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FIRM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. Seasonable Hints tor the Farm. Top dressing at this season, with anything but the very finest and best ma nure, except on sod for corn, is a waste of time and labor. The effect comes too late to beaftfit the crop. Some active commercial fertilizer should be used instead. For grass or wheat one hundred and fifty pounds of nitrate of soda, or the same of guano, per acre, would be a good dressing. In using commercial fertilizers, it is w$ll to make experiments as to quantities and va rietiee for different soils and crops. For the corn crop we have found the sooner the plauting is done after the plowing, anc^while the soil is moist and fresh, the better. A top dressing of coarse manure upon the sod would be an excellent preparation for this crop. Many Western farmers have made flax a profitable crop, the seed being in demand at the oil mills at good prices. Tf. ia a napfnl r?rr?r? in mAllnw an/1 />lcan the soil, and may precede fall wheat with advantage. A bushel and a half of seed per acre may be sown this month upon a corn stubble. Raise the best calves, and thus gradually raise the quality of their herds. A good calf is well worth a month's fresh milk, and if their coming was timed for .April, they could have the April milk, and the dairymen be richer and they the better for it Early lambs should be pushed forward for market by giving extra food to the ewes and increasing the flow of milk. To feed the lambs meal or other food, for which their stomachs are as yet unprepared, hinders their growth. You pigs may be pushed as fast as possible. When a week eld they may be taught, without difficulty, to drink milk from a shallow pan, and in doing this the young animals may be tamed and rendered perfectly docile. To have tame and tractable animals about the ? farm will add much to their value, and the ease and comfort in tending them. ' Peed the nursing sows well, and keep them warm. The roller should be used with judgment. It is a valuable implement, but onrr*nfimoa if ia non/1 ininrinnalr Tf. ifi OV/XUV?1U*VO IV AO UOW4 Uij U1AVUOJIJ XV most effective upon dry soil* ; when the soil is damp clods are easily crashed, but the sarfaoe is packed and crusted. Meadows, on the contrary, should be rolled while moist and soft, that stones and rough places may be pressed into the soil, and the surface leveled for the mower. Fall grain may be rolled with advantage the day after it is harrowed, if rain has not fallen. In purchasing tools and implements those that are lightest, other things being equal, should be chosen. To handle a heavy tool is a waste of muscle, now that steel is in universal use for the best kinds. Even a hoe should be sharp and bright to be most effective, and in a mower a dull knife will double the draft. This is equally true of horse power machines and of hand tools.? Agriculturist. Packing Batter. A well known dairy authority gives the following directions for packing butter so that it will keep sweet for eight or nine months: Make a brine with*a saturated solution of the purest salt you can get, using one pound of saltpeter to about twenty pounds of salt Scald the brine by bringing it to a boiling heat, skim, and apply when sufficiently cool. The casks should be carefully prepared as well as the brine. If the gum and sap in the wood are not removed before the cask8 are used, they will work out into the brine and affect the butter. To remove the woody flavor from the casks, a thorough steaming with a high pressure is the quiokest and best means. If soaked before the steam is applied, hot steam will cut the gum and woody flavor all out in a short time. If steam is not convenient, soak in brine a week or so, and then All with boiling hot brine, and let it stand tul it gets oooL rsv keepiDg the butter under the brine and the casks full and in a cool place, the butter can be kept safely. Some of the tin-lined packages which have reoentlv been introduced, and which are easily hermetically sealed, would be much more convenient aod probably fully as cheap as the oak casks and brine, and are claimed to be equally efficient in preserving. ^Care tar Scab ta sheep. A farmer discovered a year ago that a lot of his sheep had this disease. The first thing he knew, they lost their wool, so that by f-hearing time they were almost bare. Having heard of tobacco as a cure, and failing with other remedies, he procured some thirty or forty pounds of the leaves, and boiled it up in a great kettle. When cold, he poured the liquor into a large tub, and, after shearing, plunged each sheep that was affected by the scab into it up to the neck, and then turned them out to pasture. The liquor must be stroDg enough to change the color of the wool to a light red, and, according to this man's experience, they will be cured, not only of the scab, but if the lambs are dipped too, of all the ticks. Stalks of tobacco, cut up and boiled the same as the leaves, will do equally welL Care fer Coras. According to the Union MediccUe, oorns may be cured with greater certainty and rapidity than in any other way by simply applying, morning and evening, a drop of perchloride of iron by means of a bit of straw. This treatment, continued for fifteen days, will, in most cases, effect a cure without involving any pain. The Doctors and the Dyspeptic*. Wfl r#v*MVP Rfivs fchft York Ts>A ger, a great many communications from correspondenti who are suffering from dyspepsia, torpid liver, or some other disease caused by bad digestion, and who wish to know what to do to regain their health. Some of them have tried many doctors and many kinds of treatment, but find themselves to be no better. They are "tired bothering with the doctors," they say, and would like to know if they "had better not let them alone altogether." It seems that most of the doctors tell their patients to take out-door exercise, to be careful with their diet, and to eat slowly. But it is seldom that the patients, according to their own statements, strictly follow these simple rules. So the doctors cannot be as much at fault as they are generally supposed to be. The last rule, eat slowly, if carried out, would go a great way towards curing a dyspeptic. Almost all people troubled with dyspepsia, or any kindred disease, eat too fast. They hardly ever take time to masticate their food, but bolt it almost whole. Let them eat slowly, and when it has become a habit with them to do so, they will have better health, and find life to be sweeter and in every way more desirable. The latest in the form of a parting salutation is : " Well, uf I don't see you agin, hello." A CHARLEY ROSS STORY. I A Plot to Kidnap Jny Gould nnd Ki?k. Menu them to Africa, nnd Mell them into Slavery. A correspondent of the New York Sun j tells that paper the following story : There has been a time when Jay Gould and a distinguished companion were in imminent danger of being kidnapped, not for a short period, as has been stated was the intention in the Drew-Robinson-Rubino case, but for a time which might only have terminated with their lives. One evening Mr. Gould gave me the history of the affair while we were sitting in his office. He was iu unusually good humor, and beooming talkative, began to relate many of the interesting incidents of his life. Finally he said : " Did T A -11 1 1 11 1-1 U.'.k j. ever ten yuu auum me piut wmuu fonned to kidnap Fisk and myself and send us away to Africa?" Of course, I expressed entire ignorance of ever hav ing heard anything about such a plot from *him or anybody else, and Mr. Gould gave me the history of it something as follows : "When Jim Fisk and myself begun to do business together, his peculiar appearance and extraordinary actions attracted the attention of everybody in the country to ourselves, and a great deal of useless annoyance was the result. Everything that happened in Wall street was soon laid at our door, and no matter whether a speculation resulted fortunately or the reverse, we were credited with a hand in the manipulation of it. When people made money they would not thank us; when they lost it we received their maledictions. I preferred a more unobtrusive style of life, but Fisk was never contented unless he made a splurge and dragged me into it. After a time detectives were continually shadowing us from one place to another by day, and when we went to bed they watched in front of the houses. It was a year or more before Fisk died that I was "(conscious of being followed constantly by a person very peculiar in his general appearance, who I judged was not a regular-detective, as his face could be too easily remembered by one who had ever seen it. I therefore was puzzled to account for his actions, and was about to mention the matter to the police, when, as I was entering my residence late one night, he suddenly confronted me. There was nobody around, and at first I had a good notion to run away from L ' I- X- - * -T_l_ 1 J nim ; ne spose quietuy, nowever, auu I decided to remain, and trust to luck to get away if he should make any hostile demonstration. He said he wanted to speak to me on the subject of my personal safety, which, he said, was in great p ?ril. He had followed seafaring life, and was in need of money ; hejiad been urged to enlist in a desperate scheme, and thought if he could realize by disclosing the information, instead of committing crime, he would be glad to doit " I became satisfied after a short parley that he really possessed important information, and entered into negotiations f? r its possession. A price was agreed upon, and he revealed the facts that negotiations had been entered into by w .althy parties, who were anxious to obtain control of the Erie road, whereby Fisk and myself were to be kidnapped late a* night and put on board a large schooner then anchored in the lower bay, and taken away to Africa. The person who was to do the job had been engaged in blockage running during the war, and was to receive $100,000 in gold. " I of course went to Fisk immediately and gavo him the particulars. He was incredulous, and it was *not until we chartered a tug boat and proceeded to the lower bay in company with the informer that he was satisfied. We boarded the schooner, and found it fitted wiih every applianoefor the successful confinement of ourselves. Directly in front of the cabin a room had been built of heavy plank, and accessible from the cabin only, in which we wore to' have be n placed when captured. Rings were fixed to the floor, and the intention was evidently, as the man said, to keep us chained inside like a couple of wild beasts. We obtained every particular concerning the scheme, and were preparing to arrest the c nspiratore, when fchev found out that we were warn ed, arid disappeared. Fisk thought we had better say nothing about the matter, because the feasibility of the scheme might suggest itself to other parties, and thereby put our persons in additional peril." In response to a question as to the uses to which they were to be put upon arrival in Africa, Mr. Gould stated that the intention was, he believed, to sell Fisk and himself to negro kings in the interior as slaves. The party who disclosed the kidnapping scheme was rewarded handsomely, and his whereabouts was known to. Mr. Gould at the time he told me. Such was the story, which seems almost incredible. It was, however, related to me substantially as above. A Baby Smoker. A most curious case of inherited tendencies is described as having occurred in the town of Bradford Junction, Ohio. The story is of a baby boy who was weaned, with considerable difficulty, at the age of two years. All the usual substitutes, provided to bamboozle urchins in such cases, were indignantly rejected by this subject; he would not touch the nursing bottle; food was refused, and what with hunger and constant fretting, he suffered nervously, and his health failed to such a degree as to occasion serious alarm. He suffered, too, from an excess of saliva on his little stomach. For the purpose of temporarily pacifying him, his father, an inveterate smoker, occasionally yielded to the child's entreaties by withdrawing the cigar from his own mouth and allowing the boy to puff at it for a short while at a time, in his own way. It was observed from the beginning that the new found substitute for the maternal fount invariably gave entire satisfaction ?the stomach complaint disappeared, the child acquired an appetite fofrteod and begun to thrive. But the appetite for smoking increased even more rapidly. From a few little imitative puffs at beginning, the child grew into smoking a whole cigar a day, and j increased the number until in a-year or I so he consumed from ten to twelve cigars daily. It was noticed then that he suffered in health, suffered nervously and lost flesh, and that mentally he had little of the healthy curiosity or fresh , interest in the little things around him : characteristic of children of his age. Mixed Up.?It is well enough, says the Norwich Bulletin, to talk of elevating the tone of social conversation, but when a well meaning young man tries to introduce protoplasm as a subject, at I a little gathering, and finds that everybody thinks he is referring to a new kind of plaster and considers him in- j : delicate in doing so, he is apt to feel that the life of the reformer is a kind of j i perpetual picnic on an ant hill- 1 SUMMARY OF NEWS. (team or Interest Arm Home and Abroad. The cable of the Direct company was cnt by a fishing vessel, whoee anchor got foul of it. Advices from Mexican sources state that a proclamation of martial law checked the ! revolutionary movements in nearly all the ! states except Oaxaca. The police of Mexico City killed one hundred sympathizers of the 1 revolution, in breaking up a meeting held to express approbation of the insurgents. Prioes have advanced twenty-five per cent, under the heavy taxation, and .business is completely ruined Great Britain's income tax has been increased a penny in the pound I The Delaware river being free of ice, millions j of feet of lumber are being rafted to market. S. C. Tarsons, druggist, of Northampton, j Mass., while insane from brain fever, drowned | himself The president of the Haverhill (Mass.) btfck, who had his pocket picked of | a large amount, recently, has received $13,000 in notes and checks by express The Canada Pacific railway has succeedod in getting the Canadian parliament to appropriate $1,810,000 toward it The insurrection which broke out in the Bihacs district of Albania is extending along the Orina and north Bosnian frontier. All tho towns betweon Mogdane, Polje and Petrowatz have risen Maurice Yiguaux, the winner of the champion billiard match in Paris a few weeks since, challenges any man in America to a three-ball game for from $1,000 to $5,000 John Johns, EpiBoopal bishop of Virginia, died at the age of eighty years Three thousand coal miners in North Derbyshire, England, struck work in consequence of a redaction of wages. Capt. Kahn, of the Franconia, which sunk the Stratholyde, by which disaster so many persons lo t their lives off the coast of England, has been foun i guilty of manslaughter. The European grain market has a downward tendency The Turks violated the late armistice by receiving two shiploads of reenforcements and concentrating their army. In conseqnenoo tb a insurgents renounced the negotiations iu progress. All Bosnia is now in open rebellion The four-ball game of billiards between Cyrille Dion and A. P. Rudolphe, in New York, for $500 a side and the diamond championship cue, resulted in a victory for Dion by a score of 1,500 against 392. The Panama railway oompany has sued the Pacific Mail oompany for $333,049, due for transportation across the isthmus 8amuel Evans, a oolored sailor, who lived in a room in New York with two women, one white and the other colored, fatally stabbed the white girl for threatening to desert him By the death of Miss Newberry, at Rome, between two and three million dollars, bequeathed by her father, revert to the city of Chicago for a free library. The estate is valued at $5,000,000 Three men were killed and another fatally injured by a locomotive exploding near Bald Eagle, Pa. Qen. Garibaldi has accepted a gift of 100,000 lire ($20,000) offered him by the Italian nation and king some time ago The prospects of the Ohio fruit crop are unpromising, because of the damage by bad weather In view of the improved health of the czar of Russia, the abdication soheme has been abandoned Intelligence has been received that ! the Ameer of Cabul. Afghanistan, has defeated hie rebellious feudatory, the Meer of Maimena. The latter loet three thousand men in the battle Daniel O'Leary, the pedestrian from Cbioago, walked five hundred miles in 139 hours and thirty-two minutes in San Francisoo?being the shortest space of time that distance was ever walked in Samuel Cowell, a railroad engineer, was shot and killed at Potosi, Mo., by T. G. Settle, who had been removed from his position as station agent at Stowell's instigation. 8ettle then wont home and committed suicide by shooting Serious agrarian outbreaks have taken place in the Bustar district of Madras, India. Thirty thousand persons assembled, and troops were dispatched to restore order The wholesale drug house of Wm. H. Brown & Bros., Baltimore, containing valuable stook, was destroyed by fire, and several adjoining buildings damaged. Loss about $226,000 Athol, Mass., lost its Mnsio Hall building and a dwelling by fire. Loss, $75,000 The wife of Rev. George Gannett, of Boston, committed suicide bv jumping from the bridge on Beacon treet James Brown, superintendent of the Avondale (Iod ) coal mines, was killed and terribly mangled by falling 280 feet down a shaft Goldsmith Maid trotted a mile in 2:19% in San Fr&noisco; be ' ting Golden Gate, which was to run a mile i d 50 yards While te ting a boiler mad Ira steamboat, in front of the shop of 8 ,piey & Wells, at Binghampton, N. Y., a ten fi xploeion occurred, killing three men and woundiDg several persons on the street. Mr. Alexander T. Stewart, the merchant priuce, died in New Ycrk of inflammation of the bowels, brought on by a severe cold, in the eeventy-fourth year of age. Mr. 8tewart was born near Belfast, Ireland, of Scotch-Irish parents. After graduating at Trinity College, Dablin, he immigrated to this country in 1*22, at the age of twenty years, and opened a select school in New York. He soon afterward gave up this project and started a small retail dry goods store on Broadway, which soon became noted for the fine quality of the stock displayed, and was liberally patronized by the wealthy inhabitants. By strict attention to business, ooupled with extensive but judicious advertising, Mr. Stewart had so DrosDered bv 1848 that he was enabled to erect the Urge marble store at present standing on the comer of Broadway and Chambers street, and from that time on his fortune increased with the greatest rapidity. Forseeing the necessity for an uptown movement on the part of the retail dealers, -Mr. Stewart erected the handsome eight-story building occupying the entire block from Ninth to Tenth streets, and from Broadway to Fourth avenue, and oocupied it as a retail department, retaining the old store for wholesaling. The uptown gfore covers two and a half acres of ground, employs two thousand hands, and the running expenses are over $1,000,000 per annum?being the most extensive establishment of the kind in the world. The wholesale and retail establishments have sold $50,000,000 worth of goods in | a year, ueeides tne two ooiossai stores, Air. Stewart held & large amount of New York oity property, the elegant Grand Union hotel at Saratoga, immense mills near Fishkill, N. Y., and the entire Garden City .on Long Island, which was a pet scheme of the founder, where ho made great outlays in putting up houses and stores, connecting with the city by a railway run by his employees. His estate has been estimated all the way from $20,000,000 to $90,000,000, but probably now nearly ap! proaches the latter sum. Mr. 8tewart, outside of business, was of a pleasant disposition, and j delighted to entertain distinguished parsona! ges in a royal manner. His wife survives him; but as she is childless, it is conjectured that | the bulk of the property is left to charitable purposes. Ocean transportation having fallen off, the I large steamships will run less frequently durI ing the next few months Two men were killed and three fatally wounded by the fall of a trestlework near Peterson, N. J The Massachusetts supreme court has decided that, if armed with proper papers and havwvg reason to believe the person sought is within a house, an officer may, after demanding and being refused admission, enter by foroe, nor [ can he be treated as a trespasser if the person sought is not there Philadelphia's population, according to the census just taken, is 817,488 The revolutionists in Mexico are gaining ground. During the battle of New Laredo, near the boundary line, the Mexican state troops fired on United States troops, who in turn shelled the town John H. SeiL, teller and bookkeeper of the defunct Security bank in New York, embezzled $70,000 "while engaged in aesisting to settle up the bank's accounts .. .The suffering in Iceland during the pest winter was much less than generally eupDosed. The pumice ashes from volcanoes. which covered a large portion of the island to the depth of three inches, and which was thought would kill vegetation, turns out to have a manuring property which causes grass to grow rapidly A fire in Keesville, N. Y., destroyed five of the largest stores in the place. There was no protection against fire except a foroe pump, which was frozen. The revolutionists in Mexico have captured the town of New Laredo The Porte of Turkey has informed the interceding powers that the conditions demanded by the rebols will not be granted. Central Bosnia has joi ed the revolt, and fresh troops were forwarded from Constantinople in opposition A representative crew will go from Harvard to Philadelphia to compete with the English university crews The direct cable to Europe is now in working order, the break having been repaired Great distress is reported among the inhabitants of Cape Breton over three hundred people in the neighborhood of Sydney being without the necessaries of life Andreas Fucbs, of Brooklyn, N. Y., who killed and then brutally cut the body of his victim in small pieces which he hid, was sentenced tft be hanged June 2 A man named Taylor killed Wash. Howard near Popes, Tenn., for refusing to give him a chew of tobacco. A terrible explosion of fire-damp occurred in the Nesquehoning mines, near Allentown, Pa., killing three men and badly wounding five others A twelve-thousand-barrel iron oil tank at Bear Creek station, Pa., was struck by lightning and set on fire, the flames from whioh soon spread to two other large tanks near bv. The three tanks, with their contents of forty-five thousand barrels of oil, were destroyed, involving a loss of nearly $700,000. A twenty-five-thousand-barrel tank at Beaver Pipe station was also struok by lightning, and after burning a few hours was extinguished with steam, at a slight loss Upward of twenty thousand oolliera are on strike in 8outh Yorkshire England, against a fifteen per cent, reduction of wages Fresh disturbances are reported from M&laoca Freight rates from Chicago east have .been reduced. A forced loan of $10 per head is thought of by the Servian government By the falling of an old wall in Philadelphia one man was killed and two others seriously injured A $70,TOO fire ooourred at St. John's, Canada.... A terrific wind storm at Creston, Is., blew down five buildings and numerous outbuildings, inflicting a loss of $10,090. FORTY-FOURTH CONGRESS. The Business of General Interest Transacted. 8ZNATZ. Mr. 8herman (Rep.), of Ohio, from the oommittee on finance, reported favorably on the House bill to provide for a deficiency in the engraving and printing bureau of the treasury department. Mr. Wright (Rep.), of Iowa, from the committee on the judiciary, reported adversely on the 8enate bill to make persons chargeable with crimes and offenses witnesses in courts of the United States, and it was indefinitely postponed. Mr. 8berm*h (Rep ) of Ohio, ca'led up the House Mil to provide for a deficiency in the printing and engraving bureau of the treasury department, and for the issue of silver ooin of the United States in place of fractional currency. The bill was read a third time and passed. It is as follows: Ba it en&oted, That there be, and hereby is appropriated out of any money in the treasury not otherwise appropriated, tne sum or 9iw,000, to provide for engravirg and printing and other expenses of making and issniDg United State notes, and the further earn of $48,000 to provide for engraving and printing national bank-notes, to be disbursed under the secretary of the treasury. That the secretary of the treasury is hereby directed to issue silver coins of the United States of the denomination of ten, twenty, twenty-five, and fifty cents, of standard value, in redemption of an equal amount of fractional currency, whether the same be now in the treasury awaiting redemption, or wherever it may be presented for redemption, and the secretary of the treasury may, under regulations of the Treasury department, provide for such redemption and issue by substitution at the regular sub-treasuries and public depositories of the United States, until the whole amonn of fractional currency outstanding shall be redeemed, and the fractional currency redeemed under this act shall be held to be a part of the sinking fund provided for by the existing law, tbo interest to be computed thereon as in the cato of bonds redeemed under the acts relating to the sinking fond. Mr. Edmunds, from the committee on the jadioiary, reported adversely on the Honee hill to proteot witnesses who shall be required to testify in certain cases, and the Dill was placed on the calendar. Mr. Morrill (Bep), of Vermont, called up the bill making appropriations to continue the work of improving the Capitol grounds, and the amendment of the House, reducing the amount from $25,000 to $20,000, was agreed to, and the bill passed. The bill fixing the rate of postage on thirdclass mail matter, after several amendments, passed. BOOB. Mr. Holman (Dem.), of Indiana, from the committee on appropriations, reported back the Senate bill fixing the Presidential salary, after the fourth of March, 1877, at $25,000. Passed without discussion. The question was taken on a motion made by Mr. Holman to refer to the committee of the whole the bill reported adversely from the oommittee on banking and currency, to regulate the rate of interest throughout the country .on national money (that is, greenbacks, national bank notes, etc.), and to make it six per cent. The motion was rejected?yeas, 75 ; ays, 135; and the bill was tabled. Mr. Ward (Dem.), of New York, from t'.e committee on commerce, reported % bill exempting masters of vessels engaged in trade between the Unitod States and British North America, or the West Indies, or Mexico, and the masters of vessels of less than seventy-five tons harden, bound from a port on the Atlantic to a port on the Paciflo and vice versa, from the neoessity of shipping their crews or procuring their shipping articles to be signed before a shipping commissioner. Passed. Mr. Hereford (Dem.), of West Virginia, chairman of the committee on commerce, introdnced a bill, which was passed, making an appropriation for the construction, repair, preservation, and completion of different pub-I lie works on rivers and harbors. The total amount appropriated is $5,872,850, of which $200,000 is for the improvement of New York harbor and the removal of obstructions at Hell Gate. Mr. Hereford (Dem.), of West Virginia, from the committee on commerce, reported adverse-1 ly the bill for the appointment of a commission to inquire as to the terms on which a commercial treaty can be made with Canada. Mr. Kehr (Dem.), of Missouri, from the same committee, reported a bill to authorize the construction of a bridge across the Missouri river, at or near Sioux City, Iowa. Passed. Mr. Wells (Dem.), of Missouri, from the oommittee on appropriations, reported the Deficiency bill. The bill appropriates $652,486. On motion of Mr. Holman (Dem.), of Indiana, the Senate bill appropriating $25,000 for the improvement of the Capitol grounds was amended by reducing the amount to $2j,000 and was passed. The bill to supply the deficiency in the printing bureau of the Treasury department, and for the issue of subsidiary silver coin in place of the fractional currency, was taken up, the question being on the Senate amendment to strike out the third section, known as 44 the j Beagan amendment," miking silver dollars legal tender to the amount of $50, and lesser coins legal tender to tbe amount of $25. The amendment was concurred in without division, as weje the other amendments. The bill thus reduced to the first and second sections (which supply the deficiency in the printing bureau and directs the issue of subsidiary silver ooin) now goes to the President for his signature. The House took up the Deficiency bill, and Mr. Wells (DemA of Missouri, who had charge of it, made explanations as to<the bill. The bill was amended in various minor particulars, and passed. The Centennial Motire Power. The great engine which runs the machinery in machinery hall on the Centennial grounds weighs eight hundred tons; will drive eight miles of shafting; has a fly-wheel thirty feet in diameter and weighing seventy tons; is of fourteen hundred horse-power, with a capacity of being foroed to 2,500 horsepower; has two walkiDg beams, weighing twenty-two tons each; two forty-inch cylinders, a ten-feet stroke, a crank shaft nineteen inches in diameter and twelve feet in leDgth, and piston-rods six and one-quarter inches in diameter. The platform upon which it rests is fiftyfive feet in diameter and composed of polished iron plates, resting upon briok foundations that extend far down into the earth. The height from the floor to the top of the walking beams is thirtynine feet. Mr. Corliss is the inventor, patentee, builder and owner, having had it erected for the double purpose of exhibition and furnishing motive power, whioh will be supplied gratuitously, but only for the purpose of exhibiting machinery in operation, no machinery being allowed to run longer than is necessary for that purpose, except by permission from the chief of the bureau. Of the eight lines of shafting (four on each side of the transept) seven wiU have a speed of 120 revolutions per minute and one of 240. The IHmes tells us how the great engine started up the first time. At precisely half-past six o'clock the director general raised his arm as a signal, Mr. Corliss patted his huge iron pet as if it were a f ri3ky nag that he was coaxing to move, when a slight puffing was heard, not near so loud as that of a railway locomotive when about to start, one of the beams began to descend and the flywheel to turn, and the engine was in motion. Without waiting for more, every spectator took his hat in his hand and swung it in the air, the action being accompanied by a cheer so deafening that nothing could exceed it in enthusiasm except the cheers that followed it. Everybody appeared to understand the significance of the moment, and the practical appreciation of it shown would be worthy of the opening day. The motion of the engine was astonishingly noiseless, nothing being heard above a uniform murmur, resembling the well known sound of a well set wheel in rapid revolution. There were but fourteen pounds of steam generated by the four boilers, and the revolutions of the fly-wheel at starting numbered fifteen per minute. The shafting cog-wheels, portions of which rise above the floor in distant parts of the building, though revolving with great rapidity, were even more noiseless than their gigantic motor. It was long before the spectators could turn away from the grand sight, and when they did it was to speak in admiration of that power in man which can invent the means of accomplishing, the power of many giants with none of the bustle made by one child. The Congregational churches of Connecticut will celebrate the national centennial on Sunday, July 9. If you have a discharge from the nose, offensive or otherwise, partial loee of the sense of smell, taste or hearing, eyes watery or weak, feel dull and stupid or debilitated, pain or pressure in the head, take cold easily, you may rest assured that you have the catarrh. Thousands annually, without manifoetiug half of the above symptoms, terminate in consumption, and end iu the grave. No disease is so oommon, more deceptive, or less understood by physicians. R. V. Pierce, M. D., of Ballalo, N. Y., is the proprietor of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy?a perfect epocific for catarrh, "oold in the head," or catarrhal headache.* Pimples on the face, rongh skin, chapped hands, saltrheum and all cutaneous affections ouxoid, the skin made scft and smooth, by the use of JuxirKB Tab Soaj?. That made by Caswell. Hazard Jt Co.. New York, is the only kiod that can bo relied on, as there are many imitations, made from common tar, which are worthless.?Com. Important to Persons Visiting New York or the Centennial. Tho Gbaxd Union Hotel, New York, opposite the Grand Central depot, has over 360 elegantly furnished rooms. Elevator, steam, and all modern improvements. European plan. Carriage hire is saved, as baggage is taken to and from the depot, free of expense. The restaurants supplied with the best. Guests can live better for less money at tho Grand Union, than at any other first-class hotel. Stages and oars pass the hotel constantly to all parts of the oity, and to Philadelphia depot. * The Markets. aw tobx. Beef Osttle?Prime to ExtraBullocka (9 # 12 Oommon to Good Texana ? (9#* 10 Milch Oows ...40 00 76 00 Hogs?Live CSX% 0834 Dressed !# ?? 1U*? lcX Sheep 0** Lambs 6 60 9 00 Cotton?Middling... 131{ 18* flour?Extra Western ?... I 80 5 to State Extra.. 6 40 #6 6 0 Wheat?Bed Western.... 1 26 1 38 Ho. 3 Spring 1 26X9 1 26 Bye-mate -91X* MX Barley?Stete e?setiesseeeet?*> # ? 76 # 96 Barley Malt 97 # 97 Oats?Mixed Western 49 9 49 Corn?Mixed Western.............. MX% 66\ Hay, per cwt 60 1 10 Straw, perowt. 65 1 10 Hope ? 76s 14?19 -olds 04 ? 06 Pork?Meee ...i2 76 22 90 Lard 1834# 18,H Flah?Mackerel No. 1, new 27 0U ?'.7 00 " No. 2, new 16 50 <*16 60 Dry Ood, per cwt 4 26 6 81 Herring, Seeled, per boxl? 16 17 Petroleum?Crude... eeeese 834 S 834 Beflned, UX Wool?California Fleeoe eeiee # 23 # 28 Texas " 20 26 Australian " 43 46 Batter?State ...-. 24 A 40 Western Dairy 26 86 Western fellow... 20 # 80 Western Ordinary 16 # 26 Pennsylvania Fine ? Obeese?State Factory 01X9 "X " Skimmed............ 04 07 Western 063446 12 E :gs?State 19 1934 tiiin. 1 M A 1 M Wheat...... ? ?> w ? Rye?State 91 ft M Corn?Mixed 98 # 64 Barley?State...... ......... 9) 6 90 Oate?State S8 <*> CO NVTiLO. Flour 6 35 $ 10 00 Wheat?No. 1 Spring 1 30 # 1 80 Corn?Miieo 60 # 60 Oats 3T <? J?7 Rye 78 <? 78 Barley... 90 # 95 BALTMOBI. Ootton?Low Middlings 12\? 13* Flour?Kitn. .? # ! 8 75 # 8 75 Wheat?Red Weaten: 1 30 # 1 30 75 0 78 Corn?iellow iiaiid CO (4 50 Oats?Mixed? 45 (g <6 Fetroleum l8K? G8* mmnm Beef Cattle?Extra 04 % 07 Sheep 08)4(4 03* Hogs?Dressed 13 <at 13 tricar?Pennsylvania Extra 6 IS m 8 26 Wheat?Western Bed 1 16 4 1 15 Rye... 80 g no Corn?Yellow...... 66 # 63 Mixed 63 ? 63 Oats?Mixed 45 46 Petroleum?Crude 11)4 11 >4 Rsflned 14)4 WATKRTOWN, MASS. Beef Cattle-Poor to Choice 6 00 <4 8 76 Sheep 2 50 (4 7 0) iambs., 8 W ?6 j Southern Hotel, St, Louis, Mo, The laont complete hotel in all iU appointment*} in tlie West. The table supplied at all times with the beat the market affords. * Dr. SCHENCK'S .STANDARD REMEDIES The standard remedies for all diseases of tbe longs are Rchxkck's Pcxmonic Stbxtp, Schenck's Ska Win Tonic, and Schznck's Mandrake Pjlia. and. If taken before tbe longs are destroyed, a speedy care la effected. To these three medicines Dr. J. H. Schenok, of PhUadelpbia, owes his unrivaled sacceee In the treatment of pulmonary diseases. Tbe Pulmonic Syrup ripens the morbid matter in the lanes; nature throws It off by an easy expectoration, for when tbe phlegm or matter Is ripe a slight oougb will throw It off; the patient has rest and the longs begin to he&L To enable the Pulmonic Syrup to do this, Scheoek's Mandrake Pills and Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic most be freely used to cleanse the stomaeh and liver. Schenck's Mandrake Pills act on the llrer, removing all obstructions, relax tbe gall bladder, the bile starts freely, and the liver Is soon relieved. Schenck's Sea Weed Tonlo la a gentle stimulant and alterative; the alkali of whtch it la oomposed mixer with the food and prevents souring. It assists the digestion by toning up the stomach to a healthy condition, so that the food and the Pulmonic Syrup will make good blood; men tne tonge neat, ion ure puin? win inraij get well If care la taken to prevent fresh ookL All wbo wish to ooasnlt Dr. Scbenck. either personally or by letter, can do ao at hla principal offioe, corner of Sixth and Arch Streeta, Philadelphia, every Monday. Schenok's raedlolnea are sold by all druggists through Ont the c?i"H MHHPPI The Atlantic Gable U a national 1^1 A'i 3A i| benefit, ao are CallaJii SILVER TIPPED 8voes for children. Never wear III through at the toe. UUmmMm Also try Wire Quilted Soles. NO CHANNEL CUT IN THE SOLE Standard Screw ONLY ABSOLUTE FASTENING FOR BOOTS & SHOES. 9 8W18S-ALPINB SOFT Tree-Protecting WAX, Will Save Trace by the Miltlea. All that is necessary to be said of this it Is pronounced by those who have need It I as the BEST INVENTION ever discovered for SUREL7 CURING all Wouwds, Diseases ajcd Graces or the Bask on Roots of Frnlt and Shade Tree , Grapevine*, Roee Hushes, Shrubbery. Plants, eta. whloh are Invariably rained when damaged by Animate,Worms, Insects, Orae* hoppers. Frost, Hot San, or from any other cause. One Jar of It will protect yon against heavy Iocs, and will keep the trees In a healthy state and ^tsrtng oondli tlon. Now Is the time and the sooner yon notloe snch diseeses, the better. It is also a never-falling preparation for Grafting Trees. Price?In Jars of 8 lbs.. Ml; 6 lbs., $2.75; 18 lbs., 85; Kegs of 84 lbs., 9<*.ftO. Gash with order. Sent by Express with fall directions, under my seal and signs tare. I have no Agents. Forward all orders to the Inventor, undersigned, and get the genuine article. GODFREY ASOHMANN. Landscape Gardener, 111 18 German town Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. N. B.?Plans drawn and laid oat and Estimates given for Fruit Orchards, Gardens. Lawns, Goon try Bests. Rustic Houses sad Bridges, Greenhouses, eta, sad all work promptly attended to. O/k Extra Fine Mixed Cards* with Name, 10 ota, pat-paid. L Joints A Go., Masran, N. Y. 6 VERY desirable NEW ARTICLES for Assets. _ Mfr*d by J. Q. Oapewsix A Co.. Cheshire, Oonn. SEND STAMP for Circulars tnd Specimen OLD 00IN. 0. A. BULKLKT, Granville. New York. T) re lit able, Pleasant work; hundreds now employed; JL hnndred* more wanted. M. N. Lovxll, Erie, Pa. &04W1 A.MONTH. Agent,wanted. Excel. Mfg. Go.. 1*1 Michigan A venae, Ohloago, 111. 100 FAR.1I8 FOR 8ALK In Del, M<L. Vs.. and Pa. Send for catalogue. J. POLK. Wilmington. Pel. Oft FANCY CAKD8, 7 Styles. with*Name, 10o. 40 Add's J. B. HcariP, Naasan. Bensa. Oo., N. Y. FREE Gift of a Piano for dlstrlbntlngoar olraalari. Address U. 8. Piano Go., 810 Broadway,NewYork. Oft FANCY Card*, 7 Styles, wl'h Name, lQots. CiO Address J. K. MARPK.R, Maiden Bridge, N. Y A ftWTQ (*?t the best article ever seea to sell AuLJI 10 fsstfromT. B. Staynar A0o^>rov.,B.L WANTED AGENTS, am* Omtfktjr BetUr than Gold. A. COULTER A OO . Ohlesno. ft C HQAi da/st home. Samples worth 81 seat $0 10 free. STINSON A CO., Portland. Me. O n day tbome. Agents wanted. Ontflt and terms free A dre?a TkUE A 00.. A adnata. Maine. Bend ibr Chrooo Oia^B 3)1 U p >0^ VT. H. Bcrroan'i Sow, Borton, mc WANTRII, l.ADI KM to sell the Improved Tidy fastener. S3 to 85 a day made. R^nd 25 eta. for samples. Addree* BUStNESb, Box 453, Newport,ELL (&OOA PKK MONTH TO AGENT* to sell tJ5 M i/\J my new " Patent Steam Oooking Machine." Address, with sump, T. 8. PAGE, Toledo, 0. KA SPLENDID CALLING CARDS, In Ants. Olf with name, sent for 25 eta. Samples sent tor s aToent stamp. J. MINKLEB A OO.. Natsea. N V COCA A Menth.?Agents Wanted. 94 beet sell vbuDU ta? articles lathe world. One sample free. ?pv/v/v ^drtM, JAY BRONBON,Detroit,Mloa. A feate Wanted.?Twenty9zll MountedOhramoa ix for 81. 2 samples br mail, poet-paid,*0c. OoTntrprrai. Ohbomo Pp.. 37 Naaaan Street, New Tort. to 880 a Week and Expenses, or 8100 forfeit *d All the new and standara rTmslllsa. Ohromne, etc Valoable Samples free with Oironlara. R. L. FLKTOHER. Ill Chambers Street, New York. 3Q0 /hnn A will gnaranteed to Male and Jfatk1/1/ mala Areata, In their looahty. OoeU U/ I I NOTHING to try It. Partiooiars Free T " " P. O. VIQKRBY A OO., Angola. Me. i aiiiima Ail Want It?thooaandsof livesano 1 P y || inn millions of Droperty saved by It-tortus es A ITI. II I M made with H?particulars free. 0. M. 11U .nit A M LrxncaTOw A Bao. JVewYortA Ohio ;% A > &nd Morphine Habit abeotntefyand flDTlIM vpeedlly cored. Painless; nojrabucrtj. Ilrllllfl Send stampfor Particulars. Dr. Oallr VI mm xow. 187 Washington St. Ohleago.lU. Aafa A MONTH ? Agents wanted every(PQCn where. Business honorable and firatJK/nil class. Particalars seat free. Addrees W*IVV WORTH A OO., St. Lonls. Mo. Agests Wanted! Medals and Diplomas Awarded <? HOOU*'8 pictorial BIBLES. 1800 lllaatratlena. Addrees for new cbonlsrs, A. J. HOL D AN 4c CO., 930 AROH Street. Phils. MftftK I MARK. TWAIN'S N?w Boo* oot, DOOM. | geSJceiythinyc. Dont worry dwot hard n nM rfcl I timet Sell this Oooc ana m now dm; * " they are. Send for circulars to AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO.. Hartford, Ot AMfffVM HABIT oured. Chinese mode of I | 811 II Hfl Care. Painless. No publicity. Doe* II Wr I II Ifl not interfere with business or plesefj I III III ore. Core guaranteed. Address W* ?* Dr. J. B. WILFORD, Toledo, O. Your Name KlegaatlrPHub il'Lw *d ob II TBAnaraiivTVisiTura Cabdi. for M Grata ?*eh card contains a km which ie not risible until held toward* the light Frothing Ilk* them over bsbrt offered in America. Big Inducem?nta U> Asenta. Norax.Tr Pais rive Co. Ashland, Mm* Mind Heading, Pirekaauer. Fudnatl**, Soul Oharmtnjg, Mesmerism, and Lorera' Guide, bowing bow either aez may faacinate and gain the lore and affection of any person tboy obooee instantly. 400 page* Br mall 5Qc. Hunt A Co., 13D 8. Tth St.. Pbfia. ADimr ?aj&ntjsf ftsr-J&K uriun i?S2ia^shbj5aff^LM' Address Or. F. B. MARSH, Qnlacy, Mich. LUBRICATING OH. (( jMk vMW 0 I Ct?. per Gaixow. Pure. No Gum lW!t3C=3H'il /iLor No Charge for BaneL r l"afc3Hii ?* Prompt shipment by N.Y. 0., Pa. JyUMH; Cent.. Erie R.R.'e. Send 81 for V Gall Sample Can. J.B.HAOPg.Tldk>ate,Pa am A Klaely Printed Brlste! TialUaa Cards*entoost-psldfor25eta. oend ^^8 stamp for sample* of Glnas tarda ^M Marble, Niewfakaa Scroll, Da. w w miuslt. Ktc. Vfe baveorer lOOatriea AamtU WaMUd. A. n. Forb>? A Oa. Brockton. Mas* AGENTS WANTED Dictionary of Phristian Antiquities in Contlnnatlen of the " Dictionary of the Bible,0 By Dr. Was. Smith. *00 Illustrations. For tie pest tee rears, nerentywtevcn of the greatest scholars in tin wnkd hare been engaged upon this work, which begins wkern Vs " Bible Dictionary " leaves en. We want old Agent*. Clergymen, Teachers, 8tudenu, Farmers, etc.. to supply 1. o the 200.000 families who hare the "BAU Dicff," who ire texiting for and mttM hart this Centtnaatien, ay Agent* who sold the "Bible Diety" are asked to supply their old subscribers with the Contixmaiion. Send for CTrtuUr*. .address A. D. WoaTHtHOTQg A Co. Hartford. Conn. PRINTERS' ROLLERS Made from the Patent" Rxealal?r? tsaspssWarn, will recast, not affected br the weather; price, 30 eenti per pound. Is used in printing this paper. J. R. COLE. Act.. OO Ana St., N, Y. /^ARDM?SO white or tinted Bristol, gOota; M V Saowflake, Marble, Rap, or Damask. 36 ote.; 6(J OUas, 40 cts.; with your name beentlfully printed ot them, and 66 samples of type, agents' price-list, ate. sent by return mafl on reoelpt of prioe. Dlsoonnt U Olnbe. Best of work. W. O. GANNON, 46 Kneelaat Street. Boston. Refers to 8. M. PrrrSKOiiJL A Co. 'Th. pertU. windot) 1 WW di}-Vl.H^?oftb*h??tchaijc*?lbr?f'tal H I 1 H | "The Groceries are the best.'?.V. Y. is,iSTt. |1| | | Stories in The PEOPLE'S LEDGER EVI8 Eight lance paces every week. Kstabliabec | 1 Is fire years. Miss Loniee Aloott, Mrs. Man J. Holm s. Oliver Optlo. and Na*br oontn bate, SENT ON TRIAL THREE MONTHS FOF ONLY 50 CENTS. Samples of different dates seal FREE for a 3-cent stamp. Are You Awake To the fact that a ft* dollart will bny a small Portable Printing Press, Type, Ink, eto., all oomplete, which will prim t/our om Oards, Envelopes, Billheads. Labels,etc., at ipiart'T Prluter's pr'c- s ? Presses at ?3 and upward. Sejd iwj 3c. st m s tor Illustrated Uatalogne t> EXCELSIOR PRESS Co.. Merideo, Conn. T EARN TELEGRAPHTT I m THE BEST CFFE& e?er Made to Younc Tr JLmi MEN and LADIKS. Addrms, w th stamp, X l>HKEM AN '1 EL. C O., obERLLN. 0. nnnK WOODY and HANKEY.?Tbs only nuuft orixtnal, authentic, and oomplete record A <1 dvipb Of theee men and their work*. Btvxtrt of AWENTB. imiuuion4. Send for circulars to AMERICAN PUBLICH1NG CO.. Hartford. Ot. CUirATA Guaranteed to do doable tbe work WT/JVWW V 0f common scrapers. Township* nTRADFR can take tbem on triaL Price 81 o. ?\n Heed for Manual of Road-Makin# mivniiwh and lHtchlnx, free. Adi'a Obloajro DITCHER. Scraper audDltcher Co.. Chicago. Wr TllaaCrateA Floral Catalorne far1ST8 it now ready. Price 10 Cent*, lea* than h air tbaoorf. WQUiM H. Bowi>itch,M5 warren SC, Boeton.Maa hffi cehtemal UNIVERSAL HISTORY rl To tbe rloee of the first 100 years of onr National Independence, Includln# an acoount of tbe oominc Grand Centennial Exhibition. 7(H) paces, fine enxrarlnxa, iow price. quick sale*. Extra term*. Bend for Circular. I'.W Z1EOLKR A CO.. 5IS Arch8t.Philadelphia,P?. FITS, EPILEPSY, FALLING FITS CURED. This Is No Httmbuo. For Information, lnqilre of or write to M0Y8K BROTHERS, Wholesale Drucztota, Blooms burg, Ooiaabia Oeonty, Paanayiraala. ABIIB AllPlf dflVt MUNfcT I Bjr unking 94.75 tot tor 84 MhmIm ind THM WEEKLY TRIBUNE (ncolar prtoa 86). or 86*75 tor the Maearine aad THE SEMI-WEEKLY TBI BUinc (racolar prloe 88). Addieaa . I THE TRIBfX). New-York. \ PORTABLE GRINDING MILLS. ? B?ad French Borr stiff spin. dlo onder-runneni, cock bead oppar-ruancf*, <bc Farm or /ERa;Etstiixz&si /Bam /ffBmM FirU, Corn Chellers and /?^B|V| CI pacers, (Jeering, BhaAio?, ZmPI^E IkS* PalliaajBangera. ate., all kinds HofMlllWhlaery and Millers' ^W9snt>plles. Bend for Pamphlet, ' Mftank Mill Cnmpaoy, Box lUAClndnaaU, O. REDUCED TO A GEBTAINTTT" Chance to Gain $50,000 1 3XTO RISK. Send tor circular at once. No time to lose. Vf. H. Pendleton, Banker, 7i Maiden Lane, | NEW YORKOptiti?h unym. S|K*e<llly cured by DR. BECK'8 only known and sure Remedy. NO CHAItCiE for treatment until cured. Call on or address Br. J. a BE&. in Jota St, 'jhdaatl. 0. r| AGENTS WANTED FOR THE Ientennial ^ lilStbRT?ViO.S 1 Tbs gm*i interest tn ths thsflhn* history of ear eoan. try bum UUe tbe fastest ssUtaglwok ever published. U contains e fall eooaant of the creed Center n lei Exhibition. CAUTION.?Old. Incomplete and*Unreltable works sre being circulated; eee thai tbe book 70a bay contains 4 IdTine Engravings end 935 Pmm. Send for elrculare end eztre term to Agnate. Addreee If ATIOWAL PUBLISHING PP.. Philadelphia. Pa -ASTHMArpHE subscribers ere menafectaren end propriejL tors of Dr. S. W. Heed's Celebrated Asthma Belief, which Is undoubtedly the beet Asthma Remedy yet discovered. Ins tent relief is guaranteed or purchase price refunded. We pat up the medicine in boxes of three sizes, which retail for 26c., 60c. and $1. Persons remitting retail price will have tbe medicine promptly forwarded by mall, post-paid. > Also samples sent free to any who may desire. IMces per dos., $1.75; $3.50 and $7.00; gross pricey $18; $36; $72. Wholesale agents: John 7. Henry, * Currau & Co., N. T.; John D. Park k Sons, Cincinnati. Ohio: Richardson k Co., St. Louis^Ho.; Lord, Smith k Co., Chicago, 111.; O. 0. GooffWtn k Co., Boston,Mass.; French,Richards k Co.,Philadelphia, Pa. Address ETHEKIDGE, TULLER k CO., Rome, N. Y. % CHILIS | FOR $L00, POSTPAID. Ia oider that e^^pody may be enabled to take this crest Story and Family Newspaper, ws have detern lned . to offer it till Jan., 1877, for 81*00* postpaid. It Is the LARGEST, HANDSOMEST; BEST; and most widely circulated Newspaper in the West. 8end moose addressed THB LKDGKR. Onoaao. 111. MiwistTliipMw. OTbe American Ollssntph Cs. an now prepared to execute Sue-limit** of oil pain tiers. T Having decided to exoeod 9lOP.Ou<> in dls1 trlbuting spe lmeos, they will mall, prepaid, to T every inbeoriber of this paper who will retain 1 J them the annexed Certificate with fifty oents, a A ?aperb Oil wrsph of Mary Spencer's exqalsits I w flower psintioc," Spring Biautixs." This picgtore. measuring 12x16 inoht-s, retails for 93.CO, and la a fartimiU of an nil palatine worth 9150. To also distribute specimens oI their more elaborate work, th-y will forward gratolA too sly, to every tenth purchaser of the shore, who?e names will be registered e? received, a P magnificent 85.00 oilngraph, 22x28 Inches, satll-d " Botox Fbixxd*." HAddwi. AW. OIl.tK*KAfll CO., Nt. 183 Walait Wrrft, 8 CI* diaatl, O. tw Oct out THia Czbtutcat*. I , r*'?ftfyv>onoonw*vvyvvyinnnnnflnnnnnnnnonnnnnnnnnnr,oono o 0 o This Certificate, accompanied by o n > ran oniTt, entitles the sender to the o o 93*0O Otlocraph, " Kprls* Bean ties," o o adrertisel by AM. OILOGRAP'l CO., o o 183 Walnut Street, Cincinnati, O. o O - -juuLjijijuuifuinjiiuiji.-jiiiniinniinjuuijuinjijuuij^ J \ f It | t 1 1 HALE'S Honey op Horehound and Tar JOB THI CUBS OF Coughs, Colds, Intluienza, Hoarse1 ness, Difficult Breathing, and all Affections of the Throat, i Bronchial Tubes, and Lungs, LEADING TO CONSUMPTION. This infalliblo remedy Is composed of > the Honet of the plant Horehound, in 1 cbemicalunion with Tab-Bale, extract> cd from the Lira Principle of the 1 forest tree Awm Bataavka. or Balm of Gilead. The Honey of Horchonnd soothes and scatters all irritations and inflammations, and the Tar-Balm cleanses and n?a Tii the throat and air-passages leading to the longs. five additional I ingredients keep the organs cool, moist and in healthful action. Let no prei jodice keep yon from trying this great medicine of a famous doctor, who has ! saved thousands of lives by it in his large private practice. [ n. bl?'*he Tar Balm has no bad faflte orsmelL i - p3icxs, 60 cents and $1 per bottle^ Great wring to boy largo aiza, Bold oy all Druggists. J* Pike's Toothache I>roi>s'? , <lcre in 1 minute. _ I IT1P Wo. 16 WHEN WEIVIWO TO AOTIKTISIU, V? Hfut ho (feat fm mw Um aArwOM. Ml M tUt iMK. ^