach, of New York, for $105,000.
....The projected fusion with the Car
lists has proved a failure. Only eight of the
insurgent chiefs followed the action of General
Cabrera in giviug in his adhesion to the gov
ernment of King Alfonso The tornado in
Georgia did more damage than was first re
ported. Five Uvea were lobt, and much property
was destroyed.
A dispatch from Georgia referring to the
terrible toinado there says : The tomado was
preceded by a dull, heavy roaring as of heavy
artillery. It spent its fury in about three
minutes, Au eye-witness says the senses were
utterly deadened and appalled. There was a
crash, a roar, and the mingling of a hundred
terrifio and unearthly sounds. The destruction
of property is immense, and the list of killed
and wounded appalling The United States
Senate, by a vote of thirty-three to twenty
three, passed the Itepublicau caucus indorse
ment of President Grant's action in reorgani
zing the Kellogg government in Louisiana
Haytiis in the market fora loan of $12,000,000.
At Lowell, Mass., Mrs. Sarah Low, a
young marr.ed women, was mortally wounded
by her husband, Charles J. Low, who fired two
shots from a revolver into her head and then
killed himself with a remaining charge. Mrs.
Low was a domestio in the family, and had fled
from her husband in New York State. He
pursued her to that city and killed her because
she refused to live with bim An alarming
death rate is reported among the oolored resi
dents of Washington, D. 0. The rate shows
from fifty to seventy-five per one thousand per
annum above the rate among the white popula
tion, which is attributed mainly to the want of
proper food and protection from the cold.
Iu I'rince George county, Md., a negro, who
had committed a fearful crime upon a married
lady, was hung to a tree within one hundred
yards of where the crime was committed.
SORE THROAT.
An Article to be Rend Carefully by Every
One. :
Cold manifests itself differently in dif
ferent people. In some it produces fever
and pain in the limbs, in others catarrh,
in still others sore throats. Whatever
part of the system is weakest will be at
tacked by the cold.
A large proportion of cases of deafness
comos from negloctod sore throat. This
is because of the intimate connection be
tween the throat and the ear by means of
tho eustachian tube. Hence the impor
tance of keeping the throat in a healthful
condition. The tendencies of sore throat
are to the worse and not to tho better;
hence auy affection of this part of the
body should receive prompt attention.
In caso of ordinary sore throat, the sim
plest and best treatment is the wet pack,
using a liuou cloth wrung from cold
water, and over this a knit or crotcheted
yarn band, four feet long and four inches
wide. Apply this two or tlrree nights in
succe sion, unless it is a very serious
case, when the pack should be kept on
during the day. If taken off in the
morning, wash the throat in very cold
water, rub dry with a coarse towel aud
with the hand. This will prevent taking
more cold.
Mucous membranes have tlrree kinds
of inflammation catarrhal, croupous, and
diphtheritic. Everybody knows how
the first appears; in the croupous a liquid
is poured out which collects on the outer
surface of the mucous coat, and forms a
membrane which can be peeled off or
removed without injury to the mucous
coat beneath it. In the diphtheritic the
liquid poured out infiltrates itself into
the mucous membrane, aud if forcibly
removod leaves the mucous coat raw and
sore. Diphtheria is blood poison. The
patient complains of feeling stupid; the
angle of the throat swells; there is likely
to be more or lest na"al catarrh; there
appear in the throat patches looking like
dirty wash-leather,- which, being re
moved, leave a raw spot; the odor of this
exudation is offensive, but the disease is
not usually contagious unless the exuda
tion comes in contact with the mucous
membrane of another individual. Hence
the greatest care should be taken that no
towel or drinking vessel or spoon used
by the patient tt uohes the lips of any
other person. Croup is inflammation of
the larynx and usually attacks the patient
suddenly in the night. The membrane
is formed in tho larynx, is white, and
extends each way up and down. In diph
theria it forms in the throat and extends
downward.
The food of a patient suffering from
diphtheria cannot be too nutritious and
stimulating. All physicians agree in
this. There is nothing better for the
patient than beef tea, made by putting a
pound or two of tenderloin into a glass
can, or bottle, sealing it tightly and im
mersing in water, gradually raised to the
boiling point, and kept there until the
juices of the meat are extracted. Give
as much of this as the patient will take.
Uld sherry is also prescribed as a stimu,
lant by the most devoted adherents to
temperance principles.
A California Jury.
They have peculiar jurymen in San
Francisco. In January a Chinaman
named Wah Ah Toong was convicted of
murder. Recently, when a motion for
a new trial was being argued, one of the
jurymen made an affidavit to disorderly
conduct in the jury room, in which oc
curs the following development : When
they returned to the jury room, one of
the jurors produced a bottle of whisky
and several packs of cards. The jurors
played cards, some for money, all night,
during which time there wa3 one bottle
of whisky drank. Afterwards there was
a bottle of liquor of some kind, which
affiant took to be cocktails, introduced
into the jury room and drank by the
jurors during their deliberations upon
the question of the guilt of the accused.
During the night there were two or
three bottles of liquor drank by the
jurors. In playing cards crackers were
used, with which several jurors seemed
to be abundantly supplied, as a repre
sentative of money. Money was also
used by the players. During their de
liberations alliaut was frequently insulted
and threatened with personal violence.
It went so far that at one time alliaut
was compelled to call in the deputy
sheriff for protection. Had ailiant fully
understood the facts of the caso and tho
date when the murder was committed,
he never would have consented to the
verdict.
They Saw It.
Some time since a vessel was cast upon
the shore of Lake Michigan, and the
captain and crew were threatened with
death at any moment. Two horsemen
were seeii riding along the shore and
looking at the vessel. The captain in
voluntarily gave the sign of distress pe
culiar to a secret society, and it was
answered by the strangers, who at once
turned about and, at full speed, retraced
their steps. In three hours a tug and
life boat, manned entirely by members
of the society, arrived, rescued the fam
ished crew, and secured the vessel so
that she was afterward removed with
safety. N. B. This story will answer
for Masons, Odd Fellows, Good Temp
lars, Eechabites, Sons of Malta, Gran
gers, or any other secret society.
The Wales Miuers.
Twenty thousand people at Merthyr
Tydvil autl Dowlais, in Wales, are now
dependent for fuel upon the coal they
can get out of the waste patches and
croppinga on the mountains. A large
number of men have left for Queensland.
The coal owners have refused to meet a
deputation of ministers of the gospel who
wished to act as mediators between them
and the strikers, and it has been inti
mated that none 'will be received until
the submission of the men. The coal
owners are determined to resist at all
costs, even if the hands stand out until
the summer.
Six Millions.
About two years ago, Dr. J. Walker,
au old and prominent physician of Cali
fornia, discovered, by actual experience
upon his own system, a medicine which
may honestly be termed "a boon to
suffering
tion of b
sour to tl
gentle
although
named it
the prejv
fession a
he deteru
brother v
ing humu!
discovery
from its
maud iuc
were sole
Its merit
years ov
been sol
creasep.
ranked a
human ritl
The Tiano-Harp Cabinet Organ is ft
new invention, combining three and
one-half octaves of a pianoforto, or of
an instrument with tones between those
of the piano and the harp with
the organ. It is a beautiful instrument,
costing but little more than tho organ.
The Mason & Hamlin Organ Co. are
not able to manufacture it rapidly
enough to supply the demand.
Giant Trees in California.
It has boen supposed, says a Califor
nia poper, that the Sierra sequoias, or
big trees of California, were confined to
a few small and isolated groves like
those known to tourists by the name of
Calaveras, Tuolumne, Merced, and Mari
posa, scattered at considerable intervals
along the western slope of tho moun
tains for a distance of sixty miles. It
was known that a collection of big trees
larger than any of those iu the Mari
posa and Calaveras regions exists in
Fresno county, where Thomas' mill has
for several years been sawing this red
wood of the Sierra to supply the mar
ket of Visalia, but it was discovered last
summer that this body of big-tree tim
ber is not properly a grovo, but a forest
extending for not less than seventy miles
in a northwest and southeastward direc
tion, with a width in some places of ten
miles, and interrupted only ly the deep
canyons which cut across the general
course of the forest, and reduce the level
to au elevation below that at which the
tree is found in a wild condition, al
though when cultivated it thrives in all
our valleys.
Different persons have traced the
forest from the basin of the Tule river;
iu latitude thirty-six deg. and twenty
min., across those of the Kaweah and
Kings to that of San the Joaquin. The
elevation has not been carefully mea
sured, but is supposed to vary from
4,000 to C, 000 feet. At one point, and
one only, this forest is accessible by a
wagon rea l, and this is at Thomas' mill,
forty-eight miles from Visalia. Unlike
the groves further north, this forest
consists mainly and in some places al
most exclusively of the big trees, and
there are also a multitude of small ones
in all the ages of growth, some just
sprouting, and others saplings only two
or three feet through. The largest
standing tree as yet measured is forty
feet in diameter; a charred stump the
tree itself having disappeared mea
sures forty-one feet across. A tree
twenty-four feet iu diameter four feet
above the ground, is precisely the same
thickness sixty feet higher. A fallen
trunk is holiow throughout, and the
hole is large enough to drive a horse
and buggy seventy-two feet in it as in a
tunnel.
.This forest is so extensive, the timber
is so abundant and excellent in quality,
and the demand for it is so great in the
bare valley at the foot of the mountain,
that it cannot be withheld from the axe
and the sawmill. The wood i3 similar
iu general character to the Coast sequoia,
or common red wood, straight in srrain.
splitting freely, even enough in grain
for furniture, and far superior to oak in
its keeping qualities in positions ex
posed to alterations of moisture. The
Sierra sequoia does not throw up sprouts
from its stump as does the redwood, and
can therefore be felled out more readily,
It is better to
church.
be late than never at a
A Baltimore beggar has retired from
business with a fortune of 320,000.
A Few Wordi
to Feeble
Women.
and Delicate
By It. V. Tierce, M. D., 0 the World's Dis
peimaiy, Buffalo, N. Y.
Knowing that you arc mibject to a great
amount of suffering, that delicacy ou your part
nag a Btrong tendency to prolong, and the
longer it is neglected the more you have to en
dure and the more diflicnlt of cure vour ease
becomes, I, as a physician, who is daily con-
Huueu uy scores 01 your sex, desire to say to
you that I am constantly meetine with those
who have been treated for their ailments for
months without beinz benefited in the least.
until thoy have become Derfectlv discouraged
awd have almost made up their minds never to
take another dose of medicine, nor be tortured
by any further treatment. They had ratter
die and have their sufferings ended than to
live aud suffer as thoy have. They say they
are worn out uy suilering auu are only made
worse Dy treatment. Of anvtuine more diS'
couraging, we certainly cannot conceive, aud
were there no more succesHful mode of treating
such difficulties than that, tho priiioiplos of
which teach the reducing aud depleting of the
vital forces of the system, when the indications
dictate a tieatmont (liroctlv the rnvArf a nf tha
one adopted for them, their cases would be de
plorable indeed, But, lady suff erers, there is a
better aud far more successful plan of treat
ment for you ; one more iu harmony with the
laws aud requirements of your system. A
harsh, irritating caustio treatment and strong
medicines which will never cure you. If you
would use rational means, such as common
sense should dictate to every intelligent lady,
talip such medicines as embody the very best
invigorating tonics and nervines, compounded
witu special reierence to your delicate system.
Such a happy combination you will find in my
Favorite Prescription, which has received the
loudest praise from thousands of your sex.
Those lauqtiid, tiresome Beusations causing
you to feel scarcely able to be on your feet or
ascend a iiight of 'stairs; that continual drain
that is sapping from your systems all your for
mer elasticity, and driving the blood from your
cheeks ; tLat continual strain upon your vital
forces that renders you irritable and fretful,
may all be overcome and subdued by a per
severing ue of that marvelous remedy. .Irregu
larities and obstructions to the proper work
ings of your system are relieved by this
mild and safe means, while periodical pains,
the existence of which is a sure indication of
serious disease that should not be neglected,
readily yield to it, and if its use is kept up for a
reasonable length of time the special cause of
these pains is permanently removed. Further
light on these subjects may be obtained from
my pampiuet on diseases peculiar to your sex,
sent on receipt of two stamps. My Favorite
Prescription is sold by druggists. torn.
If you want the beist Elaatio Truss for rap
ture, write to romeroy & Co., 7HB'dway, N. x.
torn.
Burnett's Coooainb is the best and
cheapest Lair dreasuig in the world. Coin.
Electricity is Life. All nervous di
rtrrlnt-H fhrmiin riiaaujiAfl nf - tllA rhant. llftail.
Uver, ntomach, kiduovs audi blood, achea aud
pains, nervous ana geiierwi uooiiny, etc,
auicklv cured after druirs fail by weariue Volta
El-trio Belts and Bands. Valuable book free,
by Volta Bolt Co., Cuiciunaji, umo. com.
Deaths by Consumption. It is esti
mated that 100,000 die yearly in the United
RtatM with conbiimtotion. When consumption
firxt appeal's tltaro is pain in tne cnest and
11 - 1.1. .1 : l . i
BLieuueu wiui uuuuuuy ui ure&tn
jthere will be a cough, if this irrita-
liealed, auu the effort to raise will
1 to the tire. Allen's Lung Balsam
allay the pain and irritated parts.
ugn, ana prt vein wnai wouia De
i. It is making cures of diseased
were considered incurable. 1'or
ediciiio dealers. Com.
ich contain antimony. Quinine
1. should be avoided, as severe
lis would be their only result. The
est, aud bent puis are f arsons
r Antt-liiliotu VMs.(Jom,
lVt Last ! A remedy that not
x but cures consumption, as well as
Ms, bronchitis, sore throat, influ-
The reined v to which we allude is
' Balaam of Wild Cherry, prepared
r owie 61 BOUB, Boston, xuty tenia
ar a bottle, large bottles much the
'om.
Morn limit fifty ytmr havn elapsed
dlni ,iiiid' Awutunv lAnhnrnt was first iu-
mil ml iIiiiiiim wM' ii lltitn liuinlrnilN of thnu-
Kdihla ika I.boii liBitalHMi'1 by Its imn. froba-
Hy nil tl.l. In bvoi dm emu mi universally popu
lar wild l ).Iiumwi Jtihnvm'i Anmlym Lini
Wieii. fiiiii,
'Ilia MnrkeU.
KW toll.
nm-r (!nH1x-frltux lu Kdra Jlulluab 11 (H 13
Cmnimili In (limil Ti-inii OS'.ilrt 11X
Milch Cow CO OU (rfSI) 00
Huuh I.Wl'
7V
(8 V4
0fl4
07 !,'
10
OR
07 X
1BJ.
jirmiHi'U
Hheeil
l.amlfl
(lotion MliUllliiK
Flour Kxtra Western. . . . .
B 00
S 113
1 87
1 IS
05
(4 5 i
6 23
(4 1 D'X
1 If)
T
( 1 35
Stnto Rxiru
Wheat Med Wrstcru
No. 2 Surluu
It ye State
Hurley State
1 20
Barley Malt
1 ( 1 iii
Oats Mixed Western
Corn Mixed Western
Hay, per cwt
Straw, per cwt
Hops 74's S5 W
Pork Mush....,
Lard
Fish Mackerel. No. 1, new,
70 (4 70
81
.. .. ii
6.1
.oliln 08
20 m
u
13 OU
( 85
( 1 10
(ii 85
4 15
rfJ0 85
(( 14 '
(rili 00
- no. v, new ju uu auu ou
Pry Cod, per cwt 6 00 A 0 fiO
HorriiiK, Healed, per box. . . 85 40
Petroleum Crude 07',07tf Henned, UJi
Wool California Fleece g (n 81
Texas " 83X( 85
Australian " M28..4cl.
Butter State 24 8)
Western lalry 23 c4 23
Western Yellow 20 22.
Western Ordinary 17 17
FvnnKylvnnia Fine 25 (4 23
Cheese State Knotury 17 $ 17
State Skimmed 05 Mi 11
Western 12 ( 1IM
Eggs State 83 $ 83
ALBANY.
Wheat 1 23
Rye State US
Corn Mixed 84
di, 1 53
(, 05
e) 85
( 1 80
3 68
(S 7 00
1 75
& 77
63
Barley State 1 80
Oats State 64
BUFFALO.
Flour 5 00
Wheat No. 2 Hpriug 1 05
Com Mixed 78
Oats 63
llye 97J
Barley 1 06X1$ 1 55
BALTIUOHE.
Cotton Low Middlings 16
Flour Kxtra 7 00
Wheat -Ked Western 1 2
Rye 1 00
Corn Tcllow 81
Oats Mixed Oil
(S 10
(i 7 00
14 I 14
1 03
(4 81
Petroleum 07,(n)
07
PHILAnKL-FHIA.
Flour Pennsylvania Extra 5 00
d 8 75
(4 1 25
fi 1 01
(4 83
(rf, 82
ft B7
Wheat Western Red..
1 .1
1 01
Rye
Corn Yellow
8i
Mixed
Oats Mixed
Petroleum Crude 10
82
fifl
(310 Reilned, 14
WHEELER
Rotary-Hook Lock-Stitch
SEWING MACHINES.
1,000,000
OF THEIR
Family
I3ST USE.
A QUARTER of a CENTURY'S
Trial has Demonstrated
their Superiority.
" WHEELER & WILSOyS XEW jVO.
6 MAClIIXJi must eventually supersede all
others now run tvith which it conies in competition.
We recommend for it the highest award uhieh it
is in the poucr of the Institute to bestow." From
the unanimous Iteport of the five Judges
of the American Institute. New York, 1874.
The Board of Managers unanimously ap
proved the report, nnd jecotnmended for this
machine the Gold Medal of the Institute.
The Board of Direction unanimously ap
proved this recommendation, and awarded
the Gold Medal to Wheeler & Wilson, the
only gold medal awarded for a Sewing
Machine by the American Institute for
many years.
The Austrian. Official Report of the Vienna
Exposition pronounced il " the marvtl of the
Exposition," and added, "this universal machine
sews the heaviest leather harness and lite finest
game uith a truly pearl stitch."
Tlte Grand Medvl of Progress um awarded
for if.
"What the Leading Manufacturers of
Boots and Shoes say of
WHEELER & WILSON'S
NO. 6
Machine.
Sewing
We, manufacturers of boots and shoes,
are using Wheeler & Wilton's New No. G
Sewing Machine in nil kinds of Btitching
on our work, nnd confidently believe that it
will Biipersede all others in this branch of
manufactures, for the following reasons :
1. The work done by this machine is
superior to that of any other in variety,
amount, excellence and beauty.
2. This machine is more durable than any
other of its class, requiring much less outlay
for repctirs and renewal of parts.
3. It does tho cording t r staying of button
holes in a most elegant and substantial man
ner, without the expense of royalty.
In short, because by the use of' this ma
chine we can turn out superior xnrk at less
cost than with any other.
Signed by many.
f3r It is fast superseding all other ma
chines for leather work.
WBEELER & WILSON'S
NEW NO. 7
Machine,
now for the first time introduced to the
public, ranks in excellence with their fam
ous No. 6 Machine, but has some moditica.
tions adapting it to special classes of work.
The Tailor will find it as well suited to his
work as is No. 6 to leather work. It might
properly lie termed the Tailor's Machine,
Send for Circular to
WHeeler & Wilson MT Co.,
44 14th Street, New York.
fiil t $5 PER DAY-Send for "Chrop o'
C-L " eattlugue. J. U. BUl'FOKD'S SONS, BueUm
mmm
NEW
ACM PORTABLE
Jlnl-i anni rATTHTAIWQ
O WIIA IUU111 21111 U
tdid $40. $50. $75. & $100.
GOOD, DURABLE, AND OHBAP.
Shipped Read for U.
Manufactured br CHAPMAN As
( II., Dlndinon, llid.
tff Bend for a Catalogue.
TCI PHRAPM Kxtra Inducements to learn. Address
1 E-l-fc'WnHr fl j. Abernethr.Kupt., Cleveland. O, .
A lAY. Affffntfl wanted, mule and female,
KpAi Artilronfl Rnrnka M'f'g Co., Buchanan, Mtoh
SOLD ON TRIAL.
TIIK YORK Bf ANtTFAC
TUIUNU COMPANY,
Builders ol Pullnyfl, RhafUnff,
and all kindn of Mill (lonrlnff, arc
pnllind tlie liOM.INOFH TunBiNR
Watkr Whrrl very cheaply,
though th bent In una.
For descriptive Pamphlet ad
dross YORK ?VL'ii CO.,
York, liu
5,HM) To Glvm Awny.-A 50 Gold Wstch sent free to
nnv person on receipt of lO ct, and stump. Ad's W. J.
MVATT. KB., llox 14, Ilckson, Tenn. No Humbug.
AOrniN nir.n WMmn To Hut a lVw Vrry
fine nld-furthioned articles of Household Furniture
And M Ante. Ornaments, such as were In use a hundrtd
years ago. Persons having Mich articles to sell, whether
In wood or motl, will pldfifo send description and price
to W. M. IH.ISM, t
liox 31, wpw York City. ,
85 new articles and the
rlijU beat Family Paper in America, with two 85.00
iLll lln vtA A a
rntn.
tnerica. with two mo.w
30 Broadway, N. Y.
CJ bn imos. free, aai
M'F'O OO.
A C3ENTH VANTE1. Men or women, 34 ft
week, or $lU0 forfeited. Valuable Mmplwr
v" rite at once to F. M. RKKI). Eighth Street. New York.
8200
a month to a
BXUKLHIOK
rente eTerrwbem. AddreM
M'F'a CO., Bnohanan.Mlcn.
SUM) A MONTH. A1JENTH WAXTEO
for tue Now Hook ' Nnecpflft in llunineflfl." or
TIT f TVJ Tl T Thla ooontrr hut money for
IP! II tM I ' i i everybody: lor worainRinen,
HiialneM Men. Karmera.
AND
II O "W
TO
Yonni Men, Bnya, Women,
and all ; and this honk thoWB
how to set It. Just the hook
for the tlmoB, and will sell fast.
Cnrl In. nl..xll.P anH t.rml III
TVT A TTT TTH anents. P. W. ZIEOLKK A
iflillVJll 1 1 . CO .518 Arch St., Ihlla.,Pa.
A NEW FEATURE.
To the 8,000 Illustrations heretofore In Webater'e
Unobridired wo have recently added four pages of
COLORED ILLUSTRATIONS,
engraved expressly for tho work, at large expense.
ff3?"Tlie Atilliority of Everybody.
PROOF-20 TO X.
The sales of WetWer's Dictionaries throughout the
country in 173 were 20 timas as large as the sales of any
other Dictionaries. In proof of this we will send to any
fierson, on application, the statements of more, than lot
.imksollorfl from evfry Bection of the oountry. FubliBueo
by A C. MKKHIAN, Springfield, Mass.
KumIIS' made water-tight with dines Slate Paint,
which rnivrs reshingling, contains no tar. is extremely
chenp. itrarllrally tire proof, rery ornninriitnl.
and ImlorKcri by Pnhlio Institutions, Corporations
and lending nit-n In nit sections. Send fnr It on It
C-irriilnr of flmiii references nnd full particulars.
N. V. NliATK IfOOFI.NU TO.,
t frilnr StrM'f ,iv York.
tiii: i3i:sr
Prairie Lande
IOVA AND NEBRASKA,
FOR SALS BT
The Burlinztun & Missouri River R. R. Co.
On Ton Yearn9 Credit nt O per cent. Interest.
ONE Mri.MON AvtES in IOWA and SOUTH
KHN NEBRASKA.
The flneht country in the wirM to combine FARM
ING and STOCK UAIMIXJ.
Prodncta will pny for I,iml nnd Improve
ments lonff before the Principal be
coined due. 1-nrne OiMComitg
for C'rhIi.
The so-called destitution in Nebraska lies in the far
western region, beyond tho lands of the B. 4 il.K.R
Co."
iW Dor olrculars that will describe fully these lands,
and the terms of sale, apply to or address,
LAM) COMMISSIONER,
Burlington, Iowa, for Iowa Lands,
or Lincoln, Neb., for Nebraska Lands.
JUST
THK
BOOK
YOU
CAN
SELL
MONEY IN IT NITRE ! Justont.
Useful, Handsome, Chenp. Sells eve;?
where. A rare chance. Also.
NEW MAPS, CHARTS, Etc.
Our new chart, OlIltlHTIAN
I. It At'KS. is a splendid success. Cin
cinnati prices same as New York. Rend
fnrtttrmsto R.O. BRID(iMAN,5 Bare
lay8tN.Y.,A I7 W. 4th r)tCin..O.
IOOK ACXTS WANTED
neSkTELL it all
Hy Mn. Btrnhouse of Bait Lake City, for $f
ycun the vifc of ft Mormon High l'ricit In
triMluctioQ by Mr, Ktonc Tuil itory of
oman'i exrwrience lava hare the hitlden Ufa.
niyhturica, secret doingtt, etc. of the Worniom iu i
wuie-awaxe wonum tnem." nngnt, rurv
and Good, it is the tt new book out. actunuv
Orrriuivmg with good thingi or all. It ia popular jvary
wLere, with everybody, and outsells all other book three
on Mtuistcn any ' Umt 9vd it.' Em merit WomAt
ondoree iL Kveryoody wants it t and atfi'ntJ) are eelluifi
from 10 to SO a day I S5th thuu.vimi now in pros V.
frantAHM .uoi-e trusty rjiciita NOW men or womil- LP.l
we will mail OullM f'ri-o to those who will can v tut i,
pamphlets with full particulars, terms, etc. tent fret tn ,Zt,
4dUret A i. Woutiiinutuh ft Co.. Hartford. Con'
This new Truss is worn
with perfect comfort
DiKht and day. Adapts
Itwlf to every motion of
the body, retaining Rup
ture under the hardest
exerclae or seveieBt strain
until nermnnently cured.
Sold cheap by the
Elastic Truss Co.,
No. 083 Ilrondwny, N. V. City.
and sent by mall. Call or send for Clroulur, pd b onred.
SHARPS RIFLE CO.,
Manufacturers of Patent liteoch londina. Military.
Snort) iiar snd Greodmoor Kitles. 'I lit! Hvt In the
World. Winner at International and nearly ail othHr
pnnciiial nritcueB at Urfedmoc-r. (avo Ofhelal Heoord.)
Sl'OltTINt; IMI IJ S, - - 30 to $38
r it i : i mi oo ii it i r i rsf
With Kh-vations for ISOO yards, 00 and 9-125
nenn tor iiiuniratea uaiaioguo.
Armuhy and Office, B. G. WKSTCOTT,
llARTFomj. Conn. President
AGENTS WANTED TJ23
selling book ever published, bend fur circulars and
our etrru terme to AgHiits.
NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.. Philadelphia, P.
I0PEIU)AY,A
ed Visiting nnd Business Cards, the hett in
canvassing
i Celehrat-
ii nnd Burnetii t tarda, the htt In the world.
72 inagnhicent sninplen to begin work with Rent for
ris. Anaress 11. u. WAM.hY, riistitouaiJiu nugraver,
31i$ Washington Street, Boston, Mjh.
SENT FREE
A Book exposing the mysteries of TTT ATT. Q'P
and how any one may operate sue- " UjU OX
ce it lully with a capital of or $ f OOO. Complete
instruction and illustrations to any address. TlTiV-ItJtllH-K
V . Bankkub and BuouKiM 8 Wall
mreel, new voiit. t
TIIK Hi:sT in the World
It (ilve. Universal Sdtisfaqtion.
W ( M I H I I ' I . I :ro 1 1 A ill y
41 His. more Kresd to hit). Flour.
S l-'.S MII.K. KUUH. Ac
One ienr' FBYinirs will tiny s o w
Ml 1IIIKK MUCK HlfKAII
Vhit-tr. l.iuhlnr. Swepter. Hichnr.
MVlilt YISODV 1'ruUrN It.
The Lnriies nre all in lve with it.
Ki l l s l.ikH MflT aii:w
2 i fiend nt once fi r Circular to
17(1 Duatir SI.. New York
1 O i
II If HOS for l :twnfor85e. AirenU
-ft- hm
wanted. i) W.MclLEAVE ACcBofttonA Chicaro.
TABLE KNIVES AND FORKS OP
AMI) ORIOIKAI.I.Y EXCLUSIVE MAKERS OV
And exclusive makers of thi " PATENT IVOUY or Celluloid Knife. The most I) I'll A ISI K WHITE
HANDLE known. The Handles neier jtt InoKe. are not affected by li't Miner. Alwi-in call fur the
" Trade Mu'c." .ME I I lE.N n'TI.KR Y I'O.M PAN Y," on the blade. Warranted and sold by all dealer
in Cutlery, aid hvth- M KKIIIKW 01ITI.KKV CO , 4 Ohanibera Slreot, New York.
'I rained mi-1 nuuucaaiul niuil in buiueiM iaie, tnuKUl
Uaeiul Uttizens. ImimI until 1iih1iivh 1 olleue
voted to this specialty. Oldest and oiily pnctioal Coaimerclal School : only one pitiviriinK aituatifiia tutT,
New buildiags now open.
day. Addreu far particultraaDdoitaluKueof S.OOOGraduateatnbuniQena, H.U.Kast J-.U.,rouhkeepbie.N.V
tveiera 10 rairona ana uraduatea in nearly tveiy cuy and i
aoaeacaa ce. rsu.
ir.J. Warners wu:ornia i -
egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable
preparation, made chiefly from '" na
tive horbs found on the lower ran'c? or
tho Sierra Nevada mountains of Caliu."
Dla, the medicinal properties of which,
are extracted therefrom without tho use
of Alcohol. The question is almost
daily asked, "What is tho cause of tha
unparalleled Buccess of Vinegar Bit
raHst" Our answer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, nnd the patient ro
co'.'era his health. They are the greav
Wsod purifier and a life-giving principle,
b perfect Renovator and Invigorator
of tho system. Never before in the
iistory of the world has a medicine been
tompotraoed possessing the remnrkable
inalities of Vinroar Bitters in healing the
lick of every disease man is heir to. They
re a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonio,
"relieving Congestion or Inflammation
the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilioui
The 'properties of Dr. Walker'c
Inkoar Bittkrs are Aperient, Diaphoretift,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretio,
(Sedative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Altera
tive, and Anti-BiliouR.
ii. n. Mcdonald & co..
Dmprfrfsta RmlGen. A(rtn., Sun Frnncisco. Cnllfornia,
and oor. of Wanhinpton and Chnrltnn Sts.. K. Y.
bold toy all bruRglata anil De alers.
N. Y. N. U.-No. 13
WANTED
6 (MM) New
AGENTS
The People's dollar paper, Thk Vit."rm
HUTOIt, mlnryeil to (14 riimiir; reliplnuG
and M-cnlar. T'tl-m rvrryuhrrr. FWo
maKn'ticent premiums. Sample, torms,
eti-.. free. J, II, KA ItLK, Button.
-r-) The American Patron 1 the moat Popular Orange
iO and Farm Paper-!! .25 a year. Specimen free.
P, Addreaa J. K. BAKN1. Publisher, I ndl?y,Ohlo.
Seeds !
Reliable
Seeds !
Rod n Market Vegetable Seed.
Spoontr' Prize Flower Seeds.
13 Choice Varieties Asters, f!l.
Callage. Fottler's Brunswick, per
oi. 5-. Per II).
Our lllustratiid (;atloRue lentfrrt
W. H. SPOONER. Boston, Mara
itH.OOO Ai.ltMAnY SO Lit.
GENTS WANTED f"r tho new booK,
LIFE AND ADVIiNIl'KES OF
Kit Carson
hy btt comrtdc and friend, D. W. C. PcWi, Brvt LW
CoLnd Burgeon, U.S. A, from fkcti dictated by him
telC Tl)cn y True nnd Aithemic life of America'
(reatett HUNTER, TRAITKU. SCOt'T nd OUlPfe!
vr DublUhed. It rnUlni .'till and eomplftodescrlp-
tonioitna ladlui tribe ofthe FAR WEST at teen l.y KUCanoo,
whollTedamonKlheioaM hitlll. It give a full, reliable a-couit
of thaMODOCS.and tbt MOBOC VAK. At a wo-k oHlSTO-
BY ,H U lnalnbla. A grand opportunity Kragnu wrnaKnnnT.
Our Illustrated circular teni ireaioai
tatriiorv at once. DU6TLN. GILMAS it (JO..Haitford,CoBa
itiD ranU, Briwmow
0
"WTXBOEU O0XP0TJ2TD 0?
PURE COD LIVER
OIL AND LIME.
Wilbor'n Cod Liver Oil nnil Llmp.-lVrnn
who have been taking Cud Liver Oil m ill he plfar,c4 o
learn that lr. Wilbor has tmcceeded, from directions of
sev. ral profesaional gentlemen, in combining the pnr
oil nnd lime in such a manner that it is plensnnt to the
taste, and Us effects in hum complaints are truly won
derful Very many persons whoee cases were pronounced
hopeless and who had taken the clear oil lor a lung time'
without marked effect, have been entirely cured br usinff
this preparation, lie sure nnd get the genuine. Manu
factured only by A. B. WIL1JOH, Chemist, Poston.
Sold by all druggists.
A vi
KTISKIfS! Send 25 renin to OKO.
HOWELL A OO.. 4 I Pnrk How. N. V., for their
Pamphlet of 1 OO fa0". oontainlng lists of ilOOO nevs
paoers. and estimat ahr.witig pout nf adgwrtlnlnr
$250 cb
A MONTH Agents wanted tvery.
where. Business honorable and first-
na. Pai -tiriilurs sent tree. A ad rest
OHTH A CO.,8t. Louts, Mo.
Zx soap. Goods free,
k GENTS.
Chang Chang sells at sight
Necessary M
1'Pg Co., Boston.
TEA
AOKNTS WANTED KVF.nVWHF.nK.-lhe
choicest In the world Importers' prices la Iff
est Company In America staple artii-lo plea es
dont waste time emi f"
I irc.li in imir.n a
V rk. K 12S7 .
WKLI.H, 4a Vny Stn.f.1. IM'
aYOUR OWN PRINTINCi?
rfi T "R2 T T"
Us VPs. M "r m tzsm mm
a9n feat m W1 1 M .m w:
Fir Irofoionnl nutl Ann;tt;irr
Printer, Mrhoole, MoeU-tien, .1
uriirturc'l'., Mt-rrhlliitj, anil "tnerj l J
Ten styles, Prices from SB.00 to $ir.v M
BENJ.O. WOODS & CO. Msnuf
dealers In all kinds of Printing Mat'.''.i
Bend .tauio for Caulocue.) 49 Federal Ht. j.t .
ICINHTANT K.MiM.OYDIl
,;NT Atoomti. Maia
nr h'Binnl. 4it!l(l wnnlc WMrronttwl. No CHtllta.1 r-
oulred. Particulars and valuable smnoles sent free. Ail
4ress. with o return stump, tl. R()8.V, 'illanishnrnh.N. .
o
$25
t Appl
I1 Kit OA Y Commission, or Kl'U a week Sal
ary ond Expenses, we onor it u1"
Apply now
$5 i
PKIt DAY at home. Terms h w. Ad
1 u dress Geo. Stinhon Co., portliib 1, M
bol.1 lit c.u. by Uru:KL.u. uc tuul. uua uuw0.
SIr'l,KS.SIIOT(ilTl.
KKVOI.VKRS,
imMTly ii anifiiilir
nr.nv.nrl rvlrld Rend flmn 1
r...J.i ..i..... - ..l.rn G.I
mm mui mmru: rjrlli'UU-11. A.
.Prof. D.
Meeker'
Painless Opiinite!S
cenful remedy of .he present uay,
Send for Paper
ou upturn js&llnff.
t. O. Sox 4?6, LaPOBTB, IND.
ALL KINDS,
uow Ui kui a Laviuie, Alke Muiity, tUbcciui- uiiLiiiiist
roughkeepeie, I. Y.. Uu-tbe-rtudon. Only I ibMutiun do.
n'iia lux nruduates.
Aiipucarta enter any
fry
mm