9 AM) HOUSEHOLD. Hrnllh Hint. i i miment9. Tlio most importniit con.limoiita fire salt, pepper and mus tard ; of those unit nlone in a neoeflsary of lifo; a sufficient quantity does not oxiRt in onr fooil to supply the wants of the body. The young should avoid all ltirvK " - 11. 1 ' i nu ni-iunimiig; lutur UlgCHUOn 18 gOtHl and thoy do not need stimnlante. 0'tnvq is Ririrwiraa Hnin .,. -" " ... ....-.....j, vuiifua uiu lino fal in nioknoss. Cover two nuarta of 1 !ll l . , ivuiiB (iuiuus wuu sou water; etew thorn to a jolly, strain through a cloth or fine "i "tiKu uih iiqmu ana acta an t .equal weight of dark brown sugar the commoner the better simmer all to- frr'ttior mi til it ia t tlm ,,.;..i.,- t treacle. Dose, a tablespoonful three t.inien a ilnvr Tf it no,-.o u The Fixoer Nails. To whiten the finger nails take two drams of dilute Bulphurio acid, one dram of tincture i ui myrru, iour ounces of. spring water. and mix them in a bottle. After wash ing the hands, dip the fingers in a little of the mixture, ami if. will mVa a AoM. cate appenrauce to the hand. Rices i - . wiui peHiis in meni, ana such as have stones set with foils to color them should always be removed from the fingers when the hands are washed. Anti-Croup Contrivance. To moth ers whose children have the croup: First get a piece of chamois skin, make it like a little bib. cut the neck and sew on tapes to tie it on; then melt together some tallow and pine tar; rub some of this in the chamois, and let the child wear it nil the time. My baby had the croup whenever she took cold, and sihee I put on tha chamois I have had no more trouble. Renew with the tar occasionally. To Sweeten the Breath and Cleanse the Teeth. Always clean the teeth at night, just before retiring. Scrub the teeth with a hard brush, using little, if any, Boap; sprinkle on a very little pul verized borax; until the gums are hardened and become accustomed to the use of borax, rinse the mouth often with borax water; it prevents it from becoming sore or tender. If artificial teeth are worn, cleanse them thorough ly with borax, and when convenient, let them remain in borax water all night; it will purify them and help to sweeten the breath. New Stock (or Pear. Having a group of pyrus japonica seedlings which I noticed to be unusu ally fruitful, some five or six years ago, I have kept the stock since that time for the purpose of raising seedlings" for hedge plants. The habit and vigor of growth of these plants suggested the idea of using them as stocks for budding with the pear. I reasoned as follows : This pyrus japonica is quite as nearly allied to the common pear as is the quince ; indeed, it .is rather classed as pyrus than cydonia. It is a more hardy variety than the quince, being never in jured in root or branch by the winter. It is vigorous and adapts itself to a great variety of seil, and is in this respect quite in contrast with the quince stock. Lastly, it will be likely to dwarf the pear, and induce fruitfulness quite as much as does the quince. Reasoning ,ihus, I made trial upon a few stocks during the last summer, which were planted with no reference to this pur pose. The result was that the buds "took "with great readiness, and we now have young pears with luxuriant growth upon this stock. My partner and I are so well pleased with the ap pearance and promise of this stock that we have planted out our whole crop of last year's seedlings about 15,000 for the purpose of budding this year. Ve fiud the habit of growth of the seed hugs to be clean and upright, quite in contrast with the plants usually propa gated by root cuttings. The average iioigut of the plants in the seed-bed the iu-bt season was a foot and a half, al though many attained to a height of 'KMirly three feet, and would have taken ; bud the first year from seed. Possi : ly this particular variety and its dt oiidants may be more vigorous than !ie common type. However this may , it is clear that such seedlings will ' work" well To my mind the pros- ct is decidedly encouraging that anew " valuable stock for dwarfing the pear ; here promised. But I am fully aware ;U the experiment is not yet tested to conclusion. Yet it can be but a ques 111 of comparatively thort time before finite results will be obtained. Iterlpes. Ijaked Soub Apples. Place them in I 'in; pour in a teacupful of water and ! of sugar; bake thorn slowly till done. t them with cream and the juice which ks from them. ' .1 red Sweet Apples. Place them s pan with a very little water, that the j may not burn, if they are to be !-id iu a brick oven; then put the '8 in a jar, cover them close and j them five or six hours. Sweet i Ips should be baked long after they j tender. Vegetable Soup. One and a half uads beef to three quarts and a pint water, one-half cup rice or tar.ey, on with salt and pepper; put in a " luid.boil steadily for two hours; then i parsley, one onion, two potatoes, carrot and tomato, if you have it; if water boils down you can add more t, water. io Fhy Steak. First pound your uk thoroughly, heat your frying pan t, put in a small piece of butter, and :4l nicely warm put in your steak; ) inkle over salt and pepper. Now be o and have a good fire and hot frying ; when nicely brown dish up on a a platter, spread over a little butter i t ia the oven a minute or two. It -1 to broiled steak, nun Crackers. Rub three table ful of butter into one' quart of , add one saltspoonful of salt, two of sweet milk, and one-half tea fal of soda, dissolved in hot water i -.11 1 1 I a i wen ior nan an nour, then roll j an ever sheet, a quarter of an inch St or less; cut with a wineglass, prick i a fork, and bake hard in a moderate ii ; Lang them up in a muslin bag in kitcLeu two or three days to dry. ' in ncthiug ty being with such ! vea. We encourage one another "'ity. I am always longing to u more excellent than myself. FOR THE FAIR SEX. Tiny Pert f Chinese l.ndlra. Just imncine the foot of a f nil-crown lady but five inches in length I Yet even mis ir large, and in highly arisu oratio families four inches is the stand' ard. This queer enstom of compressing the feet of Chinese girls ia of very ancient uate, ana in our day is almost universal only nuns, slaves, boat-women, and others. who are obliged to perform out door drudgery, being exempt. As to the origin of the custom, the Chinese them selves are not agreed. Many suppose it is a lasmon intended to draw a lino be tween the hicher and lower classes. Others say that its object was to keep ladies within doors, where they would not be subjected, like common market or boat-women, to the gaze of the other sex; and some boldly declare that to cripple them was known to be the only way by which women could be kept at home, and rendered of nse working for tueir huEbands or fathers, instead of spending their time in gadding and gos sip. Some of the most reliable native historians state that the custom began during the reign of Take, Bomewhere about the year 1123, with a whim of the last empress of the Suang dynasty. The time for putting on the first bandages varies in different families. In some, the process is commenced when the baby is only a few weeks old, others defer the ceremony for a year or two ; but all begin before the little one has reached the age of four years. No iron or wooden shoe is used, as some travelers have stated : but a strip of cotton cloth, some three inches wide, and about six feet long, is wound around the toes, over the instep, and then bo hind the heel, after which it is brought back again over the foot and drawn bo tightly around the toes as to press them into a point all except the first and second having been previously doubled under the sole. These bandages are never removed. except for purposes of cleanliness, per haps once a month ; and they are re- E laced as quickly as possible, each time eing drawn tighter, until the instep bends into a bow and the ball of the foot is forced against the heel. ine stockings are made of white cot ton or silk. The dainty little shoes are of silk, richly embroidered and often beautifully adorned with tiny pearls or rubies. The soles are of white satin, quilted, and stiffened with lining of pasteboard. The heels are very high and pointed, and the white satin that entirely covers them, as well as the up turned toes, presents a pretty contrast to the blue or crimson silk uppers. . White satin seems to us an odd ma terial for shoe soles ; but they are in tended only for carpeted floors. When one of these tiny satm-soled slippers is cast off as " worn out," it has probably never for a single time come in contact with terra fimm ; and probably the wearer, when robed in the white slippers for her last sleep, has not from her infancy had one gleeful- romp out-doors. This compression produces, dnrin fl ail the years of childhood, the most ex cruciating pain, followed at length by a sort of numbness. I never saw one of these compressed feet entirely without covering, but I saw enough when the outer bandages had been removed to excite both pity and diseust: and a lady who had seen the bare foot of one of their greatest belles, told me that she had never even conceived of a spectacle bo shockingly revolting as this tiny foot when divested of all that could hide ita deformity. Although the young lady was full grown, the solo of her foot was but three and three-ouarter inches in length. The great toe formed a point that was bent upward and back ward, while the heel, of natural size, seemed by contrast disproDortiouatelv large. Chinese ladies of rank are seldom seen abroad unless in closely-curtained Sedan-chairs ; but we used occasionally mj meet uiose oi ine middle class making short excursions in the immediate vicin ity of their homes. Their attempts at walking were pitiable in the extreme, as they hobbled along, leaning on an urn- Drena, or tne slioulder of a servant, for support, or with hands outstretched egainst Ihe houses as they passed, en deavoring to keep their balance. Wide Jiwake. PaHhlon Notes. Sauare and I round trninn diviA iha popular favor. Silver lynx is the leading fur of the coming winter. The latest sleeve is the "Jane Shore," with its Edward IV. cuff. The bonnet shapes of this season are very like those of last year. Plain und fiat trimmings ara to be worn most on winter dresses. The poufs and paniers on imported costumes are scarcely discernible. Some of the new linen cuffs and col lars are hair-stripe like the new hosiery. The long twelve or six-button kid glove, with the opening at the side seam, grows in favor. Persian brocades and old English and niediajval French brocade etull's are re vived for parts of costumes. Ribbons with graduated stripes of another color are among the latest im portations in millinery goods. One of the new shades in the fancy plushes to be used this winter for hats and bonnets is called "Gramoise." Evening bonnets composed entirely of ostrich feathers ona transparent frame are among the novelties in millinery. A new freak of fashion shows the dol man with a double skirt. It is not nearly as prettv as tha crAfni uinrrio. skirted dolman. Bronze, olive and neutral colors ap pear in dress-goods, with all shades of dark red, including ruby, currant and crimson. For millinery and trimming purDOses the fashionable colors are ruby, garnet, amethyst, emerald, sap phire, turquoise, topaz and old and bright gold Statistics show that for the present year the value of gold and silver pro duced in California is 821,000,000, while the agriculture produce of the same State eicoeda $1)1,500,000. As com pared with mining, agriculture stands uearly five to one in valuea produced. Ihe City of Dublin. lfr. CI. CI. TiVilfnn ffi'voa a a rvlimnnA of Ireland's chief city in the following extract irora a letter to tne Jialtimoie American : Irishmen may well be proud of the city of Dublin. It has improved wonderfully during the past twenlv the city there are bright little towns and - 1 - Ml . .. biuuiur viuagoH, ana as wo upproacu it, nlflftRfinf nnnntrv onnta etnrA kaa.Ih handnome houses make the landscape most beautiful. In the city itself the change and improvement are no less marked. There are no longer any of me innicuqii canine, witu tue pig and the baby wallowing in the mud at the doorsill in tha nnhnrhn nnr ara thara any more beggars on the street, aa in uuyb oi yore, except some superannuated old women, whrmn ao-a nml iloironitri.la . O . vuv.v appeal to the sympathy of the passer-by dmvuci tunu bliou ttUiUD, LUUUgU fcUey shower the most profuse blessings on these who heed their appeals, and rumor RATH thflV DM annall lt.-.Afc IU..'. -j -'J uuunuj ILL tUt'lT curses on those who fail to respond with a penny. Dublin has but few f urnaoes or mannfntrri - - -wwuw mvf wuu WUDO- quently, the heavens are not blurred or the sun a Btrauerer. as in ninncnw Ttir. mingham, Manchester and London. Dublin is subject to sudden attacks of doom V XTAAtllAr lint Trlinn tlia liAavan. are at all favorable, few places look nanasomer, Drig titer or uveuer. '.There are a number of Ann vinwn nnv rma nf which will bring satisfaction to the stranger's eye. The sweep from the northern end of Backville street right down through Westmoreland street Reemfl a trranA hvaiiha nf lmira moif. O . v UMQW UAI.UVC. The buildings are severally and con- iointlv Aiimirftlil A rnnrAil nn in Mia vao! .( - . . . . VUW VU1 stateliness of stone and marble, free from wnat is considered here as the gaudy vlllffttritv of nffirinar nlair li massive, majestic. From Carlisle bridge tue view, looKwnicnway you will, at early morn, when tlm mm fil1 avai-v Wfv . o ' - - j j capital ; or at noon, when throngs of i. i i . . . uubj men anu rosy-cneeKea women nur- rv bv ! or At nicrht. whan ilia ninin firta tl v o 1 ' a with silver the quivering water, and the gloomy walls and fading ships in all these hours Dnblin nni.AA.rn At. ita haf and leaves a lasting impress of quiet, without loneliness ; of a throng, with out a multitude : of night, withont doom. Whether vnn 1rv.lr nn nr rlnwn the river, and take in the line of quays, wuiuu oircM-u away on one nana witu the domA nf il.A rtrnivfa anil rn lha Mtiav with the custom house ; or, looking norm, eaten the lofty monument of Nelson, the stately grandeur of the postoffice, and the pretty squares in tne 1 " A 1 1 m . . . . . uiBuuice, wun a rinity oouege, tne Dan, the memorials to Burke and Goldsmith, and the treen of rVlllotrA nnrlr lnnminx - O " awui.uQ up in the distance, the unbiased stranger will concede that Dublin has claims to beauty which it were unjust to challenge and untruthful to deny. Still it has its dark sides, as the river Lilly is almost as odorous as onr Basin ; and on a rainy day the black mud appears to rise up from the paving stones and spread itself over the whole thoroughfare. The river Liffy passes through the center of the city, and is spanned by eight very fino stone bridges, which add considerably to the beauty of the place. The city is located only a mile from the entrance of the river into the bay of Dublin, giving it commercial advantages which, as the surrounding country improves, continues to add to its wealth and importance and population, the latter being now over 400,000. IVatnral History in Chunks The Tie pliant. What is this ?" "This is an elephant! Ho is tha largest animal on legs. He is not as long as the whale, but he can eat twice as much hay." " How much does an elephant weigh ?" " As much as eight or ten loads of hay, and he is all meat. When you come to nnload him you don't find any cord-wood hidden away." "What large ears he has !" "Yes; this is the only animal now living having feet as big as the average St. L mis foot, and ears larger than those seen on the streets of Milwaukee. As long as the elephant lives those two cities will have to brag in whispers and be careful how they put np money on wagers." "Are elephants fond of musio ?" " They are very fond of some kinds. Thoy like to hear a horse fiddle or a brass baud, but they don't go much on the sad strains of a guitar or the melt ing notes of a hand-organ." " Are they an obedient animal ?" "About some things. When a bale of hay or a bushel of oats is placed be fore them, and they are commanded to eat, they obey with the greatest cheer fulness.' " What is their prinoipal food ?" " An elephant loves grass, hay, beans, corn, peanuts, gingerbread, small boys, mud, trees, camels and other vegeta bles." " What is the price of an elephant ?" " Dan. Rice used to buy 'em for about 86,000 apiecse in the spring and sell 'em for twenty-five dollars in the fall. By dividing the first Bum by the last and subtracting Dan Rice from the result you will get a fair average. " "Is an elephant very brave?" "No, not very. If you catch one nosing around the yard don't be afraid to tackle him." "Why are elephants so large and bulky?" " In order to take the conceit out of grasshoppers. Until the elephant be gan to march in circus processions this insect imagined he was the biggest thing on fodder in the world." "What is the need of an elephant's ears being so large ?" " No one knows. Any one can see at a glance that it would improve his looks if he had more tail and lets ears." " Is there any danger of huiting an elephant by hitting Lim with a shinny club?'" "Not much, but no good boy who wants to grow np will ever think of rushing in and clubbing a poor ele phant. That's all, bub, and next week we'll make a howling among other ani mals." Detroit Free Ptean, Agricultural fairs are making sad havoo among pop corn and red lemon, ale. HATCHING ALLIGATORS. Plllrilpa la ZncUir-Uottlnar I.lv Alll from J' Home Cnrlona lnslnnren of tint lny be Isolation. Anions' the enrionn fliinirn tn ha uum at present at the aquarium (says a New ior paper;, is a lanK witli tlnrty-six young alligators hatched from eggs brought from the South. They are about ten inohes long, with dark green uuuien, jarge neaufl, ana long tails somewhat out of what would bo con sidered proportion in a full-grown alii- a mi . i . . Kmur. me Dauy alligators aro ex tremely lively, wander around the tank and BtrUffdA with nn.nl. nil as young kittens do before they Rot )al TT7I II 1 ?. .iivn rjnoujicu, tTiiuu iney are imoa out of the water Anil licliflv ammAvckil a low guttural sound can bo heard. The eggs irom wnicn tliey came, thirty-eight uuurn ngi, are Btlll at tne side oi the tank and are about one-half larger than a hen's ecc and of the nr. ttia onlnr Tlw. snout of the young alligator has a sort Of horn with which tlinv hrpnk f Iia ol.nll in the Rame way that chiokens do. Iu a cellar beneath the aquarium aro half a uozeu more eggs natciung in a barrel of straw. No artificial heat is nsed, and the only care taken in tn nnrinbln 1ia eggs with water every day. About three months is the time incubation. When another batch of eggs is received, an attempt will be made to illustrate the different Rtn erfin nt in. cubation. Dr. Dorner. the ffentlpman vim lmo had such success with the alligators, is also irreatlv interested i froaka of nature to be seen in the tank. i- . ... . wuere are Kept some axolotls, a species of crawling batrachians resembling salamanders with gills. Some years a CO five Of theRO nxnlntlfl n innf from Mexico to Prof. Dumesnil in Taris. They had been waIMc ists, and in the adnlt state the gills had always been observed. To the surprise of Prof. Dumesnil two of his axolotls lost their gills, changed color and be- L - -11 . came, to an appearances, salamanders. Another instance of this transformation was observed in Oermanv. And tliAn it was observed that the animal seemed to have a special power of adapting itself to its Snrronndincfl. Whan tal-on tmm O " ' - - aka.M AAV&U deep water it lost its gills and became a uenuin extent a lana. animal. Chancres in batraahinnn nrn nnl rara hut. thov M..nn..u i .' arid are merelstages of growth. Thoy never ooour m adults. Such a change has taken place in one nf Mia inn it a nt. the aquarium, and is the first instance 41. v : i i .... . . vi. mo mnu wnicn nas been observed m this city. Prof. Marsh, of YulrtnolWA had the same good fortune in 1808 with some axoiotis rrom Wyoming. Dr. Dorner looks upon his tank of axolotls Undercoinff trn.nfifnrmfinn intj-i ulnmnn. ders as a strong argfttnent for the Dar- wiuiuu tneories. Another sincnlnr ohsArvAfinn vliinli he has also recently made concerns the -1 i rf'ii . ... cicuinu eei. Aiitnerto it nas oeen sup posed that the breathing apparatus of this eel was similar to that nf flanAa Tf has been observed, however, that this tuecino eei never opens its gills or its mouth while nnrfer wnkr. nrwl flint it ascends to the surface every few minutes, upparenwy ior air, as ine seal does. A Rabbit Plague. A plaeme of rabbits in nnnn (mm a nrn. tions of the Australian colonic Farmers ulinot. t Tlin anil nni'ann 4-1 am and legislatures have tried in vain to rid the country of the evil. Poison is me most convenient and expeditious asrent vet emnloveil. hnt. it. only ia winter, when green food is Scarce. A man nn hnroohiinV than tnVaa ft quantity of oats that have been' treat ed with strychnine, and scatters them through the fields and in the woodB. In a single night hundreds of rabbits have thus been destroyed. An ordinary trap is used in summer, great numbers being set every night, and a man is em ployed to watch them, and to reset one whenever a rabbit is caught. The ani mal's skins are all removed and packed into bales for transport to England, where they sell for two-pence or three pence per pound. Experiments, it is said, have shown that the flesh of rab bits destroyed by strychnine is not in jured by the poison, and it is freely eaten in Australia by the farmers. The supply, however, is so great that many dead rabbits are left to lie on the ground, where the crows and wild cats find and make way with them in great numbers. . Knvlroned with Danaer. lne dweller or temporary uojourner in a malarious region of country ia environed with danger. Besides inhaling at every breath an atmosphere saturated with an infections poison, he alHO drinks water which is in moHt inotanees likewise impregnated with the fever and ague breeding miasmata. It a bilious subject, deficient in stamina, or irregular in habit of body or digestion, his peril is much increaod, aa thene abnormal oondit ons are extremely favorable to the contraction of malarial dis ease, llut this danger may be safely en countered with the assistance of Hobtetter's Ktomach Bitters, which completely nulliilea the atmospherio virus, and neutralizes the con stituents of miasma-tainted water. This benign antidote to disease eradicates and prevents fevers of an intermittent and bilious remittent type, besides effecting a thorough and perma nent reform of those enfeebled or irregular conditions of the system which invite not only malaria), but other diseases equally to be dreaded. Two Noted Orave Kobbrra. Our readers will remember the account given in these columns of the robbing of the grave of the Hon. Bcott Harrison, in Ohio, last May, the body being fonnd in Ihe dissecting-room of the Ohio Medical College, l'ublio indignation juutly brands any man as a scoundrel who will rob the grave of the dead. But there are two noted grave robbers iu the country, so far from being the subjects of the people's wrath, are universally lauded for their virtues. The reauon is plain. While the former clasa steal the bodies of our loved ones to submit them to the dissectiug knife, these only rob the graves to restore the liviug victims to our hearts and homes. Their names Dr. Piorce's Golden Medical Discovery and I'leasant Purgative Pellets are household words the world over. The (Jolden Medical Discovery cures consump tion, in its early stages, and all bronchial, throat, and lung affections ; Pleasant Purga tive Pellets are the most valuable laxative and cathartic From J. M. Pettengill, of Salisbury, Mass. I have sold more boxes of Grace's Salve during the last four months than of any other like preparation in my store ; in fact it is the only salve for which there is any sale. This be speaks the confidence of the publio iu its vir tues, and is in my opinion a valuable recom mendation of its healing properties. Tho Costliest Monument In America. Ry far the most expensive monument or crypt in this country is the new one mm iu oourso oi construction at tne expense of Mrs. A. T. Stewart in mem ory of her husband. It is to cost over 980,000, and will bo very elaborate and imposing, a lew days since some ninety tons of flue mnrbln. nut hv nVilln.1 wnrt. men, were sent to Garden City, libng Island, to be placed in position under tue cnaueci oi tne ualliodral or the In carnation, also liointr built At ihn at. pense of Mrs. Stewart, and in the center will rest Mr. Stewart's body. The crypt in form is a polygon with sixteen Bides, twenty-two feet in diameter and twenty t i i i. ii ii . r leui in lengtu. j'jacii angle is ornament ed by clustered pillars of different-colored marble imported from Italv. and so placed as to render harmony and to uuow oi ine ngut giving tue proper tone through the sixteen windows of stained class. There will b niTteen clusters, each having three different- colored marbles. Between the pillars the ppaco will be nnneled and onrvvl in pure while American marble, the ceilinc being of tho same material. The floor ing will be of white and black Italian marble set in pretty design. There will lift f 1X7 fi fit-ttMVMitlina r (Iia twrvt 1 nn ,1 from handsome vestibules winch connect with the cathedral above. Mrs. Stewart takes great interest in tho progress of the work. The buildinff of the cnHiAilml is progressing rapidly, and when finished " L Ml 1 . . 1 f . , . it win ue one oi tue nnestpieoes oi work to bo found, no expense being spared in the design or materials employed. Old Fashioned Baked Indian Pud- dino. (Made, as it should be without pggs.) Take a large cup of meal and a tea-cupim oi molasses and beat them well together; then a-d to them a quart of boiling milk, some salt and a small pieco of butter; let it stand awhile in the dish you are going to bake it in until it thickens, and when you put it into the oven pour over it from half to a pint oi runs, nut do not stir it in, as this makes a jelly. Bake two or three hours. Clock work ia not more reeular than the liver, the stomach, and the bowels when tliev are put in order with Dr. Mott'a Vegetable xjiver i ins, a supremely euecuve ana sare al terative, catbartio and blood depurent, which Eromotea thorough bilious secretion, a regular abit of body, sound digestion and nervous tranquility. It is the beat' possible substitute for that terrible drug mercury. For sale by all druggists. For the benefit of our readers we Rive this wceu a Btiro cure ror coiio or bollvaohe in horses. To one bottle of Johnson's Anodyne Liniment add same quantity of molasses and same quantity of water, and pour down tho horse's throat. A man recently asked in a drnir store for a box of rough diamonds, but the druggist know no such remedy. After much parley the drug gist fonnd that h:s customer wanted Parsons' Purgative Pills. He says, "That's the only lit name ior era. CHEW The Celebrated "Matchless" Wood Tag Ting Tobacoo. Tfll PlONEFB TOBAOOO CoMPAKT, New York, Boston, and Chicago. For upwards of tliirtv vears Mrs. WINSI.OWIs SOOTUINQ BY It DP has been used for children with never-failing success. It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind oolio, regulate the Dowels, euros dysentery and diarrhoea, whethor arising from teething or other causes. &u oia ana weu-triea remedy, cts. a Dottle To oloanse and whiten the teeth, to sweeten the breath, nse Brown's Camphorated Sapona ceous Dentifrice. Twenty-five cents a bottlo. Pocket Gatling Gun 15, ArrasCo.,Lawronoe,Ms. IS. E., N. Y. V PA. I O. 1)1 KKCTOKY. J. J. Pika A Co., of ChoUea, Mm, are arranging a Buitiness Direotory. in which will be recorded one trader in each towji and city who bu for (ale Pike'e Centennial Salt Rheum Halve. For diseaaes of the skin, auch aa Salt Bhenm, Sore Lipi, Chapped Ilanda, Cut. Burns, Scalds, Piles, Corns, Bunions, Ingrowing Nails, eto., this salve has no eqnaK IMPORTANT NOTIUK.-Varmera, Fami lies and Others oan parohase no Remedy equal to Dr TOBIA8' VENETIAN LINIMENT for the ear ol Cholera. Diarrboaa. Dysentery. Crouo. Oollo and Sea sickness, taken internally (it Is perfeatly barmlesa; see oatn acoompanytns eaon Doitie) ana externally ror Chroma Rheumatism, Headaone, Toothache, Bore rtiu u.. c 1 1 . - t . rmH.tiia nores, rains in L.imus. Baca ana uneet. ine VKNKT1AN L.1N1MKN 1' was intreauoed la inn, ana no one who has nsed it but oontinuea to do so. many slating if It was Ten lfcitlars a. Bottle they would not ne witnonc it. 'l oouaanas ox uertiuoates ean d seen at the Depot, speaking of iU wonderful curative properties. Hold by the Druggists at 40 eta. Depot 1S Murray bu, new xora. Somethinq New for Aqents wanted in every vHUge, n1drH Box 7HH New York A Luxury of Mechanism! See What it Does Rose's Name Writ in a A Darn. insj Attachment fur Hewing Mae In nut t he last great io THiUitm. Marvelous, yet Sim ula ! A flDHttiHi atl JLdhinAtir. for eaun kind of machine ; in order ing name the maohine. l'rice Mil Ahk a LSewinir M&ntiinA dnaler. A fronts wanted. K. M. nOHK.Hun Huildiiig.NewYork. NEWSPAPERS and MAGAZINES at club rales. Time, trouble and eipense saved by sub scribing Ui rough the Kocky Mountain Subscription Agum y, which fumihn any paper (except local) pub balled in the United KUtoi. Musioal Instruments, Hew ing Machines of all kinds, Chnmios, f rames, hewing Machine Needle and Attachments at reduoed prices. I will also f timibh Hooka ftf Jill IfillHa St. Inuratt. liriKua Rocky Mountain Stereoscopic Views a specialty. Don't fail to write at once for our oirculara. AKenta oan make but niunxy. Aditrcna JAM ICS TU1CKKNS, Evans, Colo. WHO WANTS fl FAIM WHERE FARMING PAYS THE BEST ? FOR SALE. (111 (inf. Acres Rich Farming UUUiUUU I'ANDM. well located in Michi..1?, ' at from 2 la X prr acre, on easy terms of payment. AImo, Pflfl finn Acres of Choice Pine M U UiU U U N ln' ,a Lumber DUirlria ' ol ,l U blaiiu. I r Bend for lllusuated Famphlet, f ull of faeta. mt (. iU. HAHNKN, I. and f'omnilatilonyr, l.mialng. Mich. DEFOREST S IIOIiTBLY THK- WORLD'S MODEL MAGAZINE iura vi n as i si st i . i nr tiiwii si nriiitis ) c ties. lunuiiUia on canvass ; tiansuortation our. A grand oomhination of the entertaining, the useful, and the beautiful, with tine art engravings, and ml pit turea in each No. I'Klt K 25c. VKAKIjY with an uneiualed preiuiutu, two splendid oil pictures, Hurk ol Aii anr. The Klun'e Itrlilr, lbt W. JENNINGS DEMOREST, 11 nl 14ib direct, New York. fllOWH'I BBOirrmAl TSQfinrs, for oonghs and eelds IIDUARI'C ATIIIIA K'l-rr fnilt. Hold bf UrllAIVI O ( I KK all druagisla. Me. a boa, flTTTSTQ HRVOI.VKKSI. Prloe list free. Add ret VXUiMiJ Qreat Western Han Works. Fltlahnnr. Fa Aptrtaday oanvoslng " The Nasaan Delight.' fTOntlT roflt. Hamplefrse. Kred. Joni-,Waiian,N.V. SVVKliT IJrriPVlrvr-Medli.y t.nncsshlre (Hog for IOc, noaf-paid. J.OiMiiwr.Y.ilhntbwm Ontre.N.Y. Si a day f Agents to sell a Household Article. i Adilrem Itnrlirrr lITar To.y Marlon, Ohio $350 A MONTH Agents) WnntfH 3(1 hrat selling articles in th world ; one anmpleyrsa. Address JAY IIUDNHON, Detroit. Mich. BIG PA V. With Btnnoil OtitdU. What costs t el. sells rapidly for f( eta. Oatalogne r. H.M.HPKMi'Kn, I I H Wasb'n Rt.,llslon,Msss. ORGMS b:,np:!oBSi'Yrw'-t retail prloe Honly . riAWOB iington. N. J. $7 A DAT to AgenU oaovaesfng for the Flreeld VUUor. Terms and Ontflt Free. Addrea P. Q. VIUKKKY, AngqsU Xatt,e. I Mm for ono ynnr, to brgUi work nt Mifiitor(.i.aAn V firnt rlnrs. )1lK,'lff(NNATI,OHMIs $10 to $1000 Invested in Wall Ht . Htookt make fortunes everv month. Hook tent l-tl gaVMrvt httisf . Ad.lress BAXTKR A CO.. Hankers, 1 7 Wall Ht., W.T. DH.FOOTKM IIKAI.TII ni(NTIII.V.-IO octavo pages F.diled by Dra. K. 1. Foot. Kb. and, In. Kent on trial fur sis months for FOUR 3r. ST A M l'HI Murray IllllPilh. Oo.,ia' K.HHth Bt..N. V. Lightning LETTER WRITER Also simile copy made while writing original. No Ctrl work. Uheseat in use. Hend for circulars. Kvery business man wanta It. Agenle sell tbem st sight. For territory and rales address 1'H A IS. J ON KM dr CO., UocUlord. 111. : CIDER v7 SVEET for years, or fermentation enn be arrested at any doaired stage by using Fonl's New Prrarrvnil v. Material for S bbls. Ml ota., for 7 bbls. l im. Hnt hy mail, with f nil directions for use and hnw tn olean old barrels. Sole Mannfaotnrer, FKANK FOKI, llavenna, Ohio. $1 0 g $25 WAHitrAl Novelties Oatalogne Outfit Free application to J. II. BUFKORD'S HONS, Manufacturing FuMlehsri 141 to 147 Franklin Street. Boston, Maaa. Wstahliwhed nearly fifty years Dr. ORAIGS KIDNEY CURE The Croat Remedy for All Kidney Diseases! WVr fcv pfial fsrmia tn Rev. Dr. J. R. Rankin, Wsshingteo, H. O : O. T, Heston, M. D., Newton, Bucks Co., Ps.; John U Roper, Kq , Norfolk, Va.i Or. J. H. White, 417 Fourth Ave.. New York ; Or. O. A. Dean, Obarlette, N. Y.l Hon. O. K. Parsons, pres ent Mayor of Rochester, N. Y. Ask your druggist. timd J'nr pamphlet, nntl ahlren lr. '11 A At I'MTHRWITV PI.AC'K, NKW Villi K. . If IE BLOOD! Pn nan's PwramlTe IMIle make New Rich BIckmI, and will completely change ihe blood In the entire system in three months. Any person who will tske 1 pill eaon night from I to 13 weeks may be restored to sound healt h, if auch a thing be possible. Sold erery. wnvrm or em py mail or rtjnt terrer nltimp. H. JOHNSON A CO., Bangor, Main. Cures Uyspepsia, Indigestion, Sour Stomach. Sick Headache. GRACE'S SALVE. JOBBTn,Lg, Mich., Deo. 37, 1877. . rmrlrn: I sent yon l ota. for two boiea of Oraoe's Salve, I hate bad two and have nsed them on an uloer on mv foot, an a It is almost well. RespectiuIlT yours, O. J Van Ngsa, Prlo 2H cents a boi at all draggista. or sent hy n all on reeeipt of 35 oents. Fr pared by MKTII W. MIWI.K dr NliN", N'l Harrison A ve. , Hoaton , M ass . Daily and Weekly, Quarto, BOSTON, Mass. The Largest, Cheapest and Meat Family Newspaper in New England. Kdited with apecial reference (o the varied tastes and requirement ot the home circle. All tha foreign and local newa published piomptly. Dally Transoript, ffH) per annum In advanoe. Weekly " ft (6oopies to one addresa.) 9.750 per annum in advanoe. BEND FOR SAMPLE; COPT. ny mi Good csimsts, soil, slcr, snd bohdlns stoae, n4 good so itiy. Address, 8. J, (iilnorf, I.tnd Com'r, fUUna, Kaasas. Is ths Old Ballabls Conontrat4 lys FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. Direotlona aeaompanylng each ean fog making Herg. Soft and ToUet Boap quickly. it 1M rVLl WMISBT AND STRMlfOTK. Tha market Is flooded with (eo-oalled) Conoentratei Lye, wbioh la adulterated with salt and roain. aad wew'l BATS HON Br, A NO BUT TBM Sapopjifie MADS BT TBI FexuxsylTitnls Salt HL&nxxPg Co., PHILADELPHIA. MAKE HENS LAY. An English Veterinary Burgeon and Chemist now travelling in thia country says that most of the Horse and (Jaitle Powders auld here are worthless trash. He says that Sheridan'a Condition 1'owdera are absolutely pure aud immensely valuable. Nothing on earth will make hena lay like Sheridan's Condition Puwdera, Dose one leaspoonf ul to one pint food. Sold sueryuArrs or sent by niaiV fur riiht Irtttr ttamnt t B. JOHNSON A CO.. Bangor, Main. Established 1833. Gargling Oil Liniment Yellow Wrapper for Animal and White for Human tltth is GOOD FOR Burns and Scalds, Sprains and Uruiscs, Chilblains, 1-rost ltites,StrinKhalt, Windfalls Chapped Hands, Foundered I-crt. Kleali Wounds. Kxternal Poisons, Sand Cracks, Galls of all kinds, Sitfast, KiiiL'bone. Poll Evil, ' Swellings, Turrtors, Garget in Cows, Cracked Teats, Callous, Lameness, rvi'up in i-'niltry, Cracked Heels, Kpizootic, Lame Hack, Hemorrhoid or Piles,' Toothache, Rheumatism, Spavins, Sweeney, 1 istula, Maiic, Caked Ureasts. Jlorn Distemper, Sore Nipples. crownscab, (Juittor, . Curb, Old Sores. I. mil 1 Ma. 1. ,i . . . . v.y, . toriw, w nitiows, Abcess of the Udjer, Cramps, Boils, Swelled Legs, , Weakness of the Joii 1 brush, Contraction of Mustl. nts Merchant'! Garbling Oil U the standard Liniment of Uie United States, iarte sie i; medium, Soc; small, ajc. Small bize tvl family use, a5c. Manufactured at Lockport. N. Y., by Merchant's Gargling Oil Company. JOHJf HODGE. K... . . . TR1SCHIPT, so i A Si
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers