FIRM, OARDEX AND HOUSEHOLD. Rerlpae. Fruit or Gcrhant Cakb.Ou Ants or citron for cake should not bo "rolled in flour," but dredfred or well sprinkled with sifted flonr, Laving first niadetbe fruit an dry as possible; that Is, after waHhing and draining the currants, dry them on the stove and while warm and dry dredge them with sifted floor Jnut before adding them to the cake, and the fruit should be the last thing added. An Tmprovrmrnt in Bread Making. Pi-rHons who are so unfortunate as to be poorly provided with those agents of mastication, good teeth, will bo glad to know that there is a method of baking bread which obviates the necessity of a bard crunt. The ornnt commonly at tached to the loaf is not only trouble., some to snob persons, but is often the caime of much waste. The way to be rid of it is as follows: When the loaves are mo). led. and before thev nm a..f down t,i8e, take a small oWity"of clean lard, warm it, and rub lightly over the loaves. The result will be a criiRt beautifully soft and tender throughout. French Toast. This is a very nice breakup dish. Take a conple of eggs, beat them, and pour with them a little milk, seanon with pepper an- salt. Cat your bre id as if for toast, pour the egg over it, aud put it in a pan of hot but ter hd.iI fry brown. Chicken Soup. Cut up an old chicKrn Bnd break tho bones. Put it in a gallon of cold water, simmer several hours, skimming it well. A half hour before taking up add to the soup nearly a cup of rice and a sprig of parsley. Strain when done through a sieve. Takeout carefnlly bones and parsley. Sea on with salt and pepper. Heat again a moment and serve. A Kelish fob BnEAKF.kT. Take one-fourth of a pound of fresh cheese, ont in thin slices, put in a frying-pan turning a cup of sweet milk over it; add one fourth teaspoonful dry mustard, a pinch of salt and pepper and a piece of butter about the size of a butternut; m n me mixture an tue time, noil three jioston crackers very fine and em-inkle t once into a imme,1iatplt: in gradually, then turn at warm dish; send to table immediately. Seed Cake. One cup of butter; two of wuite suiirtr, three eggs, half a cup of seeds, and flour enough to mike a stiff pas'. Roll it very thin, with sugar in stead of flour on the board, and cut it in rounds. R.ike it about fifteen minutes. tJrnpr- Jrovrer'e Maxima. The following ruleu are given by the Mural American : 1. Prepare the ground in fall ; plant in spring. 2. Give the vine plenty of manure, old aud well decomposed; for fresh manure excites growth, but does not mature it. 3. Luxuriant growth does not always insure fruit. 4. Dig deep but plant shallow. 5. Young vines produce beautiful fmit, but old vines produce the richest. 6. Prune in autumn to insure growth, but, in the spring to insure fruitfulness. 7. Plant your vines before you put np trellises. 8. Vines, like old soldiers, should have pood arms. 9. Prune spurs to one developed bnd; for the nearer the old wood the higher flavored th- fruit. 10. Those who prune long must soon climb. 11. Viae leaves love the sun, the fmit the shade. and either a bunch of fruit or a tendril opposite to it. 13. A tendril is an abortive fruit viuuun a buuch of jyiuuuctive ten'!'1- 14 A bunch of grapes without a healthy leaf opposite is like a ship at sea without a rudder it can't come to port. 15. Latrals are like politicians ; if not checked, they are the worst of uneven. lcvrN- 16. Good granee are like oldn i . " - i 17. The earliest crane will boon 11. a longest, for that which is fully matured is easily preierved. (Not correct, savs the Fmit Recorder. ) 18. Grape-eaters are long livers. 19. Hybrids are not always high bred. 20 He who buys the new and untried varieties shoul 1 remember that the s 11 er's miixim is, Let the buyer look out for himself. DlncRard Frail Trees. Mr. Hopes, president of the Penn sylvania Fruit Glowers' Association, biddly asserts that the diseased fruit trees are, in nine cases out of ten, the resnlt of causes which have their origin m carelessness or ignorance. Ddep planting is one error to plant a tree rather shallower than it formerly stood is really the right way, whilst many plant a tree as they would a post. Rjotsareof two kinds the young and tender rootlets, composed entirely of cells, the feeders of the tree, always found near the surface getting air and moisture ; and roots of over one year old, which serve only as supporters to the tree aud as conductors of its food. Hnce the injury that ensues when the delicate rootlets are so deeply buried in earth. Placing fresh or green manure in contact with the young roots is, he tells us, a iother error. The place to jWi manure is on the surface, where the elements disintegrate, dissolve and carry downwards. Nnmerous forms of fungi are generated and reproduced by vuo application oi sucn manures direct ly to the roots, and they immediately attack the tree. It is very well to en rioh the soil at transplanting the tree, but the manure, if it be in contact with, or very near, the roots, should be thoroughly decomposed. Fruit Record. To C'leaa Maul. Powder some whiting.and make it into a moist paste with some sal volatile. Cover over the gold ornaments and sur face with a soft brush: let it drv. nnl then brush it off with a moderated harA brush. Silverware may be kept bright and clean by coating the artioles fwarmnrii with a solution of collodion diluted with aioobol. Brass ornaments should be first wash ed with a strong lye made of rock-alum, in tho proportion of one ounce of alum to a piut of water; when drv, rub with leather and fine tripoli. This will give to brass the brillianoy of gold. To clean zino.use kerosene oil and rot tenstone. The Chinese use a life . -wwW uuv t JUO U1COU1TC1. I . 1 tnwAaAwaVAaa I which, t.iinnoi. no-tti- ; j 4l ' simplest construction; it merely oonsuta of eight bamboos, of about six or seven feet long; two of these are placed hori- Buuituiy ueiore mem, ana two behind ana tnese ere crossed by two on each side. The whole are properly secured leaving a spaoe for the body, so that it can easily be put on oyer their heads, and tied securely in a minute, in case of any emergency. With those bamboos they cannot poBoibly sink. TIMELY TOPICS. President Jefferson's grave will soon be marked by a monument, the Congres sional appropriation for the purpose having been spent by Secretary Evarts in the purchane of a beat Stone, The erasshonnArs IibVa ttimin,! tn Central America, Latest advices from tionctnras state that crops have entirely disappeared in a day, and the sparsely populated localities are entirely at their mercy. A Trench tohvaician has rpcnntlv given four rules which he recommends water-drinkers to observe in hot wea ther! 1. Not to drink cold water imme diately after exHi-cising. 2. To eat some thing before drinking. 8. To drink in small moutufuls. 4. Not to drink too much at once. The reigning beauty in London just j - . . " - yer. Recently, in the midst of an ad miring cirole, she asked her husband to introduce to her a certain gentleman. He did so, and the gentleman smiled rnd bowed. Giving him her handker chief, Bhe said, "I want yon to wipe the paint from my cheek, as I hear that you say at the clubs that I am painted." It is not generally known to what ex tent we are indebted to worms for the productiveness of our gardens and fields. It has been found by a series of experi ments, carried out by a German natural ist, that the tunnels made by worms into the earth are frequently of much service to plants whose roots occupy the chan nels that hae thus been made. The mould of our gardens, and fields too, is improved m an almost inconceivable ex tent by the burrowings of this bumble insect. Each worm in less than a week passes through its own weight in mould. and the soil thus produced is fine and light and extremely helpful to the growth of plants. When it is remam. bered that there are in every acre some thirty-four thousand worms, and that in .. i 3. a t . , . . iiuuiiHiu iu lorming every uay about tuirty-Beveu p mnds of fine mould, they lien nD tte BnbBO' nni render it fer- t,'e we sllnl1 Kftiu some slight concep- tion oi our mueuteuueas to these appar ently inBigoiflonnt and generally nn- iiougni-oi mtie worKers. A serious affray took place under ex traordinary circumstances at St. Peters burg recently. A tradesman despatched a porter after a shoplifting sailor. The porter, a Tartar, pushed him into a droshky to get him to the oolice station. whereupon a happy thought seized the sauor, who shrieked out: "Save me. fellew-believers, from the Tartar 1" This brought a number of Russians to his rescue, and the porter managed to effect an escape to his employer's shop. The mob, baffled and furious, then sought the porter's dwelling place, where they beat two of his friends. Then, hearing tuai ne was concealed in a shop near by, mey repaireu tanner, and finding a Tartar and his daughter, threatened to throw them from the window unless they gave np the offender. The man assured them that the porter wasn't there, and wnen uiey reiused to believe Mm begged that at all events they would throw him out nrst. Mollified apparently by this. they did him no harm, but one of his shopmen, whom some of them had trnr- sued, threw himself out of a third story window, and his life is despaired of. Then they did frightful damage to vari ous Tartar .shoj3s.run.tjl. ajLlfnUA fina was got together, and several arrests made. Six tartars were taken to the hos pital. Tne sailor escaped. Tern-Hee on the Stand. He was a curlv-headed man frnm RiV Ur,tv i.ni , thf ft.'ho8nre'itoany name they called him, and who was finally HiiiinoHi to ha nnmn r;n;i- " uotston. nere to buy np all th railroads "i a "'wuiw uiuiiuuailG I LULLl in the State overlooked hv V,in,lrl;it oj i .r. " ".'F" oul xuu Bee. ne Decnn no ho tnn You see." he began, as he tnrnA1 in t 'e desK, "1 am not guilty I can't be, lhe wicked always get away, while the S"uu are laaen oy tue collar and walked down here aud fined five dollars. It was the other chap that opened 'and closed the row." "As I don't see what I want I shall aK for it, pleasautly remarked the eonrt, ana lie beckoned to Tern-Gee, the Chinese washerman, to come for ward and be sworn to state npon h s solemn oath if the prisoner sought to umu uui uib luunury. (I A IU 1 T, i n.uv niuua ue uiu ne aid r ex. uiaitueu me neatnen. "lie comee in likee dis, glaba me inst so alia smA kick over neaps clothes breakee stools mashee window whoop stlike me on cnin stake me on eye hit uin 'gin on lef eye 1" In his soft, confiding way the prisoner viiwuqu uo wna Ulliy jotting Ouly Joking while the shadows Did a little longer grow ; T....I a 1.111.. TT. 1 v uui n uvue, no couian t iiava m. tended to damage Tern-Gee he knew ue couiun t. lhe officer put in his say. He spoke wuu uowucast eyes ana a pair of Ho. 10 boots on, and it was apparent even to a blind man that he was telling only the duxcuju iruLU. ai -vl 1 ; v umj uaying a gooa time, your avuvi, put in tne prisoner as tne ofii cer retired. " Yon have seat No. 1 in the Maria," iu uiB Honor pest place in the wnole vehicle to observe the quivering dew-drop doing np its morning toilet after the French twist. Bijah will chalk your back, so as to lessen the chances of your getting lost." Detroit Pree Press, Words or Wisdom. Boasters are cousins to liars. Foolish fear doubles danger. What's done we partly may compute; out jiuow not, wnat s resisted. In idle wishes fools supinely stay; be u wl" "uu wuwom nnas a way. Few men have a life plan, although m,any week veart youth, or business Pian Modesty in your discourse will give a luster to truth, and an exouse to vonr error. The hardest trial of the heart is to at- tempt to as Dear a mars failure withont weak triumph. The rich man despises those who flatter him too mnoh, and hates those wno uo not natter him at all. There it no union between the thonchts ft. la V, iu.l? u"I " awwaisuo Ul IIUD W 11 IV (311 Z 11111. uie luouguts. woras ana actions Of tha . I i , , , . f g00d' a11 a8reo- Affliotion makes a divoroe between the 80al ana ein- I ia nok small thing lual wm worn Bin out oi tne soul, it ftnt nf rha annl Tl cA f hnrnimt ffl of burning affliction . . .n,1 thAM . AM AW will must be the spirit sanctified. There never did and there never will exist anything permanently noble and excellent in the character whioh is a stranger to. tho existenoe of a resolute Blf -denial. Editor Coleman's Unci. A New York paper says: It is not generally known that William Coleman, William Oullen Rfyant's predecessor on the Eveninjt Pott, was a prinoipal in a fatal aud mysterious midnight duel, wbiou created great excitement in Jour nalistio and political circles here, seven tv-five years ago. At the beginning of the century, party spirit burned at a white heat, and newspaper controversies were conducted with almost intemperate teal was . Coleman's chief political opponent James Cheetham, of the American Vttiien, and the two were constuntly at war. Although the Evening Port editor used violent language, as was the cus tom of the day, he was conscientiously averse to dueling, and bad often so ex pressed himself in his editorial columns. Nevertheless, Gheetham, after a bitter contest of words, challenged Coleman. who accepted the challenge, as men of nis anti-dueling principles nave rften done before and since. The meeting did not take place, however, because Judge Brockholst LivincRtoh. in hisofll cial capacity, Caused the arrest of the principals. The arrest was interpreted unfavorably to Coleman by his political enemies, one of whom, Capt. Thompson, harbor master of this port, declared publicly that the Pott editor could not be driven into a fight: that he was an in famous poltroon. Such language could not at that time be brooked; submission to it involved loss of influence and social caste. Consequently Coleman determin ed, witn tne advice of bis friends, to call Thompson out, and did so, Washington Morton acting for the journalist, and Cheethman for the harbor master. No legal interference could be tolerated this time, and the affair was managed with the greatest secrecy. One summer morning Dr. McLean, a well-known sur geon. received an anonymous letter to the effect that at eleven o'clock of the same evening he would find at the foot of Broadway, on the sonth side of Bow ling Green, a horse and gig. He was requested to drive with these to a spot designated, on the road skirting Potter's Field the neighborhood of Washington i u i i i. i i i iu"ID nijicoouir-wun;uo wuum ujt-tii. BOtne Wends anxious to see him. He followed the directions faithfully. On arrival he heard four pistol shots, and by the moonlight he observed, by look' iug over the fence, one man supporting another, and two other men at a little distance. The man supporting another inquired, Are you Dr. McLiean r lie- ceiving an affirmative reply, the mau said, "This gentleman is wounded. He needs yonr aid. Take charge of him. please, and carry bim to his friends." Then he gently laid the wounded man on t he ground and went off with the others. The doctor recognized the gentleman thns strangely consigned to him as Capt, Thompson, with whom he was intimate ly acquainted. Thompson was severely nurt, Having a bullet hole in his side. and was I deeding profusely. The doc tor stanched the wonnd as well as he could, and drove the patient to his resi dence, nearly two miles away. He left Thompson at the door, rang the bell and burned away. The rr embers of the family came; were terribly shocked to find the husband and father they had seen cneermi and vigorous a few hours before bleeding and helpless. They took him to his chamber, and in tears and distress, inquired the cause of bis pitiable plight. He refused to say any thing more than that he had fought a duel, and had been honorably treated. aud begged that no effort should be made to discover or punish his adversary wuose name ne would not disclose, the ablest surgeons, he diedTaffl !u gering two or three days, with his secret unreveaieu. liis petition was religiously respected. Nobody tried to molest Cole man, wuose snare in the duel necessanlj soon became known; no comment was iuauo iu me prmrz uie editor oi ine Post returned to h s desk, and so the Grange tragedv ended. ' made in the presr: the editor of the w Czar and Fisherman, The Russian province of Simbirsk. which is now the chief sufferer by the lumine mat is ravaging Eastern Kussia, was the scene of a very picturesque episode some time ago. Inthecoime of one of the Czar's periodical journej 8 to the South, he was descending the v oiRa. irom nazan to tUratofT. thinnch the country of the famous "Volga fishermen," whose strange mode of life iias lurnihnea material for one of the best of Russian romances. A little be low the town of Simbirsk a voice was heard hailing the steamer, and a fishing uoui, wiiu tnree men in ner. came along side. A rope was thrown to them, and the eldest, a fine-looking old grav-beard. scrambled on deck, leaving his two sons in the boat. Being asked what he wanted, he produced a magnificent Bteriet a nsn of the sturgeon tribe. esteemed a great delicacy in Russia and said that this fish being the finest caught in the Volga that season. he had decided not to sell it, but to offer it as a present to " father Alexander Nikolaievitoh," (the Czar). Several offl oers immediately went aft to announce the intended compliment to the em- Eeror, who at once called the old man to im, and, shaking him cordially by the iihuu, manned mm very heartily for nis gift, which he assured him should figure upon tue imperial table that very even ing. The veteran muttered a few broken words of acknowledgment, and returned to his boat with the air of a man who iiad nothing left to desire; but the Czar, though fur too considerate to offer anv direct equivalent for the present, took care to requite it soon after with a new boat and a large stock of nets of the best quality. Attachment to Newspapers. Some one who seems to know about the'relation of a good newspaper to the lumny writes as ioiiowb: " The strong attachment of subscrib ers to wen conducted newspapers is fully confirmed by publishers. Stop I my paper.' words of dread to beginners in business, lose their terror after a paper has been established for a term of years, do long as a paper pursues a just, uonoraDie ana judicious course. meeting the wants of its customers in all respects, the ties of friendship be tween the subscribers and the paper are nara to Dreas oy an ontsute third party as the link which binds old friends J l : i if- - . I in business or social lite. Occasional defects and errors in a newspaper are overlooked by those who have become attached to it, through its perusal, for years. They sometimes become dis satisfied with it on account of something which has slipped into its oolnmns, and may stop taking it: but the absence of thi familiar sheet at their homes and cmces lor a lew weeks becomes an in' supportable privation, and they hasten I 11 1 I hmu nidi "wwu take u aRm Hnd PoMy apologize for having it .topped. No friendship on earth is more constant than that con- . -. 1 1 . 1 . . . . ... frA .').. :i ." . . 1 i , . I triotod by the reader for a ionmal whioh makes an honest and earnest effort to merit its continued support Henoe a conscientiously conducted paper ba eomes a favorite in the family." ORIGIN OP HEAT WAYES. Whete the Itat Weather Cethee Frees. ex at ... .i i ... . uw mat tue torna season is prao tically over (says the New York Tribune) uuo vi Hie questions naturaiiy suggested by the terriflo beat waves which spas modically fall npon us is : What is tneir origin t Are they due to local infln. enow, or directly caused by fluctuations iu uie sun itself r uoes that great auuroe oi neat ana iiffnt remain uniform I in it supplies, or are its forces subject to periodio ebb and flow ? In short, is the sun a variable star ? Startling as an affirmative answer to the last question migbt appear, there would really be nothing strange in such a fact The nxed stars are known to be gigantic buub, saining Dy tneir own light, and CM VI T I ff -.nf nn.1nnhfa,ll quantities of heat, although we are too distant to Derceive it. and each is nroh ably the centre of an attendant system of planets, just as our sun is. Yet among these far-off worlds We find many subject to periodic Variations of bril liancy, anrjearine and disappearing with almostcJoekwork regularity, or suddenly oaring np as new stars and as quickly fading away forever. One of the most striking examples oi thit variability .is the star ALra, or "ue wonderful, in the constel lation of The Whale. This sinmr lar body passes every year through a succession of chancres so extreme that for five months it is absolutely invisible. although, when at its brightest, it eqnals in splenlor a star of the second magni tude, lis greatest brilliancy, too, is not mwajB e same, it does not increase or diminish by the same gradation, nor are the successive intervals of its varia tions constant. In fact while the aver age period of its changes is about 331 days, the star is also subject to many minor irregularities. Another variable sun of saort period is Algol in Perseus. At its brightest this star is commonly of the second magnitude, bot in loss than four hours it falls to one of the fourth magnitude, and remains in that dition for twenty minutes. Then it be i - . i giiio w increase m Dngnmess, ana in inree uourBaud a naif more Mas regained its rang as a second magnitude star, and continues to hold it fur two days and a half, when it again passes through its periodio changes. These are by no means isolated cases. The number of stars know to be variable is large some of them paBS through their round of variations in long and others in short periods, and all are apparently liable to nuutuiuioiiB wmcn coniorm to no nxea rnles. - Several facts seem to indicate that our sun is a variable star of the same kind, though not subject to such extreme changes as Mira and Algol. It is fright ful to think wnat would happen if it dis appeared altogether for four years, as Mira once did, or even if it went through such rapid variations of brilliancy as we see in Algol ; but tnat sun does vary can nardly be doubted. In some years its surface is found to be almost perfectly at rest. In others, its forces seem to be in an extraordinary state of activity, giving rise to enormous spots which undergo the most rapid and violent changes, and throwing ont vast masses of incandescent gases to inconceivable distances. How these changes are pro- duced still remains a mystery. On the supposition that the sun's heat was kept up by a constant ttream of meteors fall iug into that body, it was natural to suppose that the variations in the amount of heat thrown off depended upon irregularities in the supp.bt.ofoi7 m- . . uvw ... T auurpieu uieory. uowever. tnat tne tem perature of the sun is sustained, not by enormous snowers oi meteors, but by the contraction of its own mass, these variations of heat and light are orobablv due to corresponding variations in the process of condensation. Judging from the outbreak and disappearance of solar spots, it seems probable that the sun goes through these changes, on an aver age, every eleven yean, though the time may extend to thirteen years, or be less than ten. Taking this period of elevf n years, and remembering that Jnpiter revolves around tne sin in nearly the same period, some astronomers nave sought to show that the greater of the solar variations were due to the action of that planet, while others have argn d mat me minor cnanges were caused by tne eariu ana venus. xnese views. however, seem to rest ou no solid foun- lation. But, whatever be the cause, it mav be saieiy assumed irontjoe periodio preva n m ii . lence and disappearance of the spots and from other indications, that the sun like so many of the stars, is reallv variable, passing through its phases in a period of about eleven years, and that to its variations, am! not to local influences, must be ascribed those extraordinarv outbursts of heat which make life intol erable in summer and . are doubtless the origin of our exceptionally mild winters. It seems probable, too. that our heated terms are likely to be mnoh more severe in the years of sun-spot abundance, than in those when solar disturbances are few, though on this point there is no conclusive evidence, The fearful heat of 1872, however, oo ourred near the sun-spot maximum, while the milder inflictions both of this summer and of 1876 happened near the sun-spot minimum, future .observa tions will no doubt throw much light on these obscure points, and it may even be that as our knowledge of solar phy sics increases we shall be able to predict the arrival of these unusual heat waves, and thus rob them of half their terrors. A Short Story of Paris Life. The adventures of Jean Baptiste Roussel make one of the strangest chap ters in the criminal records of Paris. He was artioled to an attorney at Lille. made an advantageous marriage, and opened an office at Tonrooing, where he was known as a cold, methodical, con scientious business man and a model husband. At Brussels, where he passed four days every week, he was a reckless financier, a bold speculator, a bon vi- vant, and a "fast" man. Thus the notary lived from 1868 to 1874, when he turned his eyes toward Pans. There was a notary's office for sale at Courbe voie, a suburb outside the oapitaL He purchased the business and settled there. - To inspire confidence he oom- bined luxury with piety, 1 I - i i tie had a splendidly furnished heuse, and kept open table; but he was very strict about lasting and praying, and had an altar with burning tapers fitted up in his bed room. The good people were easily taken in, and deposited their money ana securities with him to the extent of sev eral hundred thousand francs. At Cour bevoie he was remarkable for his sobrie ty and piety, but in the oenter of Paris he figured among the worst , rakes. o " wm.vuk " When his oredit was exhausted his brain to supply hia wants. man named Joly. son of a t 1 . - - 1 ... .- IT7U L; j.. . 1.-1 l. - , . w ucu uis oreutt was exnausteu ua racaea A young policeman. was released from iail. There he bad served a term for passing himsell off as a prince of Morocco, under the title of Ben Ali GaenaorL Jolv again summed the title, and, in order the better to en trap hit viotims, took to himself a secre tary. The person employed by this sham prince as his aoribe was none other than the Whilom secretary of M. Fornerod, otle ot tbe ex-residents of the Swiss confederation. Roussel made the acquaintance of these two gentle men, and the trio formed an association for raising funds to enable Ben Ali Guen aori to recover the lost throne of his an cestors. At the same time they organ ized a society for utilizing the sweep ings of Paris. While they were making dupes of the credulous, and amusing themselves at the public dancing-rooms and skating palaces, tbe notary business at Courbevoie was rapidly going to ruin, and at length the crash came. Roussel, finding it impossible to hide the state of his affairs any longer, proclaimed himself bankrupt, with liabilities amounting to 850,000 francs, and assets nil. The inquiry set on foot in behalf of the number of pool persons ruined by the notary's profligacy, led to his arrest. Hii bearing in court was characteristic of the man; he feigned injured inno cence in a manner worthy of Tartuffe. However, with that exoessive mercy with which most French juries temper their justice, he was given the benefit of extenuating circumstances, and, al thongh fcund guilty of embezzlement, he got off with five years' imprisonment. Mining In the Streets of New York. Some time ago a large jewelry estab lishment in New York waa destroyed by fire and the mass of dirt and rubbish in the cellar of the rains was leased to a couple of miners, who at once began operations in this strange mine. Their success is recorded by a local paper as follows: Messrs. Peer and Roberts, who are conducting the mining operations on the site of the Bond street fire, say that the yield of precions metals fully realizes their most sanguine expectations. " It pays,"8aid Mr. Roberts, " better than any mine in California. We are taking out about $500 a day, and have been do ing so for some time. At first we only got about 825 a day, but as we worked over to the other end the yield became richer. We have collected between two and three hundred ounces of gold and about 5,000 ounces of silver." Mr. Peer said that they had made $10,000 in five weeks, and as they had washed only about one-third of the accumulation of ashes within tho inolosure, he expected to realize as much as 832,000 on the completion of the work. Peer and Roberts are natives of California, and have spent many years in the gold fields of that. State. Before they undertook the present work the contract had been refused by all the refiners in the city and vicinity, and by a firm in Cincinnati. on tbe ground that they could not make it pay expenses, and the owners of the property were about to sell the dirt for manure, for which the lime and ashes that it contained made it valuable, when Mr. I'eer and his partner, who were in the city on other business, heard of the opportnnity and offered to undertake the work. For upward or thirty years Mrs. WIN8LOW8 Dwininuumui' nas oeen nea ror emmren with never-failing snoces. It oorreot aoidity of the stomaoh, relieves wind oolio, regulate' toe Doweia, cures dysentery ana aiarrnooa, whether ariiiing from teething or other onuaos. an oia ana wen-tried remedy. 2t eta. a bottle. Hureat Tranaiilllv.er af ihn N.nr.1. The surest truuqiulizer of the nerves is medicine whioh remedies then- supersensitive.- i. . : .i s . - 1,1 Uieperjfi.aTffWaiHbV"n6t''a s'edativo. Tne latter is only useful when there is intense mental eieitement and an immediate necessity exists for producing quietude of the brain. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters restores tranquility of the nerves by endowing them with tbe vigor requisite to bear, without being Jar ed or dis turbed nohealtbfully, the ordinary impressions produced through the media of sight, hearing and reflection. Nay, it does more than this. it enables them to sustain a degree of tension from meutal application wbich they wonld be totally uuable to endure without its assistance. IDn. Ul 1UV1KU1BU IK 1 linn.. w v cm - . . . . Such at least is the irresistible conclusion to be drawn from the textimony of business and pro- iessiouai men, litterateurs, clergymen and others who have tested the fortifying and re ptrative influence of this celebrated tonio and nervine. Wobtht a Flack im Evkbt Family. Graoe Salve is now firmly established as the best rem edy in use for the immediate relief of Cuts, Burns, Sprains, Wounds, Felons, TJloers, io. It should be kept in every house. We know of no way that we can benefit our reaaera more man oy cauiug attention to John son's Anodyne Liniment. It is the oldest and moot valuable patent medicine in the world Everybody should keep it in the bonne. It will check diarrbosa and dysentery in one hour. If the fountain is pure the streams will be pure also. So with tbe blood. If that be Dure the health is establish-4 Parsons' Purgative Pills make new rich bloo 1, and taken one a night will change the, bloo 1 in tbe entire sys tem in tnree montns. Tbe Markets. mw VOBK. BkefOattle Native 09 10 xsxasanauaeroaz.. ui gk mu MtlohOows SI 00 atOOO Hags I Ilve (iHG CH Drcseea. v m vo Hhi.... OS IS 1V Lambs 0SV(, rgu Cotton i Middling UX(s IT lour Western : Qood to Oholoa. i 34 g) 1 00 state: rair to unoioe.... t n a too Wheat i Bed Weaurn 1 01 & 1 lax Ho. i Milwauxoe 1 03MA 1 OiU Eyas BUta t 4 6J Barley t Bute TS IS IS Barley Mait It (A 88 0 tat Mixed Western it IS H Corn! Mixed Weatern.. ...... ...... 41 s iS Hay, parewt al is el Straw, par ewt 80 0 hops...... ids ua ia ...... iai iu is 12 Fork : km iu iu Lard I City Steam OT OHM S 0-0 00 011 00 '0 Ok IT Irian l Maeaerei, no. i, new lsuu no. a, new....... . iu i o Dry Ood, per swt (00 Herring, Boaled, per box. .. . IT Petroleum : Onde 0 UW Banned.. .11 Wool California Fleece SO IS 36 Taxaa Fleeoe IS S U AoatralianFleeoe....... 89 IS HtateXX. U IS U Ban r State..... If s 11 - Western; Oholoe 14 s SI Western : Fair to Prime. ' 08 O-l Wasters t Firkins 07 S 18 rjheeaei Bute Factory tl 08 State Sklmmeo. 08 IS M Waatarn - MKta Oi Eggsi Btate and Pennsylvania.... 18 at 14 DI7ALO. Flour............ ................... I T8 A 8 IB Wheat Ho. 1 Milwaukee............ 1 10 ) 1 10 - Corn Mixed 41 IS 48 Date.... 10 m to Rye H II Barley... M TO 1 Barley Malt.... 80 0 (0 VBiLADaLrau. Beef Cattle Extra.......... 00 OS Sheep 061(9 06 Hogs Draeaed 069 08 Flonr Pennsylvania Extra 8 00 A 8 60 Wheat Bed Western.... 1 18 0 1 14 Bys 48 IS 4T Corn Yellow... 48 0 80 Mixed. 40 Im 41 Oats Mixed it 0 itu Petroleum Crude t804 Banned, II Wool Colorado 18 0 81 Taxaa 18 0 18 Oalllomla 10 0 a lonoi. Beef Cattle. 01 ea caw Bheep 08 X0 08 logs OS (4 0T Flonr Wisconsin and Minnesota i 00 a IU Corn Mixed. ......... m. ..m. .... . 4T 0 88 ou n a ii Wool Ohio and Pennsylvania XX... 48 0 4T uailiornia ran is 0 18M 11USHXOM. MASS. Baal Oattle..... oX0 olH Sheep...... Oi 0 Mja fmbs 08 0 10 Hos. O?0 08 Beef Cattle Poor to Oholoe 4 80 0880 foP. ........ 8 00 0 TM Uab( - T 00 0 00 wiiutovi. HAea. Peeler's Yenet Pewaler. This truly unrivaled basing powder standi on M. .innn. ami ruwanaA nf Its perfect pu rity and excellence, and from tbe fact that every package is strictly full wclpht, the peo- EI6 nave auoptea it in tut it Duuuvir. ava the tit most confidence in it. It always does the work effectually, goes much further in use, and makes better and more wholeaoiar and nutritious biscuits, bread, rolls, mnfflni, oakes and pas ry than any other powder In the ountry. Wa have a l'st of s thousand country week lies, in which we c'dfl Insert a one-inch adver tisement one year for two dollars and a quarter a paper, or for the same price we em insert fifty-two reading noiioes (a new one every week), averaging seven lines each. For list of papers an 1 other partionlari address Beaxs A Fostim, 10 Spruce Street, New York. . The Uremteat Discover at the Ae is Dr Tobias' eelebrat,d Vawrtlaa Lmun eat I 80 ears before the pnblie, and warranted' M tote Diarrhea, DTaentan r, Oolio, and Spasms, taken In tarn slit ; nt Onrap, Ohronle Rheumatism, Sore Throats, Onta, Bralssa, Old Boras, and Psins in tba Limbs, Baak, and Chest, axtamalls. tt has never failed. No family will ever be without It after onoe (tying It a fair trial. Prioe, 40 ante. Da. TOBIAS' VRNKTIAN HOR8H LIIflMBNT, la Ptol Bottles, at One Dollar, Is wan anted superior to am rther, or MO PAT, for tbe eare of Oolio, Onta, Bralaaa, Old Bona, ato. Sold by all Drncsiate. Depot lO Park flsoa. New York. Saoww'a Bbowohia. Tbcwhbs, foroonrn. anil eoies. (lTTK'Q HBTOI.VKRM. Pries lutn-s addra. VUg O Qrast Western Onn Works. Pittabara;. Pt TO MARE JtfONE , t circulars Dnv Urn's 8UO Aulnmiitie Inrnbnlor. Baltimore, Md. $7 A DAY to Airentecuvsmlnarortha f Ireelai visitor. Terms and Outfit Free. Ac dreaa P. O. VIDKKRY AmrnsU, Msine 0R6AHS retail prloa fjgno only SJO.y piAWOf retell price M5I0 only SI 3ft. Ores! bargains. B FATTY, Wasbinaton, N. J. MILLERS Send J2.AO rr Brat FLOUR Til I Kit rwrr mnil. I HTltA iri Mill Co., vM dart, Taoj I'larf 10 tVeek.a, su i aril sal a esriaJa la m Pa, I a. Ms t. ri (-pa i7n:itm ! L.LUMITB ), (Was Af ' M, r-aloAa , I ft. illnksW CHAPMAN'S CHOLERA SYRUP Core. Dysentery, Di irrhora and Snmmer Oornplsfnte of Children. Price r.Oo. UKOBHK MOORK, Proprie tor, Great Falls, N. H. Bold by sll Drngaists. CLOCKS K. INUKAHAitl fc VO.'t bapitrior in dMign. Not eqa-ler tn qaslit, or u tlmkepra. ek yoar Jsweler for tbm Agency Oortlni1t St., It. Y $10. $20. $50. $100. Invested Judiciously in Stookt (Option or PriTlter). is m Rare road to rapid fortune. Full detents and Omoiai Stnok Exohanse Reports free. Addreai T. POTT KB WKiHT A CO., Bankera. 3ft Wall Street, New York. VP A C The choicest In the world Importer X fji-S-Oa priced Larffant Oompany in Amerioa staple articm pleasns evnry body Trade oontinnall) inoreaainff Aftenta wanted ererywhere bttst induoe mants don't waste time send for Circular to ROB'T WKLLS. 43 Vesey St.. N.Y., P. O. Box 1287 $10S$25 raB1-aa Novelties Illustrated st..-A. 171 n. by mall en (JataloKue A J ULlilXv A CO application tr J. B. BUFFOKD'S SONS, Mannfaotnrina; Pnbllahara, 14 1 to 117 Franklin Street, Boston, Maas. r.suDUBiiea nearly nicy years. Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Sick Headache. GRACE'S SALVE. JoNESTTIsL- Mich., Deo. 37, 1877. Jir. FbvUs: I wnt you (ki cts.f or two boxes of Grace1 Salve. I nave bad two and hare used them on an uloer on my foot,and it i almoat well. Reapectfnl:y your, O. J. VAM Niebs. Price 25 cents a box at all drnfrirtst, or sent by mall on rnneipt of cents. Prepared by MKT II V KOW I J; iV HONS, 8(1 Harrison Are., Boaton.Maw. HOW TO OCT THtM d b"t pun of thstut. 6,000,000 Brret ror title. For a enpr nf ttie " Kit n nan IBo llano stead," tddreis 8. J- Glim ore. Laud Com'r, balias, Kibim. A aula aud iietiab e hubstltute lor tAulxiliie The only 25 cent AGUE REMEDY IN TII33 T0 IHIi t'PRES aud all DULAUIAL OB8EA8ES. told by .11 Drutcl.lt M.llri FREE ndpt ofprlra. Writ. Iu UUMIAS IIICK a CO., Ji Wuostss STassr, Nsw Vo, lor ii, Mr tea cast book, Ballad to tli. rssdsrs tt Uil.p.pr FREE on .ppllcstloo. 77a? LULe Gttnt TVWr. KILLS all the FLIES in a room in TWO P HOURS. IOC. worth will kill more flies than $io worth of Fly Paper. No dirt, f bo trouble. Sold by Dsuggists Potafl- Medtcine Co.. Bnffalo.N. T FOR $750 Wa will insert a one-inoh advertiaemant, thlrtaaa times, in one thousand Amarioaa weekly news pa oars. Adyartiasment may appear three month, every week, or every other week eix months. HALF INCH FOUK L.INE8 THltEE LINES.. ..FORS486 .FUK 8280 .FOU B85 For eaah payment entirely in advanoe, five par sent, diaeount. Mo extra c Largs for making and aendinc enta. For oatalocne of papers and other Information address BEALS & FOSTER, 10 Spruce Street, New York. Who Wants Uachinery? Wo han for sala over 1 .mm .n , . ar - i w UV XSUWIlU-UAIiq uehlnea at P'ioes far below their true Talus, eomprla in HtW..niLl and GENERAL WOOD. Portable and Htntlonary NTEADI ENtJINEN and BOILEUMfrom l. to 800.p.. WATER. WHEELH, OHI8T MILL MACHiCeRV MAt'lllMSTW and BUCKHIHITHa TOW.M of ovary variety, PUAIPM, FIRE APPA. RATUM. COTTON anil U'lliu srsi ERV, BELTINU. CIRCULAR HAIVs, HUAFTINIi, PULLEYS. ,., eie all tali, described in oar printed List No. 17, with prioes annex ad. whioh wa will mail to the address ot any part- desk In maohinerf npon receipt of stamp. State plainly lust what machine or machines yon are in wtol. and don't boy nnt.l you hal?oar."lrad ear li.tof the sreateat bamama avar ottered in the way of new anUaeoond band maohinaa. Lowspeoial freishU Sit. obtained tor our ciuuuners to any section of the United 8taUa of Oanada. 1 s - 8. F. FORSAITH CO. , uacMisis ana General mm Dealers, MANCHESTER. N. H. W B VlllurJ. snil Tn.. IM u . LI rutins LeddtfTraoks and Fira atqaiuaianle a apaoialtv. Basa lot Fue KofiiM euoaian. , wm noaca g- I GEO. P. ROVELL & CO, 10 SPRUCE ST., HEW YORK. The Object of Our Establishmenl. Wanndertak. to rlJOT not only the nawanaper. i th. jr f JJi't'oral, of sll other Amenoan eitlMv.?f Lllrttn small oount and other olase nowsr.sper,-bnt alstf tnj. .ma i o try ionrnals. We receive reulrly d.pVipUoJ diily and weekly newspapara of every oaaoripn Uirvutiuvut vu- ywi Confined Strictly to Newspaper Adver tising and to American Newspapers. We eonfloe oor (ranssotions to newspapers, and Aa not accept or undertake the management or nar clsssee of advertning, kooh as books, sufn boarda, poa- '&y(TheRn,n,one branch of advartisinf wa maka anr.elvee mastar of it. .. We aleo re.tr! ot our daallnaw ts aewa Panars poB 'i.hed wlthi i the eorepliiol limiU of the United Dtatee and Dominion of Oanada. The Nature of the Service which it is Our Business to Render to the Advertiser. . . . u..f.l,.tt RMUftt Wftll wa onaenase w minwiu : - , f evxry newspaper, and to have at. hand a eo'.adnla of onarres '"' aoeni.iii .ifwto " -- ----- - . - able to quota the ratee to an advertiser who wiehea mm or several, and to procure tbe prompt insertion of tnai sdrrrti-ement withont sny estra ohanra lor th sarvtoa) tendeled; which service ooneiete of quoting the prieee printins- or writing as many dnplioatee of the advtwe ment ss may be required, forw.nlina tbe '; insertion at onr own eapenea for poeUe-e or mjaeenaar sarviea ; ezaminiiuj the papers to see that the ad wliaar meet appears, when, and In tho manner that it ought o: oheekina each euheeqiient ieeue of Iho aovertlna itient, in eaob paper, in a book kept for that pnrpoae, . .11 limu .nhjn.l tn the in.tWOl ion of til. advertiser. and maratng plainly in eacn paper in ae it appeare; so tbst when the ailvartiir , sends) for tbe purpose of baring the nine 4 tbe eye may light promptly npn hi. aonoii and markina; plainly in each paper the advertisement eiamined. BBfionooement, without the labor of searching a whole paper or pace. If errors or omissions occur, it is our diaty to notify publishers, at our owa espenoe for lalior, postage or messenger, and t eo t.i it that tbe putilier of tha piper actually doee render tha sped bed sarvloe for which tba adyertiaer oou treated . Our Promise. We promise those advertisers who entrant their ad vertining patronage to our management that wo will not allow them to be obarged, in any infetanoe. any mora than the publishers' acbodu a rata. ; that we ill p nc tire fur them the acoeptanoa of any advantageous ..dor definitely made to tliem by any newsppr pub :i.hr, adrertuing agent, or oanvasser of mponaibiliiy. We are unwilling to do work without a protit, and never offer to do so, yet in oonfonnity with tha proniiee made above, wa sometimes nsd it advisable. The System of Arrangement for News paper Fjles a have a perfected system for filing- newspapers. "TP? rt space being aucorne I to each, and lubeled with tbe printed name of the paper it is intended to accommodate. A stranger can plana his hind upon S-.SKt?1i"?w' 'mine with tha same readi ners with which he would find a wor.1 in a dictionary, a name in a diraotorv, or a book in a library catalogue. The Amount of Money to be Expended. Parsons who have had little aiperienae a. advertisers often ban a pretty oln ir ondxr.t mding of wnat they would like to do, but are entirely ignorant of tbe prob able cost. Wa have made ont for suoh a person a plan of adver tising calling frr an inve-tment of S5.0O0, and on Bub. muting It for approval, found our oualomnr dismayed at th i m.gnitnde of the expenMe, he nt baying con templated an sap ,nditure exceeding i'JUU or Ai. Is such a case labor would have been saved, if at the com saancement of tha negotiation tho question had been eased : " How much money are you prepared to davota to this advartieiof f " The Confidence of Our Patrons a Matter of Prime Importance. It ia a matter of prima importance to aa, for tha par pose of maintaining our influence with publisheis. that it .ball com. to be understood among them that onr statements about tha advert iaing to tie dune, or not So be dona, ar to be relied npon and to tbia and our dva ing with our anvnrtiaing natrona must ba npon a basis of mutual eenbdanoa and good faith. Our Customers Entitled to Our Best Services. Whenever wa are doing the advertising for any indi vidual, or Hrm, wa consider them aiitiMrdto our beat services. If they suggest using a paper ahioh we know to ba not tba ba.t for tba purpoae, we say so sad give tbereaaons. We often expend a good dual af nmefor very small advertisers, mnoh moretbsn tbeprolilson their patronage would wairant; but we re content, C they entrust to ua what they bava to disburse, and in fluenaa m onr direction tha patronage of their friends end aeqneintaaoes. JkavaefVwai fa ror " ySeiM." Jam U, Wit. : Tan rears ago Measrs. Geo. P. Rowall a Oo estab lished their advertising agenoy in New York City. Fiv Iears ago they absorbed tba business oondueted ba ir. John Hooper, who was the fir.t to go into this kinv of entarprise. Now they have tba eatiaf action r.f oond trolling the moat extensive and complete advertising aonnection which has aver been secuiad, and one which would be hardly poasibia in any other country but thia. Tbey have aucoeeded in working down a oomplex busi- "" '"V lourougniy a Bystemauo method that no GEO. P. EO WELL & CO., 10 SPRUCE ST, HEW YORK. i mmm mm i so