The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, February 09, 1876, Image 4
FARM, GARDEN AX1) HOUSEHOLD
Uomratlc Ilrrlpra.
Victoria Pcppino.?Take of grate*
broad, mashed potatoes, grated carrots
finely chopped snot, sugar and currants
each half ir pound, four eggs well beater
a little salt, gra.ed nutmeg and lemoi
peel, with a very little cinnamon ; mi
all well together, put into a mold, an
boil four hours. Servo with sauce.
Exhibition Pcdpixg.?Take a qnarte
of a pound of siu-t, chop very tine,
quarter of a pound of raisins, stoned
two tablespoonfuls of flour, two table
spoonfuls of sugar, the peel of a whol
lemon grated, a little nutmeg and tbre
eggs ; mix all together, put into a mol
and boil for four hours. Serve wit
sauce.
Bkead Sauce. ?Slicc some white brea
very thin, ami without crust, boil it i
milk with a sliced onion and some whit
whole pepper ; rub through a coara
sieve, return it to a stewpan, put in
small piece of butter, salt to taste, an
a little cream if you ha\e it, to make i
of a proper thickness; warm sufficiently
and serve.
Dessekt of Cold Rice and Stewe:
on Ghated Apple.?Cut cold boilei
rice in slices, and then lay iu a butterei
pudding dish alternate layers of rice an
grated apples. Add sngar and spice t
each layer of apples. Cover with th
rice, smooth with a spoon dipped in col
water or milk, and bake three-quarter
of an hour if the apples are raw. T
be served witn a sweet sauce.
Carrot Soup.?Take two quarts c
stock, and to this add from six to to:
carrots, according to size, three turnip?
three or four onions, and let them stei
till tender. Then take out the vegetr
hies, strain tho soup, and with a spoo
take off the red part of tho carrots fror
the yellow center, and force it throng
a coarse sievo ; add the pulped carrot t
By. the soup, till it is as thick as goo
cream ; warm it and serve at once.
Baked College Pudding.?Take hal
a pound of grated bread, three ounce
of well washed currants, one ounce c
candied peels, half an ounce of citroi]
two ounces of moist sugar, half a nul
meg, three eggs, a pint of milk ; bo:
the milk and pour on the bread crumbs
put iu an ounce of butterv aud then mi
in the other ingredients. This quantit
will fill six enps; bake in a moderat
oven, turn the puddings out of the cup?
sift pounded sugar over the tops, pou
sauce round them, and serve.
White Soup.?This white vegetabl
K/\ mnof. ririi?tllnTil
Take four or five good turnips, two head
of celery, four line leeks, and wash tker
and slice them down ; then put thei
into a stewpan 'with a pieco of butte
and knuckle of ham ; moisten with
quart of stock, and let them stew gentl
till tender ; then add a pint of milk an
some crumbs of bread. Give all a goo<
boil up, strain, and send to table ver
hot.
Rice Cheese- Cakes.?Take half
pouud of finely sifted ground rice,
quarter of a pound of fresh butter bent
en to a cream, and three eggs ; the egg
auij. sugar must be well beaten together
fcfion tViA Imffpr nnrl ri^o ndflprl. tlr
whites of the eggs beaten together; mi:
all together, aud flavor with a smal
blade of mace, finely pounded, and th
poel of two 'lemons rubbed on sugar
The quicker this is made, the lighte
the cheese-cakes will be ; the batte
bhould be poured into little tartlet tins
not quite full, and bake in a brisk oven
Seive them cold.
Ham or Tongue Toast.?Cut a slic<
of bread rather thick, toast it and buttei
it well on both sides. Take a smal
quantity of the remains of either ham oi
tongue and grate it ; have ready chop
ped fine, txfe hard-boiled eggs, put boti
meat and eggs into a stewpan with (
little butter, salt, and cayenne, and nuki
it quite hot, then spread quickly on th<
toast, and serve immediately.
KxucKiiE of Veal with Rice.?Tab
a knuckle of veal, one onion, two tur
nips, a head of celery, six pepper corns
with a teacup fill of rice, and boil ver
gently by the side of the fire for thre<
hours : skim well, add a little salt, act
serve with the rioe around the veal
The stock in which the meat has boilet
will help to make good soup.
Cracker Plum Pudding.?Sfake i
very sweet custar J, and put into it a tea
spoonful of salt. Take soda crackers
split them, and butter them very thick
Put a layer of raisins on tho bottom ol
a largo pudding dish, and then a layei
of crackers, and pour on a little of the
custard when warm, and after soaking ?
little, put on a thick layer of raisins,
pressing them into the crackers with a
knife. Then put on another layer ol
crackers, cu.^ard and fru.t, and proceed
thus till you have four layers. Ther
pour over tho whole enough custard tc
rise even with the crackers. It is bos
mido over night, so that the crackeri
mav soak. Bake from an hour and i
half to two Lours. During the first half
hour, pour on, at three different times,
a little of the custard, thinned with milk,
to prevent the top from being hard and
dry. If it browns fast cover with paper.
Take Care of Things.
It is not always possible to obtain
fresh food from day to day as it is desir
ed, and hence the necessity of preserving
meats and vegetables in snch a manner
that they will not lose either their flavoi
or their wholesomeness. If proper carc
be taken, a variety of summer or autumn
vegetables may be preserved for wintei
use. Meats also may be preserved.
General rules for the preservation of food
ara somewhat deceptive, but economical
reasons exist for the restricted exercis(
of this art.- The principal consists ii
excluding the evil oxidizinginfluencesoi
air aud moisture. In dry goods this i;
done by keeping them dry and warn
and closely covered up. Starch, rice,
tapioca, sago, macaroni, vermicelli, su
gar, sweetmeats, jams, salt, and dried
and salted meats, tea, coffee, etc., re
quire the same treatment; and thej
should be kept in separate closets frona
odorous goods, such as candles and soap,
or they will catch the objectionable fla
vor. But with most fresh organic sub
stances a different treatment is necessarj
to attain the same end. They contain ir
their own texture sufficient moisture and
air to oxidize them into decomposition,
and the more stagnant these are the more
surely do the chemical actions result. II
is necessary, therefore, to let them have
free ventilation; their external surface
should be frequently wiped, or at least
blown over by a cm ret' of air, so as to
let the old moisture escape and fresh be
absorbed. Thus meat should be hung
in an open larder and be often dried.
Lemons should be purchased in the sum
mer, and suspended in nets for use at
the tima when they are dear. Onions
and garlic should be strung up in an out
house, and not in the larder. Parsley,
thyme, mint, and other herbs should be
dried in the wind, out of the Ran, and
then each should be put in a separate
paper bag, and hung up in the kitchen.
?xier? ?u[uea9 puura uuu uiiewi/imis urc
' stored, the window should be left open
and fruit frer; - :;tfy turned. Too much
draught make vegetables withy; so they
should be laid ou stone floorB behind the
door. Potatoes are best stocked in dry
sand.
The date when each article is stored
should be written down for futuro refer
' ence, so that proper attention may bo
given them.' Eggs are an exception to
the usual rule respecting organic sub
stances. They cannot be treated in the
same way, by reason of their structure,
yet it is impossible to avoid keeping
them for culinary purposes. They are
best preserved by being washed over
with a solution of gum and packed iu a
box of bra i, which is to be turned ovec
every dav.
Potatoes an Food for Stock.
Potatoes in many localities distant
from market are this season so abundant
and cheap that they can only be used to
advantage for feeding out to 6tock. It
is true that certain agricultural writers
have of late endeavored to show that this
valuable tuber was of little or no value
for such purposes, but it is very proba
ble that the gentlemen who advance such
theories are not practical agriculturists.
The value of the potato as food for man
and many of our domestic asimals is too
1 " known to be discarded?; this late
ienoe of which j
may bo written by theoretical chemists
or agriculturists.
But while the potato has been a bone
of contention among agriculturists for
many years, its practical and specific
value as fooil for 6tock has never been
disproved when, put to test. The cele
brated veterinarian, William Youatt, in
speaking of the value of the various
kinds of roots as food for stock, says of
the potato : "Among the various vege
table productions that have been appro
priated to the stall-feeding of cattle,
none have occasioned greater discussion
than potatoes. They furnish an excel
lent supply, particukrly when cut and
steamed, they appear adequate to the
fattening of neat cattle iu combination
with comparatively small portions of
other food." Mr. Campbell, of Charl
ton, England, observes that 100 bushels
of potatoes and 700 pounds of hay are
generally sufficient to fatten any animal
that thrives tolerably 'well. They should
at first be given in small quantities and
gradually increased to ono or two bushels
per day ; dry food being always inter
mixed, and the proportion of hay being
uniformly regulated by tho effect which
the potatoes produco on tho bowels.
The hay should always be cut in order
that it may bo more readily mixed with
the potatoes.
We might givo almost any amount of
testimony from practical farmers and
stock raisers to corroborate tho above,
but think it entirely unnecessary, as it is
quite likely that a majority of our read
ers know from experience that potatoes
nro valuable food for stock. At the ore
sent price of beef, cheese, butter, or
pork, wo think our farmers would do
u better to feed out their potatoes than to
. sell them at twenty cents per bushel and
? ; less, prices at whicn they have been sold
L. | in many localities this season. Potatoes
n j are too heavy and bulky a crop to send
n j to a distant market, but they are readily
k : turned into beef, cheese, or butter, and
() in these forms tho cost of transportation
j j is greatly reduced.
Bones tor Poultry.
[f i Tho various preparations of pure
lS ; bones, selected and prepared as
,f ! crushed, granulated, bono meal, etc.,for
, : feeding tq poultry, are becoming each
; year more popular, and deservedly so.
[1 j The experience of nearly every one who
, has given them a faithful trial, has been
j | such as to make them constantly patrons
y I of the most reliable venders, it being
e j invariably found that by a judicious use
, | of broken or ground new bone, the
r I fowls are healthier, more prolific, stand
confinement better, anil acquire less
bad habits by confinement. Chickens
fed on these preparations to the proper
extent will grow to a much bettor size,
the use of the bono having the effect to
postpone the time when tho bones hard
en, or, ia common phrase, set. Chicks
are, therefore, such for a great period,
and may be kept growiug for a longer
time by tho use of bone preparations.
Hanged by Accident.
/^InafnTTA flncl-i nf W0U7 Vnrlr r?ff7C n/\
J cidentally banged himself. The circum
tt : stances and the probable manner of the
ft | death are as follows : Guaki was a Ger
'* j man, about twenty years of age, and fond
s | of practical jokes. Ho had been merry
' | all the afternoon. About 8:15 o'clock in
e the evening there was considerable dis
, cussion in the store of Mr. Mecke, his
employer, about the execution of the
B three negroes on December seventeenth.
' Guski said he wondered how they felt
^ when they were hanged, and went into
r the ice house and closed the door. He
? found a short piece of small rope, not
* over three feet long, which had been ,
doubled to.hold quarters of meat to the
3 hooks. He made a running loop of this .
r rope and slipped the noose over his head. f
1 i The ice box was about six feet hieh. and
r i rows of hooks were placed near the top.
- | Guski -was about five feet six inches tail,
i i and must have risen on his toes in order
1 ; to slip the loop over one of the hooks.
2 j He finally succeeded, however, to let his
) I weight fall upon the noose. The floor
[ of the ice box was slippery with gr ase,
; and after he had rested his weight on his
_ | neck he could not recover himself. His
" ! struggles only closed the noose tighter,
' j and in a very short time he became un
7 j conscious. The tightness of the noose
j J prevented Guski from calling for help.
I Mr. Mecke wanted Guski about ten
* minutes after ho had entered the ice
box, and called to him to come out. Re
i ceiving no answer, ho went to the en
i; trance and threw open the door. He
- j wa$ nearly pa-alyzed with alarm at be
, holding Guski hanging from the
. j hook. His face was livid and his swol
' | len tongue protruded from his mouth,
r I His eyes were wide open. Recover
> ! inj? his presence of mind, Mr. Mecke
i lifted i p the hangiug man and slipped j
, the loop off the hook, dragged Guski ,
i out of the ice box, and laid him on the
f floor of the store. The rope had tight- '
I ened aronnd his neck so hard that it -
I nearly cut through the flesh. Finding '
) | uo sign of consciousness, Mr. Mecke '
II called for help. Guski was stripped and
3 i his body was rubbed with brushes to in- |
i duce a return of animal warmth. Mean
while Dr. Weber was getting up artifi- ^
i ciol respiration. All the attempts at
, resuscitation proved unavailing, however,
1 and Dr. "Weber pronounced the man
dead. The use of electricity was sug
gested, and a strong current was passed
: through the regions of the great nerve
| | centers. There was a momentary quiver, i
i hnt, wiflinnf, thn rlpqirprl rpsnlfr
Was it Another Case?
The Galveston Ncu'8 says : That the
loss of the Waco was occasioned by an
! infernal machine similar to that which
! was intended to demolish the Mosel,
seems hardly credible ; yet, according
to the testimony of the owners of the
j Waco, there was no petroleum stowed
: below the upper deck. The "fuss " dis
| covered by the divers " in the ship's
i lower hold " must have been caused by
: something else, and according to the
testimony of the mate of the Caledonia,
there was an explosion somewhere. Be
sides, the mast of the Waco was burned
off below deck, and not above, as it
would have been had the fire started in
i the oil forward. The fact that those on
i ; board of some of the vessels anchored in
i the offing at the time of the disaster
| heard no explosion, may be accounted
' | for -when the raging of the disturbed
1 elements is considered ; a time when
! I even a su iden explosion like that of a
i mine of dynamite may be drowned or
1 dissipated in great measure by the angry
1 conflict of winds and waves. The Cale
1 donia lay immediately to windward of
I the City of Waco, and was the nearest
II vessel to her in that quarter. Hence,
1 an explosion, if there .was any, would
1 have been heard on the Caledonia, if on
any vessel in the offing. The fearful
suggestiveness of the destruction of the
Citv of Waco is ouite as creafc as that
connected with the murderous dynamite c
which was designed to destroy the 0
Mosel. It is earnestly to be hoped that
the government authorities will probe to ?
the bottom the marine catastrophe which ^
cast such a gloom over the whole conn- *
try, and from which not one human be- ^
iug escaped. ^
Recklessness.
An almost incredible case of reckless- v
ness was investigated at Barnsley, in
England, tho other day. In one of the I
Dodworth and Silksconc company's a
mines, a certain portion of the workings
were officially pronounced "dangeroii9,"
i and the collieis were warned not to go
into it. Nevertheless, two of the men
! who had heard tho warning went into
i tho place carrying open lights, and one
, of them actually applied his candle to a
j " bore hole," and ignited tho gas which
i was issuing from it. No serious harm
j was done, bnt the act was properly
I stigmatized by the owners of the colliery
; as one 01 cno grossest; possiDie recKiess
1 ness. The magistrates thought that a
' penalty of forty shillings and costs would
be sufficient, and they imposed it accord
ingly.
For the IlrJr.
An excellent hair tonic, preventing
the hair from falling out, and at tlio same
time stimulating a n"w and healthy
growth, is made as follows : Scald two
ounces of black tea with one gallon of
boiling water; strain and add three
ounces of glycerine, half an ounco of
tincture of cantharider. and one quart
of bay rum. Mix wellH>y shaking, aud
then perfume to taste,
The Wife's Appeal.
Since love, dear lord, lies dead within your
eyes,
And pity speaks not in a single tone,
And no fond thought makes kind your cruel
touch,
Take a sharp sword and elay me. I muBt die.
Ah! onco my heart was like the rounded moon
Rellocted in eUll waters ; now it breaks,
Tossed by the whirling eddies of despair!
Sweet were tho days of yonth, and sweeter
yet
The golden summers whon your love was
strong,
Before Ohana blossomed into flower.
But when that brightness came I saw your
soul
Bend like a slender branch boneath the bird
mai, uubliou #nu ypiiug ?uu viomj ui i?i
flight.
Sinks, eoft 08 snowflake, on the rosy world.
Dreams the fair dove among the quiet trees,
Or speeds in sunny splendor o'er the fields?
What life more free and full of pleasant things?
I am a foolish bird whose mossy nsst
Is burned to ashes, and with wounded wing
I flit through flaming woods in pain and fear.
Is there a shelter in the withering world ?
Whore shall I go ? What friend can comfort
me ?
Oh, husband, lovo or kill me whore III"!
BEND THE TWItt WHEN GREEN,
Thero was once upon a time?as old
wives used to say?a husband and wife,
who had brought up three daughters,
respectively named Karen, Maren and
Metty.
They might certainly nave oeen recK
oned very pretty bad people not known
them to be all three quite as stubborn
and contradictory, and desirous of bay
ing tho last word. Metty was far tbe
most disagreeable. By dint of time
there came two wooers for the two eldest
daughters, who finished by marrying.
But it was years before anybody ven
tured to make up to Metty. At last,
however, even she had a sweetheart. It
is true that he came from a long dis
tance. The banns were to be published
three times, and on the third day after
such publication, which had been fixed
at an out-of-the-way hour by the bride
groom, he and Metty met in church in
order to be married. When these par
ticulars were settled the man, who was
an odd fellow, at once took his depar
ture.
\_7I1 tut) WtJUlXlllg uaj*, 1/Li.o uiu ^lucuin
had made their appearance at church
with their daughter. But they had a
long timo to wait for the bridegroom.
At last he appeared, mounted on an old
gray horse, with a musket slung across
his breast, a pair of worsted gloves on
his hands, and a large dog at his heels.
No sooner was the marriage ceremony
over than he said to his bride : " Jump
on that horse, and place yourself before
me, that we may return home."
She done so, although her father
raised a number of objections. Hecould
have wished that the newly-made pair
had entered his house first of all, to eat
onmoftiinff Tint fViQ new hnnhnnrl
would not hear of any such thing, and
they went their ways.
When they had gone tolerably far the
husband let fall one of his gloves.
" Pick it up," said he to the dog; but
the animal let it lie, for anything he
cared.
"Pick it up, instantly I" repeated he ;
but again the dog did not stir.
After having commanded him a third
time to do what he had bid him, but
T^ith no better success, and without the
dog's seeming to care a farthing for his
command?, the man took up his gun
and shot him dead on the spot.
They then went their ways, and
reached a wood, where the husband had
i mind to take some rest. Our travel
3rs, accordingly, got off their horsos, and
put the bridle on his neck. When the
man thought they were sufficiently rest
ed, he called his horse three times ; but
bhe animal took no notice of his master's
voice, and went on grazing. On seeing
this, the husband took up his gun once
more and killed the disobedient horse.
On witnessing this sight the wife felt
strangely uneasy ; and while continuing
her road, determined, come what might,
never to contradict her hnsband.
Shortly after, he took up a green
twig, and folded it so that the two ends
would meet, and presented it to his
wife, bidding her keep it, till he asked
to have it back. The newly married
pair then followed their road on foot
and arrived without further accident at
their farmhouse.
Here they lived very happily, for
Metty had not forgotten the resolution
she had taken in the woods never to con
tradict ner nusoana. one always ap
peared so gentle and docile that nobody
could have suspected that she was the
an tractable Metty. Now this is what
ber husband said to her one day:
"Should we not go and see your father,
Metty, to ascertain how he and your
good old mother are by this time ?"
The wife declared that nothing could
please her better; accordingly, the hus
band ordered the horses to be harness
3d, and off they went. Towards evening
;hey had overtaken a flock of storks, all
ourneying together.
"What a quantity of crows I" said the
nan.
"They are not crows, but storks,"
laid the woman.
" Turn the chaise roand and take us
jack home," was the order the husband
jave his servant.
They accordingly returned from
vhence they came.
Some time after the husband again
isked bis wife if she did not long to see
ler aged parents.
Of course Metty wished it heartily.
)n the road they met a flock of aheep.
i xi~~i_ i ~ ?? :_j
w nai a large uou& ui wuivea, cricu
he husband.
" They are not wolves," observed the
arife, "butsheep."
" Turn round the cart and take us
lome," ordered the husband of the ser
vant. And this was accordingly done.
A third time the farmer asked his ?vife
f they ought not to pay a visit to her
>ld parents, and as she acquiesed eager
y, the old horses were once more har
lessed. They had gone over a deal of
ground, when they met a flock of hens.
"What a quantity of crows," said
he husband.
" Quite true," said the wife.
This time they did not turn back, and
riien they reached the dwelling of the
>ld folks there were great rejoicings,
iaren and Maren likewise came with
heir husbands. The mother took her
hree daughters into tho room, for she
cas very curious to question Metty as to
ier mode of living, and to know whether
he was satisfied with her husband.
)uring this interval, tho father kept fili
ng a large jar full of silver coins, which
le placed on the table before his sons
a-law, saying it would belong with its
ontents to the woman who was most
bedient.
On hearing this, the eldest began to !
ry out: " Karen, my beloved; come j
lither for a moment?s3ome, my dearest
Caren." But all his appeals were lost
ipon Karen. Even when he went into j
heir bedroom, and began to urge her,
ritli a kind of gentle violence, he could ,
oc mate ner stir.
The Bccond husband fared no better:
rith his Maren.
It was now the third husband's turn.
le merely -wont to tho door, knocked, j
nd said : " Come here, Metty."
Out she came in a momeut, and in-'
uired -whether ho wanted anything. ,
He answered: "Merely tho sprig
'hich I gave into your keeping when \
ro were in the wood on our wedding I
ay."
She gave it to him at once, as she al- :
rays carried it in her pocket. Then !
lio husband showed it to the others,
xying: "Behold! I bent this branch
rhile it was still green?you ought to
ave done the same !"
A Long Fall.
The Sacramento Record Union tells |
le following story: A miner named I
'own, employed in the Oregon mine, at |
lurekfi, wheeled a car from tho 390-foot j
;vel into tho shaft, and fell with it to
iie dump, 400 feet. Two miners went
own to his assistanco, find he was
rought to the surface, his mouth filled
'ith blood, but beyond this and a sensa
on of pain in tho region of the back,
lero were no indications of injury,
hless he Jias received internal injuries
3 will recover.
A POACHER'S VENGEANCE.
A Crime that wai Set to the Credit of the
(<crman Holdlert In France.
A Paris letter to the London Times
says: At the Haute Marne assizes a
case has been tried, resulting in a capi
tal sentenoe, tho circumstances of which
deserve publicity. In 1850 a man, still
young and of indifferent character,
named Kambouillet, who carried on
poaching with audacity and success, was
surprised by the gamekeeper of a forest
in the Haute Marne. An information
1-' -3 1 L l_'
WIWJ luiu itgumtiu mm, una ua waa
brought before the correctional tribunal,
condemned to the forfeiture of his gnn,
to a fine, and even, I believe, to im
prisonment. Rambouillet received the
sentence without a protest, acknowledg
ing the offense imputed to him, and re
solving to turn over a .new leaf. He
kept his pledge, and from 1850 to 1870
he laid himself open to no reproach.
He Beemed bent on blotting out by his
good conduct the stigma of his con
demnation. When he met the game
keeper he avoided looking at him, not
with the air of a man harboring a grudge,
but like a man prevented by Bhamefrom
enconntei ing the witness of his fault.
It was observed. However, cnat no oiten
isolated himself from others, and fre
quently passed his time in wandering
about the fields without its being known
whither he directod his steps. This also
was attributed to regret for his delin
quency. He regained public esteem,
and his son married honorably.
Strange to say, Rambouillet was gov
erned for twenty years by a single idea,
that of vengeance. His apparent con
trition, the rectitude of his conduct, his
sadness, and his gestures, were all di
rected toward one aim?vengeance. For
twenty years, morning, noon, and night,
he lay wait for the gamekeeper against
whom he had vowed vengeance, and for
twenty years that vengeance escaped
him.
In 1870 the war broke out, tbe Haute
JVlarne was invaded, tiie forest in wnicn
the gamekeeper lived was occupied by
the German troops. One December
night, RambouiUet, whom every one
supposed to be at a distance from the
neighborhood, took his gun, slunk from
tree to tree through the Germans occu
pying the forest, and, at the risk of be
ing captured and shot, facing the great
est perils, and rosorting to the most
audacious Btratagems, creeping almost
on a level with the ground, he succeeded
in reaching the gamekeeper's lonely cot
tage. There was a light in the window.
The gamekeeper and his wife, lost in
this solitude, amid hostile troops, were
seated side by side. RambouiUet
watched them some time through the
clearing surrounding tho cottage. The
gamekeeper remained motionless by his
wrif** in ortifa nf fliA fnrimifl lmrlrinor nf
his dogs, for since the enemy had occu
pied the forest, the dogs had always
baxked every night. Rambouillet
raised his gun, took a carcful aim, and
fired. Two despairing cries were
uttered inside the cottage, the dogs re
doubled their noise, all around distant
calls of " Woher da " wore heard, and
Rambouillet hurried along the paths,
esoapod, and disappeared from the dis
trict.
The next day it was told how the Ger
mans had killed the gamekeeper's wife,
and all the neighborhood mustered at
her funeral
Jr*eoce was-signed, itamoouiuec re
sumed Irs former life. The occupation
ceased, and then everybody ventured to
express the horror excited by so coward
ly a crime committed against a woman
sitting peaceably at her hearth. Ram
bouillet had become more gloomy. A
gnawing despair had penetrated his
heart. He had committed a useless
crime. Not only had his vengeance
escaped him, but he felt that any at
tempt against the gamekeeper would
recall attention to the crime of 1870, and
would divert suspicion from the German
soldiers. His irritation increased every
day, and often found vent in threats
against those around him. A few weeks
ago one of these scenes was repeated
between Rambouillet and his own
daughter. "Ah, yes," exclaimed the
latter, "you want to serve me as you
served the gamekeeper's wife; but I
am not afraid of vou." Rambouillet
flinched. The conversation became
known and reached the ears of justice.
Rambouillet was arrested, convicted,
condemned to death. The jnry answered
every question put to them affirmative
ly, and without extenuating circum
stances. They felt that a man who had
plotted revenge for twenty years must
have acted with premeditation. The
prisoner's counsel had, of course, urged
as an extenuating circumstance that he
mistook his victim.
Au Ecceulric Murderer,
Dillon, who shot and killed Dilleber,
the wealthy liquor merchant, in New
York city, is a son of Gregory Dillon,
who one-quarter of a century ago was a
prominent New Yorker. His brother,
the late Robert J. Dillon, was a park
commissioner, a man of large fortune
and business ability. His sister is the
wife of an eminent merchant in New
York, who has retired from active busi
ness. Both brothers and the sister in
herited a handsome fortune from Grego
ry Dillon, their father. Romaine Dillon
was always a very eccentric man. Dur
ing the last five or six years he has ex
hibited marked and unmistakable indi
cations of insanity of the most danger
ous kind, which led him frequently to
flwonflift litr/so r\f rvoroAticj trim
ed liim or gave him even the most trivial
reason for resentment. He has several
times fired recklessly upon people whom _
he did not know, and once, opposito an
apartment that Dillon had occupied, in ah
up-town side Btreet, a person had a
habit of walking in a way that displeased
him, and he remoustrated with him by
opening fire upon him with a navy
revolver. His victim in this last shoot
ing case was an entire stranger to him.
Poisonous Winds In India
A paper has been read before the Lon
don meteorological society on the poison
ous winds of India. The author, Dr.
Cook, remarks that there are certain
days in which, however hard and violent
the wind may blow, little or no dust ac
companies it, while at other times every
little puff of air or current of wind raises
up and carries with it clouds of dust,
and at these times tho individual parti
cles of sand appear to be in such an
electrical condition that they are even
readv to repel each other. But the
wind most deadly in its influences is the j
simoon, its presenco beiug made mani- i
fest in tbo sudden extinction of life (
wherever protection from its influence i
fails to be afforded. Dr. Cook says of j
this phenomenon that it is sudden in its j
attack, nnd is sometimes preceded by a ]
cold current of air, though occurring in j
the hot months, and taking place by i
night as well as by day ; its course is <
straight and defined, and its passage (
leaves a narrow, "knife-like" track. <
It is attended by a well marked sulphur- j
ous odor, aud the current of air in ]
which it passc-s is evidently greatly heat- 1
ed?is, iu fact, like the blast of a fur
!
A Washington Dandy.
Those 'cicty boys thoy have in Wash- j
ington are queer. One of them, ac- i
cording to a correspondent, wears his j
hair a la Pompadour. It is rolled back
from his forehead ever a cushion, or
what tho girls call a-" rat." flis neck
tie, gloves, and low shoes aro faultless;
and ho is, altogether, tho most darling .j
exqnis'to wo havo. He is very fastidious J
and critical about the toilettes of the, j
young follies whom he honors with a i
dance. His manners are as polished as
i.;~ i,;?
uio uuuio, auu vnu ua|<^uiuoo ui jjao j
trousers about his daiuty feet Las caused
the suggestion to bo roado that thoy
should be tied back like tho ladies' <
skirts. j
Wheat.
Milwaukee, Wis., receivedandsliipped
east during 1875, a total of wheat and
flour reduced to wheat of 32,002,610
bushels?a large increase over the year
1874.
will be fi ty-threo
this year. If all our readers
the whole fiffcy-threa,
Estimating the Horse Power of Steam
Engines.
When steam engines were first intro
duced, they were largely used to take
the place of the horses before employed
for raising water from mines. Naturally,
people ask, when buying an engine, how
much work would it do, that is, how
many horses would it represent. The
early engine builders found themselves
greatly at a loss when this question was
first asked. They had at once, there
fore, to determino how many horses an
engine was equal to. The first thing
was to find out how much a horse could
do. The strongest English horses, the
London brewers' horses, were far above
the very best that cotild be found else
where. They were found to be able to
travel at the rate of two and a half miles
per hour, and work eight hours per day.
The load was pulling 100 pounds' weight
up out of a shaft by means of a rope.
When a horse moves two and a half miles
per hour, he travels 220 feet per minute,
and of course, at this speed, the 150
pounds would be raised vertically that
distance. That is equal to 300 pounds
lifted 110 feet per minute, or 3,000
pounds eleven feet, or 33,000 pounds one
foot high in 1 minute. The 33,000 pounds
lifted one foot high every minute is taken
as a standard horse power. It is much
more than aay ordinary horse can do,
and, therefore, the engine builders were
always sure that their engines would
take the place of fully as many horses
as the horse power would indicate that
ther should. Of course, 33,000 pounds
lifted one foot high per minute is" much
? i. r? ?>?1^4.-? xi
mure uunvtjuiwuo lur uuiuuiunuu tuuu
150 pounds 220 feet, and therefore the
former form has been adopted. The
amount of work, or number of foot
pounds, however, is just the same in
either case. A foot pound represents
the amount of power required to lift
one ponnd one foot high. It is compar
atively easy to estimate the horse power
of an engine with a reasonable degree
of accuracy, provided we know-certain
things in regard to it. We must know
the pressure in the boiler, the diameter
nf t.ViA /?T7linrlAr tlia lflnot.h of flfrrnko.
the number of revolutions per minute
which the engine is making, and lastly,
the point at which steam is cut off.
A Dog as a Mail Carrier.
Who carries the mail from Os-tra-gou
nosh, away up ou the Minnesota fine,
to the nearest frontier settlement in
Dakota ? asks a St. Paul paper. Why,
Boss, a mongrel kind of dog, an ap
parent ultimate result of the mingling of
every kind of dog found in the territory.
Boss' master a year ago was a drunken
half-breed who" was paid $3 a trip in
summer and $5 in winter for taking the
mails a distance of soino sixty miles.
Boss' master was honest and never pur
loined a letter, but he had a way of
drinking on the road, and the mails were
often delayed. Last January the mail
carrier never reached his destination,
but was found frozen stiff in a snow
bank three miles beyond Jobley's run.
Boss was keeping guard over his master
and the mail. Now Boss runs the ma
chine in bad leather. All that has to
bo done is to take Boss and secure the
letters around his neck in an oil-skin
wrap, and away goes Boss to the end of
the mail route on the biggest kind of
lope. There no use of starving Boss,
like people do pigeons, to get him to
work, though ho does expect a feed
at tho conclusion of his journey. No
one as yet is intriguing for Boss' place.
Sixty-two miles as tho crow flies, carry
ing the mail through the snow, is not
a position most office seekers care for.
Color of the Red Sea.
In a communication to the Bombay
geographical society a writer confirms
the opinion hitherto expressed by sci
entific observers that the color of the
Red sea is due to large portions being
covered with patches, from a few yards
to some miles square, composed of mi
croscopic vegetables, or animalcule,
particularly abundant in spring, and
which dye the water s,n intenso blood
red; when not affected, however, by
these organic beings, the deep waters
are intensely bine, and the shoal waters
shades of green. Contrary to the usual
belief, the water of this sea is not re
markably salt, the saline matter being
only abeut forty-one grains in one thou
sand. The evaporation is equal to eight
feet annually, while not more than one
inch of rain or rain water is added in
the same time, for although there are
heavy rains on the shore, they are sucked
up vy i?uu puruueu btuiu. jluc icnun ui
such enormous evaporation is, according
to this author, to produco a constant de
scent of heavy salt water to the bottom
of the sea, and when this heavy fluid
arises to the level of the Mocha barrier,
it falls over in an outward current, and
is replaced by an upper inflowing cur
rent?in this manner the whole of the
water being changed once a year.
A Wreck of a Man.
What wreck so shocking to behold as
the wreck of a dissolute man?the vigor
of life exhausted, and yet the first steps
in au honorable career not takeu?in him
self a lazar-house of disease; deadv but,
by a heathenish custom of society, not
buried 1 Rogues have had the initial
letters of their title burnt into the palms
of their hands?even for murder. Cain
was only branded on the forehead; but
over the whole person of the debauchee
or the inebriate, the signatures of in
famy are written. How nature brands
him with stigma and opprobrium I How
she hangs labels all over him, to testify
her disgust at his existence, and to ad
monish nf.hfirs tn hfiWJirfl nf his nifimnle!
How sho loosens all his joints, sends
tremors along the muscles, and bends
forward hifl frame, as if to bring him
upon all-fours with kindred brutes,, or
to degrade him to the reptile's crawling!
How she disfigures his countenance, as
if intent upon obliterating all traces of
her own image, bo that she may swear
that she never made, him! How she
pours rheum over his eyes, sends foul
nnirif.a inlinliit. 1i;h v>rnrit;fi. ftnH nhriolfs
? J y
as -with a trumpet, from every pore of
his body : 'Behold a beast I"
Starvation Food.
Those who have thoroughly investi
gated the matter assure us that bread
made from fine white flour is "starva
tion food." It does not contain the
elements necessary to properly nourish
and sustain the j.nman body. If parents
expect their children to grow up with
good health, strong nerves, perfect
teeth, good eyes and hnir, they must not
give them fino white flour bread as a
constant article of diet. It is believed
bhat the prevalence of early-decaying
teeth and nrematnro crravness and bald
ess of tho head are largely due to the
general use of white flour. Tho whole
of tho wheat, reduced to a uniform con
dition, without loss or injury of tho food
Dlemeuts, makes a nutritious food, which
jontains all tho elements necessary for
growing and health. Fortunately many
people are beginning to understand this
important matter.
His Retort.
The effect of one of a spsaker'.s strong
poiuts was terribly broken by a bawling
reclamation from an intoxicated stranger
m tno auaionce? uu, you re n dema
gogue ?" The speaker nettled to one of
bis stinging retorts, fixed his eyo upon
tho fellow, and pausing just a moment,
to fix the attention of tlio audience and
Gjivo his response the more cffcct, mere
ly answered with one of his own unn.p
l^aoliable grins : " And put a wisp of
Straw around you aud you'd bo
ft demijohn I" It brought down the
Souse and cxtingaislied the bibulous of
fender.
Salt ox the Walks ?A correspon
dent of the London Times writes as
follows: To throw salt upon snowy
pavements is not merely a dirty and idle
habit to save tho trouble of scraping and
swooping, but it is ouo fraught with
clangor. Suow ami salt when mixed '?>
gether form a muddy liquid of thr t
peraturn of zero, or thirty-two d< -;
below the freezing point of water?a
degree of cold long considered to be the
lowest attainable, aiad it needs not to tell
bow dangerous must be the saturation
Df the shoes, with feuoh a liquid. The
practice should nofonlybe prohibited,
but it should be ujado a penal offense.
An Old Pioneer of '40,
From Bret Harte's story, "Gabriel
Conroy," in Scribner for January, we
extract the following : A thick fog,
dense, impenetrable, bluish-gray and 1
raw, marked the advent of the gentle t
summer of 1854 on tho California coast, v
The brief immature spring was scarcely I:
yet over; there were flowers still to be r
seen on the outlying hills around San 1
Francisco, and the wild oats were yet c
green on the Contra Costa mountains, t
Bat the wild oats were hidden ander a \
dim India-inky vail, and the wild flowers c
accepted the joyless embraces of the fog r
with a staring waxen rigidity. In short, t
the weather was so uncomfortable that a
the average Californian waa more i
than ever inclined to impress the stranger f
aggressively with the fact that fogs were 1
healthy, and that it waa the " finest a
climate on the earth." 1
Pni?lior?a n/\ rvrsa rrrna UoffxtV /Mjlnnlflfflfl C
or more accustomed to impress the s
stranger with this belief than Mr. Peter
Dumphy, banker and capitalist. His
outspoken faith in the present andiuture
of California was unbounded. His sin
cere convictions that no country or cli
mate was ever before so signally favored,
his in toleration of any criticism or be
lief to the contrary, made him a repre
sentative man. So positive and unmis
takable -was his habitual expression on
these subjects, that it was impossible to
remain long in his presence without be
coming impressed with the idea that any
other condition of society, climate or civi
lization, than that which obtained in Cali
fornia, was a mistake. Strangers were
brought early to imbibe from this foun- s
tain; timid and weak Californians in s
danger of a relapse had their faith re- e
newed and their eyesight restored by i
bathing in this pool that Mr. Dumphy t
kept always replenished. Unconscious- (
ly people at last got to echoing Mr.
Dumphy's views as their own, and much
of the large praise that appeared in news
papers, public speeches, and correspon
dence, was first voiced by Mr. Dumphy. (
It must not be supposed that Mr. 1
Dumphy's positiveness of statement and <
peremptory manner were at all injurious K
to his social reputution. Owing to that 1
suspicion with wliich most frontier com- *
munities regard polite concession and J
suavity of method, Mr. Dumphy's *
brusque frankness was always accepted as J
genuine. " You always know what Pete f
Dumphy means," was the average criti- '
cism. " He ain't goin' to lie to pie se a
any man." To a conceit that was so out- E
spoken as to be courageous, to an igno- 1
ranee that was so freely and shamelessly c
expressed as to make hesitation and cau- *
tions wisdom appear weak and unmanly |
beside it, Mr. Dumphy added the rare |
quality of perfect unconscienticuauess i ]
unmixed with any adulterating virtue, j
Corner Lots for Itallding.
To persons about to build a residence,
the following article from tie Land
Owner, on the most desirable corner to
locate on, mil be read with interest:
When a lot is on the northwest corner
of two streets, it is best, in a sanitary
point of view, for its frontage to be on
the west side of the street and the depth
on the north side. The house thus gets
the sun in the front bedrooms in the
morning, and on tho sido of the house,
looking south, nearly ali day. When, a
lot is on the northeast corner, it is best
that its frantage should bo on the east
side and its depth on the north side of
the street. The east side of the streot
looks west, from which quarter our pre
vailing cool summer winds come. All
rooms looking west are very cold at
night, especially at the timo of year !
?I J.l _1 ?
j WIJCLI HUUUUU UiiUU^CO U1 tVJUi^DiUUUi.C (UC | <
common. If the front bedroom windows ! i
face the east side of the street, they can j
be kept closed at night, and air j
secured from the sheltered side windows I
on the north side of the street, on which J
the sun shines nearly all day. If a lot i
is on the southwest corner, it is better t
that the frontage be on the south side, J
and its depth ou the west side of the (
street. The rays of the sun do not {
strike the south side of the street, while l
they do strike the west side in the early
half of the day?thus getting the sun
shine and heat in the front bedrooms at ?
the most desirable hours. When a lot t
is on the southeast corner, it is best that e
it shoulcMitive its frontage on the south '
side and its depth on the east side, for ^
the reason before stated, that the sun a
does not strike the south side of the e
street, while its rays are poured on the
east side from about noon till five p. M.
| The cold winds of night can be kept e
trom tne Dest (tne irom) oearoom Dy i
having the windows closed on the east
side and by opening them on the south
side. These are important facts to be
remembered by those who are sub
dividing largo lots for sale, or by those
who are erecting houses on targe corner
lots, where they are in a position to
front them either way.
Tiro Bright Animals.
Two dogs were often observed to go
to a certain point together, when the
small one remained behind at a corner of
a large field, while the mastiff went
around by tho side of the field, which
ran np hill for nearly a mile and led to a
wood"on the left. "Game abounded in v
those districts, and the object of the t>
doge* arrangement was soon teen. The h
terrier -would start a hare and chase it ti
up hill towards the large wood at the ?
summit, where they arrived somewhat 0
tired. At this point the large dog, *
which was fresh and Jiad rested after his h
wo,lk, darted after the animal, which he p
usually captured. Tbey then ate the I
hare between them and returned home. "
This coarse had been systematically car- .
ried on for some time before il; was fully
understood.
The King of leasts. ' i e
i ^
Samuel Haughton, author of a work | fc
on "Animal juecnamcs," writes 10 iva- i -
lure of tho relative strength of the lion ! a
and tho tiger : " I have proved that the j ?
strength of the lion in tlio fore limbs is j r
only 69.9 per cent, of that of tho tiger, j
and that the strength of tho bind limbs ; *
is only 69.5 psr cent, of that of the tiger, j a
I may add that five men can easily hold i j*
down a lion, while it requires nine men J 0
to control a tiger. Martial also states j o
that the tigers always killed the lions in | ^
the amphitheater. Tho lion is, in truth, > a
a pretentious humbug, and owes his re- j ?
putaticn to his imposing mane, and ho j v
will run away like a whipped cur under ;
circumstances in which the tiger will
boldly attack and kill." p.
A Want Supplied.
' B
The American mind i'b active. It liaa Riven !
nu books of fiction for the sentimentalist, !
learnod books for the scholar and profepsional J
student, but few books for the people. A j
book for tbe people muat rclao to a subject of j 0
universal interest. 8i:ch a sn. ject is tho j
physical man, and such a book "The People's 1 e
Common Sense Medical Adviser," a copy of j
which has been recently la:d on onr table. ; ^
The high professional "atfainments of its 1 a
author?Dr. il. V. Pitrco of Buffalo, N. Y.? j 0
and the advantages derived by him from an \ B
extensive practice, would alono insure for his i 0
work a cordial reception. But these are not |
the merits for which it claims our attention, j ^
The author is a man of the people. He syrapa- s
thizes wi'h them in all their afflictione, efforts, j 0'
and attainments, He pcrceives their waut?a jt'
knowledge of themcelves?and believing that b
all truih *Lo lid be mado ae universal as God's j
own Hiuilif.hr, fiomhia fain', of learniug and i ci
BTiirrif!! re ho has nrodiiceil a work iu which ! F
ho giv?u ilic-m tho bmofi^of his laboiB. luit j
he coiiaido-i hiru in every phase of bis oxist- ;
once, from tho Eion.otit Jic unergoa "from a '
rayles* atom, too dimiuuti\o fcr t o eight, j
until ho gradually ovolvi a to tho maturity ;
of the81: C')i ficioiia pouora. tlio cxercieo cf 1
which furnishes cubjective evidence (f our !
immortality." rroceid:ng from tho theiry that j
every fiict of n ind baa aphwical antecedent,
bo haa given an admirable trratiao on cerebral j
physiology, and tbown tho bearings or the i
facta thua established upon individual and i
( oeial we.lfaie. The uutb r beliovta with |
Spencer that "as vigorous health slid i*8 ic- 1
I companiug h gh apiritr. aro larger elements of !
I hapjiinc-H? than any other things whatever, i
tho teaching how to maintain theui ia a teacb- j
ing that yielda to no other whatever," and j
accordingly haa introduced an oit.-uaivo dia- j
cu*eiou of the nuthoda by vhijb we ojav pr> ! ?
aerve tho integrity of thj system and oltiutea ii
prevent tho onset of dieaae. Domestic remo- ; J
du??their pre) a'ation, uaoa an?l effects? ! n
form a prominent feature of the work. Tie _
liyguniu treatment, or tinrsin;,' of the si-;#, in
Jin iui| ortant subject, and receives a.tonli n J
commensurate with ttn impo>tiii;co. Nonrly all j
[ dieoafta " to wliicli flesh w heir " are doacrib- t "
cd, tho;r symptoma and eain-cs explained, and j c
proper domestic treatment t-uggettcd. To re- |
ciprocate th s many favors bestowed upon him Z
by I bo generous public, the author offers hia J[
book at & jrice ($1.50) little exceeding tho ~
cost of publication. Our reason can obtain $
this practical and valuable work by addressing ~
the author.?-flew York Tribute. \
Washing Day.
As washing day, in Germany, only
ornes two or t&ree times a year, it is a
;reat occasion. The women of the
louse, assisted by others, vonisn into
he cellar during the first day, from
laskets piled high with wet, clean linen,
eady to be taken to the bleaching field.
Cbis field is about half a mile from most
if the houses and is the property of the
own. It is a point of low meadow land
fhich extends out into the river. At
me side is a little stone hut in which a
aan and a dog pass the night guarding
he clothes. In the center of the field is
, stone-curbed well. Hither in the even
Dg the clothes are brought on trucks,
requently drawn bv large dogs, and
tere, in the cool of the day, they are
pread upon the grass, sprinkled from
arge tin watering pots, and left for the
lews to finish the work which the soap
uds have begun. On a bright morning
he various groups on the bleaching |
ield make a veiy pretty picture. The
)easant girls, with old handkerchiefs or
reilfl tied over their heads, gay stuff
Lresses and bare feet, run about between
he long rows of snowy linen, or stand
in tip-toe at the lines. Others stand
^waiting their turn at the well with
catering pots on their heads, or at the
ubs up to their elbows in the rinsing
rater ; one refreshes herself with a long
Irink of water from an uplifted jug ; a
jroup of women sit in trie shadow of
he stone hut eating their breakfast of
>lack bread and sausage, while the chil
Iren make themselves useful by chasing
itray pieces which the wind whisks
vway, or ornamentally turning somer
taulte and playing leapfrog. Everything
s stirring and fresh and pretty to see,
ind invests even the practical washing
lay with an aureole of poetry.
Imports and Exports.
The chief of the United States bureau
)f satistics has prepared a statement of the
tnd exports of merchandise into imports
ind from' the several ports of the United
States. The statement shows that the
otal imports for the eleven months
snding November 30, 1875, were $i71,
187,838, as compared with 8525,263,022
or the same months in 1874; the domes
ic exports for the same time were $502,
'32,099, as against ?552,632,318 for 1874;
ho foreign exports, 811,214,299 for 1875
aid $14,616,103 for 1874. Of gold and
lilver the total imports for the eleven
nonths of 1875 were $2,168,077; the
lomestio exports $5,540,030 and the
oreijrn exports $920,363.
At our reqnost, Cragin & Co., Phila.,
Pa., have promised to send any of our
eaders, gratis (on receipt of 15 cents to
jay postage), a sample of Dobbins'
Electric Soap, to try. Send at once,
rhey make no charge for the soap, the
noney exactly pays the postage. We
irould like to have all who test the
soap write us their honest opinion of it
for publication in these columns free.
Sere is what two of our friends write:
Dear Mr. uaitor :?i received my
sample bar of Dobbins' Electric Soap,
ind after arranging my washing accord
ing to directions, went ont and asked
ny neighbors in to see the resnlt. After
Ifteen minntes wo took them from the
rads and rinsed them clean and pure,
tt is all we could wish. Yours, etc.,
Mrs. Nellie Gray.
"Wall La'ie, Ind.
Dear Editor:?I, too, am a convert
io the merits of Dobbins' Electric Soap,
i sample bar was sent me by reqnest,
ind after trials have ordered more, and
inhesitatingly recommend it to all my
friends. Respectfully,
Mrs. Kennedy.
Weaverville, Buncombe Co., N. 0. *
Chapped hands, face, pimpies, ring
rvorai. b&uriiuuiii, aiiu utuur uuuiucvua wiw
ions cured, and rough nkin m&de soft and
imooth, by using Junipeb Tab Soap. Bo care
'ul to get only that mado by Caswoll, Hazard <fc
3o., New York, as thero aire many imitations
nade with common tar, all of whioh are worth
ed?Com.
Forty years' experience have tested
he virtues of Dr. Wiitar's Balxam of Wild
Cherry, and it is now generally acknowledged
o be the beat romedy extant for pulmonary
md lung diseases; embracing the whole range
rom a slight cold to a settled consumption.
Vere it not for its merits, it would long eince
rnve "died, aud mado no sign." .Fifr.y cents
,ud ono dollar a bottle, largo bottles much the
iheapcr.? Com.
Vogetino is nourishing and strength
ning; purifies the blood; regulates the
lowels; quietH the nervous system; acts di
ectly upon the secretions, and arouses the
fholo system to action.?Com.
JCIIENCK'S PULMONIC HYItDP, SEA
WEED TONIC and MANDRAKE PILLS.
These desorvodly celebrated and popular medicine*
mve effected a revolution la the healing art, and proved
he fallacy of^voral mazlmi which have (or miny yean
bslructod the progreei of medical sclonce. The faUe
upposftlcn that" Consumption la incurable" deterred
'hyslclani from attempting to find romeJlea for that
Jsoa&e, aod patients afflicted with It reconciled them
elvei to death without malting an effort to escape from
doom which they supposed to bo unavoidable. It Is
ow proved, however, that Contumptlon can bo cured,
nd that It hat been cared la a very great number ot
ases (tome of them apparently desperate ones) by
icbenck's Pulmonic Syrup aloao; and la other case* by
bo same modlclae In c mnectlcn wlti Sobeack'i Sea
7ted Tonlo and Mandrake PlUi, oae or both, accord*
ig to the requirements of the ct*e.
IJr. acaoncK nimenr, wno eojujeu uumuirtu^iou gwu
oalth for more lhan forty year*. vra? supposed, at ooe
Irae, to be at tbe very gate of death, his pbytlclaos
iIitIdk pronounced his cans hopeless, and abandoned
lm to bis fate. He was oared by ibe aforesaid midl
ines, and *Inco bl? recovery, many thousands similarly
ffectAd have need Dr. Sohenck'a preparations with tbe
amo remarkable success.
Fail directions accompany eatih, mallng It not abso
itoly necessary to personally hkj Dr. Sccenc* nnless
Mlent.i wish their lungs examined, asd /or this pnr
osa he is professionally at bis principal office. Corner
Uth and Arch Streets, l-hll?rtelphla. every Monday,
here all letters for advice must bo addrrsee I.
bcbenck'S medicines ire sold by all druggists.
eef Oattle-Prlcie to Extr* Bu!locfc? 8.V5 13#
The Markets.
SXTV TOHK
ommon to Good Texans
[lloh Cows
logo?Live
(8 ? 10 i
88 on @80 00*
07 VO 07
C9<<4 11
0S%t* 07
18 3 0?
DreMed
heep
ambx
otton?Middling
lour?Extra Western.
5 40 @ 5 90 i
1SX& I
f?at? Extra.
? 35 (A S 78
Tieat?Red Western 1 30 % 1 10
No. 3 Spring 1 <2 <& 1 24
ye?State 84 0 91
arley? Stato. (8 id 1 10
arley Mbit 1 CC @ 1 40
its?Mixed Wertern... 4"X? 47\
orn?Mixed Western 05 <4 8T
ay, per cm 6' 1 15
traw, per <rai 70 <$ 1 20
opfl TS'a?11 ?18 ....old* 04 <H 07
ort?Mesa . '.0 75 @2) 85
aril 23 @ 13
Igh?Mackerel, No. 1, new........ .2C 00 @26 CO
" No. 2, iic-w 3( 0 ?17 00
Dry Ood, per evt i(tl (g 6 00
HerriJiR, 8cf ltd, p<ir bet. . 28 g 28
Btroleam?Cmdo 7J$ Heflned, 135^ j
'ool?California l' leece 26 & 23
Toxaa " ' 27 <& 30
Anttrallnn " 43 Q 48
ntter?State .. 24 q4 81
V.'oeCern D&lry .2 27
Western Teilow 18 @ 22
Woctorn Ordinary 14 ? 16
I'oaiiPj-lvhUiii Flue....... . 18 $ ?3 I
?Slate Factory '"iXA 133{
State SUramoJ (-S ^ 16
Wwtura .... > "<'<4 a
r;[8?State 23 i? '.1
ALBA NT
llMt . <11 $ 45
ye?State 90 ;>i 91
jrn?Mixod..... .'9 a "4
&r!ey?State 8 J 'A ? 82
ltn?Stbt6 43 13
UD77AL0.
ioar 6 CO ? 8 00
Tirat?No. 1 Bi:rlcR 1 h8 (4 1 38
ura?Slixed 40 id 4)
it* .17 A 37 |
ye 79 ;<4 73
?rlcy Pj ?4 tO
BALTIUOIUS.
otton?Low Middling...... 13 I
lour?Extra 6 75 >{J 8 78
"beat? lied Western 1 M gl 1 SB i
ye 7H <tt F3
2rn?Yellow M A 63 ;
it*?Mixed 42 <4
strol&nin . 'J' It's 07*
rn!L/DZIjPHTA
lonr?Pennsylvania Extra 6 62# 4 6 76
Tioat?Western P.tU 1 ?'<S <& 1 15
8-1 iA f8
sm?YoHov.......... Vji Ci
Mired 69 ? t8 ,
itv?M.-sed 43 <3 44 j
tfrn>nr.>?OrlirtA . I11#*! EeEnod, 13^
SILVERJ
There 1' nothi :b UUe loather
f h>.? with a
SILVER TIP
for children. Tliry never we?r
through at the ton.
Also try Wire Quilted Sole*.
Pr> you wnct the host Shoe erer
H'.ntlia' will nor rip or leak, and
easier than.any machiuo sewed
1 pegged .sh'io, buy thu
ABiiE SC'KllW WIRE
ike.
Also try Wire Qnllted Sole*.
ICABLE
|S GREW
!W)(RE
,HT/_\T> T7" At Homo. EltherSex. S< ISJO a month.
11 \yXVlV. Agent*'SnpplyCo..20 1 JJowory.N.Y.
iQT'l-flWA and Catarrh Sure Cure. Trl?l free.
JHJJ.XX Ad'lrwanW.K.BdUlii.Iudlinapolla.Iad.
lO a ?Iny at borne. Agent* wanted. Outfit and trnna
'? f::ge. Addrefn TRUE A OO.. Angnst-a. Maine.
>soki Exchanged. Furnish all new. Want old. Write.
J Kama this paper. American Book Kiohange, N. Y.
5 in (On a d&7 athntne. Samples worth 3) -?nt
10 yc.\j free. STINSON A OO.. Portland, Me.
FANTKD AGENTH. Satm>U? aiui OutlU fret
ft frtttrtHa* Bold, A. OOUiiTEH A 00., Chisago
n
BABjjETS
ORANGE
FLOWER
WATER.
Hilt
THE GREAT BLOOD BEMED1
For the toilet or bath It hi
no equal. It 1b more pleasai
than any Cologne, Toll
Water or Handkerchief K
tract. Its perfnme la Tory lai
lac, always agreeable to tl
person using It, and to tho
around them. It tills the too
with a pleasant odor. It bi
no equal
Geo. T. Barney dc Co
BoHton, Ainu.
Title secured.
Try n I TtI Try I
-IS
TEGETINE.
MAKE IT PUBLIC.
80UTH BOSTOIT, Feb. 9,1871.
H. R. Stxtinh, Esq.:
Dtar Eir?I hive beard from very many source# of ti
great snccfsa of VEGETISEIn casesof crofala,Rh?
matism, Kidney Complaint, Catarrh, and ell other d
eases of kindred natnre I make no hesitation la sayii
that I knotc VENETINK to be the moat reliable remei
for Oatarrb aud General Debility.
My wife baa been troubled with Oatarrb for mai
years, and at time* yery badly. Bhe baa thoroughly trii
very supposed remedy that we eould hear of. and wi
all this she has for several yean been gradually growl
worse, and the discharge from the bead was ezcessl
and very offensive.
She was In this condition when sbe oommenoed
tak*. VEGETINE; I oould see that she waa Improvt
on the second bottle. Sbe continued taking the VEG
TINE until she had used from twelve to fifteen botUi
I am now happy In Informing you and the publio (if y
choose to make it pabllo) that she is entirely cured, ai
VEGETINE Accomplished the care after nothing el
would. Heaoe I feel justified in saying that VEGKTIf
is the most reliable remedy, and would advise all suffi
lng humanity to try it, for I believe It to be a goc
honest, vecetable medicine, and shall not healtata
recommend It
I am, etc.,respectfully, .
L. C. OA.RDELL,
Store 451 Broadway
VEGETINE act* directly anon the cause* of thi
complaint*. It invigorate* and *treogtlnn* tbe win
intern, acts npon tne secretive organ*, allay* lnflamn
tion, cleanses and care* ulcurstlon, core* conatipalU
and regulate* the bowel*.
HAS ENTIRELY CUBED If]
Bobtov, October, 1870
Mr. SWTONS:
Dtar Sir- My daughter after having a severe attack
Whooping Couch, was left In a feeUe itate of heal
Being advised by a friend, she tried the VEGBTIN
and aftor using a few bottles,waa fully restored to heal
I have been a great sufferer from Hheomatbm.
have taken sevora] bottles of the VKGETINB fort
com wain t, and am happy to say It hta entirely cm
me. I hive recommended the VKGETIKE to oth<
with the same good results. It is a great cleanser a
purifier of tne blood: it is pleasant to take; and I c
cheerfully rocommenfflt.
JAMES MORSE,
364 A then* St reel
H?M hv nil Drnvarlata nnri flunlova tin
where.
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World orer. 3c. stamp forOircolar to
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AGENTS
size 9x11^5? <?." T^TSlUei'aQd'ohron
of aery dfterlption. Nation*! Onromo Co.. Phlla.,1
(tjnCA A Month.? AncUWanted. 24 b?*t*
milDU l?e article* In the world. One sample ft
Address JAY mtONWON, Detroit,Ml
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Adopted by all the Qneena of Fathloa. Send for circa
K. IVIN8, No. 29o3 North Fifth St.Plilladelphia,
KIPPERS PflSTILLESibymall. T ,1
ISnre relief lamni
Price40eta.AMiia
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$260
A MONTH ? Arentt wanted et?
where. Bnalneea honorable and ?
olaaa. Particular* aent free. Addt
WORTH 4 CO.. St Louis, Mo.
AGENTS
All Want It?thonaanda of Ureal
mlllloaa of property eared by it-fortni
made with lt-partlcalara free. 0.
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graptfa. Scrap book Pictnree, Mottoex, etc. Elegi
ample* and calalofne tent pott-paid for 10 eta. Acei
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$77
and Morphine Habit absolutely*
spee.l LUr oared. Painless; no pabud
Send ft tamp for particular*. Dr. Oil
TOW. 187 Washington St..Chicago,!
PER WEEK Gu AKA.NTEEIfrto Ag*t
Male and Female, In their own iockll
Terms and OUTFIT FREE. Address
P. O. VICKERY 4 CO., Au*usU,Mal
<2?/< A to 860 a Week and Expenres. or SIC
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NATIONAL PUBLMHINO 00 . PhlUdelphla,Pi
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poddlloc from h iuieto hon
Eighty <1olUra ? month, h^tel and travo'ln* expen:
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HO VnTT Mule or Female S?nd yonr *?ir
AvU *nd get something that will bring j
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"Wnxrav INVKNTOHM* UNION,
iHUJI ill X 178 Greeavrlch Street, New Vor>
Yoar Name Elegantly Prix
IIMU'ltt *1 on IS Transparent vuiti
1M9' Cards, for 15 Centj. E?ch cardconta
teais which U not viable until held towards the li|
Jiothlngllke themever beforvoffcrsd In America. Blglndn
msntsto Ajtvata. Kovsltt Fsistiko Co., JUhlaad. Mi
OPIUM COBE
The most snooest
remedy of the pr
I entday.Send fori
I per on Oplom E
Prnf. n. VT oLrav. P n U/w JT'. r..nnrt? I.
Every render ot this paper should aei
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rd lor securlrjj oubMcrlbcrn. The Journ
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" ^ I stamp for sampler of Gloss Card
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"QSrCHOMOCT, or Soul Charming.
How either ?ex may fasciuate ami fain the lore ai
auction of any penk a choose, Instantly.. Tlila art all c
>o?ee/f. *y4k.iJsC0 its; toj ether with a Lorsr's Gtik
Krypfc^^ccxjjttr&UE^Etotato Ladles, 4c. 1,000,000 Mid.
tMMr ho?KArMrr>< 1, 'J0.LLUB* 00.. TWi, ffcilndabfcl
MyUlaBfratnt Flornl Cataloiniwfor 18?
Is now roariy. Pr co lOCcnts. less than half thocoi
UVuxiAii E. Uowz>rrcn,&15 VfarrcnSt., Boston.Ma.'
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THE DANBURY NEW!
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Send stamp for Specimen Oopy. **
mil.KV <1- WINOVAN, PwnBorr. Conn,
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health, Economy, for the Ladii
Children, Sick and Infirm, get o
I'raniral, t'ortubl*, Otlnrl-iA
Water G'lo*rr. Or oik best ai
cheapest K4.RTH Ol.OSETS. U
nothing else. Send fcr circular
the \\ AKKPIKl.l) K. C. C<J
UG Oi-v St., X. V.
it CO., Station D, Now Vorl
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DIITI invi Pilli ..nil NRIV VOltK.-T
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commended.
geC'1 ' '
K? /0UR OWN PBINTkNO
rov ELT1
' PRINTING PRES>
For l*rofe??lonul nnd Anintec
Prlnt?'r?, School*, Sr>cletl9a, Mai
iitticturers, Met hunt*, and otliert M
the BEST ever invent J. l.'jt.OvJO in iin
Ten styles, Price: from S6.03 to $160.<
BEN J. O. WOODS & CO. Manqfna:
denlcn in all kicdi of Printing Materia
5?m]?t*n]pforO?Ulncufl.> 40 i-'odnra) fit. En?to
A Great Offer
kVo will dining tfa?i Holldnyn dlnpoa
i'lANtW and I)K(1ANm of first-cliutMj
nrliidlnz \VATKlt**'? al inxver
sver bi for^ allVrerf. .Ifomhly
runnluir from 12 jo 3(1 mi '
rt arritntccl for fl
itrumrniH al ex I re
tlliulrated Calalogutt
" """a
Special Notice to ?ur Readers!
SPECIAL CALL ! _
AGENTS WANTED
To sell the Vew Patent Improved EYE CUPS.
Guaranteed to be the -btiX paling butineu offered to
A'jenU by any Hotim'. An *a?y and
plemant employment
Tho value of the celebrated new Patent Improved
Eye Cup h for the restoration of sljzht breaks out aad
blaze# la tho evidences of over 6?000 genuine tes
timonials of cures, and recommended by more than
1,000 of our best physician* la their practloe.
The Patent Eye Cups are a scientific and physio*
logical discovery, and as Alec. B. Wyxth, M. D?
and Wk. Bkatlzt, M. D.f write, they are certainly
the greatest Invention of the age.
Read the following certificates:
Fzbocsox Station, Logan Co., Ky.,\
Jane 8th, 1871 /
Dr. J. Ball h Co., Ocullsta:
GtniUmtn?Your Patent Eye Cupe are, la my
Judgment, tlio most splendid triumph which optical
science has ever achieved, bat, like >11 great and
important troths, in this or in any other branch of
cicnco and philosophy, have much to contend with
from the ltfnor.:nce and prejudice of a too skeptical
public; but truth is mighty, and it will prevail, and
It la only a question of time a* regard* their general
acceptance and Indorsement by alL 1 hare In my
hands certificates of persona testifying In unequiv
ocal terms to their merit*. The moat prominent
physicians of my oountr recommend your By*
Cape. I am, respectfully, J. A. L. BOYER,
Vy'illiam Beatley, M. D., Salvias, Ky., writeet*
"Thanks to you for the greatest c<f all Inventions?*!
My sight Is fully restored hy the use of your Patent
Eye Cups, after being almost entirely blind for
twenty-si* years."
Alex, R. Wyeth, M. D., Atchison, Pa., wrftesj
"After total blindnesa of my left eye for four years,
by paralysis to the optic nerve, to my utter aston
ishment your Patent Eye Cups restored my eyesight
permanently In three minutes."
Rev. S. B, Falxixbbubo, Minister of V. E. '
Church, wrltefl; 11 Your Patent Ey? Cups have re
stored my sight, for whlfch I am most thahkfnl to'
the Father of Mercies. By your advertisement I
saw at a glance that yoar Invaluable Eye Caps per
fnrnwj ihofr work nerfectlr In accordance with
physiological law; that they literal If fed the syss
that were starring for nutrition. May God grssUj
bless you, and may your name be enahrined In the
affectionate memories of multiplied thonssngs as
one of the benefactors of your kind."
Hoback B. Dciuht, M. D., say*: " I sold, and
effected future sales liberally. The Patent *ye
Cups, they will make money, and make it fast, too;
no email, catch-penny affair, but a superb, number
one, tip-top business, promises, as far u I can sss,
to be life-long." ' "
Mayor E. C. Ex.ua wrote us, November 1Mb,
1869: "I hare tested the Patent Ivory ,Ey? Cups,
and I am satisfied they are good. I am pleased
wUh them. They are certainly the greatest In ra
tion of the ago." 'if ti>:
Hon. Hobacx Gbeelet, late editor of tho V?v
York Tribune, wrote: "Da. of our ettf,
is a conscientious and responsible man, who Is ln
capablo of intentional deception or Imposition."
Prof. W. Mzbbxck writes; "Truly, I am grate
ful to your noble invention. My sight is restored
by your Patent Eye Cups. May Heaven bless and
preserve you. I have been using spectacles' twenty
years. I am seventy-one years old., 7 do all my
writing without glasses, and I bless the Inventor of .
tho Patent Eyo Cups every time I take up my old
steel pen."
Asolfu Biouwjxho, M, D., physician to Empsroe
Napoleon, wrote, after having his sight restored br
our Patent Eye Cups: "With gratitude to God,
and thankfulness to tho Inventors, Da. J. Bau k
T ? ????? arnmmaivl ?h? trial of th? F.Vft CoDS
(ia full faith) to all and every one that baa any Im
paired eyesight, believing u I do, that line* the as*
periment with thia wonderful discovery haa proved
successful on me, at my advanced period or life?
ninety year* of age?I believe they will restore the
vision to any individual if they ' are groped/
implied. ADOLPH BIOBNBE&O.. A.
CommonweaWi of MasaachuteUi, Zmx, at* .
June 6th, 187t, personally appeared Adolph Siorn
berg, made oath to the following certificate, and by
him subecribed and sworn before me; ''
. VV. STEVENS, J. P.
Lawuscx Cjtt, Masa., Jaye 9th, 1873.
We, the nndcrsigned, having personally known
Dr. Adolph Biornberg for yean, believe him to be
in honest, moral-man, trustworthy, and In troth
and veracity unspotted. His character is without
reproach- M. BON NE f, Ex-Mayor,'
8. B. W. DAVI8. Et-Mayor,
GEOBGE B. MP.RRTT.r. V M
BOBEKT H. TEWKSB0EY, City Treaa." ,
Reader, these are a few certificates out of thou
sands we receive, and to the aged we will guarantee
Sur old and diseased eyes can bo made tie?; your
paired sight, dimness of vision, and overworked
eyes can be restored; weak, watery and sore eyes
cared J in? Diina may see; Bpecucm m uihhucuf
light restored and vision preserved. Spectacle*
and surgical operations useless.
Please send your address to us, and we will send
you our book, A GEM WOBTH HEADING!
A DIAMOND WOBTK SEEING!
Save your Eye? and Ratort your ?iijkt I
Throw Avcay your fipecLxclu!
By reading our ILustzated Physiology and Anato
my of th<5 Eyesight, of 100 pages, ttila how to restore
Impaired vision ind overworked eyes; how to car*
weak, watery, inSamed and near-sighted cyo>v and
all other diseases of the eyes. Waste no moi i money
by adjusting huj;e glasses on your nose and diifig
uring your lace. Book mailed free to any person.
Send on your addrem.
AGENTS WANTED
To Mil the Patent Eyo Cups to the hundreds of
people with dl&taacd eyes and Impaired sight m
your comity. Any person can act as our Agent.
To gentlemen or ladles, (5 to ?20 a day guar
anteed. Poll particulars sent free. Write Immedi
ate!} to
DR.J. BALL & CO.,91 Liberty SL?..
New York Cllv, B. O. Box Ml. .
Do sot miss the opportunl ty of being flr*t In the
field. Do not delay. Write by first malL Great*
Inducements and large profits offered to farmecm
during the winter months, and to any person wbd
wants a first-claw paying business. *
DT The uibomt commishio* allowed "To
Agists by any House im tsx Umcted Svatxs.
ff4A5(POCp?r A?t. Bead for Chromo Oitalagai
wll/^iDfc0-1 n. KrrjToso'sSons. BostM.lfiii'
<?SECRETS WONDER
ruled. B?bI fri? lo all for 1 pwun cap*.
Ad*lru4 ru TCHBB * CoTwiUisaaUuih. In T?k
mi l ?np inw?.it't
*V Y I
TO FAtUn
cannot b* had In tie "World, than from tb? 1
R. I/and Co. Soil. *od Clim?U ttrloU/ I
Uu.
lion Acre* for ale it #0 and 80 on K. *. Ung
uent free. Addrt? lowe K. ft.?udC??
party, 92 Baodolim 8t,?'bieago. I <grC?4ar
Kuplda, Iowa. JOH < B.
Jjord ComBhtltW.
SAFE AMD RELIABLE.
Have Yoa Weak Lungs ?
Have 1'oa a Congh or Cold?
Hare Yen Pain in Your Breast?
Have Yon any Throat Disease?
Have Yon Consumption ?
BSE Db. L. i). C. WBHARPB
PINE TBBB TAR COBMAL
Are Yog Weak and Debilitated?
Do Yog Soffer from Indigestion?
Do Yog regnlre a Tonic?
Have Yog No Appetite ?
Do Yon need Building Up ?
6,
f
DoVonwishtobeStrongfMflWeajjinj^
USE Db. L. 0.0. WBHART'g
PINB TREE TAB CORDIAL
Sold by all Druggists.
Principal Depot,
No. 232 North Second St., Phife.
HALE'S
Honey op Horehound and Tar
tob the cube of
Cooohb, Colds, Influenza, Hoarse
1ke83, Difficult Breathing, and
all Affections of trh Throat,
Bronchial Tubes, and Longs,
leading to consumption.
This infallible remedy is composed of
the Honey of the plant horchonnd, in
chemical union with Taj-Balm, extract
or fmm thf, T.TWTC. principle of thfl
forest tree Abies Balbahea. or Balm
of GileacL
PI The Honey of Horehound soothes
Afro 6CATTERS all irritations and inflam
mations, and tbe Tar-Balm cleanses
and hkals tlie throat and air-pasaagea
leading to the lungs. Five additional
irgredients beep the organs cool, moist,
and in healthful action. Let no pre
judice keep you from trying this great
medicine of a famous doctor, who has
saved thousands of lives by it in his
large private practice.
N. B.?The Tar Balm has no bad
taste or smelL
PBICES, 50 CENTS AITD $1 PER bottle.
, Great earing to bay Urge elz?. ' 7
Sold by all Druggists.
PIKE'S TOOTHACHE DRO|
Cure in One Minnie.
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