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fey i Fof' the: HM^i^iwere per-1 ^^This is a practical hint; |Rrs might experiment upon | ^^y^serions loss and with a j W Keeping Cabbages. ^Ffcnow of no better way to pre-1 k cabbages through the winter,j Viie Germantown Telegraph, than Bwhich we have recommended for K.mber of years. It is to plant or HRhem up in rows as they grow? |0enat 1% with the roots down?fill in f with soil pretty freely, then make a j covering by planting two posts where L there is a fence to rest on or four; fc~where there is \gfc. allowing for a pitch i: Pk. to carry ofi th^water; lay bean poles ' 5 opposite the w&y o*f the pitch and J L cover tip with comfodder, straw or ?.boards. In using through the winter, j. P^avoid as much as possible the sun side | f and-close up again. "We have not | I found that setting the cabbage upside j I down in the rows, as many do, of any j k advantage, as we have kept ours for j P more than twenty years in the way we ' mention, in a sound, perfe#t condition, j , thicugh the winter into the spring,' -, and could even up to the first of May, I if .desirable. We see other methods i ^recommended and they may answer j t . just as well, but as to our own we I | speak from a long experience. ? When to Apply Liquid Planar*. B. One of the common mistakes made Hkby amateur cultivators of flowers is iftihat of overmanuring. To grow plants Kid pots properly, bu; little crude maInure should be mixed with the potting H soil, unless plenty of foliage is required; , aa the liquid form is the best in which to -apply the stimulant, the chief value of K which is that its effects are perfectly Bt controllable and can be made constant ( if desired. 2s o liquid manure should 1 ever be given when plants are at rest, ' for if you do the growth is unnatu- ] .rally continued, and the wood, not hav BTingtime to ripen, is made worthless. , [. When the production of fine flowers is . BL ^esired. manure water should be ap- : HrpirfSTfrhen the flower buds begin to j ^ show themselves and commence to SWCLL Ji.ppueu W iU?CS we uuncio j ?will be largely increased in size and B$ brilliancy of color. To geraniums, B. fuchsias and other similar plants, the B supply shouM be given more cont-inu? ously than to others. When using guano a big tablespoonful to two 3 quarts of water is plenty. Some auJ Shorities say it should be left standing yantO. dissolved. but the guano is put 4145c. watering-can first, and the water Koured on it, it will be mixed suffiHpiently. This should be applied at least B Apnie Cnltnre. Prescott TTmiams, of "Williamsburg, given a quarter of a CfiStury to apple ciuture, ana now nas \ W twenty acres in this fruit?about 1,400 I ?rees in all?had one of the largest Lcrops this year the orchards ever produced. It reached about 800 ban els. Btee trees are expected to reach a *2g capacity of 2,000 barrels. In ten years the income from the w acres is estimated at $2,000 a The land is like all that adjoinB?d Mr. Williams considers it all Bgapple culture. The peculiarity Bkojlis that he digs a hole five K^hich the young tree is with { falls and decayed fruit are all removed. The tree is cut to grow low with, widem spreading branches, thus avoiding : | much of the danger from high winds. Mr. Williams has this year observed for 1 ? the first time a difference in the shape of : Kthe Baldwin trees that bear in the odd < ftand the even year. The difference is ^ftuite noticeable when it is once pointed j out The even-year tree has long and , Mfclender branches reaching out in all directions, while the odd tree is more ; Hcrubby, the branches growing closer Hogether on the top. These facts may Be of much importance to those who B^y "wish to graft the Baldwin^ Like Ipany other frirLc raisers, Mr. Williams j las come to the. conclusion, as a result j jf his long experience, that only a few arieties of both apples and pears are rfi table to raise. He would not set aore than three varieties of pears, nd if he were to set an orchard of a j housand apple trees he says he would j et oiily the - Baldwin and the Ladies' wee ting. The latter is a winter sweet, ght red in color, very handsome, and profuse bearer. Farm and Garden Notes. Put the soapsuds from the washouse around the young grapevines verv week. One of the best .methods of keeping ftnanure is to have it under a leaky BAT. which keeps it moist, but pre HL^vashing and drenching by rains. jfcer and-burn all the weeds that B R^ed. By thus destroying the : ^^uWesome weeds you will;: 3 Hl many days of labor in j ft ?d in a ]: 1^"condition and not m is frequently the case, j < particles the more im- j KhTi rr its action. JrT&Dse who use lime as a fertilizer j Krply from ten to fifty bushels to the I Kre; ashes may be applied at the same j Kte; salt at the rate of 200 to 400 :: Jwmas, and plaster at the rate of 100 i BK Two-year-old trees of the apple, j Hpmn, pear and cherry are the best size j BBor planting. Peach trees should be Rne year old. Stocky, low branched ! KpeciiEens .will give the best satis|Hlt is never safe to leave a hillside Hftked through the winter. In the; Piyesfc seasons frost will pulverize the j Oprface so that much of it will be j Rfasfaed away. In very rainy winters j Bullies will form on the hillside to the !1 Kennanent injury of the field. Ht Don't overfeed the hogs and let j1 ?em eat sour feed or feed left over, mva +>>om -froal-r t.'hroA timpc a rtav m they will eat up clean and relish it. Edd to the com diet turnips, pumpKos, potatoes, apples, etc., as a relish.; Kt -will help them to eat and digest |Raore corn. *JFhe fact is somewhat panidoxical, n -easily explainable, that an abund-! Bjg^soft corn favors late keeping j fend an increase in the stock j iflfc^The soft corn is unfit] Hke advantage that ftrrots keeps the ^HH|^^M^E>n, and turnips Bake a refreshing WL A11 the root gj stowed away An for winter . Eta is not only j BR ^fcical, but promotive of health Lentment. Bpry important for farmers who Jm ?toes largely to select the seed 85 3 previous fall. At digging somewhat earlier, mark the jgy-i have strong, vigorous plants K -ear. A small potato from \ L is presumably better than a ; Y\A^ofA -f" o "hill fhof I I _ liiv/ii-i c* mu bixcu' j rely. V. J. Bealis experimenting 1 . wheat, and has arrived i sion that it can be safely j I The wheat he is using j sprouted six times. It! a little weaker at each ' id each time a small por- j it at the first trial a large | ws well. With the exception of the Brahma j and other Asiatic breeds, it must not j be* expected that chickens half or two- i thirds grown will become fat under j any system of feeding, we ottener h^ar of fat chickens than we see them, as they ^c<Ye a tendency to turn all that they digest into frame and feathers. However, a chicken well fed is more palatable than an ill-fed one. Harness should never be kept in the stable where manure is constantly generating la--ge quantities of ammonia. This ammonia is rapidly absorbed by the leather, send the effect upon the leather is the same as would result from saturating it with strong lye. In a word, ammonia rots leather, and hence keeping harness in the stable IS sure to result ill 1L5 uciuiage muic ui less. Loss of cud or suspension of rumination in cows is due to indigestion, from inaction of the muscular coats of the stomach. The remedy is to clear the, bowels and stomach of the gathered indigested matter by a brisk purgative; for instance, a quart of linseed oil or twenty ounces of Epsom salts, and then to give some easily digested and laxative food, as bran mashes or linseed meal steeped in water twelve hours. A writer in the Prairie Farmer tried the experiment of flat and hill cultivation for vines. This year squashes, pumpkins, melons and oilier vegetables were planted, part in hills and part flat. He recommends the level cultivation as the best, as hot weather did greater damage in the Mile Tn t.pn riavs the difference was very marked. Although the flat cultivation was superior for a dry season, the hill system is preferable for a wet one. Recipes. Pickled Chicken. ? Boil four chickens till tender enough for meat fall from bones ; put meat in a stone jar, and pour over it three pints of cold good cider vinegar and a pint and a half of the water in which the chickens were boiled; add spices if preferred, and it will be ready for use in two days. This is a popular Sunday evening dish; it is good for Luncheon at any time. Beown Loaf ?One coffee cup of molasses, one teaspo^nful of soda dissolved in one-half terspoonful of boiling water, stir into the molasses until it foams, then mix into it graham flour and cornmeal (vin the proportion of three to one) enough to make a thick batter, and then add one table^,. spoonful of lard. Pour into a^mold and steam four hours.* To be eaten hot. Very nice as a pudding with sauce. -Brown Onion Soup.?To make four quarts of this soup proceed as follows: Peal and slice six large onions, fry them brown in a saucepan with two tablespoonfuls of drippings or hntter. noar over them four quarts of boiling water, season with two teaspoonfuls of salt and haJf a saltspoonful of pepper, stir in two cupfuls of grated bread free from crust, and boil i slowly two hours, stirring occasionally. Season palatably, and serve hot. Tiekna Rolls.?One quart of milk, one-half teaspoonful salt, three teaspoonfuls baking powder, one tablespoonful lard, one pint of milk. Mix into a dough easily to be handled without sticking to the hands; turn on the board and roll out to the thickness of half an inch, cut it out with a large cak-w cutter, spread very lightly with butter, fold-one half over the other and lay them in a greased pan without touching. Wash them over with a little milk and bake in a hot oven. ^ Boast Goose.?The goose should Ka /virvhf mnnfVic nlrl Qnrl LLVO KJX* ??JL\SJL\s VUUU U^uv the fatter the more tender and juicy the meac,. Stuff with the following mixture: Three pints of breadcrumbs, six ounces of butter, or part butter and part salt pork, one teaspoonful each of sage, black pepper and salt, one chopped onion. Do not stuff very full, and stitch openings firmly together to kept flavor in and fat out. Place in a baking pan with a little water, and baste frequently with salt and water (some add vinegar), turn often so that the sides and back may be nicely browned. Bake two hours or more; when done take from the pan, pour off the fat, and to the brown gravy left add the chopped gioiets wmcn nave previously been stewed until tender, together with the water they were boiled in; thicken with a little flour aad butter rubbed together, bring to a boil and serve. Household Hints. Do not put glass articles that have held rrulk into hot water as this causes the* milk to penetrate the glass and it can never be removed. To clean copper teakettles use turpentine and 'fine brickdust and rub hard with a flannel and polish with leather and dry brickdust. Bread is ready to be made into loaves when it is like a honeycomb all through, and when the loaves will not retain the impress of the finger then it is readv for the oven. To polish tin pulverize charcoal very j Bne, dip a coarse cloth in a little soft! soap, then in the charcoal and rub the tin briskly. Wash in hot water and clry with a clean towel,- afterward sitting t,hc2i in the sunshine, if there is any. The tin does not wear off by this process. Or make it clean with soapsuds and polish with whiting. The best way to prepare a new iron kettle for use is to fill it with clean potato peelings, boil them for an hour or more; then wash the kettle with hot'' water, wipe it dry and rub with a little lard; repeat the rubbing for a half dozen times after using. In this way you will prevent rust and all the annoyances liable to occur in the use - - T AA.1 - oi a new iiei-uie. Clenching of the Hands. A correspondent writes: Whether i the clenching of the hands be the result j of mental emotion, of hysteria, or j other nervous convulsion, of acute poisoning or of tetanus, women always seem to lay the thumb across the palm and fold the fingers over it, frequently wounding the skin of the ball of the thumb by the pressure of the index and middle finger nails; while men invariably flex the fingers acutely first, now and then digging all four nails ! into the palm, and turn the thumb out- i side, across the back of the middle j phalanges. About four years ago I j witnessed a case of idiopathic tetanus I in a black woman in Barbadoes. The disease had ::eaehed that advanced stage where the muscles of the extremities begin to be affected during the paroxysms, and it was interesting | to observe, before actual clenching ensued, that the thumb "first began to twitch inwardly, while the fingers were motionless. Possibly this may be the unconscious result of habits acquired duriig life, I have had no opportunity of noting the phenomenon in children. - ^ : ^ 11if i i imr i?? ii mi -I, mi i ACCIDENTS OF HISTORY. A Chapter on Trifles Which Hare Deter*n!n^ Events. ! A curious volume might be penned ; on trifles which have determined great i events. It was but a trifle which gave i Spain for so many generations the lordship of the Xew World, and enabled her by the wealth she derived from that source to become the most powerful nation in Europe. It is wellknown that Columbus, dispirited by the refusal which he met at so manj courts, dispatched his brother Bartolomeo to ask aid from Henry YII., of England. But on the way the messenger fell into the hands of pirates, and by the time he reached London he was so destitute he had to try and earn the money to clothe himself in proper style before he could be presented at court. But by this time it was too late. Even the fact that Ferdinand and Isabella supplied the funds to equip the expedition was mainly due to the accident that Juan Perez de Marchenal, the queen's confessor, happened to be passing at the very moment when the weary mariner was knocking at the door of the La Rabida monastery to beg a little bread and water for his boy Diego, and was si'ruck with the noble face of the dusty pedestrian. Had Bartolomeo Colon reached London in time; had Christoval been by any chance a little later or a little earlier at the monastery door, the fate of Europe might have been changed and the destiny of the AngloSaxon race altered. Three centuries later it was again nearly revolutionized, for in 1806 the English Steld Buenos Ayres, ana it is no Secret that Napoleon was almost persuaded to abandon Europe as >a field for his ambition, and try what he could accomplish in the way of carving out an empire among the dissatisfied provinces of South America. When citizen Bonaparte seemed little likely to sit on the throne of Louis Capet, he was on. the point of offering his sword to the sultan, as at a later period Yon Moltke actually did. It is curious now to speculate what would have been the present state of the Eastern question had ]Sfa poleon carried his intentions into effect, or supposing that Moltke had remained in the Turkish service whether the Danish war would have been fought, or Prussia's supremacy established at Sadowa or Sedan. The cropping of Louis YII.'s chin brought on three centuries of bloodshed; and a sarcastic remark of Frederick the Great on Elizabeth Petrovna, of Kussia, roused that virtuous empress to take such a vigorous part in the seven years' war that at one time Prussia seemed well nigh stricken unto death. It is hardly forty years since Louis Philippe threatened war against the Texai. ~?T>ublic because an irate citizen haa ^1; ^t the trespassing pigs of the FrenCi mbassador. As it was he prevented u.e Lone Star sovereignty fVim'T. "Pnwvnoon 1 non and J.1VJULL uvai/ixig OJLIOIX iiuwyvvw* AVMU, thus the king and the pigs combined hastened the annexation of Texas to the United States. The Dutch are said to have "jockeyed" us out of Malacca in exchange for Java, by representing on th9 map, which our simpleminded envoys took for granted, the ftpa^^^'yclorrfo onrl the other aS small, and rooted traditions of American diplomacy is one which represents the English commissioners agreeing to the surrender of Oregon, "because a country in which a salmon does not rise to the fly cannot be worth much." Laws have been altered through accidents because the queen's printer's boy forgot to deliver Lord Beaconsfield's amendment to a bill. But if trifles have determined the fate of. aws and nations, accidents equally small have caused men to fol1 * ?14.^. 4-VvA S\- *TT V? i rtVl iUW pursuits LUC icaiuio ui nww ua>u been not much less momentous to culture and civilization. Cowley became a poet owing to his perusal of Spenser's "Fairy Queen," and Sir Joshua Reynolds had never thought of painting until Richardson's " Treatise " fell into his hands. Shakespeare might have ended his life as a prosperous wool-comber had he been a prudent young tradesmen; Corneille showed no liking for any literature except the law until he fell in love and felt compelled to tell the lady so in poetry; and Moliere might have remained making tapestry had not his grandmother nettled his pride by wishing that he could be an actor like Monrose. Balboa might never have discovered the Pacific had he not been unsuccessful as a shopkeeper in Hispaniola, and found it necesc-o-rrr trt (loo tn TT! Ill"Til and P.fYn f>P?l Pfi from his creditors in a cask on board Eucisdo's vessel, and it is certain that had Cortez become a well-briefed lawyer in Salamanca he would never have lived to proudly tell Charles V. that he had given him more provinces than his father haci left him cities. Ignatious Lovola was a soldier, and the Order of Jesuit might never have been founded had he not accidentally beguiled the tedium of inaction necessitated by a wound while reading " The Lives of Saints." Gibbons determined to write his famous work after listening to the monks singing vespers in the Temple of Jupiter, Rome; and La Fontaine was stimulated to cultivate literature after hearing some verses of Mfdherbe. Faradav might have remained a journeyman bookbinder had not kindly JNlr. Dance invited him to hear Sir Humphrey Davy lecture, and Vaucanson only took to studying the mechanism of clocks to beguile the weary hours which he had to pass while attending his mother at confession. Had Sir James Simpson been successful in his candidacy for the post of a Highland parish doctor, the world might have lost the inestimable boon of chloroform for many years., and to the wise discretion which the College of Surgeons exercised in refusing their di'oloma to Oliver Goldsmith we owe (iVicjh of Wakefield" and the "^Desertecr Village."?London Standard. The Esquimaux. . Dr. John Rae, in giving an account, 1 of his Arctic explorations- fcclore the j American Association at its recent i meeting, fgdfCe'ot the Esquimaux as a generosS and polite people, who had ^rclully preserved the tradition of events that happened twenty years ago. They believe they came from the "West; and they seem to Dr.'Kae physically like the Chinese. They build their huts and boats in a similar way with the Siberian natives, but appear very short in stature on account of the shortness of their legs. Dr. Flam, of London, had said that the skeleton of an Esquimaux in his museum had thirty-five vertebrae, or one more than the average number. They are not to be regarded as gluttonous, for the large quantities of meat they consume seem to be required by the climate.?Popular Science Monthly. Capacity of the Largest Churches. Some patient German has collected statistics of the capacity of the world's largest houses of worship. First on his list, of course, appears St. Peter's, (X 0 XtvUitj ' > UAVUl iO V(i|'(V^V Vi. WUU(UU ing 54,000 people. Xext conies Milan cathedral, with 37,000; then St. Paul's., in Rome, with 32,000; Cologne, with 30,000 ; St. Paul's in London, and the church of St. Petronius, in Bologna, with 25,000 each; the Sophia mosque, in Constantinople, with 23,000; St. John Lateran, at Rome, with 22,000; St. Stephen's, in Vienna, and the cathedral in Pisa, 12,000 each; St. Dominic, in Bologna, 11,400 ; the Frauenkirche, in Munich, 11,000, and San Marco, in Venice. 7,000. St. Patrick's cathedral, in New York, is given a capacity of 13,000, which is an error. FOB THE FAIR SEX. A Benefactress. Twelve vears ago Miss Jennie Collins, of Boston, set herself about ameliorating the condition of working girls and working women of that citv. The results have proven 'what vast good can be accomplished by one who gives herself, heart and soul, to such work. What induced Miss Collins to undertake the work was this: A young women who could keep books came to her one cold winter's day. She was out of employment, owed her landlady for several weeks' board, and had been told not to return to her room again without the money to pay. Miss Collins gave her the money Deeded, and then did what was more to the point? got her a situation as a clerk in the Boston postofnce. This was an innovation, and, as in the case of all innovations, met with great opposition. The then postmaster, Burt, however, stood by her, and today there are several young women in the Boston postoffice. By the efforts of Miss Collins the interest and cooperation of many philanthropic men and women were secured, and as the result "Boffin's Bower," as Miss Collins calls the place where she seeks to do good to all of her sex who come t o her, was established In the annual report for 1882 Miss Collins says that from May 30,1881, to May 30,1S82, a total of 1,154 employers applied to her, and 1,545 girls during the same tims. Over three thousand meals were also given during the period named to girls too poor to pay for their food. "So report," says Miss Collins, "can give a description of the miscellaneous work, including the poor girls in disgrace, others hungry and cold, penniless ar.d perishing. Millions of money are invested to help the poor, but no law can possibly be enacted to prevent human sulfering, because law gives too much power in one direction and too little in another." riLSLimru ui n tiuia; Can you guess what is the newest fashionable diversion for young women of wealth and leisure? says a New York correspondent. Dressing live dolls, That is to say, they make toys of little girls?sisters, nieces, cousins, anything in the shape of a little gi^rl will do, if she be comely. This has suddenly become a rage in certain circles. I know an only daughter who, having no little girl relative, uses t'ae three-year-old offspring of one of her papa's poor tenants, a pretty little chit, on whom she places costly costumes with all the ardcr of a fresh pursuit. The child is as cute as possible in Kate Greenawav garments, and my lady takes delight indressingher after some quaint picture. Two or three afternoons a week slis is arrayed in something novel and taken out for a wUk or drive. Of course that will not liist long and the chiM will soon be returned to calico. It is net right for rich women to divert themselves in any such way, nor is there any excuse for it, now that it is fashioDable to do art needlework. Some ingenioi.s girls c. ^iy aeqUaint'jn/'G uro mokirirr atcti noc muffs and cuffs by sewing together fancy feathers from the wings and breasts of native birds, which they fasten to thin silk or muslin, line with satin and edge with a border of fpathgy arranged as a fringe. Decorating Tvrcn -fm'Hrf s.lSTffrfcc, is great; ly in vogue for amusement. Some are wearing collars and small muffs of dark velvet, bordered with their own hands with feathers, those of ducks, pheasants, peacocks, etc., being employed. Tha plumage intended for trimming hats and bonnets is also purchased and taken to pieces to fancifully decorate other articles of wear. News and Notes for Women. Mme. Patti has thirty-five servants in and about her Welsh castle. miss ijraoriexie ureeiey nas Degan making improvements on the Greeley swamp at Chappaqua. A female drummer is making the northern part of Alabama lively. She has a specialty in jeans. The women of the middle and up per classes in St. Petersburg are, with rare exceptions, inveterate smokers. The young ladies of Albany, Mo., have pledged themselves not to go with any young man who takes strong drink. Of the 120,000,000 women and girls ; in'India not more than one in every 1,200 has yet been placed under any ! kind of Christian influence. An engaged girl is happiest when she is telling about it to another girl who is not engaged and is not likely to be. The shock of finding out that her lover was a horse thief, instead of the rich gentleman that he had represented himself to be, destroyed the reason of a girl at Dallas, Texas. A week later her father followed her to the asylum, crazed by sympathy and grief. " BroD the clothes or I'll fire I" re marked Mrs. David Conhaim, of St. Paul, the other night, after she had got a pistol and followed a burglar, who had taken her husband's habiliments to the porch. For answer the thief struck her over the head with thevest, and then ran and got two bullets close by his head?but he dropped the clothes. Fashion >"otcs * Fur borderings trim both cloaks and costumes. Beaver fur of natural color and dyed beaver are equally fashionable. Royal cardinal jackets are very fashionably worn over black skirts of silk, satin or cashmere. Scarlet cloth, with eider-down woven i in it, is a light and comfortable fabric for winter underskirts. Round and oval-shaped brooches are imported, now that every lady is supplied with long, slender lace-pins. Chinchilla holds its own as one of the most dainty and useful of the furs appropriated by the wardrobe. White felt poke bonnets trimmed with white uncut velvet, white feathers and some gilt braid, will be worn by young ladies. Fancy bags carried by the ladies and i having huge initial letters on the side , have had their day, simply because the j shop and hired girls carry them. now.i The leg-of-mutton sleeves have not proved successful, but the close coat sleeves are now slightly cushioned at the top to lift them above the armhole. Copper-colored silk and velvet combination dresses are among the most j stylish of the season. Embroidery on 1 velvet and multi-colored beaded gimps | are the trimmings. The costume for church, weddings! and day receptions is a short dress of j brocaded repped silk combined with ; velvet. It is worn witli a small visite i mantle of the velvet and a capote bon- i net. The fashionable ash color for lace! may be produced by using tea. It is advisable to try it first on a small piece ! of lace, strengthening or weakening I 44 X 1:1 J r.A/1 1C I me tea uiiuu uie ucsncu cucu& u w tained. A late experiment in the dyeing of furs has produced "the golden beaver," which gives a yellowish ecru tint to the fur that is novel and pleasing, i This color is applied to the plucked fur, j and the effect is soft,- pleasing and very beautiful. Cloaks for midwinter are also lined ' with quilted satin and finished with edging and collar of fur; and these are j preferred by many ladies because less ; weighty and cumbersome than the, cloaks with fur lining, while giving ; the same exterior effect. ! ? ? - ? f _ I What is Glucose or Grape Sugar. The terras " Glucose " and " Grape Sugar" are but different names for : the same fhing; the former designating its solution in water and the latter its solid condition. Both are produced ; from starch, which, by a simple chemical process, is converted into i sugar. i The change is but a slight one, as j the chemical elements of starch and of i sugar are identical in kind, varying ; only, and that to a very small degree, , in their proportions. It has been i found that starch can be converted | into grape sugar by a simple process. It is called " Grape Sugar " because it is precisely the same as the sugar ol the grape, as well as of all other sweet and wholesome fruits, and is the chief natural component of honey. Honey often runs as h:.gh as seventy per cent, of pure glucose, and the juice of the I sugar-cane, sorghum, beet ana watermelon contains a considerable percentage of it. The starch intended for conversion may be derived, from any source that is convenient 'or economical, whether it be from fruits, grains, roots or ! plants. In this country corn is the i most available, being not only abundant but exceedingly rich in starch of a most pure and excelled quality. The starch being given, which is itself a most useful and universal product of nature, being a constituent of all vegetable growth and forming a large proportion of the food that we eat, the next step is to convert it into the sugar to which it is already so neariy arntu. This is done by simply submitting the starch, in liquid form, to the action of a minute percentage of dilate sulphuric acid, jkiifch quickly pro- j duces the requital change. As soon as this is accomplished, the acid i;? completely neutralized and elimin ated by the addition of a little chalk, which combines with it, forming the insoluble and harmless sulphate of lime, or gypsum, which in its turn is entirely removed, after settling, by drawing off the clear, supernatant sac- I charine liquid. This is then filtered and refined precisely as in the case of cane sugar, so that the most searching chemical test can discover no trace of the acid or any harmful impurities. We then have, when properly evaporated, a pure, sweet and colorless syrup called "glucose," or by further evaporation, the concentrated, white I and solid substance called "Grape Sugar." "Glucose" is from the Greek glwlcus, signifying sweet. The r ngin of the term ' Grape Sugar" has already been given. These commercial titles have served to mystify the public, and have misled people, or, perhaps, permitted others to mislead them as to the true character of these products. Were they simply called " Corn Syrup" or " Corn Sugar," their names would truly indicate just what they are, and the mystery would be dispelled. Glucose and grape sugar are no new ' things. In 1792, nearly one hundred years ago, the sugar of the grape was discovered in Germany by two chemists, Lowitz and Proust, who advocated the cultivation of the grape for the purpose of obtaining this sugar for j tlie home market.?January migmeer. \ Sixty Feet Under the Sea. J "1 was once a diver?not^a^gyf^lfer, j - out,a jd earl vbus i ness j it^afr^^S^ODierved the captain of a Spanish brig to a reporter of the j Xew York Sun. "We w">rkr d off the Mexican and Panama cotst?., principally on the Pacific side. Sometimes we worked alone, but generally on shares, and sometimes for pay. "We went to the grounds in small sailing vessels, tlier. we took to the small boats i and covered as much ground as possible. Each man had a basket, a weight, and a knife. For-sharks? Yes; but it is a poor defense, for it is almost impossible to swing the arm with any -c~?^ mnrnn TKa "hoot: Tim an ATI JLUIUC LLUUCi >T lilUi JL uu uwv vufv. is a short spear. When you reach the ground you strip, put your feet in a big sinker, take the basket that has a rope for hoisting, drop over, and soon find yourself at the bottom. Then your business is to knock off as many oysters as you can, and pile them int-j the basket before you lose your wind. It is a terrible strain, but I could stand it in those days for six minutes, and I have known some men who could stay down ten; but it is sure death in the long run. If the ground is well stocked you can get twenty or more shells, but it is all luck. When the basket is full it is hauled up, and after you come up for your wind r-Aii rrr\ o/-TOin tho CITllrAr llpirifT ULMYH *UU gV u^uiM, wuv q hauled up with a small cord for that purpose. It was on one of these trips that I ran afoul of the animal that gave me a lasting fight. You will smile when I say it was only a star fish, but that it really was. I went down sixty feet with a rush, and, landing on the edge or a big branch of coral, swung off into a kind of basin. The basket went ahead of me, and, as I swung off to reach the bottom, something seemed to spring up all around me, and I was in the arms of some kind of a monster that coiled about my body, arms and legs. I tried to scream, forgetting that I was in the water, and lost my wind. . It was just as if the plant hs.d sprouted under me and then threw its vines and tendrils about me. There were thousands of them, coiling and writhing, and 1 thought I had landed in a nest of sea snakes. I gave the signal as soon as I onr? a hrpn.k nmvard. Dart VUUiU, C4U.&VA v? ? ? C' 7 JT I of the creature clinging to me, while the rest, I could see, was dropping to pieces. They hauled me into the boat, when I reached the surface, and pulled the main part of the animal from me. It was oval, about three feet across, and the five arms seem el to divide into thousands of others. I probably landed on top of that one, which at that time was the largest I had ever seen. I afterward saw the body of one that was washed ashore on the isthmus that must have had a spread of thirtyfive feet. Their power of grasping is considerable, but touch them in a certain way and they throw off their arms in a regular shower, and are soon " reduced to an oval body." Men and Animals. All observing people must have noticed the resemblance existing between certain men and certain animals. The miser has his prototype in the rodents, whose two narrow, gnawing teeth are eternally reproduced in humanity. The proud peculiarity of the strong graybeards is to look like a lion?and Longfellow had that distinction. Chriso r> a moc -Opner .i\uruii iwi^cu imc a ^1*0 tiff; but other men have a more ludicrous resemblance to dogs of an inferior breed. A much-whiskered individual, driving in a Victoria downtown, with his Scotch terrier, asked a witty iady what she thought of them. "Why," said she, "I thought you were besi -e yourself!" A man of the Dundreary type can look very much like a te Tier. The bulldog finds his manly prot< -type in Bill Sykes, and we have all s>en slender, greyhoundlooking men, and little, mean, ferret r 1/vnl-Allt -fl-lf ~VT pri ittCCS yu ujic iw of sardonic temper and smooth out- ! lines, who are wise enough to wear a ! white, straight mustache, haveagrand ; resemblance to a B ngal tiger. They , look cruel, but it is a handsome, strong | cruelty. 2s o one can help respecting a Bengal tiger, although his traits are scarcely amiable. Ail types of the dog are represented ia man, and who has not seen worn ,-n resembling sheep 0 The recent Arctic experience ox the Jeannette explorers has proved that the j most comfortable footwear in winte?_ consists of 9 worn toeeth^ H MmWi I THE HOME DOCTOR. A Reliable "Blood Pnrificr." The popular faith in "blood purij fiers" is a never-failing source of revenue to the quacks and medicine- j makers, who are disinterestedly eager I to supply the demand. The adver- j tising columns of the newspapers teem with profound treatises on the importance of keeping the blood pure, all ending, like an old-fashioned sermon, with a " practical application " in the ; form of admonitions to buy Dr. Soand-So's "Bitters" or other medicament. The following, which we find uncredited in an exchange, is so good a prescription in this line that vre are glad to advertise it gratuitously: The best blood purifier known to the medical profession is the following: First, plenty of cold water ablutions; that is, every morning of the year take a cold-water sponge bath over the whole body, followed by vigorous rubbing with a coarse towel, using quick, brisk action, the whole process not taking more than three minutes' time. In dressing wear flannel next to the skin throughout the entire year. * Second, eat plenty of plain, nourishing food, plenty of rare beef and mutton, partaking freely of fruits, fresh or stewed, and of vegetables, particular ly the summer vegetables, as being more digestible; ignore artificial sweets of all kinds, pies, puddings, pastries, heavy preserves, etc. Third, plenty of outdoor exercise every day ; take good long walks, not to overfatigue, ;.however; plenty of ventilation to your house and rooms at all times, day and night. Let the fresh air into your sleeping-room at night, in winter as well as in summer, and see to it in every way that you breathe pure oxygen every hour out of the twenty-four, instead of carbonic ' acid gas poison. Take plenty of sleep, and at regular hours, and strictly avoid alcoholic drinks and tobacco in any form. These four?daily cold water bathing, good food, fresh air and exercise ?form together the only specific blood purifier known. Medicine, drugs and herbs will not alone purify the blood ; the most they can do is sometimes to assist nature in making a start on the ricrht. rnnH Tnurnnl of ' )h.emi.stnL FACi S FOR THE CCBIOUS. There is a willow tree in Penobscot county, Maine, 100 feet high. The papers talk about eels in Australia which are fifteen feet long. A large boa, in the Zoological garden in London, once swallowed a blanket, and disgorged it in tJ2rtythree days afterward. 4 In Siam there is a race of cats with tails only half the ordinary length and often contorted into a knot which cannot be straightened. A Lancet correspondent states that when he wants to sneeze and cannot do so he goes into the sunlight and finds its effect equal to that of snuff. There is a curious story of the blackbird that its original color was white, but it became black because one year t-hrea of the days were so CftW t&fil ' *? ; [ had to take refugeJn^-eiiThney. These three days (.January 30 and 31 and are called in the neighborhood of Brescia, "I giorni della merla," the blackbird's days. The smallest postoffice in the world is kept in a barrel, which swings from the outermost rock of the mountains overhanging the Straits of Magellan, opposite Terra del Fuogo. Every passing ship opens it to piace letters in it or I to take them out. Every ship under takes to forward all letters in h that it :s possible for it to transmit. The barrel hangs by its iron chain, beaten and battered by the winds and storms, but flo locked and barred office on land is ! more secure. The Chinese wear caps, and the con! sumption in that country is larger than j any other. Silk is the principal material of which caps are made for wear in China, for several reasons. It is a native production, is more durable than j most other goods, and, being light and ! cool, is perfectly adapted for the purpose. Chinese caps are ornamented | with tassels and silken balls of differ ent colors, the rank of the wearer being indicated by the color of the ornamental portion of his cap. ? POPULAR SCIENCE. A valuable mode of restoring faded ink on old parchments is to moisten the paper with water and then to sweep fV?Q Ti'Tifmor with o hrnsih wpfc with a solution of sulphide of ammonia, the iron in the ink being thus transformed into black sulphide. A German inventor has in operation an engine run by powder. A piston is forced to and fro in a horizontal cylinder by small quantities of powder exploded alternately on either side. This is an old idea, and there is no practical reason why it will not work, but it would not be a comfortable thing on a train to know that the engine was a nnwr!pr mdorivzinp Artificial turquoise is made in Paris I out of phosphate of alumina and phos- ! phate of copper mixed together and submitted to high pressure.. It can hardly be distinguished from the latural product, and, in fact, in chemical composition there is little difference, the real being a hvdrated phosphate of alumina 'with two per cent, of oxide of copper. The fact having been noticed that a statue in Berlin rusted black, while an old cannon in the vicinity retained its fine green color, it was found that the latter was copper and tin, while the bronze of the statue contained zinc. The bronze used for weapons by the ancients contained no lead or sine but were alloyed of copper and tin with small quantities of nickel, iron, phosphorus and occasionally cobalt. TV. TV. Seay, a Georgian, is experimenting on watermelons as a sugarDroducincr crop, and finds tiiat there is an average of seven per cent, of sugar in a fair lot of melons. lie estimates that on one acre of good land, suited to their growth, 34,500 pounds of melons would grow, and these would produce, with a seven per cent, yield, 2,415 pounds of sugar, worth, at ten cents, ?241.50. But these figures are mainly a matter of speculation as Mr. Seay has thus far experiment only in a small way. The New York Evening Post says that ladies will do well this season to lookup tiieir heirlooms in the shape of fancy buckles and clasps, as ornaments of this description are exceedingly fashionable. Buckles, both little ar<t largo, 01 genu, saver, jeo, pearl jl bronze, are worn upon the dress, often in place of buttons. The St. Louis Globe-Democrat says: Mr. Charles KeLs 2\o. 1611 Second Carondelct avenue, this city, was cured by St. Jacobs Oil after sixteen years' suffering with rheumatism. Little girls still wear large collarettes. Some of these are made of cambric Hamburg flouncing, in one, /->t- throo rows finished hv narrow I WTTVVT?DSX^C * U II edging around the neck, while the latest are in old lace designs of embroidery on scrim, or canvas muslin. The Boston Globe brings this itemCharles S. Strickland, Esq., this city, was cured of rhuematism by St. Jacobs Oil ? / The true motives of our actj^j, like ! the pipes of an orgai^||^jfl^L^n- | - THE FLOWER CITY FURORE. 'he Commotion Cansed by the Statement oi a Physician. An nrrasual article from the Rochester (N. Y.) Democrat and Chronicle -was published in this paper recently and has been the subject of much conversation both in professional circles and on the street. Apparently it caused more commotion in Rochester, as the following from the same paper shows: Dr. J.B. Henion, who is well known not only in Rochester, but in nearly every part of America, sent an extended article to this paper, a few days since, which was duly published, detailing his remarkable experience and rescue from what seemed to be certain death. It would be impossible to enumerate the personal inquiries which have been made at our office as to the validity of the article, but they have been so numerous that further nf tlm Tra^ JIT1 editorial necessity. With this end in view a representative of this paper called on Dr. Henion, at his residence on St. Panl street, -when the following interview occurred: " That article of yours, doctor, has created quite a whirlwind. Are the statements about the terrible condition you were in, and the way you were rescued such as you can sustain?" " Every one of them and many additional ones. Few people ever get so near the grave as I did and then return, and I am not surprised that the public think it marvelous. It was marvelous." "How in the world did you, a physician, come to be brought so low?" ' By neglecting the first and most simple symptoms. I did not think I was sick. It is true I had frequent headaches; felt tired most of the time, could eating nothing one day and was ravenous the next; felt dull indefinite pains and my stomach was out of oruer, dui x cua hot. unnf. it mesui <xn.$ innig serious." *'But have these common ailments anything to do -with the fearful Bright's disease which took so firm a hold on yon?" ' Anything? Why, they are the sure indications of the first stages of that dreadful malady. The fact is few people know or realize what ails them, and I am sorry to say that too few physicians do either." "That is a strange statement, doctor." " But it is a true one. The medical profession have been treating symptoms instead of diseases for years, and it is high time it ceased. We doctors have been clipping off the twigs when we should strike at the root The symptoms I have just mentioned or any unusual action or irritation of the water channels indicate the approach of Bright's disease even more than a cough announces the coming of consumption. We do not treat the cough, but try to help the Wo eVinnlrl not wnste our time trvinc to relieve the headache, stomach, pains about the body or other symptoms, but go directly to the kidneys, the source of most of these ailments." " This, then, is what you meant -when you said that more than one-half the 'deaths which occur arise from Bright's disease, is it, doctor?" "Precisely. Thousands of so-called diseases are torturing people to-day, when in reality it is Bright's disease in some one of its many forms. It is a hydra-headed monster, and the slightest symptoms should strike terror to every one who has them. I can look back and recall hundreds of deaths which physicians declared at the time were caused by paralysis, apoplexy, heart disease, pneumonia, malarial fever and other com mon complaints which I see now were caused by Bright's disease." "And did all these cases have simple symptoms at first "Every one of them, and might have been cured as I was by the timely use of the same remedy?Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. I am getting my eyes thoroughly opened in this matter and think I am helping others to see the facts and their possible danger also. Why, there are no end of truths bearing on this subject. If you want to know more about it go and see Mr. Warner himself. He was sick the same as I, and is the healthiest man in Rochester to-day. He has made a study of this subject and can give you more facts than I can. Go, too, and see Dr. Lattimore, the chemist, at the University. If you want facts there are any quantity of them showing the alarming increase of ?>?/Hcodco i+c cimnlfi nnd V"?^rSTLuat there is but one -way by which it can be escaped." Fully satisfied of the truth and force of the doctor's -words, the reporter bade him good-day and called on Mr. Warner at his establishment on Exchange street. At first Mr. Warner was inclined to be reticent, but learning that the information desired was about the alarming increase of Bright's disease, his manner changed instantly and he spoke very earnestly: " It is true that Brighfs disease has increased -wonderfully, and we find, by reliable statistics, that in the past ten years its growth has been 250 per cent. Look at the prominent men it has carried off: Everett, Sumner, Chase, Wilson, Carrenter, Bishop Haven and 'others. This is terrible, and shows a greater growth than that of any other known complaint. It should be plain to every one that something must be done to check this increase or there is no knowing where it may end." "Do you think many people ar? afflicted with it to-day who. do not realise it, Mr. Warner?" "Hundreds of thousands. I have a striking example of this truth which has just ?? - A TVTwmrncmf. rvrnfAQQnr CUillC IKJ uujr -Uk. in a New Orleans medical college was lecturing before his class on the subject of Bright's disease. He had various fluids under microscopic analysis, and was showing the students what the indications of this terrible malady were. In order to show the contrast between healthy and un. healthy fluids, he had provided a vial the contents of which were drawn from his own person. 'And now, gentlemen,'he said, ' as we have seen the unhealthy indications, I will show you how it appears in a state of perfect health/ and he submitted his own fluid to the usual test. As he watched the results his countenance suddenly changed ?his color and command both left him, and in a trembling voice he said: ' Gentlemen, I have made a painful discovery; I have Bright's disease of the kidneys,' and in less than a year he was dead." "You believe, then; that it has no symptoms of its own and is frequently unknown even by the person who is afflicted with it?" "It has no symptoms of its own and very often none at all. Usually no two people have the same symptoms, and frequently death is the first symptom. The slightest indications of any kidney difficulty should be enough to strike terror to any one. I know what I am talking about, for I have been through all the stages of kidney disease." " Von 1-natt* rvf TYr TTurnnn's rtftsa?" " Yes, I have both read and heard of it." ' It is very wonderful, is it not?" "A very prominent case but no more so than r. g-eat many others that have come to my notice as having been cured by the same means." " You believe, then, that Bright's disease ran be cured?" " I know it can. I know it from the experience of hundreds of prominent perso is who were given up to die by both their physicians and friends." " You speak of your own experience, what was it?" " A fearful one. I had felt languid and unfitted for business for years. But I didnoi know what ailed me. When, however, I found it was kidney difficulty 1 thought there was little hope, and so did the doctors. I have since learned that one or tne pnysicians 01 this city poumec me cut to a gentleman on the street one day, saying:. 'There goes a man who Trill be dead within a year.' I believe his words would have proven true if I tad not fortunately secured and used the remedy now known as Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure." "And this caused you to manufacture it?" " No it caused me to investigate. I went to the principal cities, saw physicians prescribing and using it, and I therefore determined. as a duty I owed humanity and the suffering, to bring it within their reach, and now it is known in every part of America, is sold in every drug store and has become a household necessity." The reporter left Mr. Warner, much impressed with the earnestness and sincerity of his statements and next paid a visit to Dr. S. A. Lattimore, at his residence on Prince street. Dr. Lattimore, although busily engaged upon some matters connected with the State board Of health, of which he is one of the analysts, courteously answered the questions that were propounded him: " "Did von make a chemical analysis of the case of Mr. II. H. Warner some three years ago, doctor?" " Yes, sir." " What did this analysis show you?" "The presence of albumen and tube casts in great abundance." " And what did the symptoms indicate?" "A serious disease of the kidneys." "Did you think Mr. Warner could recover?" " No. sir. I did not think it possible. It was seldom, indeed, that so pronounced a case had up to that time ever been cured," " Do you know anything about the re~edy which cured him ?" " Yes, I have chemically analyzed it and upon critical examination find it entirely free from any poisonous or deleterious substances." We nublish the foreeoinz statements in view of the commotion -which the publicity of Dr. Heiiion's article has caused and to meet the protestations which have been made. The standing of Dr. Henion, Mr. Warner and Dr. Lattimore in the comnjunity is beyonda?$^3tfiOnd thA's'ldte? ments they m?J^cannot for a moment be doubted. Tb*y conclusively show that Bright's dis^rfse of the kidneys is one of the most deceptive and dangerous of all diseases, that zijtf exceedingly common, alarmingly increasing and that it can be cured. Sheep* culture is 110 longer a matter of doubt, or experiment in the Arkansas valley. Numerous streams of pure rrmnincr Water. tame and wild srrasses, o 1 U cheap fotfd and market fa cilities present grea^uducements to sheep owners. Froi^y very small beginning made about fi^ veaj^y^the business has increased On the sJM dian Pac^M and 3,G2fl AVe forget the solemn fact that char.: acter is a growth and always growing. : It is not made and then put on, but it i is the result of that mysterious law we < 1 call growth. ' So silent and invisible ; as always to surprise us in its results. I Every day here a little and there a i little according to the appropriationof ; opportunities and privileges offered, i characters must grow good or bad until ;' they become more than a coat of mail. There are' now living in the United States 291 persons who were born at ' sea under the United States flag. Advice to Consumptive*. On the appearance of the first symptoms, j as general debility, loss of appetite, pallor, ! chilly sensations, followed by night-sweats | and cough, prompt measures of relief should j be taken. Consumption is scrofulous disj ease of the lungs, therefore use the great i anti-scrofulous or blood purifier and strength ! restorer. Br. Pierce's " Golden Medical Dis covery." Superior to cod liver oil as a nutritive and unsurpassed as a pectoral. For weak lungs, spitting of blood and kindred affections it has no equal. Sold by druggists. For Dr. Pierce's treatise on Consumption. send two stamps. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. How noiselessly the snow comes down. You may see it, feel it, but never hear it. Such is true character. Woman and Her Diseases 15 the title of a large illustrated treatise by Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., sent to any address for three stamps. It teaches successful self treatment. . As the activity of body is evidence of the spirit, so works manifest the presence of faith. _ " Sl*h No More, Ladle*!? for Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" is a prompt and certain remedy for the painful disorders peculiar to your sex. By all druggists. ' Do not accustom yourself to consider debt only as an inconvenience; you will find it a calamity. :?? Frazer Axle Grease. One greasing lasts two weeks; all others two or three days. Do not be imposed on by the humbug stuffs offered. Ask your dealer forFrazer's, with label on. Saves your horse labor and yon too. It received first medal fit the Centennial and Paris Expositions. Sold everywhere. Carboline, anatnralhairres orer and dressing, as new improved and perfected, is pronounced by competent authority to be the best article ever invented to restore the vitality of youth to diseased and faded hair. Try it. Pxjbe cod-liyeb oil, from selected livers, on the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard <fc Co., N. Y. Absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians declare it superior to all other oils. Chapped hands, face, pimples and rough skin cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, made by Casweli,_Hazard_& Co.. New York. Skinny Men. " Wells' Health Benewer" restores health, cures dyspepsia, impotence. $1. Wells' "Rough on Corns." 15c. Ask for it. Complete cure. Corns, warts, bunions. Get Lyon's Patent Heel StifFeners applied to nsw boots or shoes before you run them over. Remarkable JEscane. John Kuhn, of Lafayette, lad., bad a very narrow escape from death. This is bis own story : " One year ago I was in the last stages of consumption. Our best physiftaas gave my c^se cp. I finally got so low T /wnlrt rmfc lira iwentV-foUT hOUTS. My friends then purchased a bottle of Dr. Wa. Hall's j Balsam for the Lnngs, which benefited me. I continued j an til X took nine bottles. Z am now in perfect health baring used no other medicine." Henry's Carbolic Salve. The best S>?lve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil. ..l.-iini, Corns, and all kinds of Skin Eruptions, etc. Get 1 ri--i;rv's Carbolic! Salve, as all others are but imitations. THE MARKETS. 9 XEW YOBK. Beef cattle, good to prime Iw 10 @ 13 Calves, com'n to prime veals 6 -w 11 Sheep 4 $ 6 Lambs &%@ Hogs?Live 7% Dressed, city. ; Floor?Ex. St., good to fancy 4 20 @ 6 25 West., good to choice 4 30 @ 7 40 Wheat?No. 2 Bed. 1 07^0 1 09 No. 1 White 90 (ui 108 Eye?State .72 @ 74 Barley?Two-rowed State... 84 & 86 Corn?Ungrad. West, mixed. 73 @ 89 Yellow Southern 79 & 84 Oats?White Stfate 48 .<?? 57 Mixed .Western 39 @ 44 | Hay?Me*!. to ch. Timothy. 85 & 90 Straw?No. 1, Rye?.'. 55 @ 60 Hops?State, 1881, choice ... 90 (be 1 05 Lard?City Steam 12 25 @12 62% Petroleum?Crude 8K@ 8% Refined 8jj| Butter?State Creamery 35 @ 37 Dairy 28 @ 33 West. Im. Creamery. " 23 @ 32 Factory. 16 @ 19 ' Cheese?State Factory 8 @ 12% Skims..; 2 (d> 6 Western 5 @ 12# Eggs?State and Penn 29 (S 20 Potatoes?State bbl 1 75 @ 2 25 BUFFALO. Steers?Good to Choice 5 40 <? 5 GO ; Lambs?Western 425 @ 5 25 Sheep?Western 4 00 (d> 4 50 Hogs?Good to choice Yorks. 6 30 @ 6 50 Flour?C;y ground n. process. 7 25 @ 8 25 Wheat?No. 1. Hard Duluth.. 1 17 @ 1 18 ~ "* " "*T"?J rr> vcis UOIH JxO. Z, .'.JJLXtiU I J. w > Oats?No. 2, Mixed Western. 39 @ 41 Barley?Two-rowed State ... 85 @ 85 EOSXOJJ. Beef?Ex. plate and family. .17 00 @18 00 Hogs?Live 7??@ * 8% City Dressed JO Pork?Ex. Prime, per bbl.. .19 00 @20 CO Flour?Spring Wheat patents 7 25 @ 7 75 Corn?High Mixed 89 @ SO Oats?Extra "White 53 @ 54 Rye?State 80 @ 85 Wool?comb & delaine, No. 1 44 @ 46 Unwashed combing.. 25 @ 35 WATEBTOWX (MASS.) CATTLE MARKET. Beef?Extra quality 7 50 @800 Sheep?Live weight 4^@ 5% Lambs 6 @ 7 Hogs?Northern, d. w 9 @ 9% PHILADELPHIA. Flour?Perm, ex family, good 4 75 @ 5 25 Wheat?No. 2, Red 1 10 @ 110% Rye?State 70 @ 70 Corn?State Yellow 82 @ 82 Oats?Mixed 69 @ 69 Butter?Creamery Extra Pa. 37 @ 37 Cheese?N. Y. Full Cream... 13 @ 133^ Petroleum?Crude 6 @ 7 Refined 7%@ T% feggg: This N.Y, Singer, $20 JBglfg!^?2a\ With 58 net of Attachments Free, i Warranted perfect. Light running, Hafwab /fw quiet,handsome and durable. Sent Bp gag* f |J on test trial-plan when desired. HBs&'t-. /flBul H?ppy Hoaa Orjami 4 sett ^ffiSSii] iW'JwCjJ Reeds, 12 stops; Mechanical Sub ^Ea-ss,octave coup!er.21aicc swells. }Nar ?\f* with S3 stool ana Si Book, only 3T5 / I % J* j\ Also sent on test t.ial-plan lfdcfgpfy *,cajg? w sired. Elegant cass, magnificent ^P3|2?4M2s5?~^ tone, durable inside and out. Circular, with testimonials, free. Asfc ^ G.Fayne.? CO. .47 Thlldav,Chicago IEIIIJ?Si Parsons' Farirtflve Pills malco Sew Eich.; Blood, and will completely change the blood m the en- > tiro system in three months. Any person who will take i one pill each night from 1 to 12 weeks may be restored S to sound health if such a thing be possible. Sold every- W where or sent by mail for eight letter stamps. I. S. JOHNSON & CO.. Boston, MaitV* for- fl merfy R""gT. i>fe. M Zhave a positive remedy for the shove dlsM^e; by its sse thonsands^of cases of the worst kJnd*?d of toss ?t?UUUJK SATO WC3U WUiBU. iuuiwM, iv ohifgft M> ,'?ji lauu in Its efficacy, that I will send TWO BOTTLES FREE, togather with * YAIXABLB TKEATIS^Ca this disease, to ?ny suflfcrer. Giro Express and P^T. address. DR. T. iu aLOCUX/&l Pearl St^y?irYorfc. r TDIIT*LJ X4 MIGBTT^rof. XiftTXXEZ. 1 Ha W I So ih? GrMfcJ^k&lah S??r. Ajtr?l?c?r / sad PijcbcZc&su wttl, for 30 ornU. vitb ifi, koicnt, / e???wC3 \ oolor of or? aad Jock of hair, *md a CORRECT tlOj ? WBM ^ ' TTi* / jov ftitaz* hothead or vifr, with uu, tbao j t ^ ;-oc? of mooting, aa4 daU of t*arrlac*, p?yofaoi<c? yftafiC&flw/ SoaHy predietod. Mooty r*tnra?d to aU sot taurfod. ^TOglFMHr AddroM Prof. L. Martiaoa. 10 Moat'j R^oftp, Maw. z53fl3?* A KEY 'fin 'W?Hi A!fD NOT C=3 VILL wrsoysU ANY W4TCH LJ WEAE OCT. SOT Ti br WatcJuaakers. ByznaQ. 25eta. Circulars J. S. BEECH & CO, 38 Day St.. 2t.XENGiNESg5S? write The APIXMAIt & TAYLOR CO. Muwfifllri,, O4 er^nts Wanted for the Best and Fastest-selling . xjL Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices reduced 33 per I cent. National Publishing Co., Philadelphia, Pa._ ' YOUNG MEN If yon want to lean: Telegraphy in a j j tion. addrcra Valentine Bros.. Janesville Wis. . CIOLEMAN BUSINESS COLLEGE, Newark | ! /' N-J- W rite :or Catalogue. Coleman & Palms, Props. | rDCr A 16-page treatise on Nervous Debility. AdI dress L. G. Voikmar. West Farms, a. Y. J FOIl SsAXE?Orer3f?ichespfarrosin West Virginia. j C'rcolarsseat. J. H. Bkistob, Martinsburg, "VV.Va. j A Sure Cere for Epilepsy or Fits is 24 hours. Frw to 1 j ixpoor. De. Kucse. 2&M Arseaal st., St. Louis, Mo. 1 j WHAT WILL THE WEATI D Tt Will QOTOCw JU1GL 1HCX1C. ! | ^#^O.Mpi^?^in"d?ncru. will t?U w | Bc5dl^3ae^K*S?f5M direction?inT*l?*JjIe ' k3? nrvx-' liSB according to it* predictio ! WSts53?j5Pf!vSr- ?S?3B in accurate tharmoi J , jnf~ iiS % J?^wB combination. This great i LaSc ie sAg* arffigB mo?t eminent Phyaiciai I nS^*?n >ftsP ' *?? ?n<l Scientific men of th? [bhJ^I; ?5C vl&M The Thermometer and ? ! sfeiSi- order, on receipt of 81? < i mm ?ill s^axf'jSi.is ' Address *11 orders to Oh si'S? (Txiraigt rxtablishwiznti E#.a!iV:^f:M?S N. S. Werefer to the V S EKWOSb' -ife?''>:-t!ra5 National Banks, or any Di 1 Fk?e-P JTrif? tww OiW*, fS^lf ...b1c feSES ord-r, draft on ScuYcr |lp|f ;. Ha*willmikeaB i II ^!l *11111 H f; ? ; mmmm. i FOB RHEUMATISM, I Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, ^ Backache, Soreness of the Chest, fl Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swellings and Sprains, Burns and iwk Scalds, General Bodily 9 Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted^ Feet and Ears, and all other M Pains and Aches. Ko Preparation on earth equal* St. Jxoov oc-^h ?4.a safe, sure, sitnj?le asd cheap Extern Kenedy. A trial entails bnt the coapaaliTel.^B trifling outlay of oO Cents, and ever7 one raffedn with pain can have cheap and positive proof of it* ciaiisB. ' f j/k Directions in Eleven Lanjnarea. 13 SOLD BY ALL DEITGGISTS.JLB^^3A^Sg^l^ A.VOGELER & CO., 1 Baltimore, 3rd., U* 8. M xfc? SYHP--47 .ill For Internal and External Use. 4 CURES BHEUMA31SM, Boras, Scalds, Chilblains, Frost Bites. Chapped Hands. - ..' Flesh Wounds, Sprains, Brrrises, External Poisons, Caked Breasts,^ Sore Nipples, Toothache,. Cramps or Spasms of Stomach, ' A A.TnfomolPntn Lame Back, Bites of Animals,' Galls of all kinds, Sitfast. ""ii^bones. Cracked Teats, M i'oll Evil, Gargetjn Cows, Spavins, M Sweeney, Scratches or Grease-, Foot Hot in Sheep, btringhalt, Wicdgalls, Soup in Poultry, Foundered "Feet, Fistula,. Cracked Heels, Mange in Dog&>^^H Ask your nearest Dealer or Druggist for one of our Almanacs for 1^S3. From the Christian Leader ST. F? Oct. 28, TLlB Merchant's gaitoixsfg Oil.?"We havoH made special personal inquiry in regard tofB the merits or this celebrated remedy, and 1MB find it a genuine article of rare value. It is {? by no means a new remedy. The establish- W ment which produces it dates its manufac- [ M ture as far back as 1833, sinee which time it *3 has been steadily growing- in public favor The patentees arc among the foremost bust ness men of the city of Lockport. Theyar every way reliable. From the Toledo (Ohio) Blade, July 6,1S7L H Merchant's Gargling Oil.?This Old? standard mtic'.p, under the ndinirable man-IB age ment of Jvhn Hodire, .Esq., lias reached? H an enormous sale. It is an honestly pounded article; it has merit, and now thalH the best business talent of the country handling it, there is no reason why it should? not double its present usefulness. No famOjM can afford to be without it. For family useflj as well as for animals, it is simply IndisS Ipensable. B SPECIAL XOTICE. ? AH we ask is a fair trial, but be sure ata foJow directions. - The Gargling Oil and Merchant's WorrM nv,w"4' >?? coio hr nil and dfUlB era in general merchandise througiioattii^J ^Lanje Size $1.00; Medium 50 c.; Small 25 cj Small Size few family use 25c. . - H Manufactured at Lockport, . Yn ay MerM c&antfs Gargling Oil Company. m ?' ' 1 1 ' GANI OBTAIN A PATENT:M Send a rough sketch or {if,yoncm) * roodetgf |M gour mramoii to. bhuiibt Washington, D. C., and a Prri: miliary ?x- H ami nation will be rn'"'!f' of all United States patents of the same class of inventions and you will be advised whether or not a patentcan be obtained FOR THIS PRKT.IMIXARY EXAXDiA 8 HON NO CHARGE IS MADE. M What will a Patent* Oftet 7 If you are advised thatyour invcn H VOSl 2 Son ispatentablejBend$t20.topa; Government application fee of 815, and &5 for ^BH the drawings re<prred by the Government. T&sisM payable when application is made, andisallof theM expense unless a patent is allowM. When allowed. the attorney's fee (835) and the final Govern-M meat fee (S20) is payable. Thus you know be forehandLyor nothing, whether yon aregoingtoget^l a patent or not,and no attorney's fee ischaqjedua^B leas you do pet a Patent An attorney whoso feeM depends on his success in obtaining a Patent will^B not advise you that your invention is patentsb>.^B nnless it really is patentable, so far as his judgment can aid in flgsprrrmring QuesiLjn -flfl ! nence, you can rely on the advice given after &H preliminary examination is had. Design PaUB ents and tbe Registration of Labels, TradeM Dlark* and Re-issues secured. Caveats pre^H pared and' filed Applications in revivor of EeS jected. Abandoned ,or Forfeited CaseamadaM Very often valuable inventions are saved in thescH classes of cases. If you have undertaken to secnr^M your own patent and failed, a skillful handlins^B of the case may lead to success. Send me a written^! request addressed to tbe Commissioner of Paten t^H that he recognize Geobge E. Lekox. of WaahM| ington. D. C.. as yonr attorney in the case, civins^B the title of the invention ana about the date oaa filing your application. An examination and re^B port will cost you nothing. Searches made fozH title to inventions, in fact any information relating^B to Patents promptly famished. Copies of Patent)- M mailed at the regular Government rates, (25e-^B each.) Remember this ofS ce has been in sacceftKTcJJJ operation since I860, ana youtcereicre efits of experience, besides reference can, bejmi 1^ J to actual clients In almoet every county in trie U. Pamphlet relating to Patents free upon request GEOo E. LEMON,! 615 15tiSt,WASHDi6T0NjD.C. JB SESTSi^SKH se sa S8?PPR 2 a -i ?i* n JHSS&g jWANitU i^onpaaiitwcis^: paper, elegantly iilastmu.J iiyJJjautilully boand. JSo other book* their eqcal. All nei?BHjk5f>5wnP*atl2: - 1 Territory c:ear. Tfcsy satisfy the AgentbcSafiJSi?6^ ^ -f last, the people on account of their valoa. ' ^ 1 "Hewman's 4rnerica."Smi^??^' Blotmphy from tho X?nd B??ldm to Jalr Mi " 1 ???, The only book covering the subject. The Lives of ihe James Brothers*kJM The only oompleto account of tho Mlwoart Ouuw^. " Th? Jeaamtte." sszxxrxzsx Explorations, la&nOzz FBUaOUt, JOKE, ttWES, EAtL and i*? to.\c. 'V "Pictorial Fasii!* BiWe."SS.sas: j talningWtte wweteeaotftheXewr Teetomee*. Stoe* Feature* and Hlostratioos than any other edition. The most LUEBU. TERJW granted by any FCB~ LHErvCHOtSE. ?bobpi DEAU-\6?. A<2 DELAm. Write quickly for circclara and terms. Territory fa t^yWB?ls*'cooKPZiBiisEnroca, 9 ML 98. 99 & 100 Metropolitan Block, CHICAGO, H& JH jfl i Jk I aSPEBBBiBBMi EIHVffLEY, TjndaTl, Snenccr, Eamous Sc^H B Jt 1-jc- Catalogue free. J. Frrza^H i##fc?fcCo.. SO Lufrretw P:w. Y" i^J _x_ L -> J^WELBT, SH.TEBW.LBZ, rfl 0?f5HfiC? wholesale rates. Pr-celfeM ulvllCd T. W. Kennedy. P.O.bo:S5oS PER BE T0-M0RR0Wi Service Barometem I AJrDl'HEBMOMETER C03HJIXED, ' "1 .XjTJBTiT? YOU! J ite correctly any chance in the weathor 12 to 48hosrs M hat kind of storm is approachia*, and from what J Co navigator*. Fanners can plan their work gi " 3 as. Saves 50 times its cost in a single season. ' 3 leter attached, which alone is worth the price of ths.' WEATH-itINDICATOR i* endorsed byth? jg VSteSESTINTHEWORLOr Jl trometer are pot in. a nicely finished walnut frame, -jgM IX*, ate., making; it a beautiful as well as useful or-i a sample one, atlitcred/Tu,toyocrplace.insood^ ir six for $4. Accntsare maims from &5 to trill convince tton. Order at once. It IC to se3 to farmers, merchants, etc- Lrvaj^H > Stamp* taken if in good ord?r. d e?riwhfTt. S?mdfor WtP 0 TKEimo.nEMigl if the kind in the ay or, Po5tmaster^|^H aiaesaaMBaua^^H JJ.UOW UUUJO , County ,caai?