The tribune. (Beaufort, S.C.) 1874-1876, November 25, 1874, Image 5

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I Farm, Garden and Household. Tht HouewlO. A correspondent commends onions aa a specific against epidemics?not as an esculent, but slioed and kept in a siok room, where they will absorb any atmospherio poison. They should be replaced by fresh ones every honr. It is noticed that in the room of a small-pox patient they will blister and decompose very rapidly, but will prevent the spread of the disease. Their application has also proved effective m the case of snake bites. Fish Rissoles.?Take some fish, either fresh or that has been oooked, shred it, and let it stew with some butter. ooverinar it over nnfcil unfflnionH* done. Soak a roll in milk, beat ttp the fish and this together in a mortar with a little finely-chopped mushroom and three eggs ; season with salt and pepper. Mix all well together; bake in small onps, first battered, and turn out. Serve with or without sauce. Thk Best Way to Serve JRice.?Soak it for some hours in oold water, to -whioh a little salt has been added. Have a stew-pan ready, containing boiling water, into whioh put the rice, and boil briskly for ten minutes. Pour it into a colander, and set it by the fire to drain. The grains will be separated and very large. A good method of keeping potatoes for family use is to paok them in barrels with snn-dried sand, oovering the tope with turf, and keeping them in a dry and cool atmosphere. Then they will neither shrivel nor shrink to any real extent. f onohicaxi Coverlet.?Sheets of brown paper pasted together at the edges and laid over a blanket on the bed will give the warmth of two more bkuxets, and the article, with care, will last a considerable time. Medical Hints. A Cure for Soft oobvh t?;** > kj* of s<'ft linen rag into turpentine, and wrsi it around the soft corn ; wet the cloth in it night and morning, and in a few days the corn will have disappeared ; bat the relief to the throbbing, burning pain, comes almost immediately after the first or seoond application. Wear ootton between the toee and the corns will not reappear. To Remove Stings.?In many oases , - instantaneous relief from the pain can be obtained by pressing upon the plaoe containing the sting with the tnbe of a small key. This extracts the sting, and then a drop of aqua ammonia will neutralise the acidity of the poison, and allay the smart of the wound. A little bit of saleratus moistened and laid over the affected part will also heal it. Court the Sun.?Sleepless people? and there are many in America?should court the Sun. The vory worst soporific is laudanum, and the very best is sunshine. Therefore, it is very plain that poor sleepers should pass as many hours of the day in sunshine and as few as possible in the shade. Many 1 women are martyrs, and yet do not < know it. They shut the sunshine out < of their houses and hearts, they wear i veils, they carry parasols, they do all l that is possible to keep off the subtlest, c and yet most potent infiuenoe, which is t intended to give them strength and c beauty and cheerfulness. , Preserving Vodder. i Corn fodder and oats are preserved 1 fresh by German farmers, with entire < rtlaoafld !? -3 1 ' * ^uio id uuuo ujr cioseiy pacK- ' ing fodder on the roots after they are < pulped and mingled with cut-straw, in ] pits or troughs dug in dry soil, and ] covering the mass with a thick layer of , earth to exclude the air. In this way fresh beet or turnip leayes, green-oorn fodder, olover, lucerne, pulped beets, ] mangels and turnips are perfectly well 1 preserved during a whole year. After 1 being thus stored fermentation sets in and is completed in two months. The food thus preserved goes by the name f sour hay, but it is not sour, being, on the contrary, alkaline from the presence of ammonia. When fed with out straw it is especially valuable as preventing the constipating effeots of the dry food. Stock eagerly consume the fodder, and are kept in heathful condition during the winter season by its use. Among the produots of the fermentation a variety of fatty acids, with 1 V -1 *? -1 " ~ * ouuio ttiuunoi ana oilier car 0t>-hyd rates unusual in fresh fodder, have been detec ted. It contains less water than green fodder, and is therefore to be considered as to that extent a concentrated food. Probably upon dairy farms where fresh food is desirable during the winter and early spring this plan of preserving fodder might be found a valuable addition to our resources. The Proflt of Sheep Balling. N. Q. Abbott, of Vassalsboro, Me., had a mowing field of forty acres oovered with white and yellow daisies, and the grass was killed in many places. He thinned out ten acres of it for sheep pasture and allowed them to feed on it two years. The third year he mowed it and got the heaviest orop of hay that he had aver grown on it even with topdressing. Timothy and red-top came in, and in some places the clover was so heavy that a mowing machine could not be used. What a rush of capitalists there would be, if there was an investment to be made that would pay 60 or 100 per oenfc. Farmers might make just suoh investments in tile draining their lands and saedina fhAm with grapes, with no more manure than they now let ran-to waste. r levlag l??d Oenu . The beat plan, as a general thing, is to select the beat ears at the time of hashing, and spread them on the bam floor, so that the ooba can become thoroughly dry. The old method ol jr leering the husks attached to the oorn, so that it could be braided together, and enepended in a dry and airy plane, brought abont a similar result. In all eases, the corn shonld be kept where it will be free from dampness. Many in saving seed, ere particular to select only from stalks that produoe two large, [ well developed ears. As yon say, oorn is often planted so deep that it will not germinate quickly. If the soil is g 2"* Br?d dry at the time of planting, the flSfc. - > r.Ufr win be apt to sow deeps* than SEWS OF THE DAT. Items of Interest from Home end Abroad Balances in the United States Treasury: Currency, $16,460,1Q1 ; special deposits of legal tenders for the redemption of certificates i of deposit, $53,166,061; ooin, $84,093,000, including $21,067,000 in coin certificates; out- ] standing legal tenders, $383,000,000 Miss Charlotte Cashman bade farewell to the stage at Booth's Theater, New York. Mr. William , Cull en Bryant^ presented tho distinguished actreis with a laurel wreath and Mr. Roberts read a poem by R. H. Stoddard, after which there was a serenade ar the Fifth Avenue Hotel. United States Marshal Solye and T.innlnnenf TT a a ? a ? OVM| V P? A.} WOrG H6IU lO prison for ten d?ya at Vienna, La., for contempt of Court The murder or of Mr. Haber, the German Consul to Japan, baa been beheaded Dr. J. C. Ayer was burned in effigy in the town of Ayer, Maes., which was named after him. In condemnation thereof a numerously-attended citizens' meeting was held, when deprecatory resolutions were- ( passed. Dr. Ayer is the well-known patent medicine man who was an unsucoeeeful candidate for Congress While the funeral of a Mr. Lapauge was being hold at Pa wpaw, Mich, a little son of the deceased wandered to tho river near the house and was drowned. A scientific report received by the United States War Department shows that the Black Hills country is admirably adapted for settlement. It abounds in timber, grass, flowing streams and springs. The soil is of wonderful fertility. No ooal has been found, but iron, i gypsum, and traces -of plumbago and indications of gold in the Boil near Harvey's Peak as well as in quartz in considerable quantities.... The difficulty between China and Japan has been amicably arranged. China agrees to pay an indemnity of 500,000 taels, in consideration 1 of wliioh the Japanese troops are to be with- i drawn from Formosa Over six hundred i of tho laborers on the Delaware, Lackawanna j and Western tunnel, Hoboken, struck] against i a reduction of 10 per cent, on their wages..... | Goldsmith Maid failed in her two efforts to i beat her best time, 2:14, in Philadelphia. She made the first mile in 2:21}, and the seqond in t 2:18} The New Orleans Committee of ] Seventy request the President to withdraw the j troops from that State Joseph Bosenstell, | who lived in the upper story of 413 East t Thirteenth street, executed an oft-repeated f threat of murdering his wife by enticing her ( to the roof Of the bnildinc than th.??. ber off. She waa instantly killed. i tub famine in Asia Minor oontinnee. The Khedive of Egypt has sent corn to the die- i treeeed districts Full returns now in c place Mr. Gaeton'a majority for Governor of 1 Massachusetts at C,CJ>e During special t servioes in the French Parish Church at I Montreal, an alarm of lire was given, when the j large congregation made a rash for the doors. I Fully 300 people were trampled under foot and \ many were fatally injured Some sopho- d mores of Bates College, Lewistown, Me., so si shamefully abused a frashman in a hazing ri bout that ho may die of his injuries Near c Plkinfleld, Conn., a boy 12 years old shot his tt brother, aged two years, dead on the spot, and ai grounded his sister fatally. The deed wan 7 lone with an old gun which was left loaded in p he bedroom Mrs. Harriett Barrett, a g -eepeotable widow, hanged herself in Keene, x f. H., with a skein of yarn. She was a hypo- at ihondrlac Prof. A. B. Smith, ex-President g >f the* Arksansas Valley Collegiate Institute, ^ lays there are fully 40,000. people in Kansas w ind Nebraska who are either now or shortly viii be in absolute want of the neceesariee of n ife, and he earnestly appeals, not only to the w utizens of St. Louis, but to the people of the ^ vhole country, to send them aid in the shape tt it provisions and clothing, and as speedily as x xseaible. A carpenter at Pawtucketville, j Mass., died from the effects of a bite of a pig 3 received a week before. ? Mr. Semmes, an engineer in Washington, m while oiling some machinery, got the sleeve of tl iiis right arm entangled between two large C cog wheels, and was at onoe drawn in by the ii revolution of the same. Seeing his danger, a n fellow workman seized him by his body and tl held him with such power that his arm was it wrenched off at the shoulder Fred. Egner tl made a full oonfession of the murder and o roasting in a furnace of Herman Schilling in Cincinnati He said that Itnfer proposed the F murder, and his father and himself assisted. 1 They beat the victim over the head with clubs first, and then the sldor Egner stabbed him twice in the abdomen with a five-pronged stable fork. It was then proposed to throw the body in a vat in the tanyard; but they ? feared being found out, and they dragged the body to a furnace and shoved it in, where it ? was found burned to a horrible crisp j The printers of the United States, by a resolu- ? tion of the International Typographical Union, ? have been engaged for some time past in i, raising a fund for the purpose of ereoting a E statue of Horace Qreeley. They now say that r full steps have been taken to carry eut the e work Diphtheria is alarmingly increasing a in Hew York and Brooklyn The whole X vote of Massachusetts foots up as follows: 0 Gaston, 95,901; Talbot, 89,913; Andrews c (labor reform), 100. Gsston's plurality over ? Talbot, 6,658; Gaston's majority, 6,658. The i total vote is 185,244?over 58,000 over last r year's, when Washburn had 82,183 to 59,360 0 for Gaston?and bnt 7,406 short of the Preei- ? dential vote in 1872, when Grant had 74,212 a majority. Of the 53,601 additional votes a 86,541 went to Gaston, while Talbot had bnt t 17,060 more than Washburn. e Thirty-three members of the Council-General of France have adopted a resolution recommending the establishment of a system of 4] gratuitous secular sohools for primary lnstruo- il Uon in the city of Paris, attendance upon F which shall be obligatory. The resolution has r been presented to the Permanent Committee of the Assembly for consideration.. A bill 7 has passed the Oregon Senate which provifes jj that husbands and wires without children may f be considered divorced by simply rise sing to a live together Ambrose Lepine, Kiel's * Adjutant-General, is to b? banged on the 29th " of January...,..Dr. M. A. Shield, a young ? and promising physician of Hampton, Va., committed suicide by poisoning. No cause is t assigned for the act. He leaves a wife and two ohtldren In his message to the Arkan- C mm Legislature. Governor Batter said that the State had no idea of repudUting any of its 0 jnst debts......The small-pox attll prevails in C Montreal.'.... .The strike of the eoal miners of St. Clair county, 111., continues, and apprehension is felt- that trouble will ensue u The political complexion of the next Legist*- J tore of New Jersey will eland as follows: * Bcrrte. M Republicans to a Democrats < tl I ?& S. & < House, 19 Republicans to 41 Democrats; majority on Joint ballot, 17. Both houses will ] be convened on the second Tuesday in January next George Bufer made a full confession in the jail of his complicity in the murder of I Herman Schilling at Cincinnati, and gave a j sickening detail of the horrid deed from the ] first blow on the head to stabbing him in the bowels with a pitchfork. They crammed the body into the furnace to conceal the crime. The majority for the Constitutional amendments in New York State was very large. The lowest majority on any of tho propositions is likely to exceed 100,000, while on the provision restricting special legislation the majority will reach, and may evon exoeed 450,000. Tho amendment increasing the pay of members, and that on State appropriations, will have tho smallest majority, yot the majority for both of those, from present indications, will reach 100,000or more..... .The execution of three men, for the crime of murder, took place in Pennsylvania the same day. W. E. Udderzook was hanged for the murder of W. S. Goes, his brother-in-law, under peculiar circumstances. A life policy for $25,000 was taken out on Goes' life, with the intent to defraud the insurance companies. Goes disappeared, and, it is said, that growing restless under restraint by which ho was kept by his friends, he threatened to expose the plot, and was murdered. He was executed at Weat- * cbeeter, Penn., death ending by strangulation, J and the murderer Buffering severely. O'Mara ? and Irving were hanged at Montrose, Penn., for the murder of the mother and Bister of the J. former. The crime for which they have just Buffered tho extreme penalty of the law was t brutal in the perpetration and monstrous in it the motive that prompted it, presenting ? O'Mara in the unnatural light of the murderer * of an aged mother and invalid sister, in order a that he might be relieved from the responBi- ^ bility of supporting them. The oiroumstances v of the case aro familiar to all. The bodies of ~ the poor women after the murder where taken in an ash cart to the railroad track and left 4 there in a ditch. The track made, as the bodies were dragged along, was plainly to be seen. Blood was found in the house, on the way to the track, and in and about the cart. O'Mara made a confession of the murder, [rving denied having actively participated in It, but acknowledged being present. At 10:30 die signal was given, the weights dropped, S ind both victims wero jerked upward about r teven feet, and then fell to within two and v i half feet of the ground. They died very b tasily, both being pronounced dead in ten 1 ninutes. I A most disastrous inundation has occurred ] it the village of Mayari, Cuba, which was ' iverfloodod for forty houra. Nearly all the louses within its limits wero destroyed, en- j ailing much suffering and destithtion to turn e from remote oounties. heretofore J >artly estimated, make it oertain that McDiil, " tepublican, is elected in the Eighth District of Wisconsin. This leaves the Congressional elegation of the State standing, Bepublicans ix and Democrats two The Hon. Har- "I son Q. Bice, a late Democratic candidate for J ocgross in Indiana, is preparing to contest te election ef the Hon. Morton C. Hunter, ad has secured the servioes of the Hon. D. W. uorhees and Judge Carlet-on, of that city, to roseoute the case The latest advices from j hiva Bay there is complete anarchy there. J urcomana refuse to obey the Khan, who immoned his council, which declared that hi van autonomy was a fiiction, and that the d of Rami* for the maintenance of order as indispensable. From Oct. 1 to Nov. 5, two hundred ohm of diphtheria were sported in Brooklyn, eighty-four of which ere fatal In the Episcopal Convention A I Burlington, N. J., on the fifteenth ballot re Rev. John Scarborough, D. D., Rector of rinity Church, Pittsburgh, Pa., was eleoted ishop by a vote of 31 to 53 of the clergy and 6 to 60 parishes A. German named Kraler, living in Cheshire. Conn., beat his wife uth a club, while both were intoxicated, so j bat she died United States Postmasterieneral Jewell emphatically disclaims intendig to reoommend any increase in the present ites of postage. On the contrary, he thinks be letter postage should be reduced whenever ; shall he found possible to materially diminish | be expenditures for carrying the mails witbut depriving the public of existing facilities. A team of horses ran aw^y near West ' oint, N. Y., killing a cavalryman named leyer. Let Us Consider. ? Since the introduction of distilled pirits in the sixteenth century, they sve been habitnally prescribed as emedie's. We know that aloohol, in 11 its forms, is pernicious to health. w Lnowing these things, and that under he system of treatment whioh includes ui heir use, the mortality among the siok 5', s, and ever has been, enormous, is it > tot worth while to try the effect of a emedy whioh oombines in their highat excellence the qualities of a tonic, n alterative and a regulator; contains to mineral bane or murderous alkaloid >r alcoholic poison ; does its ourative ffice without pain, and with uniform ertainty? Dr. Walker's Vinegar Biters fulfills all these conditions, and is iow effecting the most extraordinary ures in oases where every "speoifio >f the faculty has ignomimously failed. Consider, in view of these faots, whether ,ny siok person is justified by reason nd common sense in declining to test he virtues of this undeflled and irreistible remedy.?Com. Consumption, tie neourge of the haman family, may in ta early atagee be promptly arreeted and ermanently oared. Batkkbwooo, W. Va., Oct. 28th, 1872. hr. B. V. Pierce : Sir? For the laet year I have been using onr Golden Medical Discovery. I owe my fe to it, having been afflicted for years. Did lotnse it bat a short time before I was bene- m ited ; at that time I was very bad, not able to It up much, was suffering greatly with my t] hroat, was getting blind, bad a dry ocragh, r ad much pain in my longs. I have used c| welve bottlee of the Discov ery and am almost ]j relL Kan T. Waaowxm. " A eon of Mr. J. H. Meseek, of Chatham Foot 8 Jorners, N. ?., has been cored of Oonsnmp- ? ion by Dr. Pieroe's Golden Medical Disoovery M -so says Mr. O. B. Can field, editor of the e JtuUham Courier. J 8. R. Eglar, druggist, of West Union, O., V rritea to state that Dr. Pierce's Gol Un Medi- b al Disoovery has effected a wonderfdl cure of lonsumption in his neighborhood.?Com. a It is so hard to get a linen oollar S ashed and ironed so as to look well. We ?: dviae every gentleman to boy tbe Improved farwick. Its looks better than any iinan / oUar, fits splendidly. and keeps clean longer fc ban any other. Try it,?Com. i*v.\ t " t i The poorest income on which a married conplo oan Live is inoome-patibility. Sent free, on reoeipt of neck and breast measure, height, weight and prioe, our [sample) " Model $2 Shirt." Fitted by patented model. Stylish and snbetantial. Address Modol Shirt Co., 31 South 8th St., Philadelphia. ?Oom. VKUKTABLK PULMONARY BALSAM! Most approved, reliable and well-known remedy ror Coughs,Colds A Consumption. Get (As Genuine. Price ?1; small 60c. CTTTLKE BBOS. A CO.. Bostoo. The Prettiest Woman la New York, Miss K , well known In oar fashionable soolsty ror her dittingut appesrsnoo and beautiful complexion, was once a sallow, rough-skinned girl, chagrined at fca* sad, freckled tape. She pitched Into Hegan's Magnolia Balm, and la now as pratty In complexion as she is charming In manners, rhlt article overcomes freckles, tan, sallownass, moth-patches, ring-marks, etc., and makes one look ten years yonnger than they are. Magnolia Salm for e transparent complexion, and Lyon'* ftathalron to make the hair plentiful. luxuriant, 10ft and delicate, have no rival*. The Kathalron prevent* the heir from turning grey, erndlontee tend raff, end i? the beet end cheapest dreeelng in he world. Damned toy Feint Prelie.- Jee. Btekmen, ilergyman of New Tork, wee reoently bedly kicked 17 e bone, end wee * peed Uy cured by nelng the elebreted Mexican Mneteng Liniment. When he proprietor eiked him tor e certlflcete, he retiled thet he " coneldored It e remerkeble ertiole, K^it wouldn't en ewer for him to indorse e emedy In print." Here's consistency. But we idnt kick him ei the horse did. The world nowe thet for Kheumetlim, Bruises, Bwelllnge. peyln, Scretohee, Inflemmetlon, Leoenen or ny flesh, bone or motels ailment upon men or nlmal.tbere Is nothing like the Mustang Llnllent. It eoets but 60 cte. end $1.(1) per bottle, end bould be In every family. It la wrapped In a fine teel-plete label, end signed " 0. W. Weatbrook, hemUt." ' Tonic end Recuperent Plantation niters.--The constantly lncrsestng patronage which t receive* bee, it Is trns, exolted the petty envy f certain splenetic advertisers of pinchbeck anaceas, who hope to make a market for their wn stagnant, watery wares, by decrying all plrituoue medicinal preparations. Bat the pubc can stomach neither their arguments nor tnelr otatlons, and consequently rejeot these very reak Imitations of the enemy as entirely to thin I My I??ver Straw and Stalk Cutter, $8 00 and $10.00, I f in^r onta 20 to 60 bushels per H hour. Don't pay till you IL I have tried it en your w II Tii.l farm and like it. .1U. Bend B oents In postage far Circular*. 1 WiHBEH OA.LB. Chlcopee Palls. Mm. IEW ASTHMA REMEDY. n*rl*( *trn((M twvety reere tetweenl I to and dp.lh wun A3 or -11131''. ' "P")* 1 nwnwt myMl f bj oon,po?Odl*? r?b mmd btrbe. ?cd iDhdling the Medlslo. ttiu* obtained. I fbrtunetHy diseoTerod % rooet wonderftil riuii ly tod J sure cart for Atthme *ul iu kindred dlmiri ] Warranted ?o reUere ike aerrrrti paroxjra in- l tently, no the patient eaa lie down to rest end lr*n comfortably. Drofgliu are enpplled with ; ample package* for rave distribution. Cell end grt one, or address D. LAHGBLL, Apple Croak, ( lie. Soldb7 drucsuu. Frlce for fttUeUe pnckece.il.? Agents Wanted for i a n 17 n T' R wtEsjasss.1; ! JT U 1 XI \S S D have Just received news 1 " " of the fact that the great 1 TTTomABV Btateeman, and Hletort- I itlolUiVX an. had jut completed 1 this Important work be- 1 OP fore his death, the MB. 1 #t#?Va 1?k 1 ?-- * VI ??u TUI. DDlXJg now ! pm Iq the h&nds of the Paris Lj'VQ Tl OO pobllahera. Wi u< now I tr X CVliiV'y*? taanlng the work In i ' ami-monthly part a, at l m M ota. per part. i Su I II1 It la one of the moat i ~w V aaperb apednaena of ] book making ever pnb- ( MAGNIFICENT llahed lu amerloa Vltat mnumril/Crai cta? canraaalng agenta I antetfln ererr part of a lliistrations??CTf.^?? KsTK.S <fc LtURI/VT, 143 W aalili?Ktoi? 81 reel, Boat on. MARVIN'S SAFE GO. | lum and Dry Plaster, Fire 1 and Bnrglar Proof ; SAFES, absolutely free from Dampness i and Corrosion. j MANUFACTURED ONLY BY I Vlarvin's Safe Co., i 265 Broadway, New York. 721 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. I SFHEFST OR FITS A BUR* CURE for this distressing oomplaint la >w made known In a Traatiae (of as ootavo pagas) i Foreign and Native Herbal Preparation*, pub- J shed by Dr. O. PHItH BUWf. The prescription | aa dlsoovsred by btm In anoh a providential aoner that he oannot conscientiously refuse to < ake It known, aa It has oared everybody who bas ted it for Fits, never having failed in a single 1 tse. The ingredient*may be obtained from any rugglst. A copy sent free to all applicants by all. Address Si. O. PHELPS BROWN, 31 Grand treat. Jersey City.B. J. A Present for Every Boy and Girl & Jt<\ WHO SUBSCMSt* TO TDB (1 *i YOUNG FOLKS' NEWS. I I A Bright little Paper for the Youn& i I with Handsome Illustrations. I | Published Woekly at $1.25 peryoA'. J t I (With the Pottage PaULi I ' / Th? paper ia Lively, Entertaining, ,? " / and Instructive, yet not forgetting a ft. Thlt happy boy oomai to young popple with sod newa?telling them that any one wH aaada 1.9ft to Mr. MM Martten, Pliiladelpbla, will ?t only gat a copy ereiy week for a whole year of int nlee little paper, TBS YOCHO FOLKS' BWft, with ike poetmi paid, bat will alao retire a beautiful 0U OMromoPleture, taking their >o!oe of four handsome phromos, called '? A 'rolle In tbeWeodii" ? The Mont Recei" (lotlinf Haidf ler Sea.", and "Tbe htpwreok." *Or,if thay will tend 9ft ddnta ore-that la, gl.50 altogether?thay will gat 1th the paper tea picture yarntahad aad raonntI on a card board ready tor framing: or ft 1.75 111 procure (tee Ohromoi mounted and the paper r one yaar, poitaga p?td ipr 99.9ft will procure ia/oar Chromoa mounted and the paper for one ear, pottage paid. Ma anted Chromoa will ploaee ( ?at. 8a ad a (hraeicm* *t *m? fpro9paoim4n ffuaibrr. ILKBED NAKTIKH, PkblUbar, 1 ftonth fteronth Wtraat. Palledelphla. subscription Books : Mat Induoereanta to Agente. Por terms (bid clr { ^i. addraaa Maw Woman Fwmmw Oo.,Phtla V DVKBTIBBBftI Band 9? eta. to 9BO. P. BOW T 1 T, .L 1 CO.. ft Perk Bow. l?ew York, for their am,' Idf of ton pupae, mmttlnlug liata of toon newt ipora , nudeatlmaUe ehowiug cv?t ot adraruatng I I ?__?????mrnefe FOR NOTfiRNG. TOLEDO WEEKLY BLADE (Vasby's P*f*r), the largest, beet end cheapest peper in the world, eent free .to any address. 78 oolamne of good reeding matter. Bend to LOCKK ?. JQSB!), Toledo, Ohio. A ORKAT HOVfCl.Tr. BOOK liAHV AASKHM WAMTKD For the most remarkable Book ever published In Amerloa. Br Mark Ttoeta, WhiUlaro Reid, P F. Narby.Wtikis Cotlini, Alfrtd Ttnnyson, John Bay and other*. Bntlraly new,splendidly Uluttratea, magnificently honnd Coal yvxo to produce. Will take Immensely. Extra i'rtmine. to Agenta. Addrets Immediately, Wk. K. (III. I. A CO., 181 Waablogtou Street, Boaton,Ha??, ONK agent aold Jn one moath SOI copies Of the L1PK OW I.t V1NQMTOHK, which unfolda the thrilling txperianee* of a vtrltabit Hero, and the rorioaifisi of a wonderful omntry. More agents wanted. Address, HUBBABD BROS.. PnbHther*. Philadelphia or Baston. JUST MOHKV I" IT BRUI Jast * out. Useful, Handsome, Cheap. Sells THE everywhere. Send tor prospectna to Bnnxr K- O BRIDQMAN, 6 Barclay St., K.T., U U Ji. or 1T? West 4th gt,, Claetnnatl. Ohio. TTiort Kdward Collegiate Institute.?A * r hoarding Seminary for Ladles and Gentlemen. 1 fto for IS weeks' board and common Bnglleh. Winter tsrm, Deo. lOlh; Spring term, March 16th. Six 1 Oanvu* nf !hi.? a.1...,*- ** _ , , VV.UU.V1UM4? UU4VUWUS, VjUHBI- 1 cal, Collegopreparatoty and Professlonal-preraratorv. or the student may aciaot any three ?tu- ] dtaa. Higherituition to Clergymens* famtllea and to thoaa Intending to be Mlnlatera, one-third dlt- 1 oonnt. For aelf-boardera, good aod aoceaatble , rooma with heavy furniture at $f> par term. 8tndanta admitted at any time proportionally. Fifteen 1 tearbera. Superb brick bnlldtnga. Twenty yeara of prosperity. A-ldreaa for catalogues or rooma, JOSEPH E. KINQ.'D. D , Prlnc., Fort Bd ward, H. T. WONDERFUL CURES BY THE WAUKESHA mineral Kock Spring Water for Diabetes, And all dlaeaaea of tbe Kidneys and Urinary Organa. Tbe tnereaae of tbta disease la becoming more apparent erery day; but tbanka to a kind Providence for tbe timely discovery of tbla healing water. It la unaurpaaaed In tbe known world. For Information (riving deecrlptton of tbe above tlaeaaea, tbe "Geology of Waukeaba," by Prof. 1. A, Lap ham, State Oeologlet, bow tbe medicinal propertlea of tbla water are formed. Bend for a pamphlet publlehed by C? C. OLW CO., Proprietors, Waukesha, Wis. Agent! Wanted. Price of water, $12 a bbl., $7 half bbl., BO eta a gal., In Juga or cana. Juga and cana -*tra only. A genu Wanted .?Ken or woman. |M a week JEL or $100 forfeited. Valuable earnplee free. Writ atones to F. M. REED. Eighth Street. Pew Tork. , AO R PKH DAY Commlaalon or |SO a week CVhiej Balary, and expenses. We offer It and wll pay It. Apply now. G. ffaaasa A Co.. Marion. O MASON & HAMLIN CABINET ORGANS. Wlnnera of THREE HIGHRBT MEDALS ASD ] DIPLOMA OF HONOR at VIENNA, 1873. PARI8. . 1867, and <n AMKRIOA ALWAYS. Declared by i MUSICIANS GENERALLY to be UM RIVALED and , INCOMPARABLE. Bold at Axed uniform prloaa to all, wblcb ara printed and invariable. I PURCUAoERS OP UKUANH ARB RIB- , ISINDKO that toe temptation to Dealere and ' Peddlerala very atrongto deal in and recommend ? aa beat the organs of tboae makers who will pay . them the largest commissions or dla- J counts tor selling. _ , The DlASUt o HAMLIN ORGAN CO., 1 printing as tbey do their low-ret prices, can t ifford to dealer* only tbe smallest commiitlons. Tbla plan secures to every pnrcnasat ihe t lowest price, because tbe dealer oannot aak more , than tbe Catalogue price; cut it crnaee many lealors to do their beet to tell other organs, ? limply beoanae tbay get enormone discounts on ; ihem. Some organs ara onrrently sold to dealers 1 at seventy.five per cent, discount, or at one quar- r tar tbe prices printed tor them. At a rule, tbe poorer tbe organ L'.ghor Its printed prloe and S he greater the discount on It. f Tbe HANO.N A HAMLIN ORGAN CO. are 1 low offering new styles, with Important lmprova- c cents; and are telling not only for cash exclusively, bat alto on new plane of easy payments, ? nnnlng. through one year or longer. Tbey also. L ent new Organt with prlvllaga of purchase.' , lent paid three years purchases the I Irgan. Bead for tbe Illustrated Catalogues and Circa- " era, which give very fall Information, and are r> ent free. Acareaa, THK MASON A HAMLIN 7. H1GAN CO., at either Blew York, Ifoston, t >r Chicago. B MUOft AGENTS WANTED a ||b^V'bookTELL IT ALL VkB ny Mr*. Stenhous* o( Bait I<*k* City, for >5 v HHniri tlia wile of a Mormon High Prtnt In- * ^^^^ troduclion by Mr*. Mowc. Tula story of a J I IM Jonu'i aperies:: lay* bare the "hidden l\fe," Mnjrrtnia, eecul doing*. etc. of the Moemone n? a C *' uruie-aaoalr woman nn Hon." Bright, l'uro and Good, it W the beM new book out, actually vrrrjluwinq with good thing* for alL It i* popular ovarya here, with everybody, and outaclla alt other book* three U ? me. Miuialcr* *ar " Owl tpcrd it." Eminent women r endorse it Everybody wants it t and agent* ere celling (rom lO to SO a day I S5th thimmul now in preKl We 1 want XOOO more trusty agent* NOW?men or women ? and we will mail OulOt f'rew to those who will canvass. I-arvu ] pamphlet* with lull particular*, term*, etc. tent free to all. . Addreaa A. 1). WvKtiUHOTO.i * Co., llartford. Conn. I nrm " Lunu' ruiiD" contain! 7 article! ' UUn neadad by every Lady ?Patent Spool r Holder, Bctaiore, Thimble, do.?gunrSUIT T1 TIT teed worth $1 DO. Sample Box. bv mall, t li Pi Tl SS.*rai^ ?fal' *<"Vl PBDMB A CO. / 11UII 10H B. 8th Street, Philadelphia. Pa. * VOR NH&HIiY THIRTY tKARN THR C Richmond Prints bavo been held lu high eeteem by tboae who uee a c 'Jolico. They are produced in all the noveltlei o r .'hanging faihione, and in conservative styles ( lulted to the wants of many poraona. Among the t latter are the | 1 "STANDARD GRAY STYLES,' ] proper foe the boose or street?beautiful in designs and pleasing In coloring. CHOCOLATE STANDARD STYLES s In great variety and widely known as moat aer- ' rloeable prints. Nothing better for dally wear. Tbpis fTflA 1 m Xa?- if-l-a. * wur ikmii ai gsK'tv.i a' "1!'*. Yor.r 1 . retailer ahould have them, mud y...ir examination | end approval will rolnoida. ^ STEXNWAY 1 a Grand, Square & Upright Pianos. < 8 n pert or to ell others. Brer* Piano Warranted 1 'or Vive Tears. Illustrator! Catalogues, with J Jrloe List, mailed free on application. BTKIKWAT * BOMB. t Woe. 107, 10> A ill Bast 14th Street, New York. a BECK WITH I $20. Vntmble Family Sewing Machine, c 30 BAYS'TRIAL j t'<n send toany address, c O. D., oae at ear n see with prtTOcce of examination before tafe u letBtpreee offlde t and irit doesnot^resat- 8 on we will reftnd tbe money, leas Bxpree# ? a, on rel?m of machine within the time spe- | It with Sewlnj machine Ce, Mow York t 062 Broadway. i , Chicago i 241 Wabash Avo* , "ttscb ? __________ 1 PfflMGO IEDGER i THE CHEAPEST AND BEST \ PAPER IN THE COUNTRY. g*rsi.50 ANNUM I ' K Unexcelled by any Weekly Literary g Publication, East or West. CANVASSERS WANTED IN EVERY 1 TOWN IN THE UNITED STATES. S Th* Doit Liberal ffrna?tum? and Club Bate* arar iff*red by any new*paper. VTrlte Ibr a Circular wntalnlng full information. ate. Bpeclman eoptaa nrniahod on application. Addreas 4 THE HD6KR COMPANY, CHIOAOO, ILL. I AltcAUttfnl TruM- t'l* n? rn,.o?.trof ( | lUtMliuU r> 1 jshti.: llMnif.N I ] 0 .u, Acmu.ant.*, t,i* fAIIEN 4 CO., fl I'iMbl. N.V. i jgjN ' Dr. J. Walker's California Vinegar Bitters aro a purely Ycgetab'.o preparation, mado chiefly from the native herbs found on tho lower ranges of the Sierra Novada mountains of California, tho medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without tho use of Alcohol. Tho question is almost daily asked, "What is tho causo of tho unparalleled success of Vinegar Bitters?" Our answor is, that thoy remove the ca*se of discaso, and tho patient rocovers his health. Thoy are tho great Olood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the system. Never before in the history of tho world has a medicine been compounded possessing tho remarkable qualities of Vinegar Bitters in healing the siok of every disease man is heir to- They are a gentle Purgativo as well as a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of tho Liver ana Visceral Organs, in Bilious Diseases. The properties of Dr. Walker's ? inegar bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Countqr-Irritant, Sudorific, Alterative. and Anti-Bilious. Gratefal Thousands proclaim Vinegar Bitters the most wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained the sinking Bystem. No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long ^ unwell, provided their bones are not de- ? Btroyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. Billons, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, whiph are so prevalent in tho valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkanlas, Red. Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Romoke, James, and many others, with heir vast tributaries, throughout our sntire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of-unusual heat and dryness, are nvariably accompanied by extensive doangerpents of 'ho stomach and liver, ind other abdominal viscera. In tlicir reatment, a purgative, nxerting a powrful influence upon these various or:ans, is essentially necessary. There s no cathartic for tho purpose equal to )r. J. Walker's Vinegar BirxErts, s they will speedily rcmovo the darkolored viscid matter with which tho towels are loaded, at tho same timo timulating tho Boorotiono of tho livor, .nd generally restoring tho "healthy unctions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease >y purifying all its fluids with Vinegar Fitters. No epidemic can tako hold tf a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head- , iche, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, rightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Tasto u the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitaation of tho Heart, Inflammation of tho Lungs, Pain in the region of tho Kidieys, and a hundred other painful symp;oms. are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. )ne Dottle will prove a better guarantee >f its merits than a lengthy advertisenent. Scrofula, or King's Evil, WbJto Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas. Swelled Neck, loitro, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent uflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old lores, Eruptions of the Skin, Soro Eyes, etc. n those, as iu nil other constitutional Dislases^ W a u-'.i1 'Z o VffrtOiAK fi TE KK " aU\ L c'?their great cuiativc powers in tho cost dbsi-w....' oww) Intractable cases. For Inflammatory anvil Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious. ReruiU eat and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of he Blood, Liver, Kidneys uud Bladder, hese Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases ire caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases.?Persons enraged in Paints and Minerals, such as iUIIIUUia, X J UUlU-UCttlCrB; uuu diners, as they advanco in life, are subject o parol 7818 of the Bowels. To guard, igainst this, take a dose of Walker's Yineqar Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tat. or, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Aistules, Boils, CaHranoles, Ring-worms, >ca!d-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, scurfs, Discoloration# of the Skin, Humors ind Diseases of the Skin of whatever name >r nature, are literally dug up and carried lut of the system in a short time by the use if theso Bitters. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, urking in the system of so many thousands, .ro effectually destroyed and remoVed. No ystem of medicine, no vermifugos, no annelminitics will freo the system from worms ike these Bitters., For Female Complaints, inyouag ir old, married or sitgle, at the dawn ofwonanhood, or the turn of life, theso Tonio litters display so decided an influejice that mprovement is soorj perceptible. Cleanse the Yltiated Blood wheniver you find its impurities bursting through he skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; sleanse it when you find it obstructed and luggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is oul; your feelings will tell you when. K*?p .he blood pure, andtbo health of the ty stom will follow. _ _ it. ii. Mcdonald & co., >mg(ri?U and Gen. Agta.. San Francisco oaHr.vuln, had oor. of WAihington and Charlton 9ta< Bold toy oil Dr?nliU una M F N U Wo 47. [IT CARSON. ? ?VTK*SVir TithVnu nd Authorl?ed Life published ; 600 N?i H*aU mlly lllu?tr?Ud. Agtntt watJ*tI tv*r\Cefl*?l >jfco ?1 reedy sold. Olrc leri of ?11'u* *or.? idreee OCftTIN. OIIiMAH t CO.. Hartford. Conn 15 g $20 Ko -V^neon??QOo Vo?'*'??<>. *?'"* E72 .1^/^ UOG fcK* ^/fK> Xv n.rdwere DwUri /mmL>A CT&^ J