farm, Garden and Household. Farm Notes. A Kentucky farmer keeps a tame snake in his corn crib, and he duds him cheaper than mice. In putting up stoves, make a thorough examination. More liouseB art burned from defective flues than from all other causes combined, probably tec to one. Some of the farmers in Eastern Pennsylvania have formed a company, witt a capital of $50,000, for the manufacture of fertilizers, and especially foi grinding bone, that genuine articles may be liatl. The grand cavalcade at Guilford, Conn., was formed of 141 yoke of cattle, one seven-horse team, two six-horst teams and 15 two-horse teams. Twc decorated carts, one drawn by 34 oxer and the other Dy 70, attracted specia attention. A foreign scientific journal suggest) a method of pickling meat with rapidity and success. The meat is to be rollei in a mixture of 1G oz. of salt, \ oz saltpeter, and 1 oz. of sugar, so that al parts arc completely salted. It is thei wrapped in a piece of cotton cloth pre viously scalded and dried, and placet in a porcelain vessel. Several wide-awake gardeners havi recorded an experience to the effect tha by preparing the soil and sowing pea in antumu?but so late as to preclud the possibility of sprouting before tin ground freezes?they secure a crop ii Spring considerably earlier than b; adopting the usual course. The plai seems worth trying. A good many years ago a wealth; farmer owning several hundred acres o land remarked to a neighbor that h wished he could hire one or two acre for a buckwheat patch. That inciden shows the regard in which this cro; has been held by the best farmers. Tli good man's scul yearned for buckwhea cukes, but he coiild not make himsel willing to use his own well-tilled am productive acres on which to grow tli raw material. If he did he could no well sow spring grain the following sea son, and unless he sowed buckwhea " 1 - i ? u. ? WllIlOUI UUtTril^JlIVU uc must 9VU11. urn lose a crop before the patch could b again seeded. Buckwheat is popularl considered the poor man's crop. It i almost always got in on the leas productive laud, often only half prt pared, and at the last may be cut off er tirely by an untimely frost. And yt there are few crops which will bette pay for careful preparation of the soil. Wine .Unking. Grape culture and the manufactur of domestic wines being on the increas in this country, we publish the follow ing directions for making five gallon of grape wine l?3' a correspondent of tli Germantown Telegraph : Express tli juice from twenty pounds of grapes rinse the pulp and skins in as muc water as will cover them ; mash thei and strain them|through a coarse cloth add to this the juice and put in tw pounds of brown sugar to each gallon When the sugar is dissolved pour tli whole into a keg, having the bun, open, and let it stand where the tern perature will be about seventy degree until fermentation ceases ; then bunj up tight and let it rest for a month t settle, when it should be drawn ol quietly, the keg well washed, and tli wine returned to it, adding one pouni of good raisins, and if it does not seer sweet enough two pounds of sugar ma, be added to the whole. The necessit of doing this depends on tho kind am quality of the grapes. The wine shouli remain undisturbed until the keg i fiA?oon toVioti if moir lv WilUU'U II1U UCAt DCttOUii, nuvu AV *wuj Kf bottled for use. Planting OrrhardH. If it is designed to plant ont an or chard this fall, preparations for it shouli begin as soon as possible. The lam should be well and deeply ploughed and, if possible, subsoiled. If neces sity imposes the choosing of a locatio: which is not a favorable one, from th character of the soil as regards fertility sonic paius should be taken to improv it. To do this well, rotted compost o bone dust may be used, or all or eithe of those, with such additional snpplie of ashes as may be procurable. Plot under, and mingle as well with the to; soil as possible. Do not use frcs! green mauure. If you have no other it will be preferable to plant your tree and use the manure as n top dressini afterwards. Decide upon the varietie and the proportions you intend plant ing, send your orders iu time to th nursery, and do not depend upon aji; chance trcc-poddler to take your order These are not the proper persons to bu; from, much less to make selections o kinds for you, even if they send yoi what they profess. How to Cure Ilnnis. The hams of Maryland and Yirginii have long enjoyed a high reputation Premiums for these hams were awnrde< by a late meeting of the Marylant Agricultural Society. Those who ha< opportunities of examining the ham report that they were of excellent quuli ty. The following is the receipt afte which those were packed down wliiel received the first premium. For on< hundred pounds of pork take eigh pounds of pulverized alum, two ouncei of saltpetre, twopouudsof brown sugar ouo and a half ounces of potash, an< four gallons of water. Mix the abovi ingredients and pour them upon tL< meat, after it has lain about two dayi in the tub. Let the hams lie about si: weeks in pickle, and let them dry off i few days before smoking them. 1 generally rub the meat with fine sal when I pack it down. The meat shoulc be quite cold before it is packed in th< tubs. i'orn-Fodrtcr. Persons who condemn corn-fodder a< " innutritions" are invited by Pascha Morris, of the Practical Farmer, tc consider the way of a practical dairy man, " whose butter is excelled by nc other in rniladelphia market, and who "pretty much sustained lifty-eighl cows on sowed corn from the middle ol last July to the middle of October, and that, too, the product of three acres.' lie estimated that he took ninety tons of this " innutritions" substance f?om tho space indicated, and he knows that his cows did not fall oil in their milk during these three months of drouth, but that some increased the flow, and that the butter was fallyupto the standard. A henpecked gentleman determined to sup with a party of friends, against tne will of his wife. He was resolved that he would, and she that he should not go. He did not go. His fricauls missed him ; and, just for a lark, invaded his residence, where they found him and his wife sitting in their chairs, fast asleep. He had given her an opiate that he might slip away, and she had given him one that he might not. An Obstinate Captain. My story commenoes on the 6th of November, 1812, a short time after the 1 battle of Wiazma. We, the French, beat a retreat, not before the Russians, j for they were at a respectful distance i from our camp, but before the sharp l and bitter cold of their country. 1 " During the preceding days our officers had told us that we were ap' proacliing Smolensko, where we should . get food, fire, brandy and shoes ; but r in the mean time we were perishing in 5 the glaciers, and continually harassed by the Cossacks. We bad marched for ' six hours without stopping to take breath, for we knew that repose wa3 * . 11 l - - .. .1 1.1 4l.? certain cieain. ah icy muu uicw tu? } drifting snow in onr faces, and from j time to time we tumbled over the frozen corpse of a comrade. We neither spoke or sang, even complaints were } no longer heard, and that was a bad 7 sign. I marched by the side of my I captain ; short, strongly built, rough * and severe, but brave and true as the 1 blade of his sword ; we called him 1 4 Captain Obstinate,' for when he once * said a thing, it was fixed ; he never I changed his opinions. He had been wounded at Winzma, and his usually e crimson face was then ghastly pale, t while a ragged white handkerchief, all 3 stained with blood, was bound round 0 his head, and added to the pallor of e his countenance. All at once 1 saw him ^ stagger on his legs like a drunken man, r then fall like a block to the ground. * 44 4 Morbleu ! captain,' said I, bending over him, ' you cannot remain 1 here.' 17 44 4 You see that I can, since I do it,' f replied he showing his legs, e 44 4 Captain,' said I, 4 you must not s give way,' lifting him in my arms, J t tried to put him on his feet. He leaned I p I on me and attempted to walk, but in e vain ; he fell again, dragging me with t! him. f j 44 4 Jobin,' said he, 4 all is over. II Leave me here, and rejoin your army e as quickly as possible. One word bet j fore you go : at Yereppe, near Grenoi ble, lives a good woman, eighty-two t years of age, my?my mother. Go and e . see her, embrace her for me, and tell e her that?that?tell her what you will, y but give her this purse and my cross. ? It is all I have ! Now go.' it 44 4 Is that all, captain ?' > 4 4 4 That is all! God bless you ! i- Make liaste. Adieu!' juy menus, i >t do not know how it was, but I felt two sr tears roll down my cheeks. " ' No, captain,' I cried, ' I will not leave you ; either you come with me, or I will remain with you." o " ' I forbid you to remain.' e " ' You may put me under arrest, r- thon, if you like, but at present you s must let me do as I jilease.' e " 'You are an insolent fellow.' e " ' Very good, captain, but you must ; come with me.' He bit his lip with h rage, but said no more. I lifted him, n and carried him on my shoulders like ; a sack. You can easily imagine that o with such a burden, I could not keep i. pace with my comrades. In fact, I soon e lost sight of their columns, and could g discern nothing around me but the i- white and silent plain. I still walked s on, when presently appeared a troop of g Cossacks galloping toward mo, with fu0 rious gesticulations and wild cries. tf " The captain was by this time c?me pletely insensible, and I resolved, wliatil i ever it might cost me, not to abandon a him. I laid him down on the ground, y and covered him with snow ; then I y crept beneath a heap of dead bodies, 1 leaving, however, my eyes at liberty. :1 Presently the Cossacks came up, and s began to strike with their lances right e and left, while their horses trampled us under their feet. One of these heavy beasts set his foot upon my right arm and crushed it. My friends, I did not . ( speak ; I did not Btir ; I put my right I hand into my mouth to stifle the cry of j I torture which nearly escaped from me, 1 and in a few minutes the Cossacks had ,! : dispersed. a i " When the last of them had disape pearcd, I quitted my refuge and pro ceeded to disinter the captain. To my e joy he gave some signs of life ; I conr , tnved to carry him with my one arm i n tvliiMi r>(Ti>red a Rnrfc nf B ! shelter, and then I laid nyseif by his ^ side, wrapping my cloak round hb both, p ; " The night ha\l closed in and the |t : snow continued to fall. " The rear guard had long since disb appeared, and the only sound that g broke the stillness of the night was the s I whistle of a bullet, or the howling of the wolves feasting on the corpses that e lay stretched around. God knows what r. thoughts passed through my soul du. ring that dreadful night, which, I felt y sure, would be my last upon earth. But f I remembered the prayer which my a mother had taught me long before when I was a child at her knee, and bending low, I repeated it with fervor. " My children, that did me good, and a remember always that a sincere and fervent prayer is sure to comfort you. j I felt astonishingly calmed when I reI turned to mv place by the captain. But j the time passed, and I had fallen into s a state of half stupor, when T saw a group of French officers approach. Bcr fore I had time to speak to them, their , chief, a little man, dressed in a furred a pelisse, stepped forward toward me and t said: 8 " 4 What arc you doing here ? Why are you away from your regiment ?' j "For two good reasons,' said' I, . pointing first to the captain, and then to mv bleedinc arm. ^ " I'lie mau says true, sire,' saiil one ^ of those who followed him ; ' I saw him t marching in the rear of his regiment, I and carrying this officer on his back.' j "The emperor?for, my friends, it, j was he !?gave me one of those glances , that only he, or the eagle of the Alps, could give, and said: ! " ' It is well. You have done very \ well.' 5 " Then opening hi* pelisse, he took j ' the cross which decorated his green I ' coat and gave it to me. At that instant I was no longer hungry, no longer ? cold ; I felt no more pain from my arm ' than if that awkward beast had never 1 < touched it. Davoust,'added the emperor ad-! [ dressing the officer who had spoken to I him, 'see this man and his captain 1 placed in one of the baggage-wagonR. j 1 Adieu !' And making me a motion of ; the hand, he went away." Here the veteran ceased, and resum' ed his pipe. L j " But tell us what became of 1 Captain I Obstinate,' " cried many impatient , voices. " The captain recovered, and is uow I j a geucral on the retired list. But the ; ; best of the joke wns, that as soon as he got well, he put me under arrest for j fifteen days, as a punishment for my i J infraction of discipline. "This circumstance came to the ears : of Napoleon, and after Jaughiug heart- | ily, lie not only caused mo to be set; free, but promoted me to the rank of a | sergeant. As to the decoration, my j I children, here is the ribbon at my I button-hole, but the cross I wear next my heart." And opening his rest, he showed his eager audience the precious relic, bus- q pended from his neck in a little satin 1 bag. t Curiosities of Lunacy. 8 There are cases where blows on the [ head have benefited the brain, and pro- ^ duced extraordinary changes for the a better. JIabillon was almost an idiot v till, at the age of twenty-six, he fell J down a stone staircase, fractured his j skull, and was trepanned. From that \ moment he became a genius. Doctor \ Prichard mentions a case of three n brothers who were nearly all idiots. 1 One of them was injured on the head, S and from that time he brightened up, c and is now a successful barrister, j Wallenstein, too, they say, was a mere i fool till he fell out of a window, and 6 awoke with enlarged capabilities. A i patient in an asylum was the victim of < many delusions. He was paying off the national debt, going into partnership with Baron Rothschild, and forming a \ lodge of female Freemasons. One day < an epileptic patient, irritated at being t perpetually asked to buy imaginary j shares, gave him a tremendous blow on ( the bridge of the nose. .From that ( time he improved rapidly, and ocknowl- f edged that the blow had had a sobering \ effect, and had quite knocked the non- j sense out of him. f There is no doubt that this was the se- ] cret of that cruel old remedy for madness, the circulating swing, mentioned favorably by physicians of the last . century. This horrible swing was a < small box fixed upon a pivot, and j worked by a windlass. The " inflexi- < ble " maniac, or the maniac expecting a , paroxysm, was firmly strapped in a sit- j ting or recumbent posture. The box j was then whirled round fit the average i velocity of a hundred revolutions a , minute, and its beneficial effect was supposed to be heightened by reversing i the motion every si* or eight minutes, aud by stopping it occasionally with a sudden jerk. The results of this swing (which occasionally brought on concussion ?f the brain) were profound and : protracted sleep, intense perspiration,, mental exhaustion, and a not unnatural horror of any recurrence to the same remedy, which left a moral impression that acted as a permanent restraint. That the results were often beneficial, we have indisputable evidence. The cases of suspended consciousness after brain injury are well worthy attention. A man who awakes out of I sleep is conscious of a lapse of time, I and can generally even guess its dura- j tion ; but tho man struck on the brain I is often unconscious of any lapse. A 1 man was struck in the street, aud was afterward delirious. He was uncon- i scious after the blow for fourteen days. He was then delirious and maniacal for | ten weeks. When he became more : tranquil thay brought him to the asylum in a strait-waistcoat. He soon recover- | a,l knf wtien hp hp(eriod, and it was healed without leavng a scar. As two years have since lapsed without symptoms of th e poison, t is believed that the patient is entirely >ut of danger. A new kind of potato rot is reported o Lave appeared in Apolda, near Jena, Sermany. The disease attacks the ;uber at once, without apparently injurng the vines. The tuber is found covsred with a kind of felt, of a purplish jolor, which is the mycelium of a fundus. The tuber is not always pcnotra;ed by this mycelium, but generally it ,s destroyed by a cancerous disease, the ikin being covered by a number of black dots. The Latest Triumph of Temperance. ?We congratulate the Temperance world on the success everywhere attending the use of Vinegar Bitters. Certainly no preparation containing alcohol has accomplished such cures of malarious fever, biliousness, dyspepsia, rheumatism, lung complaints, constipation, and general debility, as we hear of from all quarters, as the results of this famous vegetable specific. No true philanthropist will regret to see spirituous liquors expelled from medical use, if they can be safely dispensed with ; and that they are not necessary in any case of sickness, whatever its character, appears at last to have been demonstrated. If public opinion is capable of making any impression upon the minds of the Faculty, they will ere long introduce the most popular of modern medicines into the hospitals, and prescribe it in their practice. The millions have given the article-a fair trial; it has more than answered their expectations, and no theoretical opposition can shake their faith in it.?Com. Swindling Advertisements. Tho editor of the Franklin Register, in giving his reasons for rejecting a certain class of advertisements, says : " Years ago wo were a post-office detective, and in that poBitioa we learned a thousand things about swindling advertisements that the confiding public do not and cannot understand. We learned that the old 'sands of life' clergymnn is a burly, red-headed Englishman, who is probably good for forty years more ; that all the gift schemes are the vilest swindles ; that one smai t rascal runs a dozen companies, and nearly all are located on Broadway, New York," etc. This knowledge we make use of for the benefit of our readers. A SOVEREIGN HALM Can be found in that great and reliable family medicine ALLEN'S L U N 0 BALSAM, By tho n?e of which health and happiness i* restored to those afHictod with any Lung or Throat disease, such as: Coughs, Colds, Asthma, JJrovhitis, Consumption. UNSOLICITED EVIDENCE OF IT8 MERITS. brad trx foi.i.owixo : Dr. a. L. SC0V1LL is the inventor of several medical preparations which have become very popular, and have been liberally used. Among his inventions are " Hall's Balsam for the Lungs," and " Livorworth and Tar." For tho past ten years a better remedy has been offered to tho public. Roail the following letter from Da. 8COVILL referring to It: Mksibs. J. N. Harris A Co.: Cents?I mako the following statement from a perfect conviction and knowledge of the benefits ol Ai.Lair's Luxo Balsam in curing the most deepseated rulmonary Consumption: I have witnessed Its effects on tho young and tho old, and 1 can truly say that it is by far tho best expectorant remedy with which I am acquainted. For Cougbs. and all tho early stages of Lung Complaints, I bcllcvo it ta be a certain cure, and if every family would keep it by them, ready to administer upon the first appearance of diseaso about the Lungs, there would bo very few cases of fatal consumption. It causes the phlegm and matter to raise without irritating those delicate organs (tho Lungs), and without producing constipation of the bowels. It atso gives strength to tho systrm. stops the night-sweats, and changes all the morbid sveretions to a healthy state. Yours, rcspoctfully, A. L. SCOVILL. "IT SAVE# MY LIFE." Columbia, Ala., March P, 1F73 J. N. Harris A Co.: J'ear Sirs?I am taking Ai.lbr's Lrxo Balsam for a disease of the Lungs of thirteen years standing. i have used every remedy offered, and this is the only remedy thnt has given me any relief. 1 know it sav' d my life last spt ing. At that time 1 commenced asing It, and received immediate relief. It stopped on my lungs in ten hours. Yon aro at perfect liberty to publish this letter, for the benefit of suffering humanity, and with respect, I remain, Yours truly, D. D. root.. Such, my suffering friends, are tho letters recciv - ,....1., en ii?i iy, ami ? > you u"iiu> .... - ? . ...... cy (if tlii* valuah.e medicine. He in time, and take tn your home a bottle of Ai.ler's Luna Balsam. You will And in it a glorious prize, and a neverfailing friend in time of need. CAUTION. Be not deceived, Cill forALLF.N'S LUNG BAL8AM, and take nn other. Direction! accompany each bottle. J. N. HARRIS A CO., Cincinnati, 0., Proprietors. For eale by all Medicine Dealer*. tor falb wholesale st JOHN F. nKNRY. Now York. GEO. C. GOODWIN A CO., Boston. JOHN8QM. HOLOWAY A CO.. Philadelphia. THIRTY YEARS' MXPhRlENCK OF AN OLD KL'USK. Aire. Wlnaloav'a SoothliiK Syrup la the preacriptlon of one of the beat Female Physicians and Nuraea la the United State*, and ha* been used for thirty year* with never failing safety and aucccBa by millions of mother* and children from the feeble Infant of one week old to the ad ult It correct* acidity of the atomach, relieves wind colic, reirulate* tho bowels, and (five* rest, health snd comfort to mother and child. We believe it to be the Best and Surest Remedy in the World In all -ises of DY8RVTKHY and DIARRIKF.A IN CHILDREN. whether it arises from Teething or from hi; other range. Full Direction" ror using win accompany each bottle. None Genuine unless the Fac-eimile of CURTIS it PERKINS la on tho outside wrapper. Sold by nil Medicine Drnlora. CIIILDKKN OFTEN LOOK PALE AND NICK rrora no other canae than hawing wormi In the stomach. BROWN'S VKRMIFCOE COMFITS will destroy worms without injury to the child, being perfectly WHITE, end free from all coloring ar other Injurious Ingredients usually used in worm preparations. CURTIS dfc BROWN, Proprietors, No. id 15 Fulton Btreot, Ntw York. Sold by Crujeiaf* and Chemittl, ttnd dealeri in Medicines at Twkntt-Fivs Cents a Box. TI1K IIOUSKHOLD PANACEA AND FAMILY LIN I.UK NT Is the best remedy in the world for the following complaints, !*.: Cramps ! , the Limbs and Stomtch, Pain In tho Btomach, Bowels or Bldo, Rheumatism in all Its forms, Bilious Colic, Neuralgia Zhulera, Dysentery, Colds, Flesh Wonnds, Burns, Sore Throat, Bplnal Complaints, Bprains and Bruises, Chills and Fevcc For Internal and External use. Its operation Is not only to relieve the patient, but entirely removes the cause of the complaint, [t penetrates and pervades the whole system, reitcrlug healthy action to all its parte, and quickening the blood. Tlie Household Panacea la purely Vep ttahlc and All Healing. Piepared by CURTIS 1? .50 Hay, per ton 18.00 a28.00 Straw, per ton 12.00 alO.OO flops *73s, .40 a .65- 00., .08 a .15 Pork?Mess 14.IW al6.'J5 Lard 07", a .07 Petroleum?Crude 5',a 6'4 Refined 16 Butler?State 26 a .40 Ohio Fancy 20 a .31 ' Yellow 23 a .25 Western Ordinary 18 a .21 Pennsylvania fine 28 a .32 Cheese?State Factory ll.V? .13 " Skimmed 04 a .08 Ohio 10 a .12 on xn &KKI?BIAIO m .v. avrrkiA. Beef Cattle 4.25 (5.37 8liee|i 3.80 a -'.nfl Hoj^-Un 4.40 ? 4 fid Hour... 6.74 a 9.2B Wheat?No. 2 Syrinx 1.17 ? l.P.d Corn 4K'3? .49 fMtfl 43 a .43 Rye RO a .80 Il.irley 90 a 1.40 Lard 08 a .08 A LIU NT. Wheat 1.66 a 1.80 ltye? Hfalo 80 a .Ml Corn? Mixed 65 a .07 Barley?State 1,55 a 1.55 Data?Stale 47 a .62 philadelphia. Honr-Peno. F.xtra 7.00 a 8.30 Wheat?Western lied 1.45 a 1.50 Corn?Yellow 02 a .62 Mixed 00 a .61 Petroleum?Ornde lo\ RefincdlO Clover Seed 9.00 a 9.00 Timothy 2.70 a 3.00 BALTIMOHK, Cotton?Low Middling* 15)fa .13 Hour?Kxtra 8.25 a 7.52 Wbeat 1.40 a 1.75 Corn?Yellow 65 a .65 Oats 4H a .51 RICH FARMING LANDS KOlt 8ALK VKItY CHEAP! 'I'll 10 IIKST TVVKSTMEXT 1 No Fluctuations! Always Improving in Valu< The Wealth nf the t'nunti-y i* wade hu the Advanre in Ktnl Kstolt. NOW IS T1IE TIME I Million* of acres of llio flnoit land* on the Cont nelit, in EASTERN NEBRASKA, now for salr manynf them never hetu We are now building the celebrated Lane Cirar5 lar Saw Mill, the best and most complete saw mill evrr invented. Wo moke the manufacture of Saw Mill outfits a ? special feature of our business, and can furnish 1 complete on the shortest notice. Our aim in all cases is to furnish the best machinery in the market, and work absolutely unr equaled for beauty of design, economy and strength, 1 Send for Circular and Price List. [ VTICA STEAM ENGINE CO. UTICA, IT. T. WxuBnooitB, 42 Cortlahdt St., New Ton*. CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL , . RAILWAY. (Milwaukee & 8t Paul Railway Co.) P Extending from Chlcngo to Milwaukee, Lh Crosse, Winona, Hastings, St. Paul tnd Minneapolis. Also to Madison, Prairie ' cure of all Lung complaints, and is offered to the public, sanctioned by the experience of over forty years. When resorted to in season it seldom fails to effect a speedy cure in the most severe T. eases of Coughs, Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping Cough, Influenza, Asthma, Colds, i Sore Throat, Pains or Soreness in the Chest and Side, ' Liver Complaint, Bleeding at the Lungs, &c. Wistar's ! Balsam docs not dry up a ! Cough, and leave the cause behind, as is the ease with I most preparations, but it * loosens and cleanses the lungs, and allays irritation, thus removing the cause of the complaint. PREPARED BY 8ETH W, TOWLE & 80NS, Boston, Mas# , And sold hjr Druf tysta uml Dealer*gaicrally. l\roiurii.Mon,Oirls and Hoys wanted,to aell on 1 T French aud Aairrican Jowdry,Hooks, Oamei ' AN Y I eiid'i'tt UK the address of ten rt spectabl * I persons will receive, frre.a beautifulChrc ^IUClmoa,", Instructions bow to yet rich.posl 5 I pnl|frcs*tu,ril Htli?f?.l.nbbte I and the Wonderful Sights of the Nation.il Capital It sells quirk, Sui.il for specimen putfes and se our terms to Agents nnd a full description cf th | Work. Address NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO, Philadelphia. Pa. ?t Per l>ny Commission or EGO a wee i t?^?J Salary, and expenses. We otter it and wil j pay it. App!v now. f). WFRItF.K A CO., Marion. C ?217 ?> ill k K VCH WFKK AGKNTS WANTED * i " " Hnainess legitimate. Particular /1 tree. ,1. WOHTH, St. Louis, Mo. B..X 1.24* CONSUMPTION ' And. Its Cure. -1 WILLSOIV'S ; Carbolated Cod Liver Oil Is a scientific combination of two well-known mrdl tinea. Ita theory la first to arrest the decay, thei i mild up the system. Physicians find the doctrine cor ect. The really startling cures performed by Will uon'a Oil are proof. Carbolic Achl . aMtirehj arri*u Decay. It la thi moat powerful antiseptic in the known world. En tertnglntotherlrculatlon.lt at once grapples wit I corruption, anil decay ceases. It purlAea the aourcri of disease. Cod Urcr (Hit* Xaturt'* bctt amt'tant In reelsttnf Consumption. Put up In large wnlgMihai>t<| bottle* ' 'tearing tlie inventor's signature, and li sold by the best Druggist*. Prepared by k I J. XX. WTT.TJlQjr, n I S3 John Street, Sew VorV Br. J. Walker's California Vinegar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, niaue chiefly from the native herb* foona on the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of California, the medicinal properties of whick are extracted therefrom without the use ^ Of AICGtlOI. 11)0 qucouuu la aniiunu daily asked, "What is the cause of the unparalleled success of Vinegar Bitters f" Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient recovers his health. They are the great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the system. Never before In ti* history of the world has a medicine been compounded possessing tho remarkable qualities of Vinegar Bitters in healing the sick of every disease man is heir to. They are a gontle Purgativo as well as a Toaio, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of s\ the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious ' 4 Diseases. The properties of Dr. Walker's Vinboar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretie, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-irritant. Sudorific, Altera- I tive. and Anti-Bilious Grateful Thousands proclaim Vinegar Bitters tho most wonderful In- i vigoraut that ever sustained tho sinking system. -- J >o Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long uuwcll, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other i means, and vital organs wasted beyond [ repair. - Bilious. Remittent and Intermittent levers, which arc so prevalent in the valleys of our great rivers [ throughout the United States, especially i those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, 1 Illinois, Tenucssee, Cumberland, Arkan sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, aud 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, ara invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, aud other abdominal viscera. In thcii treatment, a purgative, exertiug a pow. erful influence upon theso various or. gans, is essentially necessary. Then; is no cathartic for tho purpose equal tv Dr. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitters, ; as they will speedily remove the darkcolored viscid matter with which tho bowels arc loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring tho healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vinegar Betters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus lbre-armcd. Dyspepsia or ludigesfion, Headache, Pain in tho .^boulders, Coughs, Tightness of tho Chest, Dizziness, Sout Eructations of tho Stomach, Bad Taste in tho Montli, Bilious Attacks, Palpitatation of tho Heart, Iuflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms. ;irn the otTsuriues of DvsneDSia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a leugtby advertise* ment. Scrofula, or King's Evil, White Swelling*, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old Soros, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc. In these, as in all other constitutional Diseases, Walker's Vinegar Bitters have shown their great curative powers in tho most obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflammatory ami Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Ilcrait. tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of tbo Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases 4 aro caused by Vitiated Blood. .Mechanical Diseases.?Persons engaged in Paints and .Minerals, such as Clumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as the)- advance in life, are subject to paralysis of tho Bowels. To guard against this, take a doso of Walker's Viseoar Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt-Iihenm, Blotohes, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Hing-worms, Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discoloration* of the Skin, Humor* and Diseases of the Skin of whatever nama or nature, are literally dug up anil enrried out of the system iu a short time by the use of these Bitters. Pin, Tape, ami other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, arc effectually destroyed nud removed. N? system of medicine, no vermifuges, no an. n-ill I'ma llin from WorUlS I lllVlUIIUIVlbO n,i>"vv V..V, J j like theso Bitters. For Female Complaints, in young I or old, married or single, at the dawn of wor manhood, or the turn of life, those Tonifl i, Hitters display bo decided an influence thai 141 improvement is soon perceptible. ; Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when ). i ever you find its impurities bursting through ' the skin in I'imples, Eruptions, or Sores-, - i eleaiiM' it when you find it obstructed .uid a I sluggish in the veins; cleanse it whet: tit fl foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep ^ the blood pure, and the health of .ue system ' will follow. It. II. MrDOKAI-D -v CO.. Druggists Hint I Jen. Agts.. San ! ninoiseo, California, I nail cor. of Washington mat imrltmi Sis., N. V. > Isold liy nil Druggist* and Dealers. ; THIS PRINTING INK 5VSS2T7.2 Harper's BlilMinyi. N. Y It In ???r pair l.v N. Y. ^ Newspaper Tnlon, 150 Worth Street, in 10 It. and 1 '2ft ll?. pa< kit/? n. Also a full assortment of .*?!> Inks. ' mmm ^kea-Noctar ' | BlacHT XJA - ,. ?s. V iile everywhere. And forma XsjPmK wboleaale only by the ORKAT Of ?9t\ ml ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TKA ?C I a jRf}>V^I Ho. pi| Fulton St. A 2 A 4 Chart (J *J5E2^3*sSr St., New York. P. 0. Bo*. VSOe laBe ^ Send for Thei-NertRrClreulsr I! ritKLKORAPIIIKO-A full conrie for ?UO 1. oftlre connected with June* Com'l College, b Loiiit, Mo. For circular* uliiri'ia. J. W. JOHNPOK, Managing Principal. Pass This Bv ".rv.n's I J wiah to make momjr, ad? drei*. Kcbrka PortaiiI.* Tahi.* Co., 8t. Loutl. IJtfi t/> fltQfl par day i Agenta wanted I All cltiiaa UJ 0f working people of either ica,young or old, mako more moi ey at work for ni lu then |. i spare moments or all thu true than at anything elss 1 Particulars free. Address 0. BTIHBOM A CO., Port l>nd'Ma. M i MURDER?,m But a man can earn with this WTIX A T70*k, <( $25 Per Day wrfra 1 any lxCjaadattharateofL'sriWtptrdar. Augers made of Cast-Mrel and warranted. Alwar crasful la quirh.and, Beet tool In the w.rM F? paoepecttof fur coal and urea. Finn,Township and County rlrhta for laic. HetvJ 1 Jets, aid you? P. O., Co. and bijij. .ad#