Farm, Garden and Household. Tillage. , Tillage is a good thing. Manure is a , good thing. But tillage and manure together are far better than eitheralone. So I said to myself one day as I walked ' across my corn field. This spring I i spread a little well-rotted manure on , the poorer parts of the field and plowed it in. I have cultivated the corn very 3 thoroughly?almost excessively. The 1 land was far from clean, and i was de- i termined that not a weed should grow , that I could reach with a cultivator. We harrowed the field four times with . a Thomas harrow after the corn was ] planted, and before it was large enough 1 to cultivate. This is pretty good tillage, j and the corn on the whole looks quite well for this season ; but wherever the manure was applied the effect is very * decided. I do not think I ever saw so < little manure do so much good. We j did not put on over five tons to the , acre. True, it was good manure, made j from sheep, cows, and pigs fed largely ^ on bran, and was pretty well rotted ; j but still I think the good tillage has helped the manure. I am sure the ma- \ nure has helped the good tillage. i What we want is good manure and { good tillage. And when I so strenu- < ously and so frequently urge farmers to i cultivate the soil more thoroughly, I have precisely this result in my mind. I never dreamed of depending ultimately on tillage alone. I use it merely as a" stepping-stone to something better. If I have given any other impression it must be because I do not write and talk plainly and definitely. But it is also just possible that some people are careless readers and uncandid critics. Chicken Cholera. The symptoms of this disease, which has during the past few years become Suite prevalent in our poultry yards uring the hot months, are by no means unilorm, and in several instances do not present a clear choleraic character. It is, therefore, of importance for the breeder to thoroughly understand the symptoms, so that if his fowls be attacked, he will be able to apply the proper remedv. During the last few years, in the United State3, whole yards have been devastated by this disease, and we see several complaints in poultry journals of similar occurrences this year. When attacked by cholera the bird is seized with a sudden and violent thirst, accession of thirst accompanied with diarrhoea; at first the droppings are of a greenish character, and by de grees oecome mm nna wnuisn, mucn t resembling similar discharges in the ha- s man subject. Great weakness also p manifests itself, and in some .cases t cramps supervene. The disease runs a its course rapidly, death resulting in f most cases in from twelve to thirty-six r hours; if not, therefore, taken imme- i diately, the treatment is generally too t late. If the following recipe be administered at an early stage of the g disease, every three hours, a large per- c centage of those affected may be cured: a Rhubarb, five grains ; cayenne pepper, a two grains, and laudanum, ten drops.? L Exchange. i How to Treat Run-Down Horse*. When horses become worn out and e run down by hard work, sometimes v liberal feeding alone will not bring f them up again to tlreir proper state of d health. A writer in the Agriculturist v says his animals were in that condition r of lassitude and weakness, and he t corrnrl a Karral in fnrA and nlonod flin DH"VU W tSMA&VA 111 v " v uuu j/invuu vuv ends upon the platform of the pump, to be used in watering the horses. Into one of them he put a pailful of corn meal and mixed it with the water. The ^ horses at first did not like it, and would only drink a little when very thirsty. e After they had drank what they would i< they were allowed pure water. In a few f, days, however, they drank this corn meal soup with a relish, and in less * than a week there was a decided change 0 for the better in the appearance of all i' the horses. He did not let them eat f, the meal, but merely let them drink the milky water. There is no doubt but it is as good for them as a plate of 8 good soup is for a tired and hungry ? man before dinner. It seems to stimu- 11 late the appetite and aid digestion. P Houaehold Hints. d Crusts and pieces of bread should be ^ kept iu an earthen pot or pan, closely 0 covered, in a dry, cool place. ' t Keep fresh lard and suet in tin vss BCls. i Keep salt pork fat in glazed earthen 8 ware. h Keep yeast in wooden or earthen d ware. f Keep preserves and jellies in glass, 0 china, or stone ware. 1 Keep salt in a dry place. c Keep meal in a cool, dry place. 0 Keep ice in the cellar, or refrigerator, P wrapped in flannel. v Keep vinegar in wood or glass. 14 Housekeepers in the country must be 8 careful that their meats are well Baited, v and kept under brine. b Sugar is an admirable ingredient in ^ curing meat and fish. o Saltpetre dries up meat?it is best to 1! use it sparingly. C c Cutting Corn. [, I commence cutting up the corn as P soon as it is too hard for roasting ears, 11 making the shocks contain 12 hills square. When first commencing cutting, cut about one-half the shock, tie it, and let it cure a few days before cutting the other half of the shock. See that the stalk is well set up, a little y bracing, and well tied, to keep it from t falling down. I have continued cutting 0 up uutil November, but think the earliest cut best, and have always ob- c served that when cut just at the right ? time, when you go to use it the shock opens out, nicely cured, and the blades ? a bright green color, looking good ? enough to eat. ^ After Them. e ? . John N. Beadle, a correspondent of c the Btica Observer, sends that paper an \ account of an adventure in the North s Woods, recently, which reads like the I stories of a century ago. In company j. with a friend, Mr. Beadle went on a t fishing excursion, and the pair were i enjoying their sport finely, when an angry growl a short distance off disclosed the presence of a bear with evi- t dent hostile intentions. The two took i to separate trees without unnecessary delay, Bruin following Mr. Beadle so closely' that he had barely time to ' scramble out of his reach. After a 1 thorough reconnoissance of the ground, the bear leisurely proceeded to secure 1 his game by gnawing the tree down, J but became disheartened with his job, f and about midnight stalked surlily off. 1 The men were treed from four in the f afternoon till daylight next morning, < not daring to venture down after the i bear left until it was light enough to < enable them to escape if tl^e hungry i brute should reappear. ' ' Baby Farming. Baby farming has long been a recognized business in the Old World, and although a plant of foreign growth, has ;aken root here and flourished amazingly. Civilized society Bhudders at the utterance of the doctrine that some neanB should be taken to check the toe rapid increase of population, but in private makes use of all the appliances vhich have been invented to accomplish this object. In England the custom of baby faming is an old one. The ordinary means for preventing the infant from coming nto the world having failed, the next juestion is, how to get it out of it in ;he best and speediest manner. Be;ent examinations by several benevolent gentlemen in the City of London have leveloped the fact that thousands ol nfants are annually put out to nurse vith the understanding that the mother .s no longer to be troubled with them. In some cases the same party will :ake twenty or thirty infants at once, is the nurse is paid a fixed sum for her jervices, which is neither increased nor lecreased by the length of the time for srhich her services continue, it is, of :ourse, to her interest to make that lime as short as possible. The developments brought about by ihese investigations would be incredblo if they were not so well authentisated both by all the well-known phianthropists and the exposures made in ecent cases in this city. But. a few weeks since a nurse was irought before the Court of Special Sessions upon the charge of exposing a :hild, which had been entrusted to her :are, to the fierce rays of an August tun and the chilling dews of night until t died. It was proved that the woman was in he habit of taking children ostensibly o nurse, but in reality to relieve their nothers of a burden. Those of the iliildren who survived the course of reatment to which they were subjeced were set adrift or given away to any >erson who would take them. Since that time an establishment caried on on a far more extensive scale in he upper portion of the city has been irought to the notice of the police by he neighbors, and the parties concerned in it will undoubtedly be indicted during the coming week. The >arties living in the vicinity of this ?aby farming establishment being disurbed by the uproar made by the tarved and tortured children, and sus>ecting what was going on, applied to he police to have the matter examined, .nd if possible put a Btop to it. It was ound that more than twenty children, anging from one week to six months n age, were confined in the establishoent. The nurses who had charge of them tated at first that no more deaths occurred among them than would occur ,mong the same number of children .nywhere else. But an examination nto the state o; affairs showed that aany of the children were actually dyng of starvation TKa nri /lonooa nf ill.froafmAnt nn very hand seems apparent. There rere none of the ordinary appliances er securing the comfort of the ohil[ren, all of whom boro marks of illisage. It is believed that the testiaony, when these cases are brought to ria1, will horrify the community. The Yellow Fever. The rumors which for some time have een in circulation regarding the existnco of yellow fever in the bouthwest, t now appears, Lave been too well aunded. It is now admitted that it revails in certain portions of the city f Memphis, and at least thirty persons a that city have fallen victims to the ital malady. At Shreveport, La., the isease seems to have broken out with reat violence. Most of the telegraphic perators have been stricken down by t. A panic has fallen upon the people, and the liltlfl town is deserted. ?he Mayor of the town, in a telegraphic lispatcH to Washington to Senator Vest, says " The poor are nearly all n our hands. No money in the city reasury. All pecuniary aid will be hankfully received. Fever increasing." i later dispatch states that there are ix hundred persons sick, and that one mndred and forty-six unfortunates have lied. The Budden change in the weather rom heat to cold has increased the rate f mortality. A more alarming state of bings can hardly be conceived. We all upon the public to come forward at nee to the relief of these unfortunate ieople. We do so with the full coniction that the response will be prompt nd equal to the occasion. With Chicao and Boston fresh in our memories, ,-e cannot believe that Shreveport will >o left one day without relief. From lobile we learn that the Advisory Board f Health has instructed the Mayor to 5sne a proclamation quarantining New )rleans, so far as local travel is conerned. This example should bo folawed at once wherever there is any ossibility of communicating with the afected districts. An Odd Pet. A writer, in speaking of sailors' pets, ells us of Jock, "a seal of tender ears, who for many months retained he affections of all hands, until washed verboard in a gale of wind. This reature's time on board was fully ocupied in a round of duty, pleasure and abor. His duty consisted in eating even meals a day, and bathing in a ub after each; his pleasure, to lie on lis side on the quarter-deck and be cratched and petted ; while his labor existed in ceaselessly endeavoring to nlarge a certain scupper-hole suffigintly to permit his escape to his native >cean. How indefatigably he used to vork day after day and hour after hour, icraping on the iron first with one flip>er, then auother, then poking his nose n to measure the result with his whiskired face ! He kept the hole bright ind clear, but did not sensibly enlarge t, at least to human ken." A Legend.?There is a legend thai ;wo Dutch lovers at Little Falls, N. Y., vho were prevented from marrying be ;ause their fathers wero enemies, tool the dire resolution of leaping from th< leights clasped in each other's arms, This was long before the days of th< Erie Canal, and the story goes that th< nan was dashed to pieces, but that th( girl escaped with simple fracture o! aoth her arms, and that she recovered ind married the husband of her father'i jhoice, and was a happy wife ant mother. She must occasionally hav< ireamed of that leap, and it must hav< spoiled her appetite each time for a fev lays. The Suspension of Jaj Cooke & Co. "What * New York Paper hat to eay on PI the Subject. 1 The city, says the New York Herald, had a veritable sensation in the an- ar 1 nouncement of the suspension of the Cj 1 banking house of Jay Cooke k Com- of pany. In the circular issued by the ur firm it is stated that the suspension wl was caused by advances having been Di made to the Philadelphia house of the Ci company and from a heavy drain on the re deposits here. This, it Is said, was the immediate cause. But what was the th remote cause, should it be more than a fe temporary suspension ? Temporary or br 1 ' i ii? i--u:i:i_ not, nowever, me prut/auim-jr m >uat 1 there are causes of a general character, wj and dating back some time, affecting.all Li ; the establishments, branches and bnsi- co , ness of the Cookes. The dispatch from oi ? Washington annonncing, immediately th , after the suspension of the bank here, ca , that the banking house of Henry D. pa Cooke & Co. had closed doors and buspended at noon, gives a serious aspect th to the matter, and leads to the infer- w( , ence that previous circumstances have br been operating to produce the catas- jc , trophe. eg The pressure must have been great to have caused such instant action of the th First National Bank of Washington; 0I] for, as the dispatch says, parties were th; at the counter drawing out funds when de the order was given to close the doors W and people to leave the premises. Such wj prompt action after the short run upon th; the bank indicated that the firm was in th< a bad condition. thi The Treasury Department, if not dh alarmed, has taken the precaution to to prevent losses or discredit from its con- be nection with the Cooke houses. The an United States Treasurer has ordered bo the payment of gold dra&s on Jay w? Cooke, McCulloch & CPi?;JU{mdon, to be in stopped. It is to be kfepeft the govern- he ment is not in any way involved and tei will not sustain any loss. We are'aware 0f that the Cooke firm in this country and ne Cooke & McCulloch, of London, have w had the handling of vast amounts of government money and securities. They have, as the famous Syndicate, or the most important part of it, had a 1 great deal to do with negotiating the M< i xl 11 - J / /I loans, as luey are eaueu, iur me iuuu' oi ing of the new five per cents, of the na- ^ tional debt; have had a hand, also, it is said, in the fifteen million five hundred m( thousand Alabama claims' payment by foi England, and liave been the financial ua agents or medium of the Treasury De- ne partment in other important tiansae- , tions. If, therefore, the government should escape loss in this tremendous tei crash it will be fortunate. That we have yet to learn. Or if the London ^ house can stand the shock, that will be as gratifying as surprising. It is but va 'air to say that the firm hero asserti hu that the house of Jay Cooke, McCulloch in cates no very great trouble is to be ap- cc prehended. cc A Corpse Exhumed to Kill a Slander, [jj A Canadian gentleman named Cam- oj eron ten years since returned home from British Columbia, bringing with rj him a coffin containing the dead bodies di i of his wife and child, who had died w during his absence. They were in- fo terred near Cornwall, where Mr. Cam- of ; erou resides. Recently, while he was w absent, some of his neighbors got up rc ' a story that the coffin supposed to con- w tain the corpse of Mrs. Cameron inclosed A ' nothing but a piece of clay, that lady ei having been in reality sold by her lius- 01 band to an Indian chief on the Pacific w coast for a gold chain. Strange as it E may seem, this monstrous tale found u: ' ready belief among the Kanucks, and when Mr. Cameron came home he found j t necessary to refute it. So he adver| tised that on a certain day the grave ! would be opened, and the corpses ex- . ' posed to view. When the time came several hundred people were present, tl The bodies were exhumed and exhibited tc to the gaping crowd. They were in ex- ]fl ^ cellent preservation, having been em, balmed immediately after death, and c< . the features of Mrs. Gameron were dis- 8 i tinctly recognized by those who knew a her in life. This, of course, exploded h 3 the story of the sale, and gave peace of b . mind to the gossips. tl s tl 5 V 5 A blacksmith has succeeded! in t< f changing the gait of a pacing horse to g , that of a trotter, by simply fastening an tl 3 extra pair of shoes heavier than usual v 1 to the fore-feet whenever he wants the I 3 horse to trot, and taking them off at all s s other times. Tho sudden change of a r weight on his fore-feet forces the ho pe f to change his gait. n # The Polaris Party Safe. eked Up After a Voyage of Hearty Two Monthi In Open BotU. The Dundee whaling steamer Aretic rived at Don dee, having on board iptain Buddington and the remainder the Polaris' crew. They were picked > on the 20th of July last by the taling ship Bavenscraig, also from undee, twenty miles to the south of ipe York, in boats constructed of the mnant3 of the bulwarks of the Polaris. In accordance with the directions of e chief officer the Bavenscraig transrred the crew to the Arctic, which ought them to Dundee. Captain Buddington and his party ntered last year on the mainland, near ttleton Island, on that part of the east aat of Smith's Land between Cape sen andFoulke Fjord. Bealizing that e Polaris was not in a condition to rry them any further south, she was rtly broken up, and the boats in lich they were found were made from e material thus acquired. The boats ire made ready and stored with the oo/t and otlior nrnvisions. and earlv in me Buddington gave the order to proed south. Buddington was well acquainted with e movements of whale ships fishing i the coast of Labrador, and knew at it was customary for them to enavor to reach Cape York, off the' !st coast of Greenland, early in June, lence they usually crossed over to e opposite coast, and commenced b catch on whaling grounds nearer e Labrador coast. By hastening rect to the rendezvousing ground the south coast of Cape York anticipated finding the whalers, by y of whom ho was sure to be taken on ard. It was a question, however, lether he would arrive at Cape York time to meet the whalers. In case did not, he would probably have atnpted to reach Upernavik. The fact his meeting with the BavenBcraig ar Cape York 6hows how well founded ire his hopes. The Gulf Stream. On its emergence from the Gulf of ;xico, the Gulf Stream has a breadth fourteen leagues; its depth is one ousand feet; and the rapidity of its >tion, which at the outset, is nearly lr and a half miles per hour, gradUy diminishes, though it preserves, vertheless, a comparatively considerle degree of speed throughout its exlded course. Its temperature, much higher than at of the sea it traverses, does not ry more than half a degree in every ndred leagues. Thus it arrives even, winter at a point beyond Newfoundid, with the abundant reserves of at absorbed by its waters under the n of the tropics. Plunged alternatein the bed of the current, and wiiht its boundaries, ihe thermometer inmates a difference of twelve, and even onetimes of seventeen degrees. If wo compare this temperature with at of tho surrounding air, the conist is still more striking. Beyond the rtieth parallel, where the atmosphere colder than the standard of melting 5, the Gulf Stream maintains an equae temperature at more than twentye degrees above this point. Its waters, [e those of all seas very rich in saline itters, are distinguished by their pth of hue, and bv their gleaming ure reflections, denning themselves ' clear and precise lines on the green ground color " of tho ordinary oceaniters. Up to tho fortieth parallel the ue and emerald waves never mingle ; is only on quitting this latitude that e former overleap their boundaries, lit their channel and spread afar over e cold strata of the sea. Their march tho same time slackens, and the ranting action of their caloric on the atospliero becomes more sensible. It ttably mitigates the severe climates of orthern Europe ; without it England id a part of France would be doomed winters as rigorous as thoso of Labdor. It is owing to the Gulf Stream -L Anrtli nf Rni^hproAn. thn ill, ill tiiu uuivu v* y nit of eternal ice and snow, instead of aking to the very level of the sea, aintains itself at a point fully 550 feet love. Another very extraordinary charactertic of the great American current is e projection which it forms above the iters that inclose and compass it both i the right and left without being able penetrate it. This projection is estiated at more than sixty-five centietres (about two feet.) The surface the current affects a concave curvare; and presents on its medial line a rt of ridge or crest, on each side of Liich extend two inclined planes ; in ich wise that every object floating on s surface glides to right or left. This ct has been established by several vesIs, whoso keel, deeply immerged, holly obeyed the action of tho princiil current; while at their side light inoes drifted cu travcra, carried toards the borders in a direction permdicular to that of the ship. Tho Gulf Stream is balanced, or impensated, by tho counter-current of Id and but slightly salt water, which, irough Davis' Strait, descends from ie Arctic Frozen Ocean in a precisely iposite direction. It is to the north JMewiounmanu mai mis 11411m u*?nche of the pole encounters the genial ver of the South. The collision proaces the flrsfc deviation of the latter, hile, at the same time, compelling the irmer to split into two branches ; one which plunges under the deep blue aters and continues its southward >ute, while the other bends to the est, skirting the entire extent of the merican coast, and penetrating into rery bay, creek and inlet. This region ves to it the severity of its climate, hich is much colder than that of the uropean and Asiatic countries situated c.der the same parallels of latitude. Punishing ThieTes. The Parish of Vermillion, Louisiana, as been for years infested with cattle lieves. The people have been unable > obtain redress by process of law, and ist month they organized a vigilance ammittee as a final resort. Notice was iven to a largo number of the thieves nd their confederates that they must save the parish within a specified time; ut instead of doing so they armed aemselves and threatened to destory ae town of Abbeville, whereupon the igilance pressed them and they scatsred. It is reported that three of the ang wfcro hung. One of a party of the liieves, who was endeavoring to escape, ras arrested under a civil process at trashear, and *was taken from the teamer Minnie Avery at Jeaneretts by squad of armed men and hung in ront of Dr. Dungeon's residence, three ailes above that town. The Cholera In Europe. The British Medical Journal, in its usual weekly review of the progress of Asiatic cholera in Europe, mentions that the outbreak at Havre, France, has proved very serious, " having been the canse of a panic which extends to all classes. Of twenty-one civilians treated in hospital nine have succumbed soon after admission with grave symptoms. Of twelve soldjers attacked during the week, five have died. In the fatal cases the rapidity of the onset, the short duration of the affection, and the violence of the symptoms, have been remarked. It was imported by ships arriving from infected parts in Germany. Montivilliers and Harflenr and the suburbs have been equally affected by the epidemic, bnt details are wanting. The disease has also appeared in Rouen, where, ac? i a*?i ? 1 ? cording 10 a meaicm jourum, uu wc 25th of August there had been seventyfour cases, with thirty-nine deaths, in the two hospitals." "In Hungary and Transylvania," says the Swiss Times, " the cholera has made fearful ravages. According to official accounts, 60,000 people nave died of it. Vienna is said to have spent already 200,000 florins in improving the drainage, but, notwithstanding, 1,188 persons were attacked from the 16th of July to the 21st of August, and 929 died. Accounts from Germany state that on the 24th and 25th of August 197 persons were taken ill at Magdeburg, of whom 117 died. In Munich, of 407 attacked np to the present, 154 died; in Konigsberg, 146 died ont of 815. In Stettin, 45 were taken ill and 36 died. In many other towns there were numerous victims." Can it be Tbue !?Within the last few months a considerable number of persons have called upon Dr. Walker, the proprietor of the popular medicine known as Vinegar Bitters, and assured him that, in their belief, his preparation is an infallible antidote for rum and tobacco. The minute details which have been furnished him forbid him to doubt the accuracy of the statements. This new claim of a great remedy to the confidence of the publio will give a vast and well-deserved impulse to its popularity. Heretofore the Bitters have been recognized as a pure vegetable tonic and corrective, devoid of alcohol, and thoroughly adapted to the cure of stomach and bowel complaints, nervous disorders, bilious affections, muscular diseases, and, indeed, a majority of the ailments within the reach of medicine ; but if it will also cure the craving for liquor and tobacco, philosophers, statesmen and theologians ought to unite their voices in its praise. Can the good news be true ? It is easy to test the question.?Com. Ninety-six million bushels of wheat, the Mark Lane Express says, will be required by England this year from abroad, in consequence of the failure of the potato crop and the shortness of I the grain crop. Cristadoro's Excelsior Hair Dye stands unrivaled and alone. Its merits nave been so universally acknowledged that it would be a supererogation to descant on them any further?nothinir can beat it.?Com. A SUVEIlEIUlt OAL.M Can be found in that great and reliable family ! medicine ALLEN'S LUNO BALSAM, > By the uae 0f which health and happiness it restored to those afflicted with any Lung or Throat disease, Colds, Coughs, Asthma, Bronchitis, Consumption. UNSOLICITED EVIDENCB OP ITS MERITS. bias tub kollowiho: Dr. A. L. 8COV1LL is the inventor of several medical preparations which have become very popular, and have boen liberally used. Among his Inventions are " Hall's Balaam f ir the Lungs " aim Llverworth and Tar." Por the past ten years a better remedy has been offered to the public. Read the following letter from Da. BCOVIlL referring to it: Mis9rs. J. N. Habris a Co. : Gents-1 make the following statement from a peifect onvi lion and kaowledgo of tho boncfits ol Allen's Luno Balaam in curing the most deepseated Pulmonary Consumption: I have witnessed ita effects ou the toung and the old.and I can truly say that It i? by far the best exucctorant remedy with which I am acquainted. Por Coughs, and all tho early itages of Lung Complaints, I be'U-veit to be a certain cure, and if every family would k-ep It by them, ready to administer upon the first appearance of disease abnnt the Lungs, there won I I be very few cases of fatal consumption. It causes tbe phlegm and matter to ra'se without irritating those delicate organs (the Lungs), and without producing constipation of the bowels. It also gives strength to the system, stops the night-sweats, and changes all the morbid secretloni to a healthy state. Yours, rcspectiully, A. L. SCOVILL. "IT SAVED MY LIFE." Columbia, Ala., March 8, 1373. J. N. Harms speplic will begin to feel its benign influence. Appetite will be created, and and witbuppettte the capacity to digest what il craves. Persevere unlil tho cure Is complete? uuttl beilthful blood, flt to be the material of flesh snd muscle, bone and nerve and brain, flows through tho channels c f circulation, instead of the watery pabulum with which tbey have heretofore been impelfectly nourished. Th? I ahoest Workshop of the Body Is thf Liver, whose office it ia to withdraw the bile from the blood. When this important organ twits slug gishly, or ftom any canan becomes diseased, Dr Jayne's 8anntivo Pills afford immediato relief, and SQ'in bring about natural action. Tim late Gov. Oeary pronounced Dr. Sbaltenberger's Pcvcr and Ague Antidote a public benefaction. A single ttiul will establish its merit. YOU WANT TUB J1P8T STOCK PAPER, L.1VK STOCK JliniNAI.i 81.50 per year. Specimen free. BUFPaLO, N Y INDIAN DIARIUI(KACVltK.-TDn *ona?r fal hHOsnoxs remedy act* almost instantly Purely veifotsble and porfectl* harmless. Dlacor ored by R. E. Wolfe, Interpret*! for the Sboshom triho i f Indiana. Sent ?>n roceiptof 60 els. Addresi R I V. 01 I - " I f ; ( inly Nevad Alt KVII WEBJt ?\0EJiT8 WANTkD j) i ' limine.s l?brlma e Purticulari free. J. WORTH 81. L uls.JW^ Bjc 1.248. Peerless Clotjies Wringer. L. IIF.YNIOER & CO.. 18 Fulton Street. N. t AORRAT SKNHATION t-Agent? Wanted Big Package Free. Better than Odd. Addrei atonco', P. A. KI.LS A CO.. charlotte. Muh. CKfo COD per "Jay! Agents wanted I All claste ?J lu wtv uf working people of either sex,yonci or old, mako raoro money at work lor us t:i thei: pare momenta or all the time than nt anything els Particulars free. Address 0. STINS'JN t CO.. Port lsnd, Me. feULffijlij] Thea-Noctar Blftcls. TEA L With the Qreen Tea Flavor. Tb Cpuhe. k Ni3' "was' bci1(i for Thea-Kectar Circular |-WOMESr/^ Accntfl V\/ Antod. 8END roa CATALOGUE. Domestic Sewing Machine Co., N. Y Tk.'e, "D_ If you arc a fool or lunatic raSS lniS JDV ?>"* if you are sane an v wtsh_to make money, ad drfag, fdrhka POBTABLB TABLa co.,bt. bomi STRAUB MILL COMPANY CINCINNATI, O, ' ManufMturrrs of Portn /I v\ blrnillit,n ii<