University of South Carolina Libraries
rag; i FAK3I, G'ABDE>" AND HOUSEHOLD, When Ap?ly Lime. Lime is most usefully employed ir the Fall when mm-aie has been plcwcJ ia. It then es<ert> :ts best e2ect io the best season. But i; it could not be applied then it may be used at any time afterward, but better before a rain thai; fe~ alter if. Lame sfcoukt be ccvereu n the soil as soon as possible to prevent too rapid carbonization, which would quickly take place ?.n the surface wher the lime is exposed to the atmosphere K and the nightiy dews. But lime is sc useful under anv c-ircur.>tances that ii will pay to apply it anywhere, at anj time, and anyhow, so that it is not pu1 ^ or.t of the reach of the roots of th< crop. To Protcct a ShSnsle Roof from Fire. The editor of an Eastern paper say; that a wash composed of lime, salt anc natr siixiu, ur tvouu asaes, put ci? ordinary way of -whitewashing, render: the roof liitv-fold more safe againsi taking fire from falling cinders, oj otherwise in case of fires in the vicinity It pays the expense a hnndred-fold ir ri'.s preserving influence against the effect of the weather. The olden anc more weather-beaten ihe shingles are, the more benefit derived; snch shin gits are generally more or less warped rongh and cracked. The application, of the wash, by wetting the upper snr face, restores them at once to thei] original or first form, thereby closing the space between the shingles, and the iime and sand, by filling np the crack; and spots in the shingle itself, prevem , ? - its warping for years if not forever. bLUlaDiirinc* As between these two methods o: man tiring?one for the crop, bnt tend ing to exhaust the soil, and the other tc increase the permanent fertility of th( * "* ^ /? ? i > # r 1 . land?tne nrst is aiuogeiner preieraoie _ It is probable that on no land can g?oc crops be produced f< r a succession o: years without adding to its fertility What is taken from the soil by making its plant food soluble is more than cffsel __ by what is added in even the most concentratjsd manures above what can be used. The use of guano has been condemned by seme farmers because aftei a few years it leaves the soil so poor thai nothing will grow. But the fault is no' ia what is added to the soil to make the crop, but in failing to return to the soi] what ha? been taken therefrom. Selling everything off the farm where guano has been used to grow the crop tends tc sterility. Bat ?o also it would be if the same money were expended in buying stable manure, but making none upon the far a.' The difference is that the stable manure is not so immediately available, aad the process of exhausting fertility would be slower.?Country Gentleniin. rFatlfnin: I'onltry. No fowl over two years old should be fcept in the poultry yard, except fez some special reason. An extra good mother, or a finely feathered bird that is desirable as a breeder, may be preserved until ten years old with advantage, cr at least so long as she is serf viceable. But ordinary fowls should be fattened at the eml or the second year for market. When there is a room or shed that can be closed, the fowls may be confined there. The floor should be covered with two or three inches of fine sawdust, dry earth, sifted coal ashe?, or clean sand. The food should be given four times a day, and clean water be always before the fowls. A dozen or more fowls may be put at ones in this apartment, so that there may not be too many ready to sell at one time. The best food for rapid fattening, foi producing well flavored flesh and rich fat, is buckwheat meal, mixed with sweet skimmed milk, into a thick mush. A teaspoon fal of salt should be stirred in the focd for r. dozen fowls. Two weeks feeding is sufficient to fatten the fowls, when they should be shipped foi sale without delay, and another lot put up for feeding. If the shed is kept dark and ccol, as it should be, the fowls will tatten ail me quicker ior it.?rractical Faun^r. Fccilicsr IIor??>? The following extracts are from the essay read by John E. Russell at the Farmers' Institute at Salem :?"The horse has the smallest stomach in pro portion to his size of any anim.\l. Fifteen or sixteen quarts is its utmost capacity. This space is complete? filled by four quarts of oats and ihf sdiva that goes into the stomach "with it. Horses are generally overfed and **ot fed often enough. For ahorse with moderate work six or eight quarts of bruised oats and eight or ten pounds oi fine hay a day is sufficient. This should De ic?i in ax; leass mree meals, auu is better if fed in fonr. A horse's digestion is very rapid, and therefore he gets hungry sooner than a man. "When he is hungry he is ineffective ana wears out very rapidly. "Water fills the ?--^stomach*, lowers the temperature and dilutes the gastric juice; therefore a horse should not drink immediately before eating. Neither should he be watered immediately after eating, because be will drink too much ai-d force some of the contents of the stomach into the large intestine, which will cans 3 securing. Scouring is also caused by too rapid eating, which can be prevented by putting half a dozen pebbles half the size of the fist into the manger with the oats. Give only a moderate drink of water to a horse. A large drink of cold water before being driven will have a very quieting effect _ on a nervous hor**. A racehorse always runs on an empty stomach. Digestion ^ progresses moderately luring exercise if the exercise is not so violent as to exhaust the powers of the horse. I consider bruised eats worth twenty per cent, more than whole. They xre more completely digested. Prefer oats to any other grain for horses. Cracked corn is very good under some circumstances, but wouldn't use meal or shorts. The disease'called big head is caused by feeding corn. When a horse comes in hot I would give a moderate feed immediately. If the horse is too tired to oat would take his feed away. A heated body is a reason against watering and for feeding, for the system is -s^tEJu-j'ust in the condition to begin digesdon. A horse will not founder if fed moderately when hot. I prefer dry feed tin less a horse Las some disease of the tliroii o;- lungs. Do not consider it wotth Vvhile to cut hay. I always feed hay Irom the floor, then the . horses do net get particles in their eyes." A V.ilaabJp Li'.quiil Manure. A writer in the Journal of Agriculture gives what he considers a very superior method of making a liquid manure with soot and s:al>le manure. A good cask is employed and also a smaller vessel, like a half barrel, or something even smaller, with loose, open joints through which the water nv^I pas.-. The latter, *? -Jf io -fillii/J io f a V>A rvl flt'Pfl in the cask, and the space surrounding ;1 to be filled with water. Take the half barrel and put in first a spadeful of manure and pack it closely down to the bottom and around the sides, so as to form a cavity that will hold a pint 01 more of good soot from the top of a chimney where coal fires are kept burnt; next add another layer of manure, prt ssing it close round the sides as before, then more soot, and so on nutil fall, when a plate or tile should be ^? placed npon the top to prevent it floating. Xjw ins-ert this ia the cask. The sinailer vessel may l?D supported at the height of the c^k by bricks placed on the bottom of the cask, or by a pair of bandies, consisting of two straight sticks seer rely fastened at its top and by Tiijcli it may be carrier. jmu up tne oask -with water, let the smaller vessel remain ior three or four days. lifting it si >ut a few times dnrins? the interrr.1 to r?'ra.ia; then lift it out altogether nnd support it on two sticks across the top and pour a few canfuls cf fresh watei to wash out by displacement the manure left in it, and when sufficiently drained the con*?nts may go back to the manure heap for further decomposition, or be l . made use of in any o'ber way. The ??~-; solution thus obtained forms the st^ck - pot. and may be diluted to any extent BSSBKEHr | according to circumstances. It may be i used either alone, of almost any strength, I /-? ;+ mor ho fnrt'hpr enriched bv the ad 1 | aition of about a teaspoonful of the ' | sulphate of ammonia to each gallon of ! i liquid. Or, on the other hand, a very " j good substitute for gwno will be i; formed by introducing a solution of 1 I chloiide of lime in the place of \ | ammonia. The chloride solution is ' ; made by adding two ounces of the dry powder to a wine bcttle (twenty-four 1 ounces) of water, shaking well up 5 j several times before using. From one* : half to one ounce of this liquid to be * added to each gallon and given to 7 j stocks, primulas, primroses and nu' | merous other soft stemmed plants, * ' -11 * fv, "U? />V, 1 ttTirto A1A71C " * ; win ue iuuuu tiuvitwvuo, | i .Milkins 3Iachinc8[ | In answer to an inquiry, the Ameri> can Cultivator replies that many at- | ' : tempts have been made to construct I : machines by which the milk could be ' j drawn from the cow's bag with the same | facility and completeness as it could be | | drawn by hand, but so far as car ? knowledge and obseivation extend, [ without ariy practical success. It is supposed by many that the milk is re' tained in the cow's bag through atmospheric pressure alone; which, however, ' | is not true, since the cow is able to _ | control tins now to a great extent. jli .; the cow dislikes the person employed \ j in milking, or Ms manner of drawing I ; the milk, she will not only refuse to let ' : down the fluid but, by persisting in the I ; effort will soon dry up the sapply. The udder of the cow is composed not only of a bundle of milk veins but also of nerves. The aperture in the teat of the f j cow varies in size with each animal . j milked. In the case of some cows )! this aperture is large and the milk 5 can be drawn away very rap. idly, while in other cows the aperl ture small and any attempt^ to.. f draw the milk from this latter class of cows as rapidly as from the former, will r be attended with much pain upon the I part of the abused animal,and a determi- i . nation on her part to held back the milk. ? This defect in the size of the aperture . of the cow's teat is one which no ma chine can detect, but one which human j ; hand readily observes. Immediately ; upon its discovery the humane milker ) relazes his efforts in forcing away the milk. Tt-. is the smallness of this ar>er tnre which stamps the cow ar a hard | milker. The observant dairyman soon , learns that when he draws too hard the > milk passes back to the bag. In such r a case his efforts must be so relaxed [ that the milk will come away easily , though slowly. Again, when there is inflammation in the cow's udder, the j careful milker readily detects it, and .' quickly sets about with measures to reduce the inflammation and relieve the I cow. By the use of no machine could ; such a difficulty be detected, and seri11 ous consequences might be the result of machine making. A great many bags . would be permanently ruined and many i cows die of milk fever, which would be saved to the owner where miiking by j I hand prevails. It is observed that men j have not become better artisans since i the introduction of machinery. Mana-: gers and overseejs may now understand better the nature of the article i manufactured, the raw material used i and the nature of the machine employed : j tiian was tne case lormeriy, out me j rank and file?the class of men who to. | day operate the machines, and who, be. j fore machines were invented, did the I work by hand?these men understood j ' the nature of the material upon which , they worked better in former times than they do now. And so, in this connec tion, he who has to milk a cow, and do . it well and properly, should know at . least the character and construction of the cow's bag. 1 Rccipes. Cup Pudding.?Some stale rolls, divested of crust and cut in halves. Place each half in a teacup and cover it with milk till it is soaked through Turn "it out on to a plate, add a little more milk and with it jam of; marmalade. I TTmr ta \r4TTR Mb.it TENDER.?Cut the I > steaks the day before, into slices about ; > two inches thick, rub them over with a ! small quantity of soda; wash off nest morning, cut into suitable thickness, and cook as you choose. The same : [ process will answer for fowls, legs of mutton, etc. Try, all who love deli- i 1 cious. tender dishes of meat. Lesion Cake.?Beat to a cream one cup of butter and three cups of pow dered sugar. Add the yolks of five eggs? previously well-beaten, the juice and grated rind of one lemon, and a , ! cup of milk with one teaspoonfal of ' J saleratus (or baking powder) dissolved in it. Then add the whites of the eggs | beaten to a stiff froth, sift in four cups , of flour and bake. ' Glazed Ham.?Soak and boil a ham twenty minutes to the pound, and let <} it get almost cold in the water. Skin I it neatlv. and coat with a paste made of i ! a crip oi cracker crumbs, one of milk, | two beaten eggs, and seasoned with ? pepper. Set the hair in the oven until the glazing is browned, moistening, now and then, with a few spoonfuls of > cream. Wind frilled paper about Ihe . shank, and garnish with parsley. ; Bishop Pudding.?Butter some thin i slices of bread, without crust, and over the butter spread a good layer of jam. ; Cut the slices into convenient pieces. ; Line and border a deep pie dish with puff paste, arrange the slices of bread and butter in the dish uniil half full. >I?Ke an ordinary, rather milky ground rice pudding, flavor the milk with wLicn it is made with the rind of a , lemon. Sweeten to taste, and add to it i tWU UJL L1IICC UCttlCU ujfc/ ttvvviuiu^ | to the size of the pudding. Pour this mixture into the pie dish, and bake in ' j a brisk oven. ! Household Hints. . j Fresh lard is better than butter to ! j grease cake-pans. 1 Silver that is not in nse may be ! kept from varnishing by burying it in ! a box or barrel of oat-meal. Tar may be instantaneously removed j from the hand and fingers bv rubbing : with the outside of a fresh lemon or ; orange peel, and wiping dry immedi- j 1 ately after. If tablecloths, napkins and handkerchiefs are folded an inch or two beyond the middle they will last longer; it is on the edges of folds where they first wear, and folding them not on a middle line, each ironing, they get a new crease. A strong, good-sized table is almost a , i necessity in the cellar. Jars that are I too heavy to be lifted on and off shelves | may be set on the table. Many cellars ! are sometimes infested with ants and i other bugs. One way to keep them | from clawing over the jars :s to take the . I tin cans in which peaches or tomatoes ; ! came, set the legs of the table in the . i cans, and fill them half fall of water. Ink stains on mahogany or black ] wainuc lurmiure mav uu lemu>eu u> ' touching the stains with a feather j wet in a solution of niter and water? ' | eight drops to a spooufal of water. ' | As soon as the spots disappear rub ; the place ai once with a cloth wet in j cold water. If the ink stains then re! main, repeat, making the soiution j stronger. A Question of Mileage. Jones held an execntion against a farmer, and when he called for a settle ; j meet the agriculturist took mm out ' i into a big pasture and pointed out a ! j wild steer as the particular piece of property to be levied upon. Jones . chased the steer around tor a while, 11 and then sat down, and taking out his | book began to write. 1 j " What are you doing there ?" asked ' | the grmger. ' ! " Charging mileage," replied the conj stable, without looking up. " Do I have it all to pav ?" gasped the , rancher. 11 "Yon bet." i " Then tafee-this tame heifer here. I ; i can't stand any s^ch game as that." % < w POPULAR SCIENCE. The amoeba, sponge and tape-worm | have no blood. There is no need of it j :or, being destitute or digestive organs, i their food comes in contact with all i parts of the body. Iiedi found that birds sustain the i want of food from five to twenty-eight ! days. A seal lived out of water, with- ' out nourishment, for four weeks. Dogs live without focd from twenty-five to . thirty-sis days. In the Royal Palace at Berlin, 40,000 was candles are simultaneously lighted by a single match, the wicks being pre-. viously connected t?y a single tnreaa ; of gun cotton. Thus the 700 apart- j raents are lighted at once. Near Cambridge, England, the por-; tion of the wall letter boxes surround- j ing the apertures has been treated with ' luminous paint to enable the people to j see to post their letters after dark. The , result has been satisfactory. On Sunday, September IS, at Kin- j gussie, Scotland, several persons ob-1 served a pink rainbow just over Glen ! Fe.shy. The bow was shaded from ; crimson to pale pink, but there was no 1 other color. Not one of the party had ever noticed a similar phenomenon before. A most remarkable discovery has < been made in the Sweetwater country, in Wyoming Territory. It is a deposit i of sulphuric acid in its natural state. I The odor, chemical action, and general j appearance of the stuff demonstrates it to be a pure quality of sulphuric acid, j The ground is imprgenated over a large area?one hundred acres or more j ?and parties have filed claims upon it. Large iron ore deposits af almost uu- j precedented richness have lately been ! surveyed in Lapland by practical mining engineers. The district is near the ! village of Judkasjarvi, in Svreedish Lap-; land, about ten iniKj from cn40F the !? arms of the West Fjord. Analysis i| shows 70 per cent, of metallic iron in this ore, and the quantity is said to be snfiicient to supply the entire world with iron, at the present rate of con- j sumption for many years. A Tea Cultivator Wanted. The manager of a large tea farm in India appeals, through the Scientific | American, to American inventors for what we may call a spading machine, to be used in the cultivation of tea plants; the machine to be worked i either by bullock or steam power. The tea bushes on the estate m our ; correspondent's care are mostly planted ; four feet by four feet apart, in plots eighty plants broad by four hundred and twenty plants long ; a few acres are planted four feet by five feet and five feet by five feet, in fields of the same i length and breadth. Many tea gardens, however, are planted five feet by five feet. The tea bush grows from three to fonr feet hi^h : it occupies about a square foot of ground at bottom, and at top spreads so that the lines of! bushes ajmost (sometimes quite} touch ; each other. The nearest approach in ! America to a tea field, our correspon-j dent thinks, is a plot of gooseberry bushes, which somewhat resemble the i tea bushes, minus the thorns. In general aspect an ordinary cotton field j might be compared, we imagine, to a: tea field; and possibly a machine;: suited for the cultivation of the one j might be readily adapted for use in the other. The India tea fields are dug by. hand ! from twelve to fifteen inches deep, the upper surface, grass, etc., being turned over and buried and the subsoii brought: up to the top. A day's work for a cooiy 13 to aig one line across a neia, or 1,280 square feet. The ordinary plow ; will not answer for this work, as it leaves one side of the bushes unculti- i vated and cuts the roots of the bushes on the other. The horse hoe or cultivator has been tried, but it does not cut "deep enough, it does not turn the soil over, and it injures the outer stems of the bashes. What is required is a machine working a blade or blades set at right angles to the handle, with an up and down , motion, and so operated as to turn the j soil over. It must dig to a depth of! fifteen inches and turn the soil thor-; UUKUAJ. AD XUUOll LiUOC IV of the plant, yet not injure the side stems; and it must be able to do much more work than a cooiy can do?say ten or twenty times as much, when drawn by a bullock or by a fixed steam engine working with wire ropes. A machine of this character, able to compete successfully with coolv labor, both in cheapness and efficiency, would bringour correspondent thinks, a small: fortune to the inventor, "as there are i upward of a thousand tea gardens in India hard up for coolies and looking but for something of this kind." We may add that the inventor's riqht may be protected in India by patents. Also that the extension of tea culture in Java, Formosa, and other islands, not; to mention Japan or China, would seem ? _ _ /v. __ _ n /? 1 1 / il * i. J l* lo oner a wiue ueiu lor cneiatrouuutiuxi | and sale of a successful cultivator. The ! same machine might also, as already, suggested, be adapted to the require-1 ments of cotton and other fiber plants, i Scientific American. Two Wooers. A young lady who was the recipient 1 of attention from two young men j equally eliV.bie, in point of good looks, social position and financial solidity, : and entertaining similar feelings of friendship for both, was in a quandary as to rrhich to choose, should they pro- j pose. A friend to whom t:he confided ; hsr difficulty suggested that she put; both to some te.fct to prove the strength i 01 their affection. She took the advice, I and to the first who avowed his affec-1 tion said: "You tell me tliat you love me. How do I know that von are sincere ? What would yon do to show yonr love!" "Anything," replied the ardent lover, who had a spice of romance in bis disposition, -'anything, I would go to the world's end for you; I would endure any suffering for you ; I would die for you if necessary." Such ardent protestations brought the blushes to her cheeks and a thrill of; happiness to her heart as she thought^, that certainly ne one could lesj her J* more fondly than he did. She asked, I however, for a little delay before giving him an answer to his suit. Meantime the other proposed and1 she questioned him in like manner to the first. "Weli," said he "I'll tell you what I would do to show my love for you. If you marry me you shall have good clothes to wear. I will see that you are always the owner of a handsome j seal skin sacque and that your hats or bonnets are always in fashion, and Ij will be a faithful, loving husband to j you." "But wouldn'c you go to the world's end for me, or die for me, or any of that sort of thing, you know?" she asked, as she toyed with his coat buttons. "I don't want to go to the world's, end," he replied; "I've got a nice, good i paying business in Boston, and as for dying for you, I'd rather live with you." "Well," said she, as the visions of seal skin sacque, fashionable bonnets, etc, flashed before her mind; "I guess you can speak to pa." The practical wooer is the man for' the times. me norm s i-ociurs. A Parisian journal estimates the total number of recognized medical men throughout the civilized world at 189,000, of whom it assigns 65,000 to the United States, 35,000 to Great Britain and her colonies, 20,000 to France, 32,000 to Germany and Austria, 10,000 to Italy and 5,000 to Spain. Of the whole number, 11,000, it estimates, have contributed to medical literature?2,800 in the United States, 2,GOO in France, 2,000 in Great Britain, 2,300 in Germany and Austria, and only 300 in Spain. TLousands of families have had occasion to ; try the never-failing qualities of Dr. Bull's ! Cough Syrup, and they all unite in the praise j of this wonderful prescription. FOR THE FAIR S?X. j t ie A Panama Weddlntr. | ? A private letter irom ranama gives j a the following account of a wedding in a Central America. At eight o'clock we : started to the house, our black maid at 1 E our heels. "When we reached the build- i j. ing I said to her: "Josepha, you can ? now go home." "0," said she, "ye bin ^ la casa prim era" (I see the house first.) f I cannot tell when she came home, for c the last I saw of her she was with a ? crowd of servants as black as herself. T We were usfcered.mto an immense parlor with large velvet mats on the floor, a grand piano, handsome willow furniture c and an abundance of pretty things. a The guests weie seated in a circle in ? the center of the room. After a little . wait the bride came in dressed in white ? satin, made with many plaitings, the train headed with a trailing vine of J1 orange blossoms. She wore also a; ? wreath and a handsome tuile veil. Her | own income, I may add, is four hun- j s dred dollars per month. The groom | j now joined her and they shook hands j with all of us, after which they retired | to the room adjoining, where they wait-; ed until all had assembled. Two love- i ^ ly little girls held her train as we j + marched in procession to the Cathedral. c Arriving" there we fonnd an immense ' crowd of all classes of people, among j? them hosts of negroes. The fonr very j j large steps leading to the altar were | ^ filled with these hordes of men and i r women. I counted fifty-five and then r grew tired of census-making. As soon ^ as Father^Figaro^(the priest who comes , to give our pupiis religious instruction) j: began the ceremony, the crowd closed ^ about the couple, so that no one could see her from the outside. I saw a wo- [ man pushing a little boy with nothing j on but a fragment of an originally very z Rnantv shirt richt on the bride's train. _ After the ceremony we filed back Sain. Thexeras not the rash to con- g Itulate Islifcr with ns ; a few gentle- s m w*mt tip and "felicitated" her, but T it was very funeral. Ice cream, chain- a pa<?ne and cake was served, after which ^ a dish of pudding with meringue kisses and a little silk flag on each section, j . This was purely a Spanish sweet and is \ called "dulce matrimonia." Cham- g pagne, ice, candied fruits and more r cake followed and the wedding was ended. r Beautiful Complexion. < A New York correspondent, apropos c of arsenic eating in that city, says : A s TtritTi nnA nr nmrrsfrmnfr el-iorn ists and physicians has given me some c idea of the extent to which this perni- a cious and dangerous pastime is indulg- ^ ed in. T It has its foundation, of course, in _ the desire for beauty so natural in s every woman, and how important a part c an exquisite complexion plays in the s general appearance is recognized when j we note how easily the girl wins the t title of pretty, even if her features are r poor and her dress simple, if she has c a pure, soft, white sirin, that enables her to wear either the colors of blonde and brumette with impunity, and to defy the rough caresses of the sun and wind; while another girl with ; well-cut features and all the advantages of toilet is doomed to the cruel adjective of "plain," on account of a sallow or pimpled complexion, which neither powder nor rouge used in decent quan- e titles f>an r'firtf.pal. i To gain "what nature lias denied, j. women resort to e^erj conceivable de- c vice, from the use of simple lemon- s juice and glycerine up to the elaborate s compounds imported from France and j. expensive treatment of the specialists who promise to make lilies and roses s bloom on a satin-smooth skin. There ]_ are a great many Mme. Eachaels on a a small scale in New York, and each of ^ them has her own particular receipt for s beautifying the epidermis. a One woman has a place on Fifth ave- s nue, where she gives Roman baths lof asses' milk to her lady customers for the trifling sum of $15 each, and she has enough patronage to be making f money fast. s A firm on Broadway that has the f handsomest business parlors in the city, 1 has made a fortune out of a peculiar t sort of a mask to be worn over the face 1: at night. A stout dame on Thirty- f third street uses the bread-and-milk 1 T-?/-\nn/1 fr/iofo ViomofvnTic in hflr^Tm f. j-i-i v CfcJ-nu. uitavo ^jcxl l vj-io xaj. xx^jl v i?m v house. Others advertise their ability r to supply a new skin, which means they a will remove the old one by powerful e washes. The most "toney" of these s skin doctors live in elegant style, and r make a profound mystery of the lotions t they employ. c Most of them are artful enough to 1 have one or two young girls in attend- r ance, gifted with naturally beautiful v complexions, but really to swear that i they are the result of madame's "balm," e or 4'bloom." One of them, who has a t place near Union Square, employs a f handsomely dressed young lady with a a brilliant complexion to thank her in s the presence of fresh customers for her r new skin. t Yet in spite of all this the only wo- c men who have beautiful complexion are a those born with them. t To say nothing of the compounds c made up in this country, and which r have reaped fortunes for their origina- r tors, cosmetics are imported in thous- s ands of dollars' worth at a time f through the year, and many of them ! contain white-lead and arsenic in such J large proportions as to be positively.! c dangerous and not infrenuently fatal : in their results. The worst of experi- i menting with the complexion is that a when a woman begins she finds a kind of fascination in it that will not allow her to leave off, and the country girl who begins by daubing her forehead and chin with flour, and rubbing her cheeks with a mullein-leaf, as a city lady winds up with Koman baths and Parisian lotions. Fashion Note*, Embroidery is a favorite trimming. Spanish girdles of black 7elvet are very stylish. Old-fashioned Louis XVI. pelises are again m iavor. g Cashmere will be greatly in vogue s the coming winter. i The new satin merveilleux are now 1 Piled Kadzirnires. ( Plush, velvet, and moire figure con- 1 spicuously in millinery. Grecian bands for the hair are made j of silver inlaid with mock gems. Gigot puffs are sec-n upon many im- i portant carriage and dinner dresses, c A novelty in fur trimmings is t beaver pointed with feathers of the j grebe. c A new necklace'is a flat band fitting < like a bracelet, with pendants falling from it like a fringe. Surah moire is the name of a raw , material designed for dress trimming and millicerv purposes. Long plain skirts of velvet will be worn "with Lonis XV. coats and scarf draperies of light-hued brocade. Dress buttons are more beautiful and ornamental than ever; those in bronze, cut steel, osydized silver and mosaic are noticeable. Hungarian scarfs of scarlet green and field striped surah are draped over jersey costumes of dark myrtle green, admiral blue or jet black. Polished steel and amber, pistachio green and lilac, pale olive and pink are eflective com oication 01 color, especially ; * in plushes and brocades. ' ^ Tlie clover leaf, fern leaf, daises and j butterflies are pretty fancies in jewelry, \ and are the favorite designs in silver * filagree for fichu and scarf pins. It is the fashion just now to cover j everything in your dressing room with t flowered materials; furniture, mantels a and walls are draped in this way. a The short sleeves of many white ! t evening toilets are composed entirely of ^ triple rows of pearl beads with a pearl-: t beaded fringe diooping over the arm. They are called "pearl sleeves," and | when they are used a pearl necklace : . and bracelets are worn to match. j1 A ^ a 1 r-? fnr 7-iolF 1 n. UldUA crcpc UUUI.icu iui JLLC*AA. , ^ mourning presents a rather novel ap-! ^ pearance, having a crown that seems to i t i >e caught up in front and just above ach ear bj small jet chains. At the j act two black ostrich feathers fall in j peculiarly graceful fashion, and I nother curls over the top. Some of the larse bonnets have the j lapped felt brushed very smooth, while he brim is left in a rough state, which ;ives it the look of for. Many of the lapped felt hats have woven in the brim 1 or a border clipped ostrich feathers. ; Jmall pokes and capotes will be called or. These chape&ux are considered ery dressy. Feathers of all kinds figure gener-j iusly in chapeau decorations for fall: nd winter. Long, well curled feath-! rs, with thick flukes, take the lead in : his line of garniture. Ostrich tips and j lemi-lon^ plumes are combined with he fancy feathers, and of these a col- < tmn might be taien up to describe | heir varied splendors, so numerous are i i - .1 r l 3 i.1. _ l ! ne cnanges ut xxues ana txic oiuguiar ; hading of colors. low Lady 3Iacdonald Joined the Tee-; totalers. The English Messenger of Peace \ fives the following extract from a letter written by Lady Macdonald, the wife of he Canadian Premier, to a friend in :avannah, Ga.: "I was myself led to live up wine drinking after some iefiec-1 ion, suddenly at last on Christmas day, ,8CG. I had thought a good deal on he subject, but never made any decided esolution until this day, when, at din- j ler with a large party, the conversation umed on total abstinence. One of our quests, himself a strictly temperate man lolding high office iu onr county, said hat practically total abstinence was im>ossible for any one in society. I said, aughingly, 'What a dreadful statement ! quite differ from you.' He took me ip warmly, and several joined in, all pithout exception agreeing with him in aying that the requirements 01 modern ociety were such that no one could be ;o singular as to become a teetotaler without being more or less ridiculous, ind that the fatigues, excitement and year and tear of political society life (specially made the use of wine, in ;reat moderation of course, absolutely . necessity. I entered the lists, I carcely know why, and declared I did lot believe this theory. "At last the question was pressed nore closely. My friend, who had >egun it, said that he did not believe You, yourself, Lady Macdonald, could >r would not give up your glass of herry at dinner.' I asked why not ? nd he went over with great force and Nearness all the specious and dangerous .rguments that are urged in support of Innking wine in moderation, ending rith the remark that in Sir John's mblic position my being a total abtainer would do him great harm politio 1 Ttt nPV>i c? frtA mAncf.rnnia qa T J. AUiO ^VUIVU WW aid, emptying my half glass of sherry nto the finger glass as I said so, 'Well, ! will try ; henceforward I entered the anks of total abstainers, and drink to >ur success in water.' "Since then, thank God, I have never ound any necessity for wine. Id health can do my life's work without any aid rom dangerous stimulants ; in sickness ! have invariably and positively refused o touch it. I have sometimes for reeks together, days of constant occu>ation, nights of almost all sitting up. j >olitics are exciting and fatiguing, and very temptation to try stimulants is o be found in the late nights of listening to debates. I have had a great deal if nursing to do and yet I have never ought strength from wine at any ingle moment, and my health is far letter than formerly. When I told my husband my deciion, and that our friend said it would iurl; his prospects politically, Sir John nswered with a laugh, 'O, I will risk he prospects, you can be a total abtainer if you like.' My example can ,nd ought to help many similarly ituated." 3 he Nocturnal Cow. Tears, mad tsars, and neated words, ollow in her wake. Sorrow and a deepettled melancholy come down upon the aces of the female members of the lousehold when they arise and, as is heir wont, go forth to look upon the >eauties of nature, and find that its airest features have been despoiled, ["here is nothing peculiar about the nocurnal cow. She is like her sisters in nind and habits. She appears to have , good countenance, a kind eye, and an :asy conscience, but in reality she is as ly as a fox, and in the after part of the light she is as restless and sleepless as he principle of evil itself. She is no :ountry Susan. She lives in town and larbors upon the outskirts, but always emains in easy access to gates, for; rhich she manifests remarkable famil-; arity. sue is a Drute 01 a cultivated ye and a refined stomach. She selects he yard where the grass is green, the lowers are blooming, and the gardens re in fine state of cultivation. She vreetly sleeps in the forepart of the light. Then in the small still hours of he morning she gets np and "meanlers" forth. She is never in a hurry, ,nd the passer-by would never mistrust hat she was bent on any mission of lestruction. She travels slowly but ie7er misses any place. She goes all ound before daylight, and will occaionally find time to lie down in yards or a nap. She never wastes any time in ooking up weak places in yard fences. >ae is a sagacious animal, and makes i lirectly for the front gate. She goes as j memngiy 10 id as a Doy aoes to u waiernelon patch. It makes no difference ibont the kind of latch on the gate. She las a combination arrangement, furlished her by nature, which will open he most complicated gate-fastener demised. When she enters the yard, she ilips around to the garden, tangles herself np in the tomato bed, walks down he bean row, bites off the promising ;abbage heads, and makes a promiscuras tread over all parts of the vegetable jlat. She returns to the front yard and lelights herself with the flowers. She las a taste for the beautiful, and consumes whatever is most idolized by the amily. Having completed her work of lavoc with the useful and the beautiful, ihe slowly retires, resolved to come igain. The morning dawns and the v%/-v+V.qtc- nr\ma frvvfh +A <rof lirpaVfast. fVhen it is ready the daughters airive >n the scene. By this time the "old nan," if he has not too much rheunatism aboard, has found out that the 'cow has been in the yard." She has eft traces behind, but she has silently led and joined the lowing herds in renote parts of the city, and is there :hewing her cud and breathing forth he perfume of flowers and garden sass. Chere is nothing left for the family to lo but to mourn and get mad.?Indiantpolis Herald. Reed-Bird Shooting in Delaware. As they go southward in the fall, >ur favorite meadow singers, the boborinks, take to the marshes and become eed birds, much sought after by sportsmen and pot hunters. At Chester, Delaware, the headquarters of the bird ihooters of the State, there are forty >rofessional "pushers." The shooting )egins tiie first ot septemoer. ?ne Philadelphia Tiires makes a brief estimate of the results of a month's shootng. At Chester, at the Lazaretto, and he two hundred club houses that line joth banks of the Delaware from jeague Island to Marcus Eook, there rill be at least nine hundred shooters iaily. At the former two places 2,000 )irds daily?taking the scores of those riio push themselves and of the proessional shooters?will be killed. Light hundred gunners daily from the )ri7ate club houses is but a fair count, nd, giving them each a score of 10 birds iaily, the total will be 10,000 birds ailed every day in the month of Sep * AAA ? . . 3 ember, an aggregate 01 auu,uuu scoieu it the above places alone. This is but l meager approximation of the grand otal, probably xanging over 1,000,000 vhec the marshes from Bombay Hook o Bordentown are included in the istimate." The earthquake of Lisbon in 1755 had ts origin in the bed of the Atlantic )cear>, whence convulsions extended ;ver 7,500,000 souare miles, or onevenlielh the arq^of the globe. I _ About Pearls. "No," an expert said to a reporter in answer to a question, "finding pearls in fresh water is nothing new, but somehow the business has received a bcom, and I should say that there were probably two or three hundred nersons spending a pare of their time collecting them. They are found from Texas to Ohio. St. Clair county, 111., and Kutlierford county, Tenn., are good places for them, but the largest was found near Salem, N. J., a number of years ago. It was about an inch across and it soli in Paris for $2,000. TJost of them are very small and sell in lots for small sums, but one large one pays for the time. Along the Ohio river all the ; boatmen and fishermen are in the busi- j ness, especially boys- They wade along i the flats and scoop up the unios with their hands, while others have regular I arrangements for hauling them up by the quantity. The best are perfectly | round and white, with rich orient. The nest shape is the pear. Some are perfect all but one side, and this can be concealed m tne setting. ''Small pearls for use in onyx need not be perfect, as t>icy are half hidden in the setting* so the imperfect ones have a value as -well. The best pearls, i the ronnd ones, are those found in the mantle of the animal. You see, the pearl, either in fresh or salt water, is merely the result of the animal's attempt to protect itself." "Have attempts been made to force ! ] the growth of pearls V" Yes. The great naturalist Linnaeus j ! thought he had discovered a plan to ; cause pearls to grow, -which was to : 1 imitate the parasites already mentioned. ; The pearl mussels were taken from the : water and the shells bored, then placed i 1/vf-f- fr\y -p/vm* AT* "flTTO rOQTC I JL^lU iVi iVUX Vk UI V J , The Swedish Government paid him $1,800 for the idea, but it did not prove a succcss. The Chinese have done well with the pearl oyster. They sprinkle | sand over the beds when the oysters or j mussels are open, and also put little i images in the shells that soon become j coated with a pearly luster. These : can be seen at the Central Park mu- i seum. In Japan a similar plan is . adopted with the unio hyria." "Is it possible to make spurious I pearls?" "It would be hard to deceive a. dealer, but they are made so skillfully ; ; that it is extremely difficult to tell , them. For years a bogus pearl manu- j t factory wa3 carried on at Murano, a little town near Venice. The forms j were made of glass, while the irides- j | cence or orient was produced by quick- ' silver ; but they were chieflv used a3 | beads for the peasantry. Finally, the j French took ud the business, and no- j i * "? * #/?*__ i _ _ xt : ticmg tne ncnness 01 nsnes scaies, mej i used them to produce the luster, ana ; with great success. The dace and the roach were the fishes used. In Italy j the smelt is taken from the Tiber, and j its scales yield an extremely rich secre- j tion or mucus that can be used for the ! purpose ; but to the eye accustomed to j the real pearl these imitations are so much dross, and I can hardly better ex- i press the difference than to say that the spurious ones seem dead and devoid of; the blush and sparkle that is the beauty j of the real pearl. The latter needs no artistic adornment to set it off. Held in the hand and subjected to the closest scrutiny it appears the best." Changes in 3Ien?s Clothing:. It is curious to note how great are : the changes in men's costumes. Looking only at one detail, the waistcoat which last century was the cause of endless extravagance, we find that is now -t ii. i._ i. 1;j I OI Uie ULUUOSO SlliljJliUitJ, ttUU JLO 1W tuc most part hidden by the coat. But the waistcoat had its day. There was a time when dandies made it a matter of : pride to have dozens?nay scores?of waistcoats. In Germany, during the last century, the luxpy was considerable, and the love of display incalculable. One of the ministers under Frederick : the Great used to boast that he had 300 j waistcoats and 300 wigs. "So many wigs and so little head," said Frederick the Great, speaking of him. Men of position w ere required to have a positive musenm of waistcoats in the eighteenth century. There were cloth waistcoats, silk waistcoats, waistcoats in ; velvet, waistcoats in cloth of gold. The waistcoast was a work of art, a painter's | canvas filled with subjects. It was j covered with admirable representations i nf 'nnnfin or onicnHoc rtf fwnrf, SfiPTlftS. of ' famous fables, of village festivals. The ! waistcoat of the gallant of the period ; was enlivened with the pictorial history : of the loves of Mars and Venus, the j marshal's waistcoat was embroidered 1 with military scenes, while one of the court dandies acquired fame (which he 1 would not otherwise have enjoyed) by reason of the illustrations of popular : plays to be seen on his manly breast, j The rage for these illuminated waist- : coats lasted till the end of Louis XIY's I reign. The buttons by which these j garments were fastened were not less j worthy of notice. They were, for the most part, of about the size of our silver dollars, and were in steel, in silver, in precious stones, sometimes even in dia- j monds. The Count d'Artois, afterward ! Charles X, was celebrated for the magnificence of his buttons, some of which were in enamel, and embellished with miniatures of the celebrated beauties, of j classic heads of the gods and goddesses. ; Some men of lower type wore on their buttons the portraits and initials of the queens of their hearts. The revolation ! brought about some changes. The j waistcoat was shortened, and its buttons [ bore the portrait of Robespierre, who j was known among dandies as the man ' with the best powdered hair in France, | or of Saint Just, or Fourquier Tinville, or others. But this fashion soon disappeared, and the waistcoat has gradually lost its importance as an article of mas- j culine apparel, and is now considered useful as a depot for the watch, but as an ornament is none. Why Some People Fall to Succeed. 'TIiq-c nnorlo/rf: J..HWJ They overlook the small things. They have no eye to business. They hope for fortune to drop in their laps. They let their help waste and destroy. They fail to advertise. i They have too much outside business. They talk politics too mucii. They fail to invent or have new ideas. They are penny wise and pound foolish. They imitate their neighbors. They are not polite or accomodating, j They think most things take too j much trouble. They fail to push business. They know not that the best is cheapest. They know not the power of method. ^.Thev are illiberal to home enterprises. They attend to everything but their j own ousmess. i They become rusty and lose ambi| tion. | A fashionable city wedding now costs i from 81,800 to 83,500. It is said that a j Wall street broker, not willing to spend 1 such sums, got a friend to put up bis : intended son-in-law to elope with bis daughter?on tbe score of economy. The Louisville Commcrcinl cites the ca*i i of Captain Charles 2s. Corri, of that city, j who was cured by St. Jacobs Oil, after suf I fering for years with rheumatism.? Iojv j (iVcb.) Rcpuh'ican | It is asserted that the contents of the 1,S00 tanks in the oil regions of this country would fill a square reservoir having a side of 3,747 feet to a depth of ten feet. Some of the recently con ! strncted iron tanks have a capacity of j 35,000 barrels. The Philadelphia Ea*y Hour mention; ! Mr .T. A. Walton, of 1245 North Twelfth j street, that ciiy, as an enthusiastic indorse: I of St. Jacobs Oil fur the relief and cure ol j diseases of horses. ! Eighty million ponnds of tea, valued i at $25,0*00,000, were imported into the United States in 18S0, and the chances ! are that these figures will show increase \ for the current jear. BRHH|BjnB^Hi Miraculous Escape. pit. Pleasant (Iowa) Journal.] . j It is an experience vouchsafed to very Caj few, to tread along the border land 'of! J. ] death and yet come back to life,preserved j of ( as if by a miracle, l'et such was the ex- Phi perience of Professor Tice, of St. Louis, ha\ the day following the conclusion of his anc coarse of lectures at Burlington, Iowa, Cat lately, as we learned from Mr. Sam'l L. j f0n Py]e, the well-known druggist of Mt. ; hig Pleasant, in relation to the case. Pro- j wh; fessor Tice gives the strongest indorse- | hex ment of the efficacy of St. Jacobs Oil, j infj which it is possible to give. It pro- i sea duced immediate relief in an attack of i swt neuralgia of the chest, where the pulse eld had gone down to thirty-five per min- anc ute, and scarcely perceptible. In half an hour his pulse was restored to its roa normal beat of eighty. Four appointments of lectures had to be canceled in hei consequence. Professor Tice credits tw< the St. Jacobs Oil with having saved nes his life. Mr. Geo. F. W. "Willey, the r0p widely-known teacher here, in response by to an inquirv concerning the remedy, 0f j said : With great pleasure I bear testi- ev mony to the peculiar healing properties SUI of St. Jacobs Oil, in rheumatic pains. brc Having been a sufferer with this dis- bo< tressing malady for years I do say that ro}the curative effects of the St. Jacobs bei Oil in my case surpassed those of any ves other rheumatic remedy, many of which I had been forced to use. Mr. E. Rugg jes spoke from personal experience in stating that he had suffered a great deal Bt? from rheumatism, and been troubled at ^ different times with sore throat. He c0] purchased a bottle of St. Jacobs Oil ^ha from Mr. Pyle, and after three or four applications was relieved of his ailment. Asking Mr. W. A. Rouse what he knew j about the article he said : After great i0c suffering with pain in the left side, at- pei tended with severe colic, I was recom- tet mended to use St. Jacobs Oil. I purchased a bottle, took two doses and applied some externally. X was relieved hie immediately and have not experienced in* any pain since; that of my left side from which I had suffered for more t0' t'??m nnA Tear having left me. Such dit experiences as these carry conviction ere with them to all fair-minded and bo: Ihoughtlal people, and more firmly ^ establish the merit of that famous otj remedy which, too, has our indorse- l'ec ment. 00 lat kit The worst thing about riches is difficulty in acquiring them. ?pie Hostj* Certificates. It is no vile drugged stuff, pretending to be made of wonderful foreign roots, barks, etc., ' and puffed up by long bogus certificates of pre- yoi 1 ended miraculous cures, but a simple, pure, coi effective medicine, made of well-known valua- all ble remedies, that furnishes its own certificates yoi by its cures. We refer to Hop Bitters, the vit purest and best of medicines. See "Truths" cai and "Proverb?," in another column. vei At least twenty-seven of the forty-eight on members of the United States Senate which pa; met in July, 1861, are dead. thj HOW TO SECURE HEALTH. * It is stranse any one will suffer from deransementt brought on by impure Worn), when SCOVILL'S SARSAPAIULLA AXD5jTILI.IXGIA.or liLOOD AND LIVED SYKl'P will restore health to the physical organization It is a stre:i;tlieninssyrup, pleasant to take, and the BEST IJLOOD Pl'RIFIKK ever discovered, curing Scrofula I Sypliil itie disorders. 'Weakness of the Kidneys. Erysipelas, I f .Malaria, Xervous disorders, Debility, Ililious complaint: wh and Diseases of the I'.lood, Liver. Kidneys, Stomach, "P skin, i tc. ^ dai Et!cy'? Carbolic Troche* prevent all coata- the Kious diseases, such as Diphtheria, Scarlet Fever m Whooping Cough, and cure Coughs and Colds. gT Pleasant to the taste and a iiood disinfectant. THE MARKETS. tol 9 e3ti NEW VOKK. < Beef Cattle?3Ied. Nat live wt. 10^<@ 11% Calves?Good to Prime Veals.. 5 '% Sheep cor JLamba 5 (in oys swr< w-a sixth 7 w?: Dressed, city 8 @ 8]/ . Flour?Ex. State, good to fancy 5 80 @ 8 25 ? Western, good to choico 6 55 @ 9 25 s Wheat?No. 2 lied 1 42 @1 44% , * No. 1 White 1 39V2@ 1 41 % Eve?Prime State 1 051 06 Barley?Two-rowed State 90 @ 90 l Corn?Ungraded WesternMixed 65 @ 70% let! Southern Yellow 7273 op< Oats?White State 4'J @ 56 pei Mixed Western 45 @ 48 ve$ Hay?Prime Timothy 1 05 @ 110 uai Straw?No. 1, Eve 80 @ 90 * Hops?State, 1881 22 @ 30 J; Pork?Mess, now, for export...17 75 @13 00 J01 Lard?City Steam .* 1150 @11 oo Befined 1185 @1185 T Petroleum?Crude 6%@ G% _ r Eefined 7%@ 7% : Butter?State Creamery 25 @ 36 Dairy 22 @ 28 Western Im. Creamery 21 @ 29 , Factory 14 @ 18 Cheese?State Factory 10 @ 13 I 150 Skims 3 @ 9 of, Western 8 @ 12% P& Eggs?State and Peim 27 @ 28 Sti Potatoes?Early Rose.State, bbl 2 50 ? 2 75 BUFFALO. Ea Steers?Extra 6 00 @ G 40 by Lambs?Western 5 00 @ 5 75 . Sheep?Western 100 @ 5 00 Hogs, Good to Choice Yorkers.. G 00 @ G 20 Flour?C?y Ground, No. 1 Spring 6 75 @ 7 23 ta". Wheat?Xo. 1. Hard Dulutli 150 @150 on Corn?No. 2 Mixed 65%@ 65% ?u Oats?No. 2 Mix. West -19 @ 5u :?* Barley?Two-ro\r<:d State 90 @ 90 ^1 BOSTON*. Beef-Extra plate and l'amiiy. ,1-i 50 @15 00 Hogs?Live '... 7 @ 7.3^ *es Hogs?City Dressed &Y/'i 9 "a Pork?Extra Prime per bbl.... 1G 50 @17 00 < Floor?Spring Wheat Patents.. 8 50 @ 9 25 xhc Corn Mixed and Yellow 72 @ 75 n0 Oats?Extra White 55 @ 57 C0I Rye?State 115 @ 115 Wool?Washed Comb & Delaine 45 @ 4'? . Unwashed '' " 31 @ 32 } WATERTOWN (JI.VSS.) CATTLE MARKET. ,1 Beef?Extra quality G G2}^@ 7 25 S1lPPT> T.ivo Wpiellr 3 Clf Lamfjs ? Hogs, Northern S34 PHILADELPHIA. Flour?Penn. Ex. Family, good G 57*<@ G 57% Wheat?No. 2 Bed 1 39 1 40^ Rve?State 1 00 % 1 00 Corn?State Yellow 70%tf? 71 Oats?Mixed CO @ GO p, Butter?Creamery Extra Pa.... 33 (<t? 40 lj Cheese?New York Full Cream. 14 Petroleum?Crude 67% liefned 7%@ 1% "" WEATHER?OR NOT. ~ ? ?:if We admire the philosophy of the unfortunate jjp man, v?*lio, when everything had been swept rcc away, said," Well, there'll be weather and taxes cm left,"at any rate." Alas! weather is tlie "yellow aii dog" of'all subjects; everyone thinks it his t!l< special right to try to better the weather, and hurls his anathemas against " old Probabilities," and all who endeavor to assist him in regulating j the weather. The following communication is De from Prof. Tice, of St. Louis. Mo., the renowned wo: meteorologist and weather prophet of the West. . It does not discuss the weather but something ^ surely of more importance to those who suffer res with that painful malady he speaks of: "The a if day after concluding ruy lectures at Burlington, for fer r~<\ SI jf- . x w . v?: n * Vj -fc -ft ori J* r*- noi * X > * &n: * I ? life'- i' i11 m!H. / i i j?ij - jr Iowa, on the 2Jst of December last. I was seized ; A3 with a sudden attack of neuralgia i:i the chest, Jcra giving me excruciating pain and almost prevent- j Jv<> ing breathing. My pulse, usually 80. fell to U5; lit intense nausea of "the .-toma?h succeeded, and a 'sJj cold, clammy sweat covered my entire body. Imc i The attending physician could do nothing to re- ikm ! lieve me. After suffering fur three hours. I j fro thought?as I had been u*ing St. Jacobs Oil with ; good efTect for rheumatic pains?I would try it. j I saturated n piece <>:' llauuel. larjre enough to ) ; cover my chest, with the Oil. and applied it. The | : relief wis almost instantaneous. In one hour I | was entirely :'r.>c from pain, and would have taken the train to fill an appointment that ni?ht in a neighboring town had my friends not dis- j suadedme. As it was. I took the nfcht train for my j home, in i-t. Louis, and hav? not been troubled ! since. i Hi } " I \ t A Sad" Tale from the Sea. Irs. Georgia L. Hunter, the wife of )tain Hunter, 01 tne scnooner xncmas Lancaster, fcwhich was wrecked north }ape Hatteras, has returned home to iladelphia \ widowed and childless, ing left tiie bodies of her husband I three children buried in the North olina sand?, near the burial place oi r seamen anfi the second mate. Tied h up ia the zigging of the L&ncaste , ile the strong vessel was pounding self to pieces, Mrs. Hunter saw hei mt child torn from her arms Dy tne _ whicli had only a moment before illowed np her husband and his est daughter, and still clinging, wet I nearlv frozen to the mast, the irt-broken woman heard above the ,r of the sea a plaintive, sobbing cry, [amma, come save me," which tol: that one child still lived. Through ilve honrs of wind an 1 rain and dark;s Mrs. Hunter battled against the ies which obstinately saved her lift fastening herself there out of read the storm and of her child, who diec :n after succor came, and the fiv? vivors of the ill-fated ship were raght to land. "When the captain': ly was found, his pocket had beei >bed of $75, whioh he had securec 'ore leaving the cabin when th< * ? * -1 - r* mi , sei strucK me reti. ?ne poor wumw s thus left destitute, but not friends, for she met kind assistance fron iutenant Newcomb, of the United ites army, and keeper Midget, of th< >-saving station, who made her a: nfortable as it was possible to do ii tt uncivilized place. * Nullifying a Grave Rink. Residents and sojourners in fever and ago ations, who are wise enough te test by ex rience the genuineness of the claims of Eos te^s Stomach Bitters to public confidence Llify a grave risk, which without the protect ; aid of this fortifying agent could not safel encountered. Bo th air and water are the v< :les for the dissemination of the disease, an egularities of the system which this fine a] native is peculiarly adapted to correct, an< it want of tone which is specially favorabl me COUUractlOB Ul uiaiautu icrao, uv ions which must undergo a radical chang i positive immunity from the scourge can b ped for. Quinine has no continuous effect, i langerous drug, and works incalculable afte schief to the system. The Bitters, on th ler hand, is not only safe, but the good el its which it speedily produces do not wea t as the medicine is persisted in. It rcgu es and tone i the stomach, liver, bowels an lnevs with certainty and promptitude. "he pawnbrokers of Great Britain, 4,372 i nber, take in during a year 200,000,000 c dges. Laaiei, uencn.cc nnu rccuici Those languid, tiresome sensations, causin a to feel scarcely able to be on your feet; tha istant drain that is taking from your systei its former elasticity, driving the bloom froi ur cheeks; that continual strain upon you al forces, rendering you irritable and fretfu' i easily be removed by the use of that m:u ous remedy, Hop Bitters, lrregularitic I obstructions of your system are relieved a cc, v.-hile the sp'ecial causes of periodic* in are permanently removed. Will you hee s? See ' Truths." >o not lose courage ov considering you 1 imperfections, but instantly set abou ledving them. Restored from a Decline. Nobth Greece, N. Y., April 25, 1SS0. )r. R. Y. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sireel it my duty to write and thank you fo at your "Golaen Medical Discovery" an 'avorite Prescription" have done lor m; jghter. It is now five weeks since she bega: ir use. She is more fleshy, has more colo her face, no hcadache, and is in other way latly improved. Yours truly, Mss. Marcelia Myers. Ticked men stumble over straws in the wa leaven, but climb over hills in the way t ruction. 'Golden Medical Discovert " (Trade-mar ristereri) is not only a sovereign remedy fo lsumption, but also for consumptive nigh sats, bronchitis, coughs, spitting of blood ik lungs, shortness ot breath and kindre jctions of the throat and chest. By drug ts. lccordesg to the security you offer to he: tune makes her loans easy or ruinous. Jnlike other cathartics, Dr. Pierce's "Pel 3" do not render the bowels costive afte sration. but, on the contrary, establish ; manentlv healthy action. Being entird tetable no particular carc is required whil ng them. By druggists. r you know how to spend less than you ge i have the philosopher's stone. Earner's Safe Kidney and Liver Care. rhe funded debt of New York City i 3,999,306. Cents Will Bny Treatise upon the Horse and Lis Diseases ok of 100 pages. Valuable to every owne horse*. Postage stamps taken. Sent posl id by New York Newspaper Union, 150 Wort eet, New York. Bed-Bus:s, Roachcs, ts, cats, mice, ants, dies, insects, cleared or '4Bough on Hats." 15c., druggists. [.ydtgestion, dyspepsia, nervons prostratio d all forms of general debility relieved b "UVviru-tv's VT-PTf)fT7Fn Beef Toxic. th Iv preparation of beef containing its entii tritious properties. It contains blood-making ce-generating and life-sustaining properties nraiuable in all enfeebled conditions, whethe i result of exhaustion, nervous prostratioi ;nvork, or acutc disease, particularly i suiting from pulmonary complaints. Coswel .zard & Co., proprietors, New York. >afe and Reliable.?There is no disease c > human system for which the Vegetdte cai t be used with perfect safety, as it does nc itain any metallic compound. iro tou bald? Cabboli>-e, a deodorized ex cf of petroleum, the only cure for baldnesj j been improved, so that it is now the mos jghtful dressing in the world. The onl, ,1 natural hair restorer ever produced ~ Vegetine pok mm ait Cwrois Humors THE DOCTOR'S C ERTIFICATE. READ IX. Ashley, "Washington Co., 111., Jan. 14,1878. i. IT. R. Stevens: tenr Sir?This is to certify that I had been suffer ; from a Rose Cancer on my right breast, whic! :w very rapidly, and all my mends had given m to die. when I beard of your medicine, Vegetisk :ommended for Cancer and Cancerous Humors, nmenced to take it, and soon found myself begin lg to feel better; my health and spirits both fel ; benign influence which it exerted, and a fe\ mths lrom the time I commenced the use of th getixe the Cancer came out almost bodilv. CARRIE deFOBREST. certify that I am personally acquainted with Mrs Forrest, and I consider her one of ourvervbes men. De. S. ~R. FLO W iiES. LL Diseases of the Beood.?If Vegetts'e wi ieve pain, cleanse, purify and cure such disease foring the patient to perfect health after tryin t'erent physicians, many remedies and sufferin years, is it not conclusive proof, if you are a su er, you can be cured? Why is this medicine pe: mini? such great cures? It worhs in the blood, i s circulating fluid. It can truly be called th eat Blood Purifier. The great source or diseas ginates in the blood: and no medicine that do* : act directly upon it, to purify and renovate, hi I just claim upon public attention. Vegetine. I regard it as a Valuable AMILY MEDICINE Jan. 1, 1878. H. R. Stevens : tear Kir?I take pleasure !in savins that I ha\ >d the Vegetine in my family with good result II have known of several cases ot remarkab: es eflected bv it. I regard it as a valuable fami] dicine. Truly yours, KEV. WM. McDOXALD. he Rev. \Vm. McDonald is well known throug : United states as a minister in the M. E. Churcl Vegetine. PREPARED BY . R. Stevens, Boston, Mass Sniff htt All A It FIELD.?Acorns vtu ."<1 : >r L?fe of Pre? 'dent Garfield. A complete, faithful history fro idle to grave. by th>-eminent biographer. Col.<'< : 11. Books all ready lor delivery. An elegantly.illu .ted volume. Indorsed edition. Liberal term cnts take orders for from 2o to 50co;>i?-s daily. Oi; Is any other book ten to one. Agents never mas >ney so fasr. The book sells itself. Experience ni -essar.v. All make immense profits. l'rivate tern e. Gkoegk Sxin'son x <.'u.. Portland. Main*-. Br.XXnAWS HEADACHE 1 short time both SICK and ICERVO the nervous system, clcanse tho s! regiilar healthy action of tho bow A foil size box of these v.-ilnahit pletc cure, mailed to any address gta-raps. X'or tale by all druggists BEOTfS c: I (TMsea^ravinz represents the Lungs la ahealthy state.) : 1 SiIJMTD liEDT t IN MANY HOMES. i 1 For Conzlis, Colds, Croct>, Bronchiri?and all ? other affections of the Throat 3nd LUNGSs it stands unrivaled and utterly beyond all competition. j I IN COMIPTIYE CASES 4 I | It approaches so near a specific that "Ninety-five" , per cent, are permanently cured where the direc3 lions af-strictly complied with. There is no chemi. i >ncredicnts to harm theyouns or old. ' AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL! J IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM! 3 J. N. HARRIS & CO., Proprietors, S CINCINNATI, O. FOR SALE BYALL. DRUGGISTS. > Y N U iS "o j! HJg| MAKDF1CT0BY | I; ind Wholesale Depot I ' 465 FULTON ST., ' ndBSESSS BROOKLYN. ? Tmprtant to tie Mlifis of Aiem '* The MOST MARVELOUS INTENTION ia tho 0 WORLD is the "W1LSONIA" MAGNETIC G GARMENTS. aw v.vkry FORM OF DISEASE known to - ^ i mac, withont medicine, ehangesof ftiet, or occupar tion. 200.000 PERSONS, once HELPLESS INVAo LIDS, are dot rr-joicius in the blessings of EE5 STORED HEALTH. * All checks and postoffice orders for " WILSONLi " x suit* mnst be made pavable to WM. WILSON, 465 _ '* . FULTON ST.. BROOKLYN. "1 Scud tor circulars, price list and other memoranda 3 regarding the "WTLSONIA." We vi ve from the lis: or thousands of " WILSONIA" Vatient-; the foilowintr ' . n REPRESENTATIVE REFERENCES: Hon. Horatio Sevmour, Utica, N. Y.; Hon. Peter >i Cooler. Hon. Thurlow Weed, Commodore C. K. Garrison. General ij. Graham, Judse Levi Parsons, ot Y. City; j. B. Hovt (merchant). Spruce St., N. Y.; P. V. I-'air.veather, (merchant). Smice St., N. Y.; E. B. Stimson (merchant). Spruce St., N. Y.; Thomas g Hall. 184 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn: Colonel Bayard t Ciark, ">4 E. 41!th St., N.Y.: Hon. John Mitchell (treasil ttrer), Brooklyn: Mrs. R. Robb.aQjWyckoff St.,B'kIyn. * S S'>urt'st and Best Jledicine CTer Made. 8 j, | AcoSmhinatiou of Hops, Buchu, Man- I - B drakleand Dandelion,withallthebestaad 1 3 B most ctturative properties of all other Bitters, I ,C | makes% the greatest Blood Purifier, Liver fl il 5 Reg U l\a tor, and Life and Health Restoring I B Agent cnwBMKSZH earth. S No disease an possibly long erist where Hop 6 B Bitters are us^^<?so varied and perfect are their B ^ | aeygiTesevlllfossdrlgortotlesEeiazdiria. 9 | To all whose eB'-=P^ymei:ts cause irregalarf- I K ty of the bowels or\ urinary organs, or who re- H JB Quire an Appetizer^kTonic and mild Stimulant, I g Hop Bitters are inval^iaaMe' Without IntCX- a~~? ' Iicaxing. hub >'o matter what your fc^elings or symptoms are what the disease or 13 Hop Bitters. Don't wait until you a?1"0 sick but if you ordy feel bad or miserable ,4 use them at ocee. It may save yourlife.lt has? 3 a ved hundreds. SGGO '"'ill be paid for a caRse they will not cure or help. Do not suffer ?orIety?or friends suffer,but useaadurse them%touso HOP B Remember, flop Bitters is noVjfl?. drugged drunken nostrum, but the Parest^^ n d Best Medicine erer made; the JT2ZE5D and HOPE" and no person or family^. xJfl y should be .Tithout them. i .kLj-riA su 0 D. I.e.Is an absolute and Irresistible cure B fi| f orDnmkenness, use of opium, tobacco and ? narcotics. All sold by drugzists. Send f > for Circular. Hop Blttm rfy. Co., ^ BtfS i* ^T**x If you enjoy a laugh heartily U fggj I frA Then read our Science ex Stobx* <3 Ol Sammy Tubus ar.d his Spousi'* , XxS&wSEScSfcik The Bo> Doctor 4: Trick ilonkeij ' TjSssk. The author, EL B. foote, iL D? ^S^^SSsS'Sji IUustratc^ contents free. ' ?sS?y Bat if you're fond of lots o un, j Just buy the folropticon: fe 1 Magic Lanterns are outdone. Poly, is a picture-sun l|^?5afif??ff?Wc0S!co. r Box 7SS. yew York City. . . . -j. 1 5.000 Agents Wantc<! for Ufe of : GARFIELD m t It con* aiss the full history of his noble and eventful . 4SI ' life and dastardly assassination. Surgical treatment, 4M death, faneral obsequies, etc. The best chance of - - ' " voi.r life to make money. Beware of" c&tchvonxs . imitations. This is the only authentic and fully illast rated life of our Martyred President. Fine steel . _ portraits. Extra terns to agents.- Circulars free. _ : ' ?M| S Address NATIONAL PUBLISHES CO., Phila.. Pa. . ?3? I'^atW" Pills ^ u Blood, and will completely change the blood in the a entire-svstem in three months. Any person wno will tak'; one pill each night fron\ 1 to 12 weeks mav be restored to sound health, if such a thins be possible. Sold everywhere or sent by mail for 8 letter stamps, t ?. s. .VrtMNSOX & CO., Boston, Masfc, <%3S fo?isi ? ri y Baiignri Mc. j Free! Cards! Free! | 0 We will send fron by mail a sample set of car Ger, man. French, Ei?:-'li?h and American fancy cards,with M " a price li?t o! ovira hundred different desisns. onrej coi|>t ;i stsrr-.j. fur postage. Thoy are not advertis:r in;: cards. but lar?e. flue inotr.ro c.hromo cards, on , eokl.siiv tinted crrounds, f< rmiDjtthe finest collection i:i ihe world. We will also inclose a confidents tial j.r>? li-1?i>'our large and small chroiuos. Address !, i'. GLKASQX CO.. 46 Summer St., Boston, Mass. PLAYS! PLAYS! PLAYS! PLAYS! ,j For Beading Clubs, lor Amateur Theatricals, Tem. perance Plays, Drawing-Room Plars.Fairv Plays.Eth'* lopian Plavs. Guide Books, Speakers, Pantomimes, it Tableau Lights, Mapnesium Lights, Colored Fire, Burnt Cork, Theatrical Face Preparations. Jarley*s Wax Works, Wigs, Beards, Moustaches, Costumes, Charades and Paper Scenery. New Catalogues sent ' free, coin:-i.lull desoriptinn and prices. S>A1M II EL Kit ENC11 A- *0X. 38 E. 14th St., New York. J PA AAA SOLD!!! AGENTS WANTED : Sn.flilf! RARFinn * V WB w W or wm&M MB mm nr S3SB > kjwiwi^iiw Profunda ::iw.ruted. Ttoe onlo complete work vet out. Sale is immense. 30.000 eold. Outfit 3f>e. Address C. R- BLACKALL & CO., ... *3 25 Groat Jones Street. New Tort City. -- r.i Qi V WASTE MONET! Tcunf xsaaorcM. v> E /*\ If to a wan: a Luxuriant sioc?ucl*e. flomn* tbnken or a h??*T? cro?th of !:a:r on baW V = W brae* or to THICKEN. 9TKEN<i HI EX *n4 fc*3?Ej ISVKWRATKib*HA:R*r*rr'i-.i fc? tai'.-r.:. TTjW "*?vi? T?7 the rreit Spv*i?h 0:v^>rrry w*kicti La> NEVER VET I |# I"AILED. Srr?4 ONLY MX CENTS to l>r. J. CONZAI.tK, Box K-49. I^Mton. Mi?i. Iir?ar* cf a:! iinii&tiro*. \^^r\ CHEAPEST T100KS IN THE TTTORLD Macaulay'sHIs-|J Tainc's History of In I t'ulidrcory of Easlasd. JjSn^. Literature. l l'pre UM l'ce ll.-iio vol*, i I limo vol. han<iboraely V f coiaJ?j?? clots: 01J? bouad, for only M ct?. ? ??. MANHATTAN BOOK CO 18 W. 14th St.. N.Y. P.O. tOKMO. J W & N T EII 25M-:^rf^ a? "fe I b?1*SI?S ? fia oy prepareJ^SpedilPsiitissias : Besi-bepers, Posses, Salessea, te. Situations Guaranteed. v Address wlthstamp, COBB'S COLLEGE. PalnesiiKe.0. e Sure relief?c tttw i KIDDER'S PaSTiUiS^^S Any Livi n z Person can loam to play Piano or Or{ran in 15 minutes. Musical talent or previous s, practicc unnecessary. Guide by nuuL50c.(stamps takS en.) Send for circulars. L.W. TcM\ss.C5SB'way.X.Y. I ^ \r The Greatest Investments in the World. n Water Works Loans, 5'?? 6*s and 77?. ie S*cho?l Dintrict Bonds <*' ?. 7'it and Si'*. io A. WIL.K I >S. 74 (.'friaf >t.. New York. :? "P"PTWI'L,-P Q u?eour 1'aicnr Boiler Com? i Xviil XXiAO p0*iii.,n. Oedxxssolicited. FRANCIS & LO(;TItEI>. NVw York. C'TS. pavs for the Star Sransled Banner 3 mos. ill Nothing like it. ivthvear. 8 pages, fll'd. SpeciIVmens free. Add. S. S. Baxskb, Hinsdale. X- IL. . S mm mm mm K YEAR ANT) EXPENSES WiMMl Iff AGEXTS. Outfit fwe. AddrSM 111 P. O. VlcUcry. Angn?ta. MeM " Q A T T7QTWrP1C WANTED to sell Stationer?? oft " "O'? Mil Goods on commi-^ion. ScntiH gtamp for terms. PHCEN'IX PL~B. CO.. Warren. Pa. M 7 ??Kl^fiM?3 -AGENTSWMTED-90be?? i' ( ^ >^"^||scr.iagar:fcIes;n:!icworiu: 1 sample/V?, Address Jay Bron*oii. D.-frolt. N'!c&. 1 V n i! M fi Wif^iV II you womu xcarii 11 hvwiju, JUUilu 171 ul? tour months, and lx; certain of aHB j, situation. address Valentine Bros.. J^nes\lHe,JtVis^H l, i 1.1,EN'S ISmin Food-cnre? XervotisDebility .. Y Weakness ol GrnerHtiveOr/aiis.S'l-- rtlldrn;rtrists^B H Send forCircnlar. Alien's Pharmaov.:U:i First av? TtlEXTS WANTED for the Bos: ^niTTS'teit^B ;v S-ilin^ Pictorial Uooks and Bibles. 1 *rio? -s redticec^H . ret. National Publishing Co.,Philadcli;hia,Ba^H M ecc :i your own town. Terms and , vOD frt-o. Add's If. H m.i.ktta:Co..Port!and,>Ia?2!"flM 7~oNSJ I/r E. Sl'ENCEU., Attorney, Oo.'Ua^H I * Fia.. to !) ,; . L.::m i. loan or collect ;u >ncy in Fla^B BB 7 C?fn COH j' rdavathome. Samples worth $.>fre?,^B it ^ ^ Address stinsox A. Co.. Portland.Staine^B <5 A 17^ Clt3:o2acfrcc' SI?ccm^B "s V V <kX X W Lj. JimsAairrirsaVTatctiCo .I'ilt<burt;Xr^H t ff*i ^yT"j%TO Revolvers. Ca:?:i>cue free. AiUml ^ <ks* ' W bd Great Wcji, Gun XToiit. "itf^irrh. C70 A WKEK. $12 a dav at home easily made. Co<<t]^M v ' c. outfit free. Add's'TscE & Co.. Au;n:sta,Main^H A 5 I ?riXS euro most woa^rfclly In a very S US HJE.VDAC HU; sn<l while aotinjj on :onxa.ch of cscess of bile, producing a : PHXS, xrlth fail oroctions for a coinon receipt of r.ise three-cent jx>stago at ~-5c. Solo Frotrrietors, 3CE3nC.lI. CO:.IPA><*V, Ealtixaore, 3Id. I ' " j V i ~ t ^