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Farm, Garden and Household, s ? ? Housekeeping Department* I r To Remove Stains op Indelible Ink. -r-First trash the stains in strong salt water, and then in ammonia. Breakfast Cakes.?One quart of flour, one pint of milk, two eggs,butter the size of an egg, one teaspoon of soda, two teaspoons of cream of tartar ; bake in a quick oven and heated pans. Perfume for Linen.?Dried rose leaves, one pound; cloves, caraway seed and allspice, each one pound ; pulverize or grind them together, and add of dried salt one-fourth pound. ] Pat in small bags among yonr linen. Cookies.?Two cups of sugar, one ] cup of batter, four eggs, one teaspoon- ( ful of soda, two teaspoonfnls of cream 1 of tartar, and flour to roll. Caraway I seeds or spice to taste. If put in a stoDe jar they will last for a long while. China Pis.?Make crnst short, roll ont thin, and put in a deep pie plate. Put in a layer of thin sliced apples, a layer of sugar and spice, so on until full; put on the top layer sugar, spices and little lumps of butter. No top crust. Bake from three-fourths of an hour to an hour. Cottage Cheese.?Boil two chickens till tender, take out all the bones, and chop the meat fine, season to your taste with salt, peper and butter, pour in enough of the liquid they were boiled in to make it moist; put into .whatever mold you wish, and when cold turn out and cut into slices. It is excellent. To Renovate Carpets.?A teaspoonful of liauid ammonia in one er&llon of warm water will often restore the ooler of carpets, even if produced by acid or alkali. If a ceiling has been whitewashed with carpet down, and a few drops are visible, this will remove it. Or, after the carpet is well beaten and brushed, scour with ox-gall, which will not only extract grease but freshen the oolors. One pint of gall in three gallons warm water will do a large carpet. Table floor-cloths may be thus washed. The suds left from a wash, where ammonia is used, even if almost cold, cleanses these new floor-oloths very well. Rolls.?Nice rolls are made "with two quarts of flour, one cup of yeast, two eggs, one-half cup of lard, and made up \yith cold water. Of course they are better made with sweet milk and butter instead of lard and water, bnt these are not always easy to get. In making rolls divide the dough at the second working into small long wedges, and cover the bottom of the Dutch oven with these set on end, pressing them together until all the dough is in. They will rise to the top of the oven, and when done can be broken off in flakes. It is a sin to put a knife into a loaf of hot rolls. Cbacxzd Wheat.?Lizzie R. Bronson Bays, in the Herald of Health: For a pint of the cracked grain have two quarts of water boiling in a smooth iron pot, over a quick fire; stir in the xrVienf bIotpIv V?r?il fanf. anil nfir mn. stantly for the first half hour of cooking, or until it begins to thicken and "pop upthen lift from the quick fire, and place the pot 'where the wheat will cook slowly for an hour longer. Keep it covered closely, stir now and then, And be careful not to let it burn at tha bottom. Wheat cooked thus is much sweeter and richer than when left to soak and simmer for hours as many think necessary. White wheat cooks the easiest. When ready to dish out, have your monlds moistened with cold water, cover lightly, and set in a cool place. A handful of raisins added with the wheat is nice. Eat warm or cold, with milk and sugar. Tomato Sauce.?The following recipe comes all the way from Australia: Take forty pounds tomatoes, wipe clean, and boil or bake till soft; then squeeze through a sieve that will retain the seeds and skins. Boil for an hour in order to get rid of some of the watery portion, and then add half a gallon of best brown vinegar, one and a half pounds salt, two ounces cloves, three ounces allspice, two ounces cayeune pepper, three pounds white sugar, four ounces garlic, and two ounces black pepper. Boil a sufficient time ; two hours will usually suffice, but the sauce will not be boiled enough until it has become tolerably thick, and all the watery appearance lias gone. Bottle without straining in perfectly dry bottles, and cork them securely when cold. The garlic must be peeled, bruised, and tied up in a bag ; all the spice piust be ground ; the quantities maybe increased or diminished according to taste. We have kept sauce made from this reoeipt three years. BnllrtliiZ n Dnlry. In arranging for a dairy in which water is to be pumped from a well into the cooling tank we would not permit the waste water to escape back into the well. Neither would we use tarred paper to cover the boarding, for the rAfl 5nn flint tliA millr on rl Unffaf trill nn _ ... ......... ..... .... ( deubtedly receive some taint; paper | free from tar can be procured, which is ] equally serviceable. In fact, we would < not use coal-tar about any part of the ( building. Coal-tar will not disgust rats ( unless it is made into a cement through j which they canbot penetrate. Rats are | only disgusted with impossibilities, and , a cement of hydraulic lime and coarse , cinders or broken clinkers or finely ; broken st?ne, on which their claws and , teeth can make no impression, will ] alone disgust them. ( Roup In Chicken*. The disease known as roup in chickens, and which appears in a discharge from the nostrils and eyes, leading to swelling of the head by reason of an ac- , cumulation of matter which cannot find escape, is bettor prevented than cured. Warm, dry coops, preventing the chicks ? from running in the dewy grass, good ] feed, plentv of fresh water with a little ; copperas dissolved in it, all tend to prevent the disease. A cure is very difficult, and as the disease is contagious it is better to kill and bury out of sight all roupy fowls as soon as they become affected. At first, washing the head with warm water and injecting into the nostrils a solution of 10 grains of sulphate of copper in an ounce of water with a syringe may bring a cure. What She Said.?A blind man, a 1 woman, a hand organ, and a little girl, ' are a family group traveling around the 1 city of Detroit soliciting alms. The ' man holds out his hand, the woman ' turns tho organ, and the little girl ap- 1 peals as follows : "Won't you please J give a few cents to a poor blind man ' who had his eyes blown up while he was < firing a cannon on the Fourth of July, < and. hain't got any home and has got to go round begging and is in poor health and 1 has got the consumption and broke his < arm the day before Inst Christmas, and i God loves a cheerful giver." i The Greatest Crop of the World. A question widely discussed involves die relative value of the wheat, cotton, ?a aud hay crops of the world. Which if these products employs the greatest mount of the world's capital? It is laid that hay leads the rest, and the items that enter into the acoouBt as itated are somewhat startling, and will make a Granger's hair stand on end. Ootton and tea are local crops, while bay is produced everywhere the world over, and thus the hay crop greatly outweighs either of the other two. The aggregate reported value of all farm products for 1870 was $2,447,538,658; but as this includes additions to stocks, "betterments," &c., it is probably too high. Now the hay crop for that year? that is the grass driea and cured for use or sold?is leported at over 27,000,[XX) tons. This at half the selling price in the large cities, would amount to $405,XX),000, and is far greater than the aggregate home-valae of the cotton crop or any other crop. But the cured "hay" is but a portion of the grass crop. The other portion is Used on the ground, md it requires considerable calculation to get at the value so used, even in the roughest way. Tn t.via firnt, iVInrA IiVa stork, inrlndinc homed cattle, horses, sheep, swine, &c., to the value of $1,525,000,000, were fed From it that year. Averaging the lives of these at five years we have one-fifth of that Bum as representing the grass fed ? them in 1870, namely: $305,000,000; aext we find the value of the animals slaughtered for food in that year to be ?309,000,000, and as this is an annual product, the whole of it will for the present be credited to tho grass crop; next ve find that the butter crop of 1870 was >14,000,000 pounds, which at the low iverage of 25 cents, amounts to $128,XX),000, and this goes to the credit of jrass; next we have 235,000,000 gallonB >f milk, which, averaged at the low estimate of 10 cents per gallon, adds $25,)00,000 more to the credit of the grass ;rop; then we have 100,000,000 pounds >f wool at 25 cents a pound, adding ?25,000,000 more; and, finally, 53,000,XX) pounds of cheese at 10 cents, addng over $5,000,000 to the total of these jredits to the grass crop of 1870, which ' aggregates $887,000,000. Now let: us add thevalue of the "hay" ' jrop as given above?viz.: $405,000,600 ?and we have a grand total for " hay " ; ind the products of grass consumed on , ;he ground amounting to $1,292,000,000! 1 riiis is, of oourse, subject to the de- : luotion, as the meat, butter, milk, heese, and wool-produoing animals . mnonmh rt+hai* frtst/l Vtoculno erraoa an/1 /VU 4 UU1V VVUVA AWU MVOiUbO g A UUU UUU iay. To make ample allowance for 1 his, we deduct the entire value of the , sorn and oat-crops of 1870, estimated at 1270,000,000 and this leaves a remain- ' ler of $1,082,000,000 to be credited to he hay and grass-crop of that year, vhen the reported aggregate of all farm ; iroducts was $2,447,538,658. If onr esimates make even the roughest ap)roach to accuracy, the value of that srop was two-fifths of the aggregate alue of the farm produots, and hence ve may infer that two-fifths of the capial then invested in agricultural purimts was devoted to the grass-crop, and ! his in the United States equals (in onnd numbers) $4,575,000,000. From hese figures the dedu< tion is palpable hat King Cotton is uncrowned and dehroned.and we may be forced to admit hat all " flesh" and all else is hay, if lot "grass."?Memphis Appeal The Evangelical Alliance. The evangelical alliance in N. Y. city las attracted much attention. On August 5, 1845, a number of British clergy, nembers of the different evancelical iranobes of the Christian Church, met together for the purpose of affecting a jloser relation and a more brotherly 'eeling among Christians. The favor vith which the movement was received throughout Great Britain finally led to v public demonstration at Liverpool in Dctober of the same year, whenoe dates the origin of the "Evangelical AUimce," a Christian bond of fellowship xmnting among its members nearly all die nationalities of the known world. The first General Assembly of the Evangelical Alliance was held in Freemasons' Hall, Great Queen street, Lonlon, and lasted from August 19 to September 2, 1846; 921 Christians from all parts of the world took part in its twenty-six sessions; among them were forty-seven from the European continent. md eighty-seven from America and othsr parts. Daring this meeting of Christians in different nationalities the society organized as an international body. Seven branch associations were form)d?one for Great Britain and Ireland; >ne for the United States; one .for France, Belgium, and French-speaking Switzerland; ome for Northern Germany; another for Southern Germany and jterman-speaking^jSwitzerland; one for British North America; and, lastly, one for the West Indies. On January 80, 1867, "The Evangelioal Alliance for the United Stater; of erica " was organized in New York ;ity. Eminent divines and laymen of the Methodist Episcopal, Presbyterian, Protestant Episcopal, German Reform;d, Reformed, and Baptist churches, ind from various parts of the country, ugnified their approval of the movement either by attendance in person or ay letter. At the 1873 session delegates ittended from the British, French, Belgian, Swiss, Dutch, German, Swedish, L'urkish, and Greek branches. There vere also present delegates from the New Brunswick, Toronto, Montreal, French Canadian, Ceburg (Canada), and Bellerille (Canada) brunches. A Decided Opinion. The correspondent who asks us, writes Max Adeler, whether Don Carlos will defeat the Republicans in Spain, ar whether the Republicans will overlome Don Carlos, proposes a conunIrum which is difficult, but which we can, perhaps, answer. After a oareful consideration of the subject, we regard it as absolutely certain that the Republicans will win, if by any combination af unexpected oircumstanceB the efforts of Don Carlos are not crowned with success. Events apparently tend strongly to prove the truth of this proposition, while they shew, it seems to us, in the dearest manner, that if Don Carlos achieves an ultimate and overwhelming triumph, the Republicans will not be likely to carry everything before them. The party upon 'whose banners victory perches and whose adversaries are crushed to earth in hopeless and disastrous defeat, will, in all human probability, have the upper hand, and whether this shall be the Republican Government or Don Carlos, depends in a great measure upon which cue places the other hora de combat. We do not often give decided opinions with confidence, but in this instance cur theory may be safely relied ob. It may seem rash and improbable, but it is absolutely sound. Up in ft ftiiioon. The Atlantic Voytft per Btfllmm which o Suddenly Terminated. Ford, one of those who started from Brooklyn in the Atlantic balloon, has written a description of the trip. He says: After the ropes were cnt we rose proudly to a height of 3,500 feet, and immediately the whole of the grand panorama of New York and its surroundings was spread out before ns. At half-past nine o'clock we were 4,900 feet high. The first pigeon message was dispatched at this point. The balloon soon slowly drifted over the Sound. The thermometer marked, dry bulb, 42; wet bulb, 41. We now began to skirt along the northeast, skimming over the towns bordering on the Sound. Atl0.*08 the balloon was 4,200 feet high, one mile being the highest elevation reached up to this time. At twenty-eight minutes after ten the balloon was going north-northeast. "How happy I feel," said Donaldson; " the dream of my life is realized." At this time Lunt was verymuch concerned about two bags of sand whioh had been accidentally left hanging upon the drag-rope, tied merely by two very light strands of marline." After extraordinary exertions the two aeronauts succeeded in getting these two bags into the car, and they were subsequently used with great advantage at a critical moment of the journey. At 10:30 the balloon was 6,650 feet high, and shortly after 6,000 feet. "If she expands much more, we shall rise above the stratum of clouds, and then won't we fly I" said Donaldson. "We shall fly like the wind." At a quarter to eleven o'clock, when the above-mentioned elevation was attained, the dry bulb thermometer indicated 54 degrees, and the wet bulb 48. We felt not the least inconvenienoe from cold. Although the temperature fell to 42, none of the party experienced the slightest inoonvenience from the cold, and Lunt worked round in his shirt-sleeves all the time. The gas now was evidently beginning to lose its power, and we were coming down rapialy. The appearance of the interstices between the net-work showed that the bag was getting flabby, aid Donaldson considered it advisable to throw off another sand-bag?25 pounds. The balloon then rose to 5,000 feet. 3he sank again rapidly, however, and at five minute 3 of eleven she was 4,150 feet high, the thermometer being 37. "I have got to empty another sandbag," said Donaldson, and out went 25 pounds more. Still, however, the gas was rapidly losing power, and we soon sank to 1,100 again. But this elevation seemed to be somewhat of a permanent one, for we floated on very tranquilly a great number of miles without any perceptible difference in the baremeter. Lunt called my attention to the magnificence of the autumn foliage in the woods below us. One of the woods looked like a parterre of tulips. We were now getting in rather unpleasant proximity to the earth. The drag-rope, which is 600 feet long, was hissing, humming, booming (I hardly know how to describe this extraordinary sound) among the trees*and across the fences. We had left the margin of the Sound and were far from it in the interior of Connecticut. At one moment we seemed to be but a few feet above the tops of the trees; but, by a judicious sacrifice of ballast, Donaldson saved us from dashing most dangerously against a formidable-looking stone fenoe three feet below us. Lunt didn't like the sound of the drag-rope, nor the experience recorded above; out Donaldson said, " I came down just expressly to try the powers and capabilities of the balloen. I am satisfied with the experiment I have tried." At this period the loss of gas was becoming so apparent that Donaldson seriously proposed to climb up on the netting and cut off the guy-ropes, but Lunt objected. At twenty-five minutes past eleven o'clock the dry bulb was 60, and the wet bulb 56. Of course, such a temperature as this indicated a near proximity to earth. The height was, in faot, but 2,200 feet. Af 4wnnfvr.fwn vriinnfAa fn fwAlvA cast off tie third bird. We let our friends below know by this means that we had now cast off abont 500 pounds of sand ballast out of the 600 pounds placed on board. There then remained 600 pounds of water ballast and 300 pounds of other disposable material, such as provisions, instruments, clothing, Ac. The drag-rope was still making its singular whistling or humming through the trees; and the cattle in the fields were terribly scared. The most amusing sight of all was, however, to see n flock of geese scurrying at a great rate from the rasping monster. Provisions had to be thrown overboard, and the balloon alternately rose and fell again. All of a sudden it began to pour with rain, and a dense mist environed us with an impenetrable curtain. The rain gathered upon the folds of the balloon and poured down upon us in bucketfuls. At the same time violent guste of wind seized us, and shook the boat in such a manner that I expected every moment either that the balloon would hm-afc TPi'tli fhpsA ATftPRflive shocks. 01 that the boat would break loose from the tackle. We did not know where w? were drifting, except that every now and then through the rifts of the cloud we could see the colored foliage upon the side of the mountain, or Borne little homestead in the valley. The rain meanwhile was pouring dowu, so that we were all drenched to to the skin. The drag rope caught around a tree and broke off a huge limb; then it made a rebound and caught around some rocks, so that we were shaken about in the boat with tremendous force. However, it soon liberated itself, and then we went spinning over another ridge of the mountain with great velocity. After getting over, howeuer, we were in a calm, and then Donaldson said, " Oh, if there was only half a dozen fellows below to take hold of that drag-rope, what a pretty landing we would make." However, the gusts of wind soon caught us again, and we went spinning across the valley at a most alarming rate. About one hundred feet from the surface, Donaldson saw that we were nearing a bank, where we would probably strike, and he said, "Now boys, preEare to leap out." At this moment iunt was standing on the port side, near the bows. Donaldson was next to nr\A Virvl/lirt rr th A TJfrcnTMT ' it****, ncawu, ? oo?O I I saw that the decisive moment wa? coming, and that we should have tc take the chances of two or three different ways of breaking our neoks, so ] took my place behind Donaldson. Presently, on looking behind, I saw we wen passing over a rising ground, and that now was oar jr.me. Donaldson saw it also; he pitohed out his two traveling bags. I threw myself from the car, clinging to the rigging; then, without knowing the distanoe, I let go, And in a second Donaldson and I were rolling together upon the wet grass. We had scarcely time to pick ourselves up when, to our horror, we saw the balloou make a suddpn rebound and fly off into the slouds, with Lunt clinging to the rigging. I confess I stood paralysed with amazement; the shock I had received from the fall (it appears we fell thirty feet) was altogether forgotten in the terror I experienced in seeing Lunt borne away in this terrible manner. Donaldson, who was more awake to the exigencies of the moment, ran and tried to seize the drag-rope; but that, of course, was futile. Lunt shouted out to us some remark which we could not hear. Donaldson shouted in reply, " Open the valve!" but the roar of the temnest was too (Treat to pymit a word to reach Lunt, and he presently disappeared in the blinding mist. The rain was still ponring down in a perfect deluge, and we were both soaking wet. A gentleman who saw the whole disaster?Mr. Albret Peck Briggs,of Canaan?came towards us and aakea if we had been hurt by the fall. Donaldson's first word was: "What State are we in ?" Mr. Briggs told us Connecticut, and we further learned that we had fallen upon the farm of Mr. Charles Lewis, of North Canaan, Litchfield oonnty. We crawled into the barn, half drowned with wet, and had some conversation about the disaster with Mr. Briggs and another gentletleman. We sent out to try to g6t a team from a person near at hand, but there was a great deal of delay, and, as as I was anxious to get to the telegraph station, I begged Mr. Briggs to drive me over, which he very kindly consented to do, leaving Donaldson in the barn, and promising to send another conveyance for him. While I was writing my dispatch in the telegraph office, news was brought me that " the other man " was all right, and that he had just arrived at the hotel in the village. I Rent a messenger after him, and in a few minutes had the gratification of shaking Lnnt by the hand. Donaldson presently rejoined us, and then were the three "skyscrapers " all safe and sound, once more reunited upon terra firma. Yen may very readily believe that we extended congratulations to one another that we had escaped with whole bones. Diamond Robbery In Paris. A diamond robbery of considerable amount has just been before the courts in Paris, with results that will strike the American sense of propriety rather curiously. It appears that M. Spinelli, the wealthy and well-known jeweler of the Palais Royal, was in the habit last summer 01 going every evening u> a country house at St. Maar, leaving his shop with its valuable contents in the care of his son, Hector Spinelli, a lad of sixteen, whose vigilance he thought i the more assured beoause he locked j him in for the night. But Heotor, not unnaturally, found it dull t* be in a | shop all night by himself, and obtained I the means to get double keys, of which, ; lor a long while, he made no more criminal use than to let himself out and j amuse himself in cafes. But he ulti! mately was induced by a cousin, named i Loiseau, twenty years old, to rob the till. They laid hands upon money and jewels to the value of $25,000, and set out with the plunder for Italy. Their youth provoked suspicion on the part of a Commissary of Police on the frontier, i and they were arrested. The Code in use in France (Article 300) precludes the proseoution of a son for robbing his father. Consequently only the nephew Loiseau was prosecuted ; and his counsel submitted to the jury that it would be anomalous to convict the nephew, who was only an accomplice, : whereas the son was the principal. The jury adopted this view and acquitted | Loiseau. A Tacht In a Ga'e, Shortly after the Fletcher put about i for home the Meta, which was engaged in the race with her, caught in a sud1 den northeast squall. When it struck 1 her she was standing in shore; suddenly I lioi- nratn fnrm/1 HipmnalvPB dim nut, in thfi I breakers. They were forced to jibe, a j dangerous manoeuvre in heavy weather. ' Impelled by the heavy wind the main: sail swung over with an awful crash. I The immense boom broke into a dozen j pieces, and the big mainsail was torn to ribbons in an instant. Things looked | dusty. It was sure destruction to at| tempt to beat back, and it was resolved to scud before the wind. From the northeast the wind veered to the north: west, and blew hard all night. The boom was securely lashed and everyI thing made snug for a run before the | wind until daylight. The next morning : broke cold and clear, the sea running i high and a stiff nor'wester still blowing, j The boom was fixed, the maiusail patched, and sail was made on a wind j for Little Egg Harbor. After a hard run the Metn made the harbor by sun| down, and came to anchor. The Christian Intelligencer asks if i the good peaplo of New York know that ! we have a heathen temple in the very heart of the city. It states that in | Baxter street, within a stone's throw of I the City Hall, on the second floor of a j wretchedly dirty tenement, the Chinese j have a temple, where more than five | hundred assemble regularly to worship j a wooden image of the Chinese god Fo. ______________ A Dixon (Ky.) editor comes out I strong against the hogs of that town. He says they annoy him every day in I the week by rooting down his back ; steps, and on Sunday they annoy him by scrubbing their backs against the i timbers of the church. A Providential Man.?This title j now justly belongs to a physician who ' has added to the list of medicines a ' new remedy, which appears to include | all that is most valuable ia the old 1 ? - ? 1 i A. * 3 - ! pnarmacopceia, nnu nmi ?j iuciuue auy of the drawbacks with which the bocalled specifics of the Faculty are i chargeable. The Providential man is Dr. Joseph Walker, of California, . whose Vinegar Bitters have achieved, in the short space of two years, a degree of popularity never before attaint d by any advertised preparation in this coun try. We have too much confidence in the shrewdness of the American people i to suppose than this sudden and surprising celebrity is the outgrowth of a > delusian. Indeed, we have reason to ; know that it is founded on innumerable i and well authenticated cures of almost > all the bodily ills that flesh is heir to. Not the least among the merits of the [ famous Tonio and Restorative, is its > entire freedom from aloohol, as well as > from all mineral drugs. It is composed ; exclusively of rare vegetable extracts.? \ 19m. i A South Ahxbicax Kino.?A potei tate of South America is about to vii England. This personage is the kii of Araucania. His dominion contai: a population of about 2,000,000, and 1 is nominally subject to Chili. T1 king, who was originally a French be rister, M. De Tourens by name, visit Araucania some fifteen years ago, ai soon after succeeded in having himst chosen king, assuming the imposii title of Orelie Antoine the First. _ I is described as amiable in disuositi) and modest in habits. Ho goes England to solicit manufacturers send things thither for sale. Sixteen hundred men applied to i vacancies as letter carriers, in Bost ast we ek. The pay is 8600 a year. Samples Free.?The Saturday Eve ing Pott, 319 Walnut street, Philadelphia, git a beautiful Chboho to every yearly subecrib cblstadobo'S exoklsiob ha ib d stands unrivaled and alone. Its merits hi been so universally acknowledged that it wot be a supererogation to descant on them a further?nothing can beat it.?Com, Vntr intu "RnanTwo Br,nTDLY IN" Consumption if you neglect to take Hal Honey or Horehound and Tab for a cough cold. Pike's Toothache Drops cure in one minu ?Com. Lung fever, common cold, catarrh fever and nasal dischargo of a browish color horses, may be checked at once by liberal t of Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders Com. " The season for congbs and oolds rapidly approaching, and every one should prepared to check the first symptoms, ac cough contracted between now and Christn frequently lasts all winter. There is no bet! remedy than Johnson's Anodyne Linime Fer all diseases of the throat and lungs it shot be used internally and externally.?Com. Flagg's Instant Relief.?Warrant! to relieve all Bbeumatio Afflictions, 8prau Neuralgia, etc. The beet, the surest, and t quickest remedy for all Bowel Complaints; I hef guarranteea or the money refunded.?Co Db. Wibtab's Balsam or Wild Chebbt.-Cc For loss of Appetite. Dyspepsia, I digestion, depression of Spirits ana Gene Debility, in their various forms, Febbo-Pb< phobatrd Elixib of Calisata made by Ci well, Hat.ann A Co., New York, and sold all druggists, is the best tonic. As a stimuli tonio for patients, recovering from fever other Bickneee, it has no equal. If' taken di ing the season it prevents fever and agae a other intermittent fevers.?oro THIRTY YEARS' EXPERIENCE C AN OLD NURSE. Mrs. Wilis low's Soothing Syrup U t! prescription of one of the best Female Phy dans and Marts* In tbs United States, and 1 been used fer thirty years with never falling tafi and success by millions of mothers and ohlldi from the feeble Infant of on* week old to the ad It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wl oolio, regulates the bowels, and gives rest, hen and comfort to mother and child. We believe 11 be the Best and Bureet Remedy In the World In oaeai of DTBKNTERY and DlABRHCRA IM CH DBEN, whether It arise* from Teething or fr any other canse. Fall directions for using will company each bottle. None Genuine unless ! fac-nimtle of CUETI8 4 PERKINS 11 on the outs: wrapptr. Sold by all Medicine Dealers. CHILDREN OFTEN LOOK PALE A1 SICK from no other cauee than having worm* In I stomach. BBOWM'S VERMIFUGE COMFITS will destroy worms without Injury to the chl being perfectly WHITE, end free from all oolor: or otaer Injurious Ingredient* usually used worm preparations. A- RRIIWK. Prnnrt.lAn. No. V15 Fulton Street, New Tori hold by Druggist* and Chemist t, and dtaUri Utdieinu at Twbhtt-Pivb Caxi* a Box. THE HOV8LHOLO PANACEA Airs FAMILY LINIMENT ! the beet remedy In the world for the follow complatntf, via : Cramp* li> the Limb* and St< ach, Pain In the Stomach, Bowel* or Side, Bfa mattim In all It* form*, Billou* Colic, Neuralj Cholera, Dyientery, Cold*, Fleih Wound*, Bai Sere Throat, Spinal Complaint*, Sprain* i Brut?e?, Chill* and Payer. For Internal and ternal uie. It* operation 1* not only to relieve the patli bnt entirely remove* the came of the compla It penetrate* and pervade* the whole *y*tem, itorlng healthy action to all It* parti, and qa enlng the blood. The Hoaaehold Panacea la purely V< table and All Healing. Prepared by CURTIS St, BROWN, No. Vlft Fulton Street, New Tor For (ale by all Drngglit*. A SOVEREIGN BALM Can be found In that great and reliable foi medicine ALLEN'S LCNO BALSAM, By the uie of which health and happiness 1* reitc to thoie afflicted with any Lung or Throat dlie inch a*: ? Coughs, Odd*, Asthma, B rone hit it, Oontumpi UNSOLICITED ETIDENCB OF ITS MBBITI bias thb rollowibo i Dr. A. L. SCOV1LL 1* the Inventor of *ev medical preparation* which have become i popular, and have been liberally u*ed. Amonj Invention* are " Hall'* Balaam for the Lung*," " IjlTCrifunii ?uu im. rui IHD ymmt mu ; better remedy hat been offered to the public. I tUu following letter from Di. SCOVILl, refer to It: Missus. J. N. Harris A Co.: Cents?I mike the following statement fro perfect conviction and knowledge of the benefl ali.in'i Lvita Balsam In coring the most d seated Pulmonary Consumption: 1 have wltne Its effects on the >uuug and the old, and 1 can t say that It Is by far the best expectorant ren with which lam acquainted. For Coughs. sn< the early stages of Lung Complaints, I belles t-? be a certain cure, and If every family would I It by thorn, ready to udmlutater upon the tlrsl pearancn of disease about the Lungs, the re w be very few cases of fatal consumption. It cat the phlegm and matter to raise without Irrlta those delicate organs (the Lungs), and will producing constipation of the bowels. It also g strength to the system, stops the nlght-sw? and changes all the morbid secretions to a bea stats. Yours, respectfully, A. L. 8C0VII >? IT 8AVED MT LIFB." Columbia, Ala., March 8, U J. N. nAYtRis 4 Co.: hear Sirs?i am taking Allsk's Lcrro Balsai a disease of the Lung* <>f thirteen years stand i have used every remedy offered, and this is only rtmcdy that has given me any relief. Ik It sar d my life last spring. At mat time I < tranced using It, and received Immediate re It stopped on my lungs in ten hours. You st perfect liberty to publish this letter, for the b Qt of suffering humanity, and with respect, I remain, Yours truly, D. D. Pot Such, my suffering friends, are the letters ret ed daily, and do you doubt for a moment the el cy of this valuable medicine. Be In time, and to your home a bottle of Allrx's Luxo Bal You will Bud lit It a glorious prise, and a ue falling friend In time of neea. CAUTION. Be not deceived, Cvll for ALLEN'S LCNO I SAM, and take no other. Directions accompany each bottle. J. N. HARRIS A CO., Ctnclnaatl, O., Fsorsmoss. For *ale by *11 Medicine Dealer!. fob f ALB WnOLIAALB bt JOHN F. HBNBT, New Tork. GEO. C. GOODWIN A CO., Bolton. JOBNbON, HOLOWAV A CO.. Philadelphia. Beet and Oldeet Family Medicine.t'/rd'? Livtr Invigorator-? purely Vegetable Cai .ie and Tonir-lor Dyipepita, Conitlpatlon.Deb Sick Headache, Billou* Attack*, and all den menti of Liver, Stomach and Bowel*. A*k ] Drnggiat for It. Hetmri nt imitntirmt. A Btubbobb Couoh that wtli not yield to c nary remedle*, may be thoroughly cured by Jayne'* Kxp^torant, an efflcadon* medlcln Bronchial and Pulmonary DUordO'*. Biohtb'H year* have eitabNihed the fact no cau of Ague, or Chill* and Fever, can w itand Bhallenberger'i PHI*, if taken a* direct! THIS PRINTING INK Harper'* Building*. N- T. It 1* fer tale by K Newipaper Union, 180 Worth Street, In 10 lb. M6 lb. package*. Al?o a full anortment of Job I MONET jf*j?reytgy withItenellAler 01 Outfit*. Catalogue*, (ample* and full w lara Free 8. M Snntirar 117 wanoaer St.. Ifni TTTT1 BBBT 3PAT?B3 XN THB WORLD, U the Toledo Weekly Blad< Specimen Cople* *ent free to any addre**. Ra*bt Lbttbb* are written for the Bub*. I for Specimen Copy, with Book List. Splei book* almoit given ?*yr. Z -XM , WCKM A JOBII, Tol*do, Ok ft Trim i.i 3. HManU Decuj*?Protect the IjKm, 1 lit The human body la a machlna,and therefor# can]g not endnra forever; but. Ilka a watch or a tawing Qg machine, It will last much 1 ngar If properly regul la ted and duly repaired, than If no palne were taken to keep It In order. The great object of every li' one who deelree a long and healthy life ehonld be to pnt hit body In a condition to realat the lifted threatening lnflnencet by which we are all more or id lata torronnded; and no tnrigorant or oorrectlve jlf at pretent known to effectively ant wart thla purpote ae the vitalizing elixir ?h ch, under the unpretending name nf Hi>e*etter'e Stomach Blttera, hat been for more than twenty yeara the etaaflard tonic Jif America. In crowded clttee, where the to atmoiphore It contaminated with the effluvia Into teparable from large population**, In marahy regiont, where the eoggy toll reekt with mlatma; on the pralriet and In the foretti, where every tall ill the air It tainted with exhalation# from rotting OH weedt and grattet, or deoompotlng leavea?In thort, In every locality where malaria extata, thla j powerful vegetable antidote la urgently needed. 7). fever and ague, blllont fevert, dyientery, congetr68 tlon of the liver, Janndlce, rhenmatltm, and all ? er dlteatet which are generated by infected air, Im- p pure water, or tudden changet of temperature, ( XX everted by atrengthenlng the eyttem In ? lTe advance with Hoatetter'i Bitter*. Autumn it al- _ lid waytatettonofperll.etpeclally to weak, tuaceptny ihie organtaatlone. Even the more vigoroneare apt to be tn tome meetnre depretted by the humid Q atmoiphere, loaded with deleterlont gate* pro- j dncedby vegetable decay. The fall it a period of V TO the year when the renovation and regulation of the ? _ ? living machine la peculiarly important, and th > Bitter* thonld therefore be taken dally at thti j ?r critical teatO?. { to. fHTSIC'AEJ' OffSIIII [ to Birt Mtten b u??wikin?u??tiiiea*?a <j dQt al^ aatantlouilr me?1 ' ? V I hurt a tea It la BT pre* 0 *** Um ter a auabor ef jtvt, . and kaow trim experionco that It loa nod moody. IB N. a Merrisea, M.D., North Cait Cecil Co- Ml.: Per fl ho Druatrta horo harp a food domaad tar MIBHI^BB/g *??u? BITTERS. I hart uacd It la ar praetloo with pod ratulw, r I a and do sot heattau to mommaed It aa a valuable raaady, par- t Igg Uculirtr la afftetlooi of lh? kldooya. ... J. T. Halter, M. D., I.ooeaottr, Pa.i Purine thopaattaa 1 ynra I h?v? had frwocnt oprortoifiUoo of wlfaoaolnt tho oflOot rtf. or MIBHI.BB'g IT EBB BITTERS. J hart known It to ,i j rrwo ouecootftil la n.oojr coooa where Allo'ethle. UcBuropalbto t and Hydropathic Imtmrot had failed. I conoldee* It the aoet . MBcaclost moody yet dluorarod for Dion mo artothf fToa a I DUcrdcrcd Stomach. Ltvor, Kldoayt ar Bowalo. j i IFft lait nun. inmwivi ? dd Prcoooncod MISiiUSR'S HXRB BITTXR8 "Um bum! I vociitirful combination gf Medicinal rtarba ha arar aaw." Ha i?f18, fcrad tar many year. hoa an organic adtcilon at tt? kidney*. b6 and hnndrada of Ma frlanda at Waahlnfton and LancaMar know I- that ba atlrlUtad tha prolonga'^on of liU UTa U thla Ulaat Dlurrtle. .VothlafoUa ratlaaadhlm. m. ma o?iT n tonus. m?f a nm tmii mail. , *n m"L ' _ T) If yon or* ft f jol or lanatlo. m irass iDis by butw,f.you "b# a a. uiuu -"J wlih to make money, ad- 1 dreaa, Eciiska Po?tabl? Tabls Co.. flt bonis. j ^ TTTTr1 Jk J STEAM ENGIi a CO. en ^ oil IBp (FosKxmiaT Wood A MAW*.) B STATIONARY & PORTABLE - Steam Engines. iia, The Best A Most Complete Assortment log in the Market. In These Engine* hare always maintained the eery highest standard of excellence. We make the manufacture of Engine*, Boilers and Saw Millja specialty. We have the largestoncTmost oompUta t works of the kind in the country, with machinery specially adapted to toe wor*. We keep constantly in womi large numbers of ? Engines, which we furnish at the very lowest prices and on the ehorteet notice. We build Engines specially adapted to Hines. 8aw Hills, Grist Hills, Tanneries Cotton Gins, Threshers and all classes of manufacturing. Ins We are now budding the oelebrated Lane Clrcu* lar Saw Hill, the beet and most complete saw mill ever invented. eu" We make the manufacture of Saw Mill outfits a tie special feature of our business, and can furnish us, somplete on the shortest notice. .nd Our aim in all cases is to furnish the best ma_ fcinery in the market, and work absolutely unliualed for beauty of design, economy and strength. Send for Circular and Price List gfc tlTICA 8TEAM ENGINE CO , UTICA, If. r. ick- rasnooio, 4] Cobtlajtot St., New Tor eg- CiOPf Per Day Commission or gUO a week SaUry, and expenses. We offer it and Till pay it. Apply now. O. WEBBER t CO., Marion, t) CAHVA88ING BOOKS BENT FBEE FOE Prof. FOWLER S GREAT WORK On Hgnhood, Womanhood and their Mutual Inter relations; Love. Its Laws, Power,sic. ally Agents are selling from 15 to 25 conies of t) s woikx day, and we send a canrssiang book free *.o aiy b"ok agent. Address, etsting experience, ot ? .red NATI0yAI' rUBblBHlWO CO.. Phiisdelphls. P?. veAOjJLsueic ilaii eral 1 CONSUMPTION rln" And. Its Our?. m , WILLSON'S ? Carbolated Cod Liver Oil F?JJ I* a aclentlfic combination of two well-known medl L.7, :lnca. Ita theory la flrat to arre.t the decay, thro sulldnptheayten. Phvalclana find the doctrine cor.*11 !*ct. The realty startling curt* performed by Wl.l F.p oon'a Oil arc prnot. 1 ?P: Carbolic Add pod'tr'ty arruu Decaf. It la t! < suit powerful natUieptlc In the known world. E>i> '1,e* taring Into the clrcnlatlon, It at once grapple* with ting corruption.and decay ceaaes. It porlflaa the aoorcea Jout 0f dlaeaae. lTr Cod IXrtr OU U1Vatura't btM anUtanX In reaiatlrg itta Conaumptlnn. 7 Pat ap In large vrrdge-ehaped bottlca, t, bearing the inventor'* signature, and il aold by the beat Druggist*. Prepared by J. H. WTT.TigQDt, fjy 83 John Street. New lotf ( for Peerless Clothes Wringer. ^ L. HEYN10SR A CO.. IP Fnllon Street. N. Y now ?>17 /W1 EACH WEKK-AQKNT8 WANTED :om- tj? i ii.Wlt Bualneaa legitimate. Particular! diet. free. J. WORTH, St. Loola.Mo. Bin 1,3*8 euV If fl IT If Mooai'a Rcral NEW YORKER, M II HI V tb" Urea* Illustrated Agrt-ultuill fl 111 il r*' ?' <J Family Weekly, la th* IL. Ill II IM I Standard Authority upon Pr ictraiauifaai tlrai 8ubl?ct? and a High Toned el*- Literary Journal. Only i'AMa Year?lea* to cltiha. 9ca- Oreat Premium* or Cuah Commiaainn* toAgeii'i. take ThWUtn S'uniben (Oct to Jan.) On Trial, for Oi ly 9am. Fifty Cental Premium Llata, Ac , aent free to al vet- Trial Suhaerlbera. Addreaa D.D.T.MooaiJt.Y.C :y. ?? /tArrnna an7>T? WUUUI'.DVWH !AL. flfo^c^uon San which dorj n"t (1 .-}* qp ft much and Iravethe ciaso lK*r behind, butloo-ens If, cleanses tlnilungjand allays lllty Irritation, tdus removing thocauao of tho coin plaint , ;ss; CONSUMPTION CAN BE CUBED by a tlmelv iwrt to llita standard remedy, as Is irdl- proved by hundreds of testimonials It lias received. _ Tho nmy'.rt Is signed "I. But/*" on tln> wrapper, UT- PETII V.\ iOWLB A SONS, raorairroca, Boa8 ln Toa, Ms is. told by1 *alers generally. c?* I Ouua or Catarrh. Sold B I yj BMmA li by druggist* ?t 80 cent*. J n d fpSGSnw&Ki1-! 1 2JHURDER? a Ft. Mb IMamaneaasamwtAthb WBLX. ATOKB, . If 525 Per Day isr'drKi 9! II sfypssss^sr Tha fll MAdhtqdriMi teMllaftsvorUb gg. Dr. J. Walker's California Tingar Bitten are a purely Vegetable reparation, made chiefly from the naive herbe found cn the lower ranges of be Sierra Nevada mountains of Califoria, the medicinal properties of which re extracted therefrom without the use f Alcohol. The question is almost tally asked, "What is the cause of the mparalleled success of Vixiqar BrrrxBSf Our answer is, that they remove he cause of disease, and the patient reovers his health. They are the great >lood purifier and a life-giving principle, i, perfect Renovator and Invigorator ?f the system. Never before in ^ istory of the world has a medicine been ompoonded possessing the remarkable aalities of Viitboak Bittbbs in healing tfea^ lek of every disease man is heir to. The/* re a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, elieving Congestion or Inflammation or he Liver ana Visceral Organs, in Bilious Msssses. The properties of Db. Walker's TOMARBrrrass are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, ^ Jedative, Counter-irritant. Sudorific, Altera* ive. and Anti-Bilioua Grateful Thousand* proclaim Vureoak Bitters the most wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long tinweH. provided their bones are uot destroyed by miueral poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. i Billons. Remittent and Inter* mittent Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland ^Arkansas. Red, Colorado, Brazoa, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, art invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these various organs, is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walker's Vinboar Bitters, as thev will speedily remove the darkcolored viscid matter with which the , bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with VnfESAJt Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of :t system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness. Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpita " * ^ tation 01 ids neart, muumiuuuuii m w? Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy rivertisement. Scrofula, or King's Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Keck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skii^ Soro Eyes, etc. In these, as in all other constitutional Diseases, Walker's Vi.veoae Bitters hare shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intractable coses. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit- j tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no eaual. Such DitfAst are caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases.?Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, ns they adrance in life, are subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard Against this, take a dose of Walkm's Vreno ah. Bitters occasionally. + For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt-Kheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimple* Ductules, 150113, tarouncies, luug-iumw, Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scarfs, Qiscolorations of the Skin, Hum ore and Diseases of the Skin of whatever nam* or nature, are literally dug np and carried out of the system in a short time by the as* of these Bitters. Pin, Tap#, and other Worms, lurking in tho system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. No system of medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelmintics will free the system from worma like these Bitten. For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood. or the turn of life, these Tonio Bitten display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find iU impurities bunting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; m cleanse it when you find it obstructed and ' sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. It. II. Mr DONALD & CO.. Druggists and Gen. Apt*., San Francisco, California, and cor. of Washington and Charlton Sts., N. V. Hold bv all "'irngirWt- nltd Dealers 5 T 11 U-Ko 41 to f. i dpihci rmna sir ram EST/^'I WfASmo H^>?( Asents Wanted. (BBD FOB CAtAXOOUB. Domettic Sewing Machine Co., K. Y. ?tn *9/1 P" ??7i Aganta wasted 1 All dMiM w of working peoplaof aithar eex,young or old, BAk* nor* money it work for aa la tkell epere moaen ti or all the tine then at anything alee ParticnlAre free. Addreee 0. tTXHSOF a CO., Port lend. Ma liiNWtfiMI Thea-Nectar 4 KAmi 1 The beet Tea Imported. Pat A , ??le everywhere. And fur >?/! M JT wAoleeale only by th* oHEAt M V ATLAhTlC d PACIFIC T*A CW AO.U1 PullontUdiaiChurog ^ It, Sew Tor A P. 6. Boz.'.Oi 1 B?nd for Thee-Weeter drewlaF title LEOBAPH1HO? A fin ronrM for |M at X ottea connected with Jonee Cea'1 College, 9* Lcala, Ho. For clrcalare eddreaa, #. . WMKMMUnaflngJTilAdfai, ?