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The Way of the World. I leant from ont my two-pair back, The afternoon was mild? A cab pass'd by, and on its track A little dirty child. Cabby drives calmly through the slush, With all nnconseious mind, The dirty child comes with a rush. And clambers up behind. His mates had look'd with careless eye On all his efforts vain, . lint now he's landed high and dry, They lurn with envious pain. The driver turns and piies the lash, The child falls in the dirt, And in a puddle rolls ker-splash? 1 think he must be hurt! *r- x xL.A Um. nc turns awa? ? uiut * "w.*? He's anything but gay ; His little friends they jump for joy, And go on with their play! I shook my head despondingly? "Ah. such is life, I guess!" A man meets little sympathy While struggling for success. And when the back of Fortune's Car He's clntch'd?you'll always find Ilow ready all his best friends are To bellow, " Whip behind !" Farmhouse Notes. Bread Omelette.?Breuk four eggs into a basin, and grate two tablespoonfuls of white bread. Soak the bread in inilk or cream ; beat the eggs with a little pepper and salt; add the bread : and beat constantly, while a frying-pan | well buttered is getting ready. Ponf in | the omelette, and, when it is set, fold it over. Serve very hot and quickly. Scarlet Potatoes. ? Pound two i pickled red peppers in a mortar, and j mix with them a tablespoonful of fresh, 1 raw tomato pulp ; mash four good sized steamed potatoes, add an ounce of fresh butter or olive oil, and the raw yolk of an egg, well beaten. Mix all well together. place it in buttered patty pans, and bake it until brown ; turn out on a hot dish, and serve with sprigs of pars- j ley for garnish How to Claeii y Honey.?The Dnt<j- j hists* C ire "lor gives the following mode:! A good way to clarify honey is to add i to two pounds of a mixture of equal j parts of honey and water, one dram of j carbonate of magnesia. After shaking occasionally during a couple of hours, the residue is allowed to settle, and the whole filtered, when a beautiful clear filtrate is obtained, which may be evaporated in a water bath to the proper consistency. The only draw-back to this method is the length of time it takes to filter the solution; and this may be much abbreviated by taking the same amount of white clay instead of magnesia, when a yearly equal good article is obtained in muchi less time. PcMPKrs* Pies. ? C'ut the Pumpkin into small pieces : take out the seeds and inside, but do not pare it. Jt must be well-grown and thoroughly ripened, and not watery. Put the pieces in a saucepan, with only a few spoonfuls of water?not more than four, cover close and let it conk gently, so as not to scorch, until the water has all evaporated, and the pumpkin lias cooked quite dry, and of a rich dark orange color. While hot sift it through a coarse sieve. Season oulv as much as you are needing for the the day. For one large pie?one egg, one tabltspoonful of molasses, four tablcspoonfnls of condensed milk, and enough of new milk to make it as thin as you wish, or if you have it half milk and half cream, ;v stead of condensed mill' ei-trroi. nn/1 cr.'.ia 1a cnil ll.A I J I7HWUA ?UV? tvv IV/ null) Hit' lU^ir. Bake till a clear rich brown, do not blister or scorch. To Keep Apples Di king Wixteb.? Apples at the present time are in excessive supply aud unsalable at almost any price. At the same time the crop in Great Britain has been a failure, and a demand is arising the?o for foreign fruit which will doubtless soon affect our market. Beside the great waste now occurring in consequence of the heavy supply which induces those who are encumbered with them to dispose of them as rapidly as they may, will lead ere long to a scarcity, and high juices probably will be paid for good fruit in the spring. It would, therefore, be wise for those who now have plenty of apples to refrain from wasting or hastily getting lid of them. They arc verv easily preserved through the winter,as if kept at a steady temperature, although it may be one or two degrees below the freezing point, they will not be injured bv it. A very easy way to keep them is to pit them, by digging out the earth in a dry spot in the orchard to a depth of a foot, piling the apples in a conical heap therein, and covering them with a foot of dry long straw placed evenly so as to shed rain. The straw is to be tied in a sort of brash at the top, which will serve as a ventilator, and the heap should be covered with three inches of earth to wifui'n .> tl 1 ? iuiuju .1 iwv v/i mu luj)*, XI IS llOl WCU to use more covering than this. Even early fail apples may thus be kept until spring if desired. Apples may also be kept in a dry, cool cellar, in bins or boxes, holding not more than 10 bushelcaeh, with straw at the bottom and lays era ot dry straw intermixed,and a covering of a foot of straw placed on the top. They will be safe thus kept even should l'ro^t penetrate the cellar, unless the | temperature falls below "it! . A Wiiolk Family Bukif.i> Aliyf.?A ? family by th 1 name of Hunt, cons sting of the father, mother and three children, have been living on a claim some two miles from Marion Center, in Marion, County, Neb. Their house was situated in a ravine, built of stone and roofed with dirt and sod, which was supported with tiinbeis. A few sights ago, as some persons were returning home from a dance, they noticed that the rool had fallen in. They immediately went to the house and found that the roof had fallen in upon the family as they lay deeping in their beds. The party went at once to relieve them, and, upon taking the dirt away, found the mother and three children dead, and the father so fastened and held in his place that he was evt 11 powerless to help himself. The ioof was very heavy, and came down in crushing force upon the inmates of the fatal house. For hours the father had lain p'uncdto his bed, and was compelled t<? hear the dying agonies of his wife and children : compelled to listen t<? their piteous cries lor help. Out on the prairie, beyond human reach, immur in a living tomb, the hours slowly dragged along, ai d still no help. Still the appeal to "Father, help us," L until all of human a gory was endured, i and then a silence c r -pt c ver tha abode, K which was bi t the RtiPness of death itB Female Smugglers. The Detroit Fife Prrss says: It is a fact probably better known to the Custom i House officials than to outsiders, that at i i least every tenth woman who crosses the < Detroit river carries smuggled goods. The < goods may be tea, coffee, socks, thread, 1 ribbons or something else- of great value, ' but the intent to smuggle is there, and the i i success in bringing over a small lot is < nearly always an inducement for the < smuggler to try the game on a larger scalo. * ! Men may and do smuggle clothing now 1 I and then, but it is the female sex which < ; eariies the burden of guilt. The Custom i House officials at the ferry dock in this i city aie as vigilant as officers can be, but ] i what chance have they against monster < ; hoop skirts and gigantic bustles. They ' cannot stoop to peep under shawls, exam- { ine pockets, look into baby carts, and hold 1 j> nn tho boat, and so thev must ! 1 continue their work with the knowledge that goods arc being smuggled, and that only one giand and certain haul of their nets can trap the guilty and frighten the innocent so tkat^they shall never date to pursue the business. The net was drawn jesterday. The officers commenced about two o'clock, walking liftcen or twenty women upstairs s into the custom roams, and handing them ( over to a woman to be searched. Every boat load which landed (or about three ^ hours, was treated in the same manner? * that is, all the female portion. Some were c indignant, and appealed to their husbands, r who vainly appealed to the custom officers. c Others wanted to faint nway, but after * looking at the planks and the dust, con- t eluded not to; others wept, laughed or s turned pale, but none of them were per mifcted to escape. During the afternoon a about one hundred and fifty women were x confronted by Uncle Sam, and the old 0 man had a good deal of fun and made some a wonderful discoveries. i; For instance, a modest littl* woman,who * was in a great hurry to go home to her a nnlliul /\,,f n (urn r\in^ an/1 tnn ^ citiv viiMU) j'uiau vuv u i\, y? auu au yards of English flannel fell to the floor. * A tall woman, with tears in Lcr eyes, who ^ asserted that she would sooner chop her S head off than think of smuggling, uufastened a pound of tea from her skeleton and s asserted that it must have been placed a there by some designing person. Auother f one indignautly denied the right of search 11 but after remaining a prisoner for an hour j 0 or two, told the searcher to take it and go | to grass, throwing a package of ribbons and laces on the floor. * A lot of calico was j ^ found on another, some velvet on another g and at least ten per cent, of the whole q number weie found to be engaged in j smuggling. The officials were satisfied I with confiscating the goods. I ^ d Thoughts Essential to Health. If we would have our bodies healthy j our brains must be used, and used in e orderly and vigorous ways, that the life ( giving streams of force may flow down v from them into the expectant organs. ? which can minister hut as they are: ]j ministered unto. We admire the vigor- c ous animal life of the Greeks, and with- j out injustice we recognize and partly u seek to imitate the various gymnastic Sl aud other means which they .employed | to secure it. But probably we should ti make a fatal error if we omitted from ^ our calculation the hearty and generous a earnestness which the highest subjects t: of art, speculation, and politics were a pursued by them. Surely, in this case, t the beautiful and energetic mental life i< was expressed iu the athletic and grace- e ful frame. Aud were it a mere extravagance to ask whether some part of the J lassitude and weariness of life, of which tl wo hear so much in our day, might be c due to lack of mental occupation on ^ worthy subjects, exciting and repaying I n rrfinnvfino onllincioom oc ivoll fn <111 \ it ^VUVI. VUU ???J m uu tw uu ^ over exercise on lower ones ? Whether li an engrossment on matters which have t] not substance enough to justify or satisfy c the mental grasp, lie not at the root of o some part of the maladies which efiect a our mental convalescence ? Any one a who tries it, soon finds out how weary- a iug. how disproportionately exhausting w is an overdose of " light literature," ii compared with au equal amount of time A >pent 011 real work. Oi this we may be ii sure that the due exercise of brain?of: ti thought?is one of the essential elements i b i of human life. The perfect health of a j u man is not the same as that of an ox or a 1 horse. The preponderating capacity of his nervous parts demands a conesjioii- j ding life.?Coi j'JiiW i A Second t?it eat Easteux.?A eoii-ja tract has been made by Hooper's English a Telegraph Works,with Messrs. C. Mitch -' " ell ic Co., shipbuilders, Xewcastle-on" j v Tyne, for the construction of a steamer j r specially designed for the laying of sub-! marine telegraph cables. This will be r' the first cable steamer specially built,'s and it is contemplated that considerable i h saving will be effected in the cost of 1( laying future submarine cables by its " use. The vessel will be capable of fcak- j c iug it,000 to 1,000 miles of table in one JI length, and will be employed in the D submergence of the English Great West- b ern Telegraph Company's cable, now iu v progress of manufacture by Hooper's Telegraph Works, and of which about 1.000 miles have passed the test of Sir William Thompson and Professor Fieeni- ^ ing Jenkin, the engiueers of the com- y pany. d Curb Your Temper. ? Never get j angry. It does no good; and those who j * indulge in it feel no better for it. It is F really a torment; and when the storm of i " passion has cleared away, it leaves one v to *ee that he has been extremely silly, ? and lias made himself silly in the eyes of others, too. Who thinks well of an * ill natured. churlish man, who has to be a approached iu the most guarded way? e Will a bad temper draw customers, pay e debts, and make credit for better na- (1 tured? An angry man adds noUiing to the welfare of society. Since, then, anger is useless, needless, disgraceful, without the least apology, and found e only in the bosom of fools, why shonld I it be indulged in at all? ' d Popular Superstition in Corfu. On Easttr day in Corfu, when the ringing of bells at noon respond to the voice of the bishop, " Onr Lord is Risen," the windows are thrown up and a crash of old crockery resounds along the pavements ol the narrow streets; old womeu shout il Avaunt fleas, bugs and ail vermin! and make way for the lord of all to enter!" accompanying the invocation with a showei )f broken pots and pans. On these occasions, woe to the luckless stranger who may be walking through the streets if Corfu in unhappy ignorance of this domestic institution, of which, perchance, a coiseless water jug flying in dangerous proximity to his own nose may suddenly ?nlighten him. Greek saints, which, in a measure, supply the places of the gods of i passed away mythology, are invoked for clesssing and assistance in all the important affairs of maritime and agricultural Tim i.lonfi,if? nf flip seed and the I J V AUt J^ItUl VIU^ v? WMV ? gathering of the fruits require each ft benediction; a boat purchased by a Greek rom a Turk must be formally purified; St. Eustace is respectfully requested to free a ield or a vineyard from caterpillars; St. Peter gives particular attention to the lsherman's nets and lines; Elijah blesses lalt; St. Procopius protects the thick skull )f the stupid schoolboy. After the slaughter of the lambs on Easter day, a lock of wool is dipped into ;he blood and a cross is inscribed with it >n the lintel of . the door. Within the ncmory of old islanders the obolo a small upper coin, has beeu deposited in the cofin of the dead to pay Charon his fee across he Styx. In parts of the country evil pirits are supposed to be abroad at noon, luring the month of August, and the peas,uts shut themselves up in their houses. I cotiln nail, here, as in many other parts if the world, when diiven into a house, fiords perfect security Irom ghosts, and a riangular bit of paper on which is written Lie name of a disease effectuallyprevents the ppearancc of that malady in the ncighborlood. Hags tied to a bit of stick receive he evil spirits exorcised by the "papa" or riest. To drop oil bodes 110 good, aud to ee a priest at sunrise is a very bad omen, nd a convenient aj?ologv for the reverend luggard. It is but fair to say that these nd a hundred other superstitions arc hielly prevalent among the peasantry, and II the towns are confined to the lowest lasses. I Anti-French Feeling in Italy. The expulsion of Prince Napoleon aud is wife from France has aroused a very trong feeling against the Government f M. Thiers in the Italian press, and ven the ministerial paper, Opinione, everely censures the measure as a granitous offense to Ifcfly. The Ganetfa 'Italia Rays M. Thiers' attempt to exilain away " the insult offered to au talian princess," by assuring M. Yiinrcati that he did not know the Princess 'lotilde was in France with her husband, -ill deceive nobody, and that all Italy rill believe that ' he wished to revenge imself on the daughter because he ould not strike at the father." (i The imes are past," pursues the Gazzetta, when insults and excuses could be ent to Italy in the same breath. This 3 not the way to maintain friendly relaions between two kindred races, and r T.iiovq mnv lio wirp flint wp in Ttalv re well aware Low low the French naion must have suuk thus to use violence gainft a woman who commands respect y her virtues and her misfortunes." It i said that M. Thiers has sent further xplanations of the matter by telegram o M. Visconti-Venosta, the Italian 'oreign Minister, but whatever may be lie disposition of the Government, there an be no doubt that the incident has roduced a decided coldness toward, 'ranee among Italian people. The inti-Frencli articles which were pubshed in the Press immediately after lie war, and which had almost entirely eased during the late reaction in tavor f France, are now agaiQ making their ppcarancc, and all the old grievances gainst, the French Government, such s the presence of the Trench man ofar Orencque at Civita Vecehia, the layag down of mines at the entrance of the lont Cenis tunnel, aud the ofhcious iteiTention of M. Foamier in the quesion of the religious corporations, are rought up as so many evidences of the nfriemllincss and insincerity of M. 'hiers' policy. Tul Rjutish Navy.? In a letter recntly published in the Loudon 'Jinn?, Ir. K:ed, formerly Chief Constructor, sserts and laments the present eomjmrtively weak condition of the Rritish avv. Two years ago England's naval essels were so strong and many that in espeet of them she ocupied not only the rst place among European powers, but, datively, a place superior to any which he hud previously occupied. Now, ovrcver, in Mr. Reed's words, slie has )st the lead in the race, is rapidly fall3g ofl' and losing "the practicability of ompeting in the race." Russia and 'russia liave outstriped her?she has ot an iron-clad which will compare with be Peter the Great, and in ease of war - onld be very badly off indeed. Burying Horses.?At a meeting of he Sanitary Committee at New York he following resolution was passed revive to the burying of horses: Jiesolced, ?liat during the prevalence of the epilemic amoDg horses in this city and unil the further order of this Board, the few York Renderiug Company be auhorized, under the direction of tile olice, to bury the remains of horses ying above One Hundredth street in ucant grounds above such street not ontiguous to any inhabited dwelling, inch interments shall be in trenches, so hat the whole body of the horse shall be t least four feet below the surface of the arth, and each body shall be first coverd with at least one barrel of ground nick lime, and then with fresh earth o a depth of not less than four feet. The berries of the mountain ash are mployed in some of the torest regions in lurope for tfie manufacture of alcoholic rinks. The Training of an Anthor. The Popular Scunce Monthly informs us that a Mr. Tyndall, the ancestor of the distinguished Professor, who lived at the epoch 6f Columbus, was devoted to religions reform, and translated the Biblo into English for the people. But he found worse navigation on the theological sea than Columbus encountered on the Atlantic, and was burned at the stake for his opinions in 1536. Professor Ty ndall's father inherited from his an cestors a taste for religious controversy, and threw himself zealously as an antiKomauist into the Protestant and Catholic warfare. Young Tyndall's early intellectual discipline consisted almost wholly of exercises in theological controversy, on the doctrines of infallibility, purgatory, transubstantiation, and invocation of the saints. The boy knew the Bible almost by heart, and, with reference to this knowledge, his father used to call him Stillingfleet. But he had also an early interest in natural things, and his father flattered this tendency uv calling him Newlon, and by teaching him lines concerning the great natural philosopher, before he was seven years old, that are still remembered. The father of Prof. Tyndall was not only intellectually gifted, but he was a man of courage, independence, mental delicacy, and scrupulous honor. By the silent influence of his character, by example as well as by precept, he inspired the intellect of his boy, and taught him to love a life of manly independence, lie died in May, 1817, quoting to his son the words of Wolsey to Cromwell? "Be just and fear nothing." Of Professor Tyndall as an author, it is hardly necessary to speak, as his various works have been widly circulated and the reading public is familiar with them. Yet his genius as a writer is so marked that it cannot be omitted even in the briefest sketch of his character. Among scientific writers he stands almost alone in the poetic vividness, force, and finish of his style. His descriptions and narrations are enriched by a bold and striking pictorial imagery, which presents the subject with almost the perspective and "coloring of reality." No man better understands the high office of imagination in science, or can more effectively employ it to fascinate and illuminate the minds of others. Of an ardent and poetic temperament, and at home among the grandeurs of uatuial phenomena, there is ofteu an inspiration in his words that rouses and thrills our highest freliug. Gentlemen's Clothing. The novelty for business suits is their short, jaunty, double-breasted coat, generally called the pea-jacket. The suit is made of dark mixtures, with almost invisible plains iormeu 01 tnrcaus 01 white. The entire suit, coat, vest, and pc Saloons, is made from the same piece of cloth, and costs from ?75 to $85. The overcoat for such suits is a long sacque of rough cloth, such as Elysian and fur beavers. Semi-dress suits for church, visiting, etc., are made of black or blue cloth with raised curled perpendicular lines, or indented checks, or the basketwoven goods, instead of diagonals so long worn. The whole suit made of this fabric costs $85. The coat is the doublebreasted Prince Albert, with longer skirts than those of last season; the vest is single-breasted, with notched collar, and buttoned high to wear with a scarf ; both coat and vest are bound ; the pantaloons are of medium width, shaped to the limbs. Sometimes the single-breasted cut-away, New-market coat is pre. ferred for this suit. By way of variety an extra pair of pantaloons is provided to wear with this coat and vest. These are made of thick rough-surfaced Scotch mixtures in snaaea gray stripes, or else grayisb-black grounds with white lines, or a faint suggestion of a warmer color. Trice -S20. There is an eti'ort to introduce for carriage wear the Euglish driving coat of light drub or cream colored beaver. It is long and double-breasted, with collar of the same, and two rows of buttons down the front. There is 110 change in full-dress suits. They remain of solemn black, with swallow-tailed coat, low-rolled collar, and pantaloons all made from the same roll of broadcloth. The Euglish overcoat for opera and other full dress occasions is the doublebreasted surtout. Instead of this tightfitting garment, the preference here is for a loose, easy sack overcoat of light gray or creamy brown cloth. Marshal Bazaixe's Health.?A Paris corespondent of the London Daily JYews says that Marshal Bazaine's health is so precarious that his friends think he will die before his indictment can be drawn up. Should he live long enough to be LUUU^Ul IU jinijjuivui vucj nv/xob that can happen to a soldier will befall liim. He is strongly and vigilautly guarded by an officer, almost personally hostile to him, who says if he escape coming to trial, it will not be through any fault of his. Marshal Bazaine's ill health is aggravated by a nervous terror of committing himself in his answers to the General charged with his u instruction." His counsel has accused him of not being able to open his mouth without making a blunder. Gen. Kiviere, i the correspondent learns, is amazed at j the want of ncnteness tvliich the Mar- | shal has shown. He never seems to perceive the drift of a question, and falls headlong into any pitfall which the ! prosecution may lay for him. Jar.?An illustration of the effect of the jar produced npo.i the particles of iron in a rail or a cannon in constant use, may be got by scattering iron dust upon a piece of glass, under which there lies a magnet, and tapping the gla->s gently. Tne particles of iron rearrange themselves in new lines, as in granulation, and this is what destroys the life of the railway traek or oolumbiad, Training Beaks.?Many years age Zebulon Stanhope, a farmer residing near New London, ConD., trained f couple of bears to plow and do other labors of the field and road. Oa one occasion he started to town with a sleigh load of wheat, but some of the harness breaking, the farmer set about repairing the damage, when one of the bears seized him by the legend sorely wounded it. The bears then simultaneously ran off. leading the farmer to reach liif house alone, which he did with difficulty after four hour's labor. Two or three days were spent in useless seifrch, and bears and sled were given up as lost; when, upon the third day at noon, a noise was heard in the road, and, to the astonishment of the Stanhopes, they beheld the two bears drawing the sled into the barn, and instead of the wheat, {our large bears and three cub3. The door was suddenly closed, and the strangers were shot with a long gun thrust through the crevices of the building. The Power of Winn.?Rev. George H. Ilepworth says: "Young men, an earnest will can accomplish anything that is good aud anything that is bad, It is the master element in man's nature; it is very like omnipotence. It can fix your purpose and keep it fixed until the end is reached no matter how difficult the path may be. He who has a, strong will hns hnlf won t.ho viotovv Hr> wlir? has a strong will, and a cc"socrated one, already feels the laurel on his brow." invest your spare cash in first-class Railroad Bond a. Write to Charles W. IIassler, No. 7 Wall St., N. Y. Fertile.?Western Michigan is a fer tile country, and lacks not for fruit. Statistics show the number of fruit trees now growing there to be as follows: peach trees, 900.000; pear trees, 140,010; plum trees, 30,000; cherry trees, 27,000; ap?le trees, 170,000; quince trees, 10,000. There are also 180.000 grape vines; about 030 acres of strawberries are uuder cultivation, 000 acres of blackberries, and 900 acres of raspberries. A Youth's Publication.?l?or nearly half a century the Youth'? Companion, of Boston, has been published. It was started in 1827, and is to-day one of the brightest and most vigorous papers with which we are acqmainted.?Com. The New World's Grand Remedy. ?The Old World seems to have played its part in vegetable medication. But the botany of the New World is, as yet, imperfectly explored. One new and most important revelation from that land of wonders?California?has recently burst upon the world, astonishing the scientific, and accomplishing such cures of diseases of the stomach and bowels, bilious complaints, malarious fevers, nervous affections, and all diseases proceeding from a vitiated condition of the blood, as have never before been witnessed in either hemisphere. Before Walker's California Vinegar Bitters all the herbalized poisons are rapidly going aown. They cannot resist the overpowering evidence brought forward every day of the immense sune riority of this medicine, without a drawback. Not a drop of any variety of distilled or fermented liquor enters into its composition. It is a gentle aperient, a tonic, derived from entirely new vegetable sources, an unrivaled stomachic, admirable in all pulmonary diseases; and, in fact, coming as near to a universal remedy as botanical discovery and scientific skill can hope to attain. Dr. Walker considers it a cure for all diseases not organic, and really the great variety of diseases in which it is successful seems to warrant the opinion.? r m. For i)Y.srF.rsiA,indigestion, depression of spirits, and general debility, in their various forms ? also as a preventive against fever-and-ague and other intermittent fevers?the " Ferko-phosphorated Elixir of Calisaya," made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., of New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic, and as a tonic for patients recovering from fever or other sickness, it has no equal.?Com. Clap-tkap and Cant.?Invalid reader, if you are unwise enough to put yourself outside of any of the mock tonics guaranteed to contain " no diffusive stimulant," you will inevitably come to grief. Ask your physician If any liquid preparation, destitute of stimulating properties, is worthy of the name of a tonie. He will tell you 110. Shun all such nauseous catchpennies. Plantation Bitteiis, the most wholesome invigorant in the world, owes the rapidity with which it relieves the disordered stomach and the shattered nerves to the diffusive agent which conveys its medicinal ingredients to the scat of the complain^ That agent is the spirit of the sugar cane, the most nutritious aud agreeable of all the varieties of alcohol. The medicinal ingredients of the Bitters, valuable as they arc, would be comparatively useless without this distributive basis. 111 L*y WUUIU luiueut unu SUUI. ucnaiv, us you hope Tor health, of 'he horrible compounds ol refuse drills iu a state of fermentation which humbugs are endeavoring to Joist upon the public as medicines.?[Coin. The season for coughs and colds is rapidly approaching, and every one should be prepared to check the lirst symptoms, as a cough contracted between now and Christmas frequently lasts all winter. There is no butter remedy than Johnson's Anodyne Liniment. For all diseases of the throat and lungs it should be used internally and externally. [Com. As Ql'icic as a Fi.ash ok Lk.htninu Ckistanuito's Excelsior Hair live act upon the hair, whiskers and mustaches; no chamelto i tints, but tlie purest IbiV'-i! or the most exquisite Uruw n- will be evolved. lx One to Five Minutes, Headache. Earache. Xeuraliria. Lame H.tck, Diurrha-a. Croups, .^praihs, and all similar complaints, are relieved by E'lacjo's Instant Relief, or money refunded. ("actios.?Iu our changeable climate, couuhs. eolds, and diseases of the throat, lungs and chest w ill always prevail. Cruel eon-umptioti will ciairn its viciims. These diseases, if attended to in time, can be arrested and cured. The remedy i- Dr. Wiitar'e ttaham nf Wild Cherry. One Cold after Another, will. with many constitution!), securely establish the seeds of Consumption iu the System. Those in need of a remedy will find l?r. J a vne's Expectorant always prompt, thorough and efficacious. AMERICAN SUNDAY SCHOOL, WOIUvEIt (4111 year), a 32 page monthly, has lessons tor every Sabbath, with expository notes for teachers; Lesson papers for scholars. Specimen copy with particulars free. J. W. McTstire, Publisher.S.S. and Theological Bookseller, St. Louis. Mo. Seasonable Suggestions. The heavy nii'ts and cold night duws which clu.racterizc the present sea-oil ure very trying to delicate .?11.1 ,,, Inir.lrliii. nn.l tiviinnr localities they produce an enormous crop of intermittent fevers of various types and decrees of intensity. At this very time there are probably half a million of people in the United States suffering trom periodical fevers bv miasmatic fogs and exhalations. W hat makes the prevalence ot this evil the inorc deplorable is the fact that it might in all ca.-es be easily prevented. Malaria and damp produce little or no effect upon the system preforlitied by a course of lloytetter's Strmaeh Hitter-. Every fall and spring hundreds of letters are received from per-ons residing in fever aud ague di-tricts. who state that while tludr neighbors are incapacitated from labor by that debilitating disease, tin y have be<-n happily exempted from attack by the regular use ot the great vegetable antidote to inia-ma. As a chlologopic or specific for intermittent and reniitte it fevers the Bitters may be justly accounted infallible. They eradicate the complaints In their most obstinate forms; but the wiser course is to forc>tall attack by taking the preparation as a preventive. The amount of productive labor w ithdrawn from active service during several months in the year by malarious maladies is immense and the pecuniary losses to individuals, families, and the nation from this cause is incalculable. Bear in mind that by toning and regulating the system with Iloetetter's Bitters before the calamity comes, it may always be escaped; and let it also bo remembered that indigestion, general debility, biliousness, constipation, nervous complaints, and indeed almost ail disturbances and derangements of tho physical system are controlable by this gonial restorative. / 'If ) Luu<; fever, common cold, catarrhal lever, | , aud nasal di^cbar^e of a browuish Color in 1 ' horses, may be checked at once by liberal 1 use of Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders. ' -[Com. To remove Sunburn and Tan, use "The Queen's Toilet."?Com. 5 ?????i???? SHEEP.?WEBB SOtTIIDOWNS FOR SALE.GEO. H. BROWN, Mlllb-ook. Dutches Co. N. Y. AGENTS WANTED. No monev required In advance. Address LATTA & CO., Pittsburgh, Pa. [ Dllll n Kits. Send stamp for Ill'd CatalogueDUIL U Bicknell & Co., 27 Warren St., N. Y. I fZ A?VALUABLE?Send three-cent stamp for / DOU particulars DOBSON, HAYNES 4. CO. 4 St Louis, Mo. ' 6Y9 AH each week.-agf.nts want> v EI). Business legitimate. Particu- J lars free. J. WORTH, St. Louis, Mo. Box 2131. AGENTS Wanted.- -Agents rnalce more money a 1 work for us than anything else. Particulars free M O STtVBOV Si On., fin 4 .Publisher*. Portland. M? ^ ?03 RECEIPTS, ~~ uc which cost S133.00, sent on receipt of 10 cent Ad- tasl dross IIY. BENJAMIN, St. Lou Mo. &c ?? but WANTED. Agents for the fastest selling ai 'icle and tt in the world. One agent cleared S33 in one Th week, and has averaged $200 per month during the pri past year. Address, c... RANDALL & CO.. *>' 767 Broadway, New York. x rjr."!TlVil-1 JITJ||1 J jd-fcJIIJ.i|l.kJil-Hil ?^a kV 'I'd* j|iW?.A7 jiwBiHivJMl re si Sent by mail for 10 cents. E. B. FOOTE. M. D., P 1520 Lcxinfftou Ave., New York City. 3ng 1 the n in ri CHANCE FOR AGENTS.-Agents we me. 1*. ^ M\MjJ will pay you $10 per week in cash, to r engage with us at once, everything furnished and ex- ? penses paid. A. COULTER & CO., Charlotte, Mich; * in i $5 to $20 P?r day! Agents wanted ! All classes ot * working people, of either sex, y.ung or in old, make more money at work for us in their spare He moments or all the time than at an vthing else. Partic- the uiars free. Address 0. Stixson & Co., Portland. Maine are Power Hoisting Machines! ma If in need of an Elevator of any description, we can tun furnish one, and guarantee satisfaction. We make them infl to be driven from shafting by a special engine, or by tibl water in cities where there are water works. For tie- ] senptive circulars, address m, JAMES L. HATES <fc CO.. Cincinnati, 0. sip< Write for Large Illnstrated Descriptive Price List to anc^ Double.Singlo Muzzle and Frcrch-Loadin* Rifles. Shot 5tn Guns. Revolvers, Pistols. Ac., of every kind, for men or IDU boys at very low orices. Guns.$3 to >300: Pi?tols.$lt">25. put A GENTS AVanted. We guarantee employment T_, i*. for all. either sex. at $5 a day or $3,000 or .. more a yearNew works by Mrs. H. B. St owe, and , others. Superb Premiums (liven Away. Money made * rapidly and easily at work for us. Writeand see. Par- the Oculars free. Worthingliaui, Dustin & Co., Hartford, Ct. strc ogi: HR W'llTTICR 390 Pcnn Street, ear UK. Willi lltn, PITTSBURGH, Pa. It Longest engaged, and most successful phvsiciuu ot the ivoi age. Consultation or pamphlet free. Call or write, dqi Ju>t published fo- benefit of young men w ho suffer frt n Nervousness, Debility, Ac., a trcatiso of 30 pages, fo 2 jc stamps: a bootc of 200 page illustrated, for in cent-. (erj THE best elling book ia the market ii n 3 The Struggles of _ jj PetroleumVJasbv i \J I<"c It is illustrated by THOMAS NAST, the great gre est of American artists, and contains an introductio: tlm by Hon. Charles Sumner. Agents wanted for thi yes and other popular books. Address I. N. lticbardso. E" & Co., Boston, Mass., and St. Louis, Mo. 1??? neTHEA"N?CTAR ?m BLACK TEA otli with the Green Tea Flavor. Tho <>bs fcTpuRCCKWlMTC/W* be-t Tea Imported. For sale J)' everywhere. And for salo whole- cji> sale on I v bv the Great Atlancw Ht\?l tic and Pacific Tea Co., No. , v3 131 Fulton St., and 2 A: 4 Church ",c oa emUi\--3i St., New York. P.O. Box, 5500. r-? Send for Thea-S'ectar Circular Vi: iHGni s K&] BUZ?S?fi?iflKU22IfiiZH |H2LK"36>vaT7V=J!VR'XYiV-^Bfl Ul< Frowy, iSn^itT Vfjfl MM BMBBi infl r9v?Wnnv^w^wiiPTV9#mjm!^7inH ctfc . I'n>7Tiju*H^iHY?n^:fEIOT3tiyiViiill'lTliXl3ZUH eaa THE NEW SCALE ^ ^ 27 Jnion Souare, N.Y. UiidonMetiiy the lisst Spare Piano maoe, ?s Send for Circular with Illustrations. B>1 Prices rausijig from 350 to 700 dollars, % Every Piano "WASRANTED for I'ivo Years. j;vc A $5 PICTURE FREE! ' election is past ! Eat peace prevails: cho people prosper *$< AXD NOW IS THE TIME TO GET A ?o PItEMICM 111 T.V BUBSCKIBIXO FOU Uri v' tue great illcstratkd Let Rural, Literary and Family Paper ,,,r AT tpM.SO l'KH V KA It. Moore's ItrRAi, New-Yorker, the Pioneer I'npei i in its Sphere, has for vears been tiic Leading Juurnu ' of Its Chiss ?the first in Circulation, Intlucncn unc Usefulness? the Standard Authority in Iturul anc . Domestic Affairs, and a first-class, high-toned llli.s I trutod Literary and Family Paper--Is conceded tin iicst A.IIS:ki( A> u I:B:uba : An Exchange truly says that " MoOKK's KrUAI. I Uw uwnt Ahlfi Kilititl, h'.l, jtiufly Printed, ll'i hhi I'iiru \ ' lattd iiml Ihnitihj Wilcoiniil J'nitir, n.i n wind , whirl tunc flmli it? Win itnuni'j tin /Vr>pJ.\" It is .National ti tts Character and Objects, and adapted to both Towr jt? and Country. Sixteen Quarto Duces, weekly, dai $7.50 ron $2.30 ! All who pay fi.50 will receive the Ht'KAl. f>r 1>73 (or for a year from this date or Oct. i. Tf. as pre'or n ) red,) and a post-paid copy of the Snprtb Strrl-Pbit, PU Krujrai'ino entitled " Hihth-Dav Morning, aliTlll or! gardener's present" ? a Beautiful and Pleasliu ?Picture, worth $5. In tact wo furnish Everybody ? THE BEST PAPEE, J AND BEST PEEMIUJI, FOK THE LEAST PAY ! Moore's ItritAT. is only t'j.jo a year, with Prenilnn 4! EnKravlnu. In cluhs of ten or more, without Kn ^ (raving, $2 per oopy. (ireat IndueoBients to Oul Agents, and ono wanted in every School District 01 tbo Continent. Specimens, Ac., sent free. Addres; D. I). T. MOORE. New York C hy. ^ D MOTHERS. MOTHERS.*' MOTHERS. i "2 Don't full lc? procure MRN. TVIXSI.OWS ^ SOOTIII.Xi HVBCP FOR CIIILDREX g TJUSTHlxa. ^ Thi* filwible preparation ha* been used with NEVER _ FAILING SUCCESS IN THOUSANDS OF CASES. | % It not only relieve* the child from pain, hut invigor- *2 ates the stomach and bowels, corrects acidity, and irivea i 2 tone and energy to the whole *ystera. It will also in- | qj tantly relieve Griping In the Bowels and Wlud Colic. We trelieve it the BEST and SUREST REMEDY IN THE WORLD, in -11 ca-e* of DYSENTERY AND DIARRHEA IN CHILDREN, whether arising from | J teething or any other cause. DejK-nd upon it mothers, it will give rent to yourselves and M Relief and Health to Your Infanta. Be sure and call for " Mn. WladowU Soothing Myrup," ^ Having the fac-simile of "CURTIS k PERKINS' , on the outside wrapper. Bold hy Dr?x?ut? throughout theWarld I Ifhh7iiif:illliirl finegrnr Bitter* are rot a vile Fancy Drink, de of Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Spirits and Refuse luors, doctored, spiced, and sweetened to^please th* te, called "Tonics," " Appetizers," "Restorers," ., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, are a true Medicine, made from the native roots I herbs of California, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants ey are the Great Blood Purifier and a Life-givir\ nciple, a Perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the item, carrying otl all poisonous majter and restoring blood to a healthy condition, enriching it, refreshing * 1 invigorating both mind and body. They are easy idministration, prompt in their action. Certain in thetr llts, safe and reliable in all forms of aisease. 10 Person can take these Bittern accondtc directions, and remain long unwell, provided ir bones are uot destroyed by mineral poison orothct ins, and the vital organs wasted beyond the poiif epair. )y>pep?la or Indljreation. Headache, Paig ;he Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Djg:ss, Sour Eructations of the Slomach, Bad Taste the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the art, I nflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the regions el Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, the offsprings of Dyspepsia. Iu these complaintt as no equal, and ono battle will prove a better guar ee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. ?or Femnlc Complaint*, in young or old >ricd or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the a of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an uencc that a marked improvement is soon percepe. .'or Inflammatory and Chronic Bhen* it is in and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bilious, mittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Kid, Liver, Kidnevs and Bladder, these Bitters have n most successful. Such Diseases are caused by iated Blood, whxh is generally produced by derangeijt of the Digestive Organs. Pliey are a Gentle Purgative as well as Tonic, possessing also the peculiar merit of acting i powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Inftamtion of the Liver and Visceral Organs, and in Biliou.teases. i*or Skin Diucases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salteum, Blotches Si>ots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Caricles, Ring-worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes, Lry- 4 das, Itch, Scurfs, Discoloratious of the Skin, Humors I Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, literally dug up and carried out of the system in a rt time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle in 11 cases will convince the most incredulous of then ative effects. 'leuline tlie Vitiated Blood whenever you I its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, jptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obictcd and sluggish in the veins ; cleaiisc it when it is 1; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood 'e, and the health of the system will follow, irnteful thousands proclaim Vinucar BitUS the most wonderful Invigoraut that ever sustained sinking system. ?in, Tape, and other Worms, lurking ia system of so many thousands, are effectually de>yc<l and removed. Says a distinguished physielst: There is scarcely an individual upon the face of the th whose b-xly is exempt from the presence of worms, is not upon tiie healthy elements of the body that ins exist, but upon the diseased humors and sliipy tosits that breed these living monsters of disease, system of Medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelminwill free the system from worms like these Bit i. , fceliiusiciil Diseases. Persons engaged in nts and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-settera, id-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, will subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against i take a dose of Wai.kkk's Vinecak Bitters once twice" a week, as a Preventive. lillouM, Remittent, and Intermittent vers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of our at rivers throughout the United States, especially sc of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tensee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazes, > Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile. Savannah, HToan-, James and many others, with their vast tributat, throughout our entire country during the Summer 1 Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of isqal heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, sud er abdominal viscera. There are always more or^e&s tructions of the liver, a weakness and irritable state die stomach, and great torjx>r of the bowels, being -eecl ui> with vitiated accumulations. In their treat nt, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upoi se various organs, is essentially necessary. There is cathartic f?r the purpose equal to Dr. J. W.vlkek's skgak Hitters, as they will speedily remove the k-c<>lored viscid matter with which the bowels are fled, at the same time stimulating the secretions of liver, and generally restoring .the healthy functions he digestive organs. ierofulu, or King's KvII, White Swelling? :ers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goiter, ScrofuUus [animations, Indolent Inflammations Mercurial At'ions, Old Sores Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, , etc. In these, as in all other constitutional Discs, Walker's Vinecnr liiTTitRS have shown their at curative powers in the most obstinate and intracte cases. )r. Walker'* Cullfontla Vluegar Bit fere on all these cases in a similar manuer. By purifying Blood they remove the cause, and by resolving away effects of the inflammation (the tubercular deposits* affected parts receive health, and a permanent cure fleeted. Phe properties of Dr. Wai.ker's Vinegar rTK.ts are Aperie.it, Diaphoretic and Carminative, tritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Couuter-Irrit. Sudorific. Alterative, and Auti-Uilious. n?e Aperient and mild Laxative properties of . Walker's Vinegar Bitters are the best safeird in all cases of eruptions and malignant fevers, ir balsamic, healing, and soothing properties protect humors of the fauces. Their Sedative properties y pain in the nervous 6ystem, stomach, and bowels, icr from inflammation, wind, colic, cramos. etc :;r Counter-irritant influence extendi throughout system. Their Diuretic projiertiej act on the Kids, correcting and regulating the flow of urine. Their ti-Bilious properties stimujrte the liver, in the secret of bile, and its discharges through the biliary duels, I are superior to all remedial agents, for the cure ol ious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc. fortify the body against dUrsie bv piri* ig all its fluids with Vinegar Bitters. No epi. sic can take liold of a system thus forearmed. The r, the stomach, the bowels, the kidneys, and the ves arc rendered disease-proof by this great invignt. Mrectlon*.?Take of the Bitters on going to bed light from a half to one and one-half v.-ine-glassfull. ; good nourishing fo?>d, such as beef steak, mutton p. venison, roast beef, and vegetables, and take door exercise. They are composed of purely vegetingredients, and contain no spirit. fALKKR, Prop'r. R. II. McIM>XAI.D A CO.. iggists and Geu. Agts.. San Frar.ciscoand New York - SOLD BV H I. * DFAT.KRR i' N U?No 40 loiicst, energetic God-fearing men and women can 'e plea-iint. profitable work; no risk or capital, ito to II. L. Hastings. 19 Lindall St. Boston. Ma-m AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE sell the best low-priced Corn-Sheller ever patented, farmers and evervhody who lias com to shell solid circular to "FAMILY t'OK.N-SHKLLEK CO.." Harrisburg, Pa. CIGHTC vtrasA i lun^ OF NEW YORK. WORK DESCRIPTIVE CF THE CITY OF NEW YORK IN ALL ITS VARIOUS PHASES. splendor* and wretched ne**, iu hbrh and low life, marble nuliices and dark den?, it* attraction* and ijrer*, its It t?;;s 6i> Frauds, it* leudinjr men and iticians, it* adventurers. It? cliaritie*. it* mvsteries 1 crime*. Illustrated with nearly 450 Fine itfrnviiigH. Send for Circulars, with terms and 'tilt description of the irork. Add re.-* NATIONAL HUSHING CO.. Philadelphia. Pa.: Chicago. 111.; ?t. Louis, >lii. Jon in the Blood! e pnnm \\SYRUP mnkrdthe weak stronjr, il expels disuse by Hipplying the blood with s* attke's Own Vitalising Agent?IRON. tutlon.?P.esnre ron pet Pernvian St/rup. inphietsfreo. J. P. DINSMORK. Proprietor, No. 361)?>y St.. New York. Sold br Druire1*'* irencr-ally. $75 to $250 per month, EKES male, to introduce the GENUINE IMPROVED COMMON SENSE FAMILY SEWING MACHINE.. Thia Machine will stitch, hem. fell, tuck, quilt, cord, bind, braid and embroider In a most superior manner. Price only (15. Fully licensed and warranted for five years. W? wdl pay (1000 for any machine that will sew a stronger, more beautiful, or more elastic seam than ours. It makes the "Elastic Lock Stitch." Every second stitch can be cut, and still the cloth cannot bo pulled apart without testing it. We pay A gents from 175 to 9230 per month and expenses, or a commission from which twice that amount can be made. Address 8EC0MB * CO., Boston, Maas.; Pittsburg. Pa.: Chicago, 111.; or 2>L Louis, Mo. 823. JUBILEE! 1873. or THE IEW YORKOB8ERVER he Best Belljrloua and Secular Family Newspaper. a Year wi fi the JUBIL E YEAR BOOK. SIDNEY E. MORSE * CO., 37 Park Row, New York. 3HD FOR A ?A9PLE COPT, / ^ / >