? Farm, Garden and Household, Orchard and Vumrj. Planting.?Should the ground remain open this month many fruit trees oan be set and at n less cost than when the work is done in the spring. Now labor is plenty, and many a man at this season will accept a job at smaller wages than would be demanded in the spring. Do not, however, set trees in a wet or partly frozen soil; they will be likely to perish. Better occupy the time in cutting drains and preparing the soil properly. Trees not set out this fall must be heeled-in ou a dry sandy soil where there is no danger of water settling during the winter. xv :t a ?.? .??tv?j X'lUKS ? XXXIJ AOUUUUUI5 Uii^MUiUlUU should be harvested at once and plaoed where the temperature is as low as possible without aanger of frost. Applet gathered late, stored in barrels and plaoed in a low temperature, will keep a long time. Cider.?Continue to make eider from the late varieties of apples, using only those which are free from rot. flidei made at this season, strained through sand to remove all pomace and impurities, may be barreled at once, and little or no fermentation will take plaoe il kept cool. This makes a very fln< quality of oider for use during the win ter, as it remains sweet a long time. The barrel should be bunged up ai soon as the cider is put into it. Vinegar.?All cider from inferioi fruit should be made into vinegar. Keep the vinegar barrels open, and fron time to time add oider, and in a fee months or years, according to the temperature, good vinegar will be the re suit. Stocks.? Take up stocks for rool grafting, assort, tie in bundles of convenient size, and bury where they car be got readily during the winter. ? packed in damp sawdust and put in i oool cellar they will keep equally well Cions.?Cut at any time when th< tree is not frozen. Store in sawdust See that they do not dry out during th< winter, Seedlings which need protection muff not be covered until quite cold. Leavet are the cheapest and best covering whioh can be used, and they are afec generally the easiest to procure.?Agri Guitarist. Recipe for CaHn| Moat. The editor of the German town Tele graph gives the following as his recipe for curing meat: To one gallon of watei take 1} lbs. of salt, } lb. of sugar, } oz. of saltpetre, } oz. potash. In this ratic the pickle can be increased to anj quantity desired. Let these be boiled together until all the dirt from the sugai rises to the top and is skimmed off. Then throw into a tub to cool, and when oool pour it over yonr beef or pork, tc remain the usual time?say four or five weeks. The meat must be well ooverec with trickle. and should not ho nnt down for at least two days after killing, daring which time it should be slightly sprinkled with powdered saltpetre, which removes all the surface blood, &o., leaving the meat fresh and clean. Some omit boiling the pickle, and find it to answer well, though the operation ol boiling purifies the pickle by throwing off the dirt always to be found in salt and sugar. Canning Grn u. I send my mode of canning grapes, which we find an exoellent addition tc the table all winter. Rioli, ripe grapes are the best, having so muoh more juioe when fully ripe. We use Conoord grapes, having them in abundanoe, and I doubt if any other variety answer better. Pulp them, and boil the pulps for a sufficient time to separate the seed from the other part. While these are boiling, place the skins in another kettle, with some water, and boil them until the skins seem tender. It takes qnite a good boil, and care must be taken not to let them bnrn. When the seeds float about, showing that they are loosened from the pulp, pour all into a oolander, and add what has ran through to the skins: now weigh the whole, and allow 5 pounds of sugar to 11 pounds of fruit; they need little more boiling. Can them hot as possible.?Cor. Cultivator. ' A Dry Cellar. To have a dry cellar, dig out the bot torn 01 me cenar, commencing at the aides, two inches below the walls, increasing the depth to the oentre, bo that it shall have the form of an inverted arch. Then the earth should be pounded firmly, and well cemented, allowing the cement to go under the walls an inch or so, and up the sides for two feet. Then the bottom should be filled up level with sand and paved. If this is all properly done, the cellar will be rendered dry permanently. Suicide In the United States, Tho statistics of 1870 show an increasing tendency to suicide throughout tho country. The per-centage was 3.06 per 100,000. In 1860 it was 3.02, and in 1850 2.01. As usual, the male sex greatly predominates, more than three-fourths being men. Suicide is rare among women who have reached maturity, the majority of the cases being confined to the romantic period of girlhood. Men, on tho contrary, resort to it in numbers increasing with age. Ten suicides occur among the whites to one among the blacks; the cheerful, contented disposition of the latter shows where lies the exciting cause of suicide. It is the product, not of mental rust, but of wear and tear. The rate is higher in the bustling communities of the North than in the more quiet South. But the German and French minds, of all others, appear to be particularly prone to suicide. These nationalities stand nearly as three to one as compared with the Irish, and four to one compared with the native American. The Fate of French Marshals, Let me add, says a Paris letter, that the history of previous trials of Marshals of France is not calculated to flatter the hopes of Bazaine. The office of Marshal was instituted in the reign of Francois I., and since then five Marshals Lave been tried, found guilty, and all of them executed. 1. Marshal de Betz was hanged and burned for rebellion and high treason. 2. Marshal de Biron was decapitated for conspiring with Spain against his friend and benefactor, Henry rV. 3 and 4. Marshals de Marcillac and de Montmorency were sent to the scaffold for conspiring against the red man, Richilieu. 5. Marshal Ney was shot by the Bourbons, in 1815, for going over to his old master, Napoleon, en his return from Elba. v ? Bazaine is the first French Marshal oharged with not having done his duty in the face of the enemy. The Domain of Death. Tk? Ttrrtblc Two Konttia of I. If# In Ihrrroport aa Told by a Raaldant. Mr. William Barnard, formerly of Cincinnati, and now manager of the Western Union Telegraph Company's offices in New Orleans, was at Shreveport daring the whole of the epidemic, and gives the following account of the sufferings in that pestilence-ridden' city: Shreveport lies north and south along ; the Bed River, and, before the days of the pestilence, numbered 11,000 inhabitants. The fever broke out on August 28th. It became an epidemio about i Sept. 4th, and 8,000 of the population l at once left the city. - Since that time Shreveport has been quarantined in i every direction. Mails for Texas are i lying there whioh should have gone for> ward two months ago. The lowest mortality on any day of twenty-four hours was three and the highest thirty-six. , Up to OctobeT 25th there had been 720 . deaths. The cause of the yellow fever epidemio is not attributable to the Bed ' Biver raft. Not a single case of fever i er any other sioknesss occurred among . the 140 men emnloved bv the United States Government in removing this obstruction to the upper Bed Biver ' navigation. This fact in itself puts a quietus on the theory of several scientists. The causes of the fearful epir demic, after the appearance of the cQs. ease, are to be found in the filthy coni dition of the eity and in the drying up r of the swamps and morasses in the ? suburbs, producing the malaria. The virulence of the contagion is directly attributable to the skinning of 200 carcasses of dead cattle and their subsequent putrefaction on the river banks, [ about two miles below the city. A f steamer loaded with cattle sunk at that k place, and the negroes towed the dead animals ashore, where, after being skinned, their carcasses were left to dei compose. A southwest wind, wichpre vails during much of that season of the ) year, carried the stench which the burning sun created into the city. This pret pared the air for taking the infection, i The first case oI the fever, however, j was brought from New Orleans ; but, ? under the influences mentioned, it re. solved itself into the moBt virulent type of Mexican black vomit The percentage of deaths at the most violent period of the pestilence was 95 out of every ' 100. Sixty per cent was 'about the > average, but there were never less than r 40 deaths to every 100 person^ attacked. The symptoms began with a violent ' pain in the head and shoulders. Heavy aches and numbness then attacked the bones in the limbs. The fever then set r in and the pulse rose to 120 to 140 per minute. The crisis of the disease ar1 rived in about three days, when the > fever left the patient; then, if the kid| neys could be kept right, the case was ' a hopeful one. All of the deaths od1 ourred either from bllck vomit, which is the oomplete putrefaction of the ' stomach, or from the entire sequestration of the urinary organs. There was ' hardly a case of the disease where the 1 catheter did not have to be resorted to. [ The period of the disease was in each case owing to the constitution of the : patient?the strongest did not survive j 1 a week. 1 The treatment was simply a hot mus- j tard bath, with castor oil as a cathartic. r. Calomel, the old specific in this disease, t i was entirely discarded. Fear killed a f i great many. Beoovery in the best cases i i was a matter of coolness, constitution t and trood luck. The. shortness of the i supply of nurses prompted the organization of the Howard Association in Shreveport, Mr. L. B. Simmons being chosen President. The President of i the Association in New Orleans, Mr. E. F. Smith, came at onoe to Shreveport with nurses and physicians. The deaths among the nnrses did not exoeed five. The greatest mortality among any one sect was in the ranks of the Oatholio clergy. They were very faithful in their ministrations on the sick and the dying. The Protestant ministers were equally fearless of death and just as indefatigable in the discharge of their sacred duty. The telegraph operators were the next heaviest sufferers in proportion to numbers, four out of six falling victims to the dreadful disease. There was no such thing as funeral services at the churohes or at the graves. Every place of business was closed exeept the drug stores and liquor i saloons. The churches were closed. The formalities of burial were very few. The deaths were reported to the Howi ard Association, which at once detailed workmen to dig the graves. The coffin was taken to the sidewalk in front of the house. The corpse was brought from the house, put into the box, and, after being closed up, the casket was (>laced in a wagon and driven at a galop to the cemetery. There it was deposited beside the undug or only partially completed grave. The grave digger was left alone with the corpse and his own thoughts. He got the box 1 into the grave as best he could. The i cemetery, and especially the Potter's i field, looks like a battle field with its newly made graves. < There were no hearses to convey the f bodies with some show of decorum to \ ( their last resting places. No mourners t followed the corpse to the grave. Those f wno would have wished to go to the fu- \ neral of a friend were required at the ] beuside of a dying wife or child. The ? sick monopolized the attention of the ? living; the dead were regarded as be- i i yond all the help of love or affection. High and low, rich and poor, were \ buried alike. Whole families were x swept out of existence?not a member ( left. There are 120 little orphans who f have lost both father and mother. E They will be raised by the 8tate of Lou- j isiana. c The fever virtually terminated on the , 26th of October, when a heavy frost x chilled the atmosphere, and by stiffen- c ing up the ground stopped the forma- ( tion of the malaria. Regarding myself a I can only say that I never have had the fever, and prior to going to Shreveport as a volunteer I never had seen a case of the disease. Baked Fresh Fish.?Bake like meat | in a pan, with salt and a little water, , and when partly oooked, pour over it |1 nail or a wnoie cup ui crcuiu, uccuruiug i ? to the quantity of fish. It will bake in t about an hour; and a thickening gravy [ e should be made in the pan, after the ; a fish is taken up. Cut halibut in thin t slices, but other kinds, like haddock, e shad, etc., are best baked whole, and 1 may be stuffed, if desired. This is a t nice way of cooking, if one cannot eat c fish fried, as it preserves the flavor a much better than boiling. A Mixro Cm.?Mr. Mingins says of I a New York city: " There are more Ger- j mans there than in Berlin, more Irish- c men than in Dublin, more Catholios ' than in Borne, and more Jews than iu i Palestine," . ii The Murdered Peddler. in Old atoi7 Retold. w One of the most striking oases of ^ >resenoe of mind and sell-possession of gfl rhich I have any recollection came to 0E ight in a trial which took place some f0 nonths since in Ireland. The story ?e ooks like a fiction, hat I have reason to >elieve it qnite trne. jj( A woman was traveling along a rood ju o join her husband, who was engaged ^ is. a teamster in the army, and was ^ piartered some twelve miles from Ath- ot one. She had not proceeded far when in ihe was joined by a peddler, who was b< going the same way. Thdy entered into a conversation 0? luring a walk of some hours, bnt as the re lay began to wane they agreed that 0t hey should stop for the night at a house gt >f entertainment, and pursue their pe- ei lestri&n journey the next day. ^ oc They reached an humble inn, Bituated di n a lonely spot by the roadside, and, fatigued after a long diy's walk, they bl vere glad to find themselves under the at shelter of a roof. ri Having refreshed themselves with a oc inbstantial supper set before them, they oc expressed a wish to retire. They were shown into the travelers' ei room and went to rest in their respeo- tx :ivo beds. it The peddler, before retiring, had tt sailed the landlord aside and given into m lis keeping the paok whioh he had un- flstrapped from his back until the bl morning, telling him that it contained n< i considerable sum of money and mnoh T rain able property. p< They were not long in bed hefore the oc peddler fell into a sound sleep, but the poor woman, perhaps from over-fatigue hi >r from thoughts of meeting her has- re land next day, lay awake. A couple of fe lours might have passed, when she saw w he door slowly opened and a person n< mter holding a light, which he screened to cvith his hand. She instantly reoog- ac aizod in him one of the voung men she lad seen below, son to the landlord. ci He advanced with stealthy steps to m he bedside of the peddler and watched cc lim for a moment. He then went out ai ind entered again with his brother and D father, who held in his hand a large m pewter basin. p< They went on tiptoe to 4he bedside, ec ivhere the peddler lay in a deep sleep. One of the voung men drew out a tl tnife, and while the father held the ti a as in so as to receive the blood he out st he poor victim's throat from ear to ear. ? A slight, half audible groan, and all tl vas still, save the cautious movement )f the party engaged in the fatal deed, ai rhey had brought in with them a large lit tack, into which they thrust the unre- ai listing body. The poor woman lay si- oi ently in her bed, fearing that her turn vould come next She heard low motorings among the men, from whioh she ioon gathered that they should murder ler too, as they feared she might have si t in her power to betray them. One of BC hem said he was sure that she was fast m isleep, and there was no occasion to rouble themselves; but to make sure of " his "being the case one came to her bed- tr dde with the candle in his hand and the & >ther with a knife. She kept her eyes a. slosed as if in sleep, and haa such com- n< >lete command over herself as not to >etray in her oountenance any sign that 01 he was conscious of what was going on. iE Che candle was passed close to her eyes, 0i ho knife was drawn close to her throat, tl ihe never winked or showed by anv tl novement of her features or of limb sc hat she apprehbnded danger. _ So the cl nen whispered that she was so soundly isleep that nothing was to be feared 01 rom lier, and went ont of the room, re- si noving the sack which contained the pi x>dy qf the murdered man. ct How long must that night of horrors w rnve seemed to that poor lone woman I if EIoW frightful were the stillness and its it larkness. cl The presence of mini which had so w istonishingly enabled her to act a part \[ \o which she owed her life, sustained tl ler through the trying scenes which 01 the had yet to pass. She did not hurry ei 'rom her room at an unusually earlv tl lour, but waited until she had heard all r he family astir for some time; she then tl vent down nnd said she had overslept tv lerself, in oonsequence of being greatly hi ;ired. tl She asked where the peddler was, tt ind was told that he was in too great a rt lurry to wait for her; but that he left k: tixpenoe to pay for her breakfast. r( She sat down composedly to that neal, and foroed herself to take with an ipparent appetite of the food set before w ler. w She appeared unoonscions of the " syes whioh, with deep scanning, were B 'astened upon her. gi vm __ if. 1 .U. a. vvuen uie inem who uver one ii/ua m. eave of the family, and went on her tl vay without the least appearance of sc iiscomposure or mistrust. She had ri proceeded but a short way when she ki vas joined by two strapping looking Tomen. One look was sufficient to convince her that they were young men, ci md one thought to assure her that she m vae yet in their power and on the very gi rerge of destruction. tj They walked by her side, entered into ,u >onversation, asked her where she was a roing, and told her that their road was he same way ; they questioned her as o where she had lodged the night be- m: ore, and made minute inquiries about p? he family occupying the wayside inn. ier answers were quite unembarrassed, J* tnd said the people of the house had to ippeared to be decent and civil, and lad treated her very well. J For two hours the men continued by ier side conversing and watching her in vith most scrutinizing glances at any " ihange in her countenance, and asking th juestions which, had sho not been fully n lelf-possessed, might have put her off ier guard. It was not till her dreaded th lompanions had left her, and till she ** aw her husband coming along the it: oad to meet her that she losl her selfommand which she had so successfully 'zeroised, and throwing herself into his irms, fainted away. j. Wholesale Murder. Two negroes stole some hogs from ?tn )r. Eagle, a farmer in Ouaehita eouny, Arakansas. On missing bis hogs g? ^agle and three others started in puruit, ovartook the party, and arrested , hem. During the night the negroes <> scaped and reported that they had been stacked by En-Elux. They raised t vj >osse of about thirty negroes and start d after the Eagles, overtook them, dlled three of the party and wounded he fourth. The Sheriff of Ouachita j ounty summoned a posse of fifty men ,nd went in pursuit j When a traveler, seeing a driver fold n extraordinary comforter round his leek, remarked that he took very good are of himself, the man replied: i ' To be sure i do, sir; what's all the rorld to a man when his wife's a riddyT ? - $ T : * <\ I 'l Importance of Habits In Business, We hare taken occasion to remark, ys the N. Y. Ledger, heretofore, or e'incurable nature of the habit o! imbling. A person on whom the habit ice becomes fixed remains a gamblei r life. To this rale the exceptions arc windeed. And habits of baainess which are al id to those of gambling are almost ai curable as. that of gambling proper 'e refer to operating in stocks by de >sitwg a margin on meir vaiue, anc her like kinds of dealing which are, essence, nothing more nor less thai Ming. People who once engage in this son thing are very apt to stiok to it. Th< ason is the same as that which bindi hers, often even against their will, t< imbling; and that reason is the great > intensity of exoitement which sad jcupation affords as oompared with or nary business. And the uncertainties of steck-gam ling are hardly less than those wniol tend gambling with cards. Howeve oh stock-gamblers may at times be ime, they almost certainly fail in th< ?urse of their adventuresome career. Individuals think they can do differ ltly from what any one has ever dom jfore; that they can operate in stock ist long enough to make a fortune, an< ten quit. Fatal delusion ! As wel ight a miller boast that he alone ooulc y about a lamp, enjoying the bright laze, but running no risk of ever goin( ?r enough to get his wings scorched he time for confirmed gamblers eve irmanently to leave off gambling neve >mes. The fate which awaits stook-gambler is been distinctly shown during tb cent monetary crisis. Men so rich i iw weeks ago that it was thought the; ere sure to remain rich for life, art dw insolvent Others considered well h!o have been reduced to the verge o stual want There is, it is true, a great deal of ex toment in such an existenoe, but *it omenta of exhilaration are more thai mnterbalanced by its days, months id often years of anxiety and suffering isappointment follows disappoint ent and the wearing effect produce armature old age, er, in many cases irly death. Added to all this, and abovo all, i le consideration that it is an oocupa on destitute of principle?one in whicl eady success?which is never possibli -would not afford any lasting satisfac on. Think of these things, young men id remember that your only safet; es in never beginning a course of haz dous speculation, and either nomina virtual gambling. Get Strong Harness ana hiu. Considering the lives of those wh t behind horses often .depend on th inndness of a bit or a strap, it is re arkable how little attention is paid t te condition of harness bj those wh nat themselves, not only in Strang images, bnt also in their own vehicles n English journal, devoted to the hai 388 trade, after observing that scarce ' a day passes without the oocnrreno I an accident arising from a bit break g while in the horse's mouth, point it that there are three ways of makini lese bits: One is to forge ther iroughout of the toughest iron or o >ft steel; the other is to use oas >eeks, and forge the mouthpieoes bile the third is to cast them through it. The first is the only method tha lould be followed, but buyers will no ly the prioes asked, and manufacturer mnot afford to sell them for less. Th rought mouth is the next best, an< the oheek has been properly annealed makes a most serviceable bit. Cas leeks, however, are not always trust orthy, and the manufacturer is a kely to be deceived in this respect a te buyer. The cast bit is one tha lght never to be used. Harness-naak s should inform their customers o te quality of the article, and leave th tsponsibilitv with the buyers. If fo te sake of the difference in price * be reen two kinds a man chooses to risl is life by using the poorer bit, neitlie te harness-maker nor the bit-man ufac irers should be blamed. The bit an< tins should always be of the strongea ind, no matter what the merits of th tst of the harness. Boswell once asked Johnson if ther as no possible circumstonce unde hioh suicide would be justifiable No," said Johnson. " Well," sail oswell, "suppose a man had bee nilty of fraud, and that he was certai: > be found out." "Why, then," wa te reDlv. "in that case let him eo t >me country where he is not known id not to the devil, where he i uown." A SOVKKKIOS UAU1I in be found In that groat and reliable tamll ediclne ALLEN'S LUNO BALSAM, f the nee of which healt h and happinttt le reitore thoee afflicted with auj Lung or Throat dleeaai ich aa: tight, Cold*, Asthma, Bronchitis, Contumptiot UNSOLICITED EVIDENCE OF ITS MBBIT8. bead -tan rouewus: Da. A. L. SCOVILL li the Inventor of eeveri edlcal preparation* wbtch have become ver ipular, and have been liberally need. Among hi ventlon* are " Hall'* Baliam for the Lnng*,,ran Ltverworth and Tar." For the patt ten year* tter remedy ha* been offered to the public. He* e following letter from Dh. SCOVILL referrln It: lias. J. N. Harris a Co.: Vents?I make the following ctatement from irfect conviction and knowledge of the benefit* < ixait's Lugo Balsam in curing the moil deei ated Pulmonary Consumption: I have wltne?*e i effect* on the young and the old, and 1 can trul y that it 1* by far the belt expectorant remed ith which I am acquainted. For Cough*, and a e early Itage* of Lung Complaint*, I believe I be a certain cure, and if every family would kee by tbem, ready to adminliter upon the flrit at arance of dlieaie about the Lung*, there woul very few caae* of fatal consumption. It came e phlegm and matter to raiie without Irrltattn o*e delicate organ* (the Lung*), and wtthou odticlng comtlpatlon of the bowel*. It alio give rongth to the *y*tem, atop* the nlght-aweati d change* all the morbid accretion* to a health it*. Tour*, reipectfully, A. L. SCOVILL. " IT SAVED MT LIFE." Columbia, Ala., March 8,1878 N. Harris a Co.: lisar Sirs?I am taking Allw'* Ltrwo Balaam fa llieaie of tbo Lungs of thirteen year* etaadlui lave u*ed every remedy offered, and thl* 1* th ly remedy that ha* given me any relief. I kno' sav d my life last spring. At that time 1 oon Biued using tt, and reclved Immediate relle topped on my long* In ten hour*. You are I rfect liberty to publiah thl* letter, for the hem of suffering humanity, and with reipect, I remain, Toure truly, D. D. POOL. Inch, my infferlng friend*, are the letter* recels dally, and do you doubt fbr a moment the efflci of thl* valuable medicine. Be In time, and tah your home a bottle of Allxm'* Lumq Baxbaj iu will find In It a glorlon* prize, and a nevei lllngr friend In time of neea. CAUTION. Be not deoelved, Oil tor ALLHN'B LCNO lil lV, and take no other. Direction* accompany each bottle. J. H. HAKRIB A CO., Cincinnati, a, PBoruiTone. ror tale by all Medicine Dealer*. ron Liu vHOLsaaLa rr HN f. HtNBY, New Tork. SO. 0. GOODWIN ? CO., Boetrtn. iHWOK. HOLOWAT A CO.. PhUaJolphU. Beet and Oldest Family Medlelae^-Bii r better for the workmen who have served 1 faithfully many years. Safes can thus be obtained this winter at a very great t discount?forty per cent from the usual ? rates. i > Tub Latest Tbiukphof Tzxpkhixcb. - ?We oongratulate the Temperanoe i world on the sucoees everywhere at. tending the. use of Vhooab Bittebs, Certainly no preparation containing - alcohol has accomplished snoh cures of i malarious fever, biliousness, dyspepsia, r rheumatism, lung oomplaiuts. consti - pation, and general debility, u we hear t a of from all quarters, as the results of \ this famous vegetable specific. No true , - philanthropist will regret to see spirit- ' a nous liquors expelled from medical use, j s if they can be safely dispensed with ; 1 and that ther are not necessary in any < 1 oase of sickxraes, whatever its character, 1 appears at last to have been demont strated, If publio opinion is capable I of making any impression upon the . minds of the Faculty, they will ere long i r introduce the moet popular of modern r medicines into the hospitals, and pre* ! scribe it in their practioe. The millions b have given the article a fair trial; it has e more than answered their expectations, 1 a and no theoretical opposition Neuralgia, etc. The best, the surest, and the | . quickest remedy for all Bowel Complaints. Be8 uef guarranteeaor the money refunded.?Cora. 1 Peerless Cloth YTrJjirer. ' L. Heyniger & Co., 18 Fulton Street, New * York.?[Com. b For loss of Appetite. Dyspepsia, In* , digestion, depression of Spirits ana General Debility, in their various farms, Fraso-phos. fhobatzd Elixir of Calmata made by Caswtll, Hazard & Co., New York, and sold by r all dm jurists, is the best tonic. As a stimulant i tonio for patients, recovering from fever or e other sickness, it bee no equal. If taken durIng the eeaeon it prevents fever and ague and other intermittent fevers.?om. ' Wiatab'b Balsam for Bronchitis.?Com. y r Have you ague in the face ; and is it 1 badly swollen ? Have yon severe pain in the chest, back, or side? Have yon cramps or pains in the stomach or bowels ? Have yon biliona colic or severe griping pains ? If so, nse Johnson's Anodyne Liniment internally.? [Com. Inpluenza, Bronchitis, cough, oold and catarrh, yield at once to Halx's Honey i- of Horehound and Tab. . Pike's Toothache Drops cure in one minute. 0 ?[Com. 0 A Consumptive Cured, ? Dr. H. James, while experimenting, accidentally made I. a preparation of Cannabis lndica, which cured w his only child of Consumption. This remedy is .. now for sale at first-class Druggists. Try it: prove it for yourself. Price $2.60. Send 6 stamp for circular. Craddoek A Co., proprie> tors, 1032 Race St.. Philadelphia, Pa.?Com. s ? a Butter and cheese are almost indis* q pensable articles of food. Properly need, thoy , are nutritious and healthy; but an inordinate * nse of either causes indigestion and dyspepsia, t Parsons' Purgative Puis, Judiciously used, ; will remove both of these troubles.?[Com. 1 Cristadoro's Excelsior Hath Dn is . the most euro and complete preparation of its kind in the world; its effects are magical, its 8 character harmless, its tints natural, its qualie ties enduring.?Com. , THIRTY YEARS' EXPERIENCE OF t * AN OLD NURSE, r MR8. WINBLOW'S SOOTHINO 8TRCP IB THE g PRESCRIPTION OF one of the beat Female Phyils elane and Nnreee In the United Statee, and haa a bean mod far thirty yeara with nayar falllns eafety and iDcceii by millions ef mother* and children '* from the feeble infant of one week old to the ad nit " It oorrecti acidity of the etomach, relieve* wind B collo, regulate* the bowele, and give* reet, health r and comfort to mother and child. We believe It to . be the Beat and Bnreat Kenedy in the World In all caaeeof DYSBNTRBY and DiaRRHCEA IB CH1L' DBKB, whether It arleei from Teething or from r any other oanee. Full direction* for oelng will aooompany each bottle. Bone Genuine nnlee* the I- fao-eimlle of CURTIS A P1BKIBB li on theoutelde a 'wrapper. ^ SOLD BY ALL MEDICINE DBALKBB. n CHILDIIKB OFTEN LOOK PALE AMD 8 SICK from no other eanee than having worm* In the e etomach. T BKOWB'B VBBXIPUOB C0HF1TB , will deetroy worm* without Injury to the child, j being perfectly WH1TB, and free from all coloring or other lnjorlona Ingredient* oaually need In " worm preparatlone. ' Q CChTIS A BBOWB, Proprietor*, 8 Bo. 3115 Pulton Street, Bew York. 0 Hold by Drtu/gitii and Ckamittt, and daalari In 1 Mtd.cintt at Tw??tt-Fiv Cun a Bon. B THK HOUSEHOLD PANACEA a*D KA.niLY LINIBENT I* the beat remedy in the world for the following complaint*, via.: Cramp* lo the Limb* and Storny ach, Fain In the Stomach, Bowel* or Side, Rheametlem In all It* form*, Blllou* Colic, Benralgla j Cholera, Dytentery, Cold*, Fleth Wound*, Barn*, *, Bore Throat, Spinal Complaint*, Sprain* and Brnltee, Chill* and Fever. Vor Internal and Xxternal nie. It* operation I* not only to relieve the patient, bnt entirely removee the came of the complaint. It oenetrate* and pervadee the whole yetem, re il e to ring healthy action to all 1U parts, and qulck7 entng the blood. .1 Ths Household Panacea la purely Vsail stable and All Healing, a Prepared by d CCRTI8 A BROWN, No. Ml ft Pulton Street, New York, ftor tale by all Drngglet*. *??52??. | A Couoh, Celd, Bore Throat BRONOHIAL . ,, . y- rnnrnrt Requires Immediate attention, and d xurZk. j should be Checked. If allowed to 7 nrtAntrti Icontinue Irritation of the Lunge, a jr OODUH8 (Permanent Throat Affection or an 11 and Incurable Lung Dleeaee, It often it GOLDS. ithe result. 5 BROWN'S BRONOHIAL TROCHES I Having a direct Influence on the parts, give Inn e- ' 9 dlats relief. Por Bronchitis, Asthma, Catarrh, I ' Consumptive and Throat Diseases, Troches are used with great success. 9 scfokrs and public speakers Will And Troches useful In clearing the voice when taken before flinging or Speaking, and relieving the throat after an nnnsnal exertion of the vocal organ e. Obtain only " Brown's Bronchial Trochee," and do not take any of the worthless Imitations that '* may be offered. Sold Evtrywhert. e Ths Lrsos are Strained and Becked by a perw sletent Congh, the general etrrngth waited, and i- an Incurable complaint eetabliehed thereby. Dr. L Jayne's Expectorant le an effective remedy for A Conske and Colde, and exert* a beneficial effect on h the Pulmonary and Bronchial Organs. CUSHINa'S MANUAL OF PARLIAMENTARY PRACTICE. Rulei of proceeding and debsts In deliberative assemblies. An indttptntablt hand-bonk for tvory member of a dtlibirative body, and the authority In all lb* States. " Tb* most anlhOTltattv# expounder of American parliamentary law."?Che*, tinner. Price, ? cent*. Bunt i>; mm on mmpi 01 pnrg ? Addreee TBOMPBOH.BBOWird 00., Boiton.Maa* t)ft? >R,'h 1}' u rot in ?im1 oi irnuo. KaS8 IUlS iJV knt .If ?you are Ma* and **J wish to make money, addre?a, Bcuuua Poaraau Tuu Co.. ?i. Louta. IK |A |On per day i Agent! wanted I All elaaaa Ml ItU ofworking people ofeltherieu, young or old, makamore money at work tor ? in their are moment! or all the time than aj anything alaa Particular* free. AddlUM 0. BTDTBOB A 00., Pot (land. Me. I "QTTCTVCCKI Bnterprlitnf young and r JD U {3111 CiOV% njlddie-aaed man aad wo I men amhitlhu^to makc^a luccceeful ?tartlu hurt# )r. Turner's Guide to Heal Oirlog all ad Tie* ?Mm>r Hi mrr on* ltaah Ddiltiia cf any kind, married or eub la bed ; tend 60 raata for aampla c?PT to Dr. L Washington Amuse, at. loo la. Mo. r 1.1 Mm i co, 'onduct an Agency tor th* reception of ad tvrttae aenu for Aiomicair Xnamrara*?the moat com 4ete eatabliahment of the kind In th* world. 81; houaand Xrwnmt ar* kept regularly on file pen to inepeotlon by customers. Xo reading-room lowrrer ertnplcte, ror?1?ea one-twentieth of thl lumber, fiver+ Advcrtiecnmt 1* taken at th lome price of the pep.T, wltlurst any additions harge or commission, ao that ah afircfuaer, In deal og v.ith the Agency, la saved trouble and ecrreapon lence, making one contract lnatead of a dolen, i inndrad or a thousand. A Book of eighty pagea ontainlng bats of beat papers, largest circulations ellgloua papers, agricultural papers, daaa papers wUtical papers, dally papers, country papers, mags Inea and all publications, with aome Informatioi .bout prioaa, la sent FREE to any addrasa on appb atloo. Persona at a distance washing to maha con note for advertising in any town, city, county Itate or Territory of the United fttmtea, or any por Ion of th* Dominion at Canada; may aend a ooncia tatement of what they want, together with a copy o eoflve information by return mall which will enabl hem to decide whether to increase, reduce or foreg he order. Por euch Information there is no Chart rhalever. PnbUahera not only send their files frw >ut pay Messrs. Geo. P. Bowaix * Co. for their aei rices. Orders are accepted for a tingle paper aa we a for a larger Hat; for a tingle dollar at readily a ore larger turn. Address the Amerioen Hrwepap* idvertlalng Agency. 11 Park Row,N.T |OK Per Dap Commission or >30 a wee ISalary, and tsptnttt. We ofer it and wt pay it. Apply qpw. O. WM1U A CG.. Marion, ( FOR HONEST MMWOMH Irery where. ffiO to $18 per Weak. Bo In terra i Hon to ordinary bualneit. Aaeren Box 2864, CI1 PUTBATI, P. 0? OHIO. Ol Q a day guarantied to Agents. O. M. Sou. IJ7.I. O rax a ')<>,? St. Pan! Btratt.Btmmors.Mi PHESICH STAMPING MATRRIALS, I r any eoantity. Complete working tampU* aei Tree. W. J. OU?*lBk, Park Hotel. Kew To>hClt: THIS PRUITDT& IKSTKSrrj Harper'* Buildings. H. T. It li for tale by V. 1 Newspaper Prion, 180 Worth Straat. la to lb. at 86 lb. packaget. Alto a fall assortment ef Job Ink " SECRET OP SUCCESS IN WALL ST. V pages. Bulls. Bears. Proflts on puts and call coating $10 to $100. Mailed for stamp br Vatentti rumbrldge A Co., Banker*, Broker*,* Wall St jr.' "WTom**,Men,Girls and Boya wanted .to tell ot it Prtncn and American Jswtlry .Books.Oaatt Ac. Bo capital needed. Catalogue, Terms, do. ,eei free. P. O. TiriKBT a CO., Augutta, Me. THE GREAT REMEDY FOR CONSUMPTION which can be cured by a timely resort to this standard preparation, as has been proved by the hundreds of testimonials received by the proprietors. It is acknowledged by many'prominent physicians to be the most reliable preparation ever introduced for the relief and 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 cases of Coughs, Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping Cough, T n A _il lmiuenza, iitjtnma, vuius, Soro Throat, Pains or Soreness in the Chest and Side, Liver Complaint, Bleeding at the Lungs, &c. "Wistar's (Balsam does not dry up a Cough, and leave the cause behind, as is the case with most preparations, but it loosens and cleanses the lungs, and allays irritation, thus removing the cause of the complaint. ' PBSPABXD BT BETH W. POWLE 4 80N8, Boston, Mass., And old by DnunrUU and Dealer* gtsxnlly. RICH FARMING LANDS FOR SALE VERY CHEAP THE BEST INVESTMENT I No Fluettiationj! Alvaji Improving in Vain The Wealth of the Country Jo made by the Advanet in Real MiM. NOW IS THE TIME ! Million* of acre* of th? flnett land* on the Con nent. In BASTXBN NEBRASKA, now for ink many of them nottr Mart in marktt?nt prle** U OBIT COMPETITION. Fir* and T*n Tsars Orsdil Oirtn, with later* at Six per Oen:. The Land Grant Bond* of the Company taken par for land*. They can now he purchased at U'Se dlaooont. Bull part.rular* riven, new Onide with < iwMi mailed free, by ad*re**tng O. P. DAVIS, Land Commiuiontr V. P. R. R. Omaha. Hi ON O A A HhCH WEEK?AGENTS WANTB i Boalne** lefltlmate. Particol* free. J. WORTH, Lonl*. Mo. Box I MS Thea-Nectai Bmh *be^wwa ^n*7law gwaicwwiWTia^The he*t Tea Iaaported. S sale everywhere. And for u /AHH Z wholeiale only by the GBBi OT litVfl ATLANTIC *PACINIC TEAC SndMSttll Eo. m Pulton It. d Id 4 Char MeSSD St., New Vorh. P. 9. Boa, tj EP Sen* Rir Thea-Weetar 01 real Q-| K Per Day. 1,000 Afent* wanted. Sei ) ?Ump1n A. H. Blair d Co.. St. Loot*, N GONSUMPTIJDI ?vt | rr oofV'tt Carbolated Cod Liver 0 1? ? ootmbtnottoc of two ven-ksova toe rtMM. Ita theory la ftrat n the lower ranges of * the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califop- ? * nia, the medicinal properties of which - are extracted therefrom without the ass \ of Alcohol. The question is almost a daily asked. "What is the cause of the I unparalleled success of Vinboab Bit* TXMf Our answer is, that tbey remove s the cause of disease, and the patient re* a covers hfe health. They are the great * blood purifierand a life-giving principle, * a perfect Benovator and havigorator of the system. Never before in history of the world has a medicine been ' compounded possessing the remarkable qualities of Vihboah Brmas in heallngthe nek of every disease man is heir to. They are a gentle Purgative ae well as a Tonic, - relieving Congestion or Inflammation of {[ the liver and Visceral Organs, in Biliou 9 Diseases. ^ t The properties of Dr. Walkxb's I Vutegar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic, L Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, ^ f- Sedative. Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Altera- ] - tive. end Anti-Biiioua . .1 j- Unateful Thousands proclaim Vur* - kqak Bitters the most wonderful In- I vigorant that ever sustained the sinking r. system. 7^ r No Person can take these Bitters jp according to directions, and remain long id unwell, provided their bones are not de stroyed by mineral poison or other i' means, and vital organs wasted beyond ? repair.' ^ Bilious. Remittent and Inter* i. mittfnt Fevers, Which are so preva1,1 lent in the valleys of our great rivers - throughout tbe-Unltoci 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 Autuqin, and remarkably so during seasons of unasual heat and dryness, arc invariably accompanied by exteusive 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 I Dr. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitters, as they will speedily remove the darkcolored viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at tbe 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 Vinegar Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of tho Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Pnlpitatation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of tho Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are tbe offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guar&atee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. ^ 1 "WW A T! I tvri |4_ iscroniia, or mug's mil, wmie Swellings," Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial A flections, Old Sores, Eruptions of tho Skin, Sire Eyes, etc. Tn these, as in all other constitutional Diseasos, Walker's Yin boar Bitters have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intractable cases. i For Inflammatory and Chronic / Rheumatism. Gout, Bilious, Remittent nud Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, ? tbe.se Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases.?Persons enfnged iu Paints and Minerals, such as lumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters,' and Miuers, as they advance in life, are anbjeot to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of Waakm's Viwi boar Hitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, ; Pustules, Bolls, Carbuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolofations of the Skin, Humors and Disuses of the Skin of whatever name , or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system in a short time by the use - of these Bitters. I Fin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking irv tho system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. No system of medicine, no venuituges, no an* tholminitics will free the system from worms likn thefiA Bittars. For Female Complaints, in young tt- or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo* manhood, or the turn of life, these Tonio Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible. ' Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you tind its impurities bursting through \ the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstructed and p( 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 D will follow. xi U. II. HcDOXUD & CO.. _ Druggists and Gen. Apt* . 8.1:1 Fmncisoo, California, Mil oor. of Wimhtnglon oinl Churitsn Sis.. N. Y. Mold by oil Druggists unit Drslrra ITIP?Mo SS i, chicago, k milwaukee ? a st. paul $ railway; ? (Milwaukee * t. Paul Railway CeO to. j fcUnein? frtu Chicago to Hilwewbeo, L* Mlnne'apollii. Alto 10 Madtton, Pr?lflt