Beaufort Republican. [volume] (Beaufort, S.C.) 1871-1873, July 03, 1873, Image 4

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Farm, Garden and Household. Stock on the Farm. Ont feed is oertainly more economical than uncut. Whether it is healthier or otherwise depends much on whether the horses are allowed to rest after eating. Indigestion is the cau.se of more than half the diseases of horses, and we should be careful to feed properly and regularly, and eepecially to avoid, putting the horses to hard work on a full stomsxih. liilch-cows should now be giving a lull flow of milk. If there is the slightest symptoms of a falling off, give a little 'extra feed in the form of cornmeal and bran-slops. Corn is cheap, and if the ootfs can convert one, two. or three quarts of meal into milk it will be very profitable. See that the cows are milked regularly and clean. Sheep should have their hoofs pared, and every sheep in the flock have its feet dressed vith carbolic acid to prevent foot-rot. Dip the lambs, after the ewes are sh.AATAil inin n. onlnfinn nf Cflrbolirt soap to kill ticks. The ewes and lambs Bhoold have the best pasture on the farm?but let it be dry upland. Low land is death to sheep. Suckling ewes, especially, require constant access to water. Have a pen in the field into which the lambs can enter, and feed them a few oats or other grain separately from the ewes. It is a great help to tnem. Scours in lambs indicate that the flock needs a change of pasture. Always let sheep have access to a little dry hay. They will eat it if they need it, and* it will do them a great deal of ?00d. Milk-porridge, made with wheatflour and milk?say a pint of fresh skimmed milk and a table-.gpoonful of flour, well boiled?is a capital remedy for mild cases. Do not neglect to tag the lambs whenever needed. Salt regularly, or better still, let the sheep have access at all times to the salt. They will then never eat enongh to scour them. Swine are looking up. In the great t corn-grewing sections of the country there is no stock that pays so well at present prices as good pigs, and the prospects are favorable for a considerable advance. Feed liberally. Nothing is better than a good clover pasture ; but it is a great mistake not to give grain in addition. Save all the milk for the young pigs. Pigs five or six rn An I V? a a! A rrof olmi r? rorr rrol 1 wifVinnf V/1V4 gVII (UVUg f VIJ n VIA VVAVXAVUV milk, but for young pigs, two to four months old, there is nothing so good as skimmed milk. Give more or less grain in addition. Push the little pigs all you can. It will pay. See that swine have access to fresh w^ier. jf confined, give ashes, salt, sulphur, and charooal. Keep the pens ana troughs clean. Dry earth i8 a cheap disinfectant. Use freely. Heading Lettuce* How he successfully counteracted a tendency on the part of his lettuce to go to seed is thus told by a writer in the MasuacJiHtnits Plowman : " The plants looked fine and healthy, but already indicated the running-up symptoms. 1 thinned them out, then carefully slipped a cotton twine under the lowest leaves of each plant, and gently raised them a few inches from the ground, and tied them loosely, then I placed a shingle upon each plant, and a small stone to keep it firm. Every evening I removed the coverings, watered each head, and replaced the protective covers in the morning, as I found the Bun's rays had a tendency to cause the lettuce to run up to seed, and removing the cover at night allowed it a sufficiency of fresh air, so that neither mold or decay made their appearance. I was rewarded by large solid heads of superior quality, and the hearts were white and crisp. Not a single plant failed of heading and none decayed or bore seed." How to Make Cheap Frames. Cut strips of stiff pasteboard about an inch wide the desired length, clip the ends to a point, and cover with any nice black cloth, like broadcloth or fine cassimere; lap the ends at the corners of the frame, and fasten with a white or gilt button. Bind your picture and glass together with strips of gummed paper and glue, on to the frame. Hang against a white wall. Bronzed paper, which can be bought for eight cents a sheet, may be used instead of cloth, in which case a short st*ip across the corners of the frame is n great addition to its comeliness. A Scene In Boston, Recently a young man, poorly but neatiy clad, applied for lodgings at a police station, stating that he had just arrived in the city, and was penniless and heart-broken. He was slowly dying with consumption, and, alone in the corn world he sought only a place to remain until he died. His cheeks were sunken, and his hollow voice too plainly proved the truth of his story. %l I can do nothing but put you in a warm cell," said the kind-hearted lieutenant; "nothing but that, and you could scarcely breathe there. If I send you to the City Hospital, you will be turned away, for they receive no incurable cases there. Haven't you relatives who will take care of you? ' " Not one, sir. I haven't a relative in the world who knows of my existence. I can't stay long here, sir. It won't be only a little while that I shall cumber you with my presence. Can't I find somewhere some corner where I can lay down and wait ? For humanity's sake, sir, don't tell me that a dying man must go into the street." " And here the poor fellow broke down, and the tears which ran down his cheeks and the sobs of agony which convulsed his frame showed the bitterness which he suffered. The lieutenant sadly shook his head, aud, after a small collection had been made in his behalf, the poor boy sought refuge elsewhere. His future is unknown. The statement, however, shows the necessity of some sort of an institution where the sick and homeless poor can be shel tered. At present the authorities can' do nothing with applications like the above, except to tender the cheerless shelter of a prison cell. Will Not Leave Home. Mr. Bailey, of the Danbury Xewa, in reply to an urgent call, backed by offers of many ducats, to go to New York, says: " Your bigcity likes fresh oranges; but it veiy quickly sucks them dry, and throws them away. I don't want to be sucked dry right off; so I think I'll remain where I .am. I've seen from my country home how clever fellows turn out who go to New York with grand expectations. They gave up something, and in the en^l found nothing. I am glad you want to have mq come, and I'm gladder that I don't want to go. Danbury, insignificant village as it is, is good enough for me; and as I don't want to steal anything, or get murdered, or get up a reputation for genius, I respectfully but firmly decline to pitch iny tent in Gotham. Australian Towns, i Anthony Trollope Bays that the country towns of AuBtr-.V'ig generally are zi not att^ctive, and it is hardly to be ii expected that they should as yet be so. L There are, of course, exceptional in* hi stances-Ballaarat, Geelong, ahd Beech- n worth in Victoria, are exceptions, as d are also Launceston in Tasmania, and >. Strathalbin and hfotant Oatnoier in J South Australia, trhich,from peculiarity b of situation, or the eherjty of Indi- ti tiduals, have beooine either ttell-built ^ cities or pleasant little towns. No n doubt there are others which I was not 0 able to visit. But, generally, there is ^ a raw newness about these congrega- n tions of hoaBcs, an initiation of streets ^ wnicn as yet are no more uian initiated, Q a deficiency in pavement and macadamization which leads either to dirt or 5 mud, an apparent admixture of tote* ^ tension and failure which is indeed n indispensable to towns founded with ft hopes of future greatness, but which ^ creates a feeliUg of melancholy sadness Q in the mind of a stranger. It oould ^ hardly have been otherwise, and .yet it T grieves us to see that they wh have j( diligently maHe their plans, intending ^ to produce comfort, social neatnesB, n and sometimes even urban magnificence, a should as yet have succeeded in producing only discomfort, untidiness, c and insignificance. In old countries, ^ such as our own, towns have grown Up (; almost without an intention on the part ^ of any founder. Cities have formed t themselves out oi village^ i 6c use it ~ has suited first this man and then that t to earn his bread in this or that local- B tty. Consequently our Btreets have B been narrow and crooked, our spaces ? confined and often ill-arranged, and ? our supply of water and air insufficient , for an increasing population. We are a daily compelled to pull down that we e may rebuild, and are almost angry with B ourselves, or with those who went a before us, in that there haB been so 0 little foresight among us as to the ? wants of mankind. But it has resulted T from all this that we are not, as a rule, ? incomplete, pretentious, or unpictur- 0 esque. The new countries however have E taken a lesson from the deficiencies of E the old countries, and have commenced a their towns on a certain plan, with wide ? streets and large spaces, and straight v long lines, so that coming generations ? of thronging men may be able to build a their houses in spots properly prepared, e An/] 4/v i- I auu w uiuvc auuuu wituuub alii'J < bill ? i themselves into convenient crowds, as r men have to do in the old cities. When t the fenerations shall have come, this 0 will be very well, and the wisdom of p the founders will be acknowledged? 8 but in the meantime the new towns are ugly, and generally dirty. } s A Gas-Propelled Boat. t Mr. William A. Leggo, of Montreal, * Canada, is the author of a novel method J, of propelling vessels, designed especi- a ally for canal boats, to overcome the 8 difficulties of horse towage. He dis- * cards steam wheels, ropes and other e common contrivances. All that Mr. F Leggo uses is a large bent pipe which a is attached to the stern of the vessel, J] the mouth of the pipe being placed un- ( der water, pointing stern-wise. The I pipe rises to the deck, and at the upper a end of the pipe is a gas light and valves u that open inwardly for the admission of C hydrogen gas and atmospheric air. As F soon as enough hydrogen and air have 0 entered, to wit, two parts of hydrogen 7 to one of oxygen, the mixture takes tire 11 from the gas light, an explosion en- ? sues, the valves are closed, and the j1 great pressure produced finds vent at 11 the mouth of the pipe, acting against r the water and driving the boat ahead. n The valves then close again, the gases h How in, a new explosion takes place, 8 and so on. These explosions follow 1: with as much rapidity as the motions of D a steam engine piston, and thus the c boat soon acquires a regular velocity. D \17liitflvAW A mnmtifniiiiiti/t n<\cf on/1 A IT UCbUCl HUD lUauUiat'VUiO) WOVj auu ? storage of the gas, and the working of I the gaseous motor will equal the a economies and conveniences of steam 8 power and its propelling appur- 1 tenances remains for Mr. Leggo to 1 ascertain by trial. But we think he will find that steam is the cheapest and simplest motor, take it all in all. The same amount of fuel that he requires to produce the gas and work tho gas en- 1 gine will yield a greater amount of use- i ful motive power if used in connection ^ with a proper boiler, engine and pro- * peller. Australian Method of Cooling Water. < Large buckets of canvas, says the ( Bulletin du Muscc, are made about 1 4 feet high and 15 inches in diameter. ( A bag of linen or flannel stretched | across the top serves as a sieve and a j siphon ; a wooden cork and a canvas i tube inserted below the level of the I water are used to draw off the contents, i ] These reservoirs are suspended toI c branches of trees in shady places and t exposed to the light breezes which in f mimmpr nlwava p*ist in Anstralia. From f the damp surface of the vessels a rapid t evaporation takes place, which keeps \ the water within at a temperature much t lower than that of the surrounding air. 1 This arrangement is on the same t principle as the water jars, or "mon- i keys," used in tropical countries and 1 the east of Europe. The latter are c merely unglazed earthenware jugs, hav- f ing a very small neck and a spout. We 1 have never seen them used in the United ? States, but should imagine that during a the summer months, and particularly c in event of ice famines, such as we have I been threatened with during the past i two years, they might be advantageous- t ly employed. The jars may be made e by any potter from ordinary clay at a s very small expense. By suspending tliera in a current of air, the water within is kept during the hottest weather at a delicious coolness, and at a tempera- , ture much more healthful than that f produced by the copious use of ice. The vessels may be molded in fancy \ shapes, so as to be ornamental for table z use. The Black Sea Fleet. J Russia is making rapid progress in t the organization of a fleet on the Black 8 Sea, having in service several monitors J finished last month. There are still 6 two monitors on the stocks at Nikolaief, t respectively named the Novogorod and t the Kief. These are the circular moni- ' tors of Admiral Popoff? monitors intended to revolve themselves bodily in j about their own length, instead of hav- j. ing turrets. Each of them is of some r twelve or thirteen hundred tons burden, c and each has six parallel keels, with a ? system of half a dozen sister screws. ? The screws can be worked separately, , if it is required to twist the tubby for- a tress round on its own axis. ? s There are 1,600 Oranges in Iowa,with t a membership of 70,000. c 9 ' 1 ? termalds?Their Appearence a^Sea. In 1737, according to a Scottish mags ne, the crew of a ship newly arrive i the Thames river from the Eaj ndies, reported that in the inland c tauritius they had partaken of a mei iaid> the fleah of Which was ft gret eal like Veal. The mermaid weighe ?ree or four hundred Weight?rather uxom specimen ! The hea<l was pa: loularly large, and so were thefeaturei hich differed but little from those of la it or woman. The story tells of tw f them, one with a beard four or fi\ aches long, the other much more fern ine. "When they are first taken, he narrator proceeds to say, "which ften on the ground > they cry an rieve with great sensibility." Aboi ' ? ^ a. VRlL ne same lime a siory came irom ?ig< a Spain, to the eftebt that some ftshe leh on that boast had canght a sort < merman, five feet and a half froi ead to foot. The Hfead was like thi f a goat, with a long beard and mn ache, a black skin, somewhat hairy, err long neck, short arms, ham anger and larger than they ought to 1 a proportion, and long fingers, wil ails like claws; webbed t'oes, ana a ? t the loWeir part of the back. The magazines for 1775 gave an a ount of a mermaid which was capture a the Levant and brought to Londoi )ne of the learned periodicals grave old its readers that the mermaid he he complexion and features of a Eur tean, like these of a young womai hat the eyes were light blue, the noi mall and elegantly formed, the moul mall, the lips thin, "but the edgeB hem round like those of a codfish hat the teeth were small, regular, ar flute ; that the neck was well rounde nd that the ears were like those of tl el, "but placed like those of the humi pecies, with gills for respiration, whit ppear like curls." there was no ho n the head, but "rolls, which, at a di ance, might be taken for curls." The fas a fin rising pyramidally from tl emples, "forming a fore top, like th if a ladv's head-dress." The bust w learly like that of a young damsel, >roper orthodox mermaiden, but,- aloi 11 below the waist was exactlv like Ish. Three sets of fins below tl raist, one above the other, enabled h o swim. Finally, " It is said to ha n enchanting voice, which it never e rts except before astorm." The writ a the Annual Register probably d lot see this mermaid, which the Oe lemaris Magazine described as beii inly three feet high. It was aftcrwa iroved to be a cheat, made from tl kull of the angle shark. A Welsh farmer named Reynold iving at Pen-v-hold in 1782, saw omething which he appears to ha' lelieved to be a mermaid ; he told tl tory to Dr. George Phillips, who to t to' Mrs. Moore, who told it to a ycrai ady pupil of hers, who wrote out i ccount-of it for Mrs. Morgan, who i erted it in her "Tour to Milford Haven low much the story gained on its tra Is?like the Three Black Crows, or tl larlor game of Russian Scandal?\ re left to find out for ourselves ; b ts ultimate form was nearly as follow )ne morning, just outside the cli; Reynolds saw what seemed to him to 1 person bathing in the sea, with tl ipper part of the body out of the wate )n nearer view, it looked like the upp art of a person in a tub, a youth, 8a f sixteen or eighteen years of ag rith nice white skin ; a sort of brow ih body and a tail were under tl rater. The head and body were humi a form, but the arms and hands tlii< a proportion to length, while the nos unning up high between the eyes, te limited rather sharply. Themysterioi eing looked attentively at Reynold nd at the cliffs, and at the birds flyii u the air, with a wild gaze, but utteri 10 cry. Reynolds went to bring son ompanions to see the merman or mt aaid, but when he returned it had di ppeared. If we like to suppose th Reynolds had seen some kind of sci nd that the narration had grown omething else by repeating fro aouth to mouth, perhaps we shall n >e very far wrong.?All the YearJloun Equal to the Situation. A rich broker in San Francisco late aade a desperate effort to prevent 1 >retty daughter from marrying a m rho mended harness for $G5 a mont rhe girl loved the man, and seemed o ermined to go ahead with the busine >f true love. The broker offered t laruess-mender 81,000 to desert 1 laughter forever. The young man i rused tjie bribq as no equivalent for 1 ;laim. He then went to the young mai imployers to get them to dischar lim. They could not think of doi his, as he was a good, faithful fcllo ind gave entire satisfaction?so the c broker didn't know what to do ne: Tis danghter helped him out of his v sertainty, but plunged him into deep rouble than he had ever known befo She disappeared one day, and sear or her proved unavailing. In two hree days traces of the missing g rere found in the office of a Justice he Peace. There was a record there ler marriage with the faithful harne: nender. The broker draped his hor n mourning according to the custom lis religion, and of course regards 1 laughter as dead. She immediate ound a place as saleswoman in a m inery store at 815 a month, and 8 ind $65 make $110, which is not 6o*b i figure after all for a young rnarri ouple to cut. - It is just the sort leginning that founds a happy hon nto which mothers-in-law are not a o enter with their disturbing influence ind fathers do not break through a: iteal their daughters away. A Wrillng Machine. There is now nn automatic writer, t rork of a western inventor, that bi air to realize most of the purposes inch an instrument. The operator s; >efore three or four rowB of kej narked with the letters, figures, a> ranctnation marks, and upon pressii >ne of these the letter is instantly i sorded on a sheet of paper. Speed he extent of fifty words a minute laid to be easily attainable, which >erhaps twenty words more than a rap ong-hand writer will average. Great peed, greater ease, and greater lepibi j would seem to recommend the inve ion as one that may become very s< iceable to overworked mankind. A church in Iowa neglected to p ts pastor's salary. Not relishing th: le brought his action and got a jud nent. This was thought to be a pi ceding demanding a council of inves Ration, and that tribunal arrived at fo Indings, viz.: That the churoh d rrong in failing to pay the pastor 1 alary; that the pastor did wrong uing the ehurch; that the chur hotud apologize to the pastor: ai hat the pastor should apologize to t hurch, The Death of Dead-Headigm. k- The Springfield Republican saya :? i The widely-extended prevalence and pc it gross abases of " dead-headism" in this a ?f country are producing the natural re- F; r- suit of a grand reaction, and the whole ve it system is being fast swept away. The st d last Congress cut it wholly out of 1;he th a boe^offlde* froto an4 after the 1st of j? r- July, neither paper noi: telle? fl^r ^ s, age of any kind ia to be carried in the | ^ a mails without pay. * This abolition of w! o the free privileges of the newspapers is fa \e not a very great thing in itself. At the ^ outside it will not bring a-half million i. dollars into the pnblio treasury, but it , enforces a principle which is altogether jjj ' right, and we regret to Bee any portion re of the prjess deprecating and denottnc- fr ingit. ThefreeciMulationinlne (joiin- CT I ties was an especial demand of and y boon to the country press; but we do . not beb'eve its loss will be found to ^ harm any real good local paper. No tr man will give up his county paper, if D1 *X wnlna +r\ him fnP m lb ID llinuo Ui UUJ VOiUU VW -wthe matter of 20 cents postage. If it is J \e not worth thltsum additional to the old j, : price; it is Odt worth an existence. Tne ^ 111 payment of postage on their exchanges w will generally be regarded at first a y greater burden to the newspapers; but p in the end it will prove greatly econom- tj ? ical to the press, bv reducing the nuin- a] J7 ber of exchanges which they send and ^ receive. Nearly every ppper has twice , or thrice as many exchanges as it really 1? needs. ,, se tl -jj Tunnelling the Rocky Mountains. t( Says the Denver, Col., Newu: A p id scheme is now on foot for running a h tunnel through the RoOky Mountains. " ^ This may seem a prodigious enterprise ? ;h at first to the casual reader, but the T ir parties who have the matter in hand are a" sanguine of the most complete success. 11 re For some time past gentlemen have n been investigating the matter, and they c have arrived at the ooncluBion that the ? 48 project is feasible in every particular. e a The idea is to tunnel the mountains B j! from a point about one mile below Black ^ a Hawk to the Middle Park, running in F ae the northwesterly direction. The tun- B er nel to be run will, it is presumed, cut B ve many rich veins of gold and silver, and 8 x* thus a great mining interest be devel- ^ oped. Money for the prosecution of E the work is furnished by English capi- a n" talists, who are sanguine of the ultimate t success of the enterprise. Some idea 0 of the magnitude of the task may be I ae gathered from the fact that the tunnel, if completed, will be twelve miles in E 8> length. It is intended to make it large 1 a enough to be used for railway purposes, c ve> and so, if a road is ever to be construct- 8 h? ed to the Middle Park, it will find its \ Id convenient route through the tnnnel. ? It will be called the Sierra Madre Tun- ? in nel Company, and the incorporation 1 n* papers for its organization have already < " been filed. v- ' 16 Beecher's Salary. ^ It appears from "The History of 3 s: Plymouth Church," Brooklyn, N. Y., ^ ff, that the salary of Henry Ward Beecher I 36 was at first, in 1847, $1,500, to be in- <3 r creased on the third year to $2,000. In f er 1859 the salary was $7,000 ; in 1865, 4 y, $12,500 ; in 1870, $20,000. The pew ^ e? rent in 1853 was $11,157; in 1859, $26,- 8 ? 000; in 1868, $48,000 ; in 1872, $59,000. t in In 1868 a quartette was introduced, fl 3k whose aggregate salaries, with that of J e, the organist, are $7,600. The helper? ' ir. a clergyman who does the pastoral work as ?and the sextons receive $7,700, mak- y ;B| ing the whole amount of salaries $35,- ? jg 300. There are several deaconesses * 3d elected annually. The number of mem- J ae bers increased from 21 in 1847 to 3,300 >r. in 1872. The number of Sunday school 1 is- pupils was, in 1872, 1,319, besides some j at eight hundred connected with mission il( schdols. ^ A Modern Harocn Alraschid.?The l ()t romantic custom, immortalized in Ara- * . bian legends, of promenading the streets j ' at night, in disguise, is said, by a local , paper, to have been revived by the c Governor of Smyrna, Sureya Pasha, c ijy who, accompanied only by a few atj j'H tendants, has adopted this means of assuring himself of the vigilance of the * ftn pohce. J ;h* i le" PAIN! PAIN 1! PAIN!!! !88 WHERE IS THT RELIEVER ? ( hfi _.n i, ?,.? v.vnrHa TTnmft 1 lis Remedy j re. PERRY DAVIS" PAIN-KILLER. \ , jH It has been tested in every variety of climate, and < , by almost every uation known to Americans. It is | [I S the almost constant companion and inestimable . _A friend of the missionary and traveler, on sea and . land, and no one should travel on our lakes or rivers 1 IK? without if. < Its Mkrits abb Uwsunpasssd. .1 If you are suffering from INTERNAL PAIN, )ld Twenty to Thirty Drops in a Little Water will al- . vi most instantly cure yim. TVters is nofAinp sguai fo 1 * ' if. In a fow moments it cures ! ill- ! Colic, Cramps, Spasms, Heart-bum, Diarrhma, i ipr I Dysentery, Plur, Wind in the Bowels, Sour 1 Stomach, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache. re- Cures CHOLERA, when all other Remedies Fail ch | It gives Instant Belie/from Aching Teeth. Of 1 In sections of the country where Fcveb akd , i Aoub prevails, there is no remedy held in greater lrl esteem. of Fob Fbvbr awd Aoub.?Take three tablespoon- < t ! fuls of the Pain-Killer in about half a pint of hot i Ot water, well sweetened with molasses as the attack n- ' is coming on. Bathing freely the chest, back, and ! bowels with the Pain-Killer at the same tune. Reise peat the dose in twenty minutes if the flrst does not nf stop the chill. Should it produce vomitin* (and it V | piobubly will, if the stomach is very foul), take a 115 little Pain-Kuler in cold water sweetened with .i_ sugar after each spasm. Perseverauce in the above ] -v treatment has cured many severe and obstinate if. cases of this disease. 1 >45 . OBKAT " CHOLBBA" bbxbdt ad1 pais-killkh. ' P(1 \ It is an External and Internal Remedy. For Sum- | , mer Complaint or any other form of bowel disease Of] n children oradulls.it is an almost certain <ure, I ,A ! ar.d has without doubt, been more successful in curing the various kinds of CHOLERA than any ' ,pt - other knowu remedy, or the most skillful physician. * I In India, Africa and China, where this dreadful dit:*8t I ease is more or less prevalent, the Patn-KUIer is f nil ; coi sidered by the natives as well as by European : residents in those climates. A SURE REMEDY j i and while it is a most efficient remedy for pain, it is a perfectly safe medicine in the most unskillful ' hands. It bus become a household remedy, from the fact that it gives immediate and peimanent re- 1 , ! lief. It is a purely vegetable preparation, made . 116 i from the best and purest materials, safe to keep Aa I and use in every family. It is recommended by j "" physician* and pei cm of all claitcf, ana to-o;iv, OI after a public trial of thirty year*?the average life i. of muii-it atiinda unrivalled and unexcelled, Ha eprcadiug ita usefulness over the wide world. *8, Direction* accompany each Bottle. Hd Price 25 ct*., SO ct*., and 11 per Bottle. Qg FBRKY DAV18 A SOW, Proprietor*, T6- Providence, B. 1. *.? J. It. HAERIS * CO., Cincinnati, O., 18 Proprietor* for the Western and South Weitern 18 State*, id Por *ale hy all Medicine Dealers. e_ > res uli waOLiULi XT JOHN r. BXWET. Mew Torh. OaO. o. GOODWIN a CO., Boeton. iq. JOHNSON, HOLOWAY * CO., Philadelphia. if- Beat and Oldeet Family Medicine.?San(ird's Livtr Invigorutor-a purely Vegetable Cathar.if and TYmfe-for Dyspepsia, Conettpatton,Debility, . Sick Headache, Billon* Attack*, and *11 derange- I SV ment* of Liver, Stomach and Bowel*. A*k your jg Druggist for it. Beuxirt of imitation*. ?[ Fox Blotch**, Pntput*. Txttsx, Salt Rhenm, e> ead all Skin D'*raae*, Jayne's Alterative i* a *ure 'O remedy! It purifle* the blood, and remove* all obstruction* in the pore* of the *kin. nr Da. braulsxxi*osk'i p*U* are not a purgative. j .? They cure ev?ry form of Fever and Ague lenwlild oiety. wttbant any ?tckne?* or dleonmfort. ; lit KIDNBT DUB *81, DB0P8T. and all disease* of ;n th. Kidney* and Bladder, can be cered by tha ? * " of Boat's Kawkdt. Thousands that have been I ch gtven Bp by ihptr PhyiL tan* to die, have been I speedily cared by the ate of Htnrr'i Bnm. Sent I . u to any addree* eacnrely packed on reeelpt of one 1 hft dollar and twenty-five (HJfi) cents. Bend for tllme trated pamphlet to Watui B. Clabkb, Bole Pro- ' prism, Providence, B. L > A Picture from Life. ti Imagine, says' a New York corres- I indent of the Cincinnati Commercial, ; handsome yonng fellow, an Alsatian renchman, with a pair of purple vel- ! it knee-breeches, a pair of snow-white , ockings coming to his knees, at which ' ley are trimmed with lace; a pair of x w shoes with silver buckles, a white aen jacket, a four-cornered hat of bite linen, and carrying a large light ) with those delicious rolls / Jf. ? Ut"~ . , Kunday breakhich are made lor ^ ' of ' st table in some of the towns . ranee. I am not describing a circus jrformer, or a grotesque humbug per- , nbulating the streets for boys to laugh A L I saw him, and more than one of Is kind, in the bright early hours of a 'cent Sunday morning, going round om house w house supplying their Pri istoihefs with the bread-rolls in qtteson. This style bf thing is compara- tbi vely new, and has teeh introduced by n" lsatian exiles. The young man's cos- aJ' ime looks entirely appropriate in its of nrity, tastefulness, and gayety. He da ? nAmmi'onfln/U ftf UD X1I1B ll&O U V1D1UU auu lOMHHiPWMvw W. (e far-gone times. His fleecy rolls tz rongbt back to one's imagination the th Ses when as yet Biddjr was not4 and co ten the various craftsmen carried on bli leir labors as though they meant to a lease and delight those whom it was of idlr privilege to serve. The French hit re the only people who can give color co ad charm to the arts of daily life. T1 _ sic an Editorial Notices are bo common rel lat it is almost impossible for an editor th > express his honest opinion of the D' lerits of any article without being pus ected of interested motives. This fact, "V"! owever, shall not deter us from say- Ci ,ig what we think of a new addition to ? he Materia Medica to which our attenion has been recently directed. We efer to Dr. J. Walker's California e. 'inegar Bitters, a remedy which is T! asking its war into more families just tow than all the other advertised mediines put together. Its popularity, as a' ar as we can judge, is not based on u mply pretention. There seems to be 81 io question about the potency of its 11 onic and altera ive properties, while it n assesses the great negative recom aendation of containing neither alco- II ioI nor mineral poison. That it is a le pecific for Indigestion, Biliousness, tl Constipation, and many complaints of- tl lervous origin, we have reason to know; II nd we are assured on good authority s; hat as a general invigorant, regulating P nd purifying medicine, it has no equal, ai t is stated that its ingredients, (ob- tl ained from the wilds of California,) are ei iew to the medical world ; and its ex- A raordinary effects certainly warrant the s< lonclusion that it is a compound of ft gents hitherto unknown. If populari- n y is any criterion, there can be no &! loubt of the efficiency of the Vinegar ti Jitters, for the sale of the artiole is ei mmense and continually increasing.? c Join. jg French Lore and Patriotism. ^ fi The Oauloia, in announcing that a c< roung lady of rank recently took the '} eil in a Parisian nunnery, thinks it ^ >roper to " reveal, a fact " which it evilently thinks too good to be lost. Her ather's chateau during the war became b he headquarters of some twenty Prus- II ian officers. One day, on sitting down o o dinner, "one of them forgot himself o far as to clasp the young lady around a he waist. She took up a long knife q md stabbed him to the heart. She ? vas arrested, but released in a day or j| wo on the order of Prince Frederic ^ larl." Another story is that an officer, { vho fought most gallantly at Metz, was n tent a prisoner to Germany, and while t here fell in love with and married a (Jerman girl. The other day he re- 0 urned to Paris, and went to his club as u lsual, but to his surprise he was immeliately expelled, on the ground that he g lad married into a Prussian family. q 1 Toothache proceeds from ague in the 9 ace. operating upon the exposed nerve of a I Iccayed tooth, ltub the gum thoroughly with he finger, wet with Johnson'* Anodyne Lini- a nent, heat the face well, and lap a flannel wet jj vith the liniment on the face, also put a Uttlo >f the liniment into the cavity of the tooth on _ lotion.?Com. I t The system frequently gets out of or- t ler and should be at onda regulated, else other t roubles will eusue; when physic is needed ? ake Parton'* Purgative PHI*; they are a safe, vholesome. aud natural medicine.?Com. c For loss of Appetite, Dyspepsia, In- ' ligestion, depression of Spirits and General 1 Debility, in their various forms, Ferro-Phob- I phorated Elixir of Calisaya made by Cab- ti yell, Hazard & Co., Now York, and sold by i 111 druggists. istlie best tonic. As a stimulant ionic for patients, recovering from fever or . ither Bickness, it has no equal. If taken dur- 1 ng the season it prevents fever and ague and ' Dtner intermittent fevers.?om The Browns and Blacks produced by t hat sterling preparation, Cristadoro's Excel- ( hor Hair Dye, cauuot be excelled by Nature; t ts tints challenge comparison with Nature's ( most favored productions, and defy detection. ?Com. I Flaoo's Instant Belee it.?Warranted 1 to relieve all Rheumatic Afflictions, Sprains, i Neuralgia, etc. The best, the surest, aud the 1 luickest remedv for all Bowel Complaints. Re- 1 lief guarranteed or the money refunded.?Com. Robbed of Health. The richest of bi i* poor Indeed. Tho tommer, j pleasant ana cujoyuoie as mi, n icijiviw lit open to this kind of depredation. The high , temperature weaken* the body aud impairs it* rttality, and a* the strength and energy of the sys- 1 km declifte, disease following in the trail of debility, obtains a foothold somewhere in the frame, in the stomach, perhaps, or the llyer, or the head, jr the bowels, er the nerves. In summer, therefore, it is of great importance to keep the body itrong, and all its fuuciions in healthy activity. To promote, or rather to Insure this condition of ^ >he human machine, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, g ;he standard tonic of the age, is the one thing need- " ul. Asa wholesome iuvigorant it stands at the bead of all medicines of the class to which it be- Jj longs. But this is only one of its many valuable properties. Its mild and painless eatharttc action, ' its anti-bilious properties, and the certainty with { which it eliminates from the blood and other ' animal fluids all acrid matter that tends to produce >r foster disease, almost entitle this wonderful p preventive and curative, to the much abused ap- e pellatlon, a universal medicine. It Is so harmless . that the most delicate female invalid may take tt " with safety, yet so powerful that no form of billoue >r nervone disease,too phase of tndlgeetion.noease >f chronic constipation, no type of iutermitteut fever, can resist ita sanitary operation. Clhenp 1 Any question answered furlOcts. lend / stamp. evfPUST. *4 Turk Bqr.. New Haven, Ct. Dr. Whittier, \ Longest engaged and most eucceetfuPphyelclan I >f the age. Consultations aud pamphlets free. Ce I >r wrtts. B7<) AA EACH WEEK?AGEKT8 WANTED " ip / da. UV/Business legitimate. Particulars jt V? J WORTH, at. Liwus. Mo.. Nov SSM1. I WILL YOU EVER GO WEST 1 e A weaum Mies p.p.r unwittingly gives the to 'ormatton you want, for, if ukan r rutrrly, in its 1: sews will appear both the good and bad faatures of the business, climate, laws, markets, people, Ac., which an Anmigrstfon-paper will not gtve. The AfcAteen (Kansas) Woke ia a western news-paper. Pry It. famnlea free. Weekly, one year, |UP, Hz J noe., *.?; Dally, ens ysur, one me., ILK. I ggl' Dr. J. Walker's California 7!U" ar Bitters are a purely Vegetable w eparation, made chiefly from the nae herbs fontid on the lower ranges of S Sierra Nerada monntains of Califor- ^ i, the medicinal Properties of which s extracted therefrom without the use 4ledbol, The question u almost ily asked, "What is tbe cause of the paralleled success of Vinegar Bit- o* iKsf" Our answer is, that they remove e cause of disease, and the patient re- _ vers %is health. They are the great sj sod purifier and a life-giving principle, ~ perfect Renovator find Invigorator the system. Never before in the itoiy of tbe world bos a medicine been mpounded possessing tbe remarkable alities of Vikeoar Hitters in healing tbe k of every disease man is beir to. They i a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, licving Congestion or Inflammation of 1 a Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious I seascs. m The properties of Dr. Walker's fl iJtkoah Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic, | irmi native, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, B dative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Altera- B re, and Anti-Bilious. B Grateful Thousands proclaim Vin- B gar Bitters the most wonderful Ingorant that ever sustained the sinking 'stem, bal No Person can take these Bitters J* Kcording to directions, and remain long f* uwell, provided their bones are not de:royed by mineral .poison or other ^ leans, and vital organs wasted beyond ? jpair. w " i' nnA Tutor, f D1H0US, Ilt'lllii irnt uuu ?? , littent Fevers, which nro so preva- 1 silt in the valleys of our groat rivers irougbout the Uuited States, especially i lose of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, * linois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arfeanis, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, earl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Rosoke, James, and many others, with ieir vast tributaries, throughout our *? atire country during the Summer and j .uturnn, and remarkably so during sea- "1 ins of unusual heat and dryness,- are ivariably accompanied by extensive delngementa of the stomach and liver, nd other abdominal viscera. In their eatment, a purgative, exerting a powrful influence upon these various or- ' ans, is essentially necessary. There i no cathartic for the purpose equal to " >r. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitters, ? a they will speedily remove the dark- ? ilored viscid matter with which the owels are loaded, at the same time S simulating the secretions of the liver, Z nd generally restoring the healthy ft inctions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease 51 y purifying all its fluids with Vinegar 2 Utters. No epidemic can take hold ft f a system thus fore-armed. I Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head- \ che, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, * 'igbtness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Iructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste l i the Mouth^Bilious Attacks, Palpita- g lit ion of the Heart, inflammation ei mo mugs, Pain in the region of the Kid- | eys, and a hundred other painful symp- Q urns, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. I >ue bottle will prove a better guaranteo P f its merits than a lengthy udvortiso- 1 lent. I Scrofula, or King's Evil, White | welliugs, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, I foitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent R nflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old lores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc. E n these, as in all other constitutional Disascs, Walkbr'8 Vibbqar Bittbrs havo R hown their great curative powers in the h lost obstinate and intractable cases. I For Inflammatory and Chronic I Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit- t en t and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of g be Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, R beso Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases R re caused by Vitiated Blood. | Mechanical Diseases.?Personsen- I raged in Paints ana MineraiB, bucu as Numbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and liners, as they advance in life, are subject o paralysis of the Bowels. To guard igainst this, take a dose of Walkbb's Vin:gar Bittbrs occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Toter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, 'ustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors md Diseases of the Skin of whatever name J >r nature, are literally dug up and carried >ut of the system in a short time by the use >f these Bitters. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, in king in the system of so many thousands, , u-e effectually destroyed and removed. No s lystem of medicine, no vermifuges, no an- ( :helminitics will free the system from worms ike these Bitters. j For Female Complaints, in young J ir old, married.or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic ^ Bitters display so decided an influence that , improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Hlood whenever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Emptions, or Sores: cleanse it when you liud it obstructed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul; your feelings will tell vou when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of tko system will follow. r. h. Mcdonald & co? Druggists otidGon. Agts., Sim Prnncbon. California, and cor. of Washington and Charlton 8Us., N. Y. Sold bj*all I)ruggl?U unil Umlrri. *? a . /t% A A per day. A?enl? w?nt?r C||| r.O Sk'/ll yerywhere. I'artlealare fre; 911V Uv tDd&U A.H.Blair* Co. 6t. toiili. M< 11EA.?TEA A'-ERTS wanted in town ami country to eell TEA, or get up club ordera, f?r thr irgeet Tea Company In America; importer!' pricc-i at nducement* to agent*. Send for circular. tddreii, ROBERT WKLL8, *3 iTeaey btreet, Ncw York. m nnn reward PJ?eFor any caae of Blind, Bleed _ ing. Itching, or Ulcerated ?? Atxrard p that d1 BIRO'S pili nowtuu RKMEDT Call! to core. It li . repared exnrenly to cure the Pile! and nothln* 1 lie. gQLD BY ALL DRPOOIBTS. PRICE HI :hicaco, milwaukee 1 a st. paul i railway. (XilwamkM * Bt aul Railway Co.) Extending from Chicago to Milwaukee, La 'roue, Winona, Had Inge, St. Paul arid flnneapolia. Alio to Madlion, Prairie da I 'hlen, Anatln, Owatenna, Charlea City. Saaon City and Alcona i alio to Janeavllle, < lonroe, Klpon. Berlin and Oahkoeh. i Embracing more Bnalneaa Centres and Pleas> j ire Keeorta than any Northweetam line. 1 CHICAGO DEPOT?Corner Canal and . Tadleon e treat a, (with Pittsburg. Port Warned J 'en-nyiunla. and Caieago. Alton ?8t. Louie R'ys.) MILWAUKEE DEPOT ? Corner Reed . ittd dootb Water streata. Connecting la St. Paul with all Railways diva. 1 ng thanes. Raw Toar Orrich-SM Bread way. Borroa Ornoa? 1 Court (treat. ' OaraaAL Oraicaa?Milwaukee, Wis. 8. 8. MERRILL, Sea. Maaaga MO. C. 9AULT, A.e't Oen Manj-er. A. T. S. CARPRRTXR, 9. t. and T, Agsat, *? .... i i i OTHERS! MOTHERS MOTHERS! ; ant fall to procure MB8. wijllWW'f rrbure stbup iob cheldbbh tuthil'i TftlubU preperetlon h?i l^.,,1nti g-pB.?ATT.TNa 8UCCKU XM THOUtA*D> OF 'riot oiUTMUrree the <*U?fh)mp*tii,b*tle^ f let the stomach And boweli, correct! Acidity, And MtoneendSner*p.totkeerttolee7?teto. ftwU Gripiaf of the Bowel* and Wind Colio. bah^ve It the BIST and STTBBST BBXBDT XB I WORLD in ?U c**-? of DTBBHTBBT AND ?nmi m CHiiP***' whether arleir| roat Wng or any other oaC?* spend npon It, mother*, it wlBBra to yowe reaaad Baliaf and Health to Tour Iafaatr. rare and oatl or "In. Winalew'e Boothia* Syrup.' aTlng the fho-etatle ef "CUBTI1 * PSBKIW the ontetde wrapper. Md by Drumrifta through out the World' ' W P?Bo H ITERS' COKCKRTO PARLOR OBtiAft* -ic. are (he moat bMUttfhl im i jMd*. atyld and ptrfeet is* tone dMUK ever made. The COB* -*vFnWr;^< CJEKTO STOP m lhe beet ever placed th amy r'JpgJ. ' Uriah. It it produced fry B3raPlWP?oB^'SW i I a third ect ?/ rttdt pecmHS?i2222fl!LLL Harly voiced, the MMMBHftBKrfTCT of wAiek u MObT CH.lBMIlfO EC? BOIL STIR* "ilMiB RlltO. ?Mb U? IKSx SfffijCin itatioi* ?, a* h lgJKiflMfagTiiMIM man voice u?v< PEBB. | tmMUbmi. Ma maker** tncludiog K aid timely low prlMa ftor ee?h, er BMteM*.a??l anaim null nMatfcly jxnn"^ ***2' iUt? flrst-el?*a PI AltOS? all moqera^tm^ trremente, fortVM eath. ? ??? ? : ?* ?CBI.E.IttED OBGAITI. !!^I!.t5T?f/ 10. 8-BTOP, f 13n>.upward*. ILLUSTRATKh ITALOOUKS MAILED far? ttamm A ItytdU. , mi to MinitUrt, Churchu, 9**day- Seh>?lt,_Trmgfr, m Sooittiu. Ledou. lie. AbENTS WAHTTO rire lor n l'rloe lJjtt to J. II. JOHlVttTORji i Emlthfleld St., PJttrtmrtb. arch-Loading ShotOnm. f<010;800 TKmhMSJt- * i??, ?8tofX?. Slngie Onn?. M to 830 Bifl.i 88 S7S. Rrrnlrrra. 86 to 9 A Platnla. fl to ?8. Ou ta.iai Plthlan T?fkle, Ac Largo dttamt to to alerturduii A?yOttoa;BeT'lT#r?,?t0.^bo0fhl traded for 0->o.> ""* hT expreaa C.OD. to k* am Id rd befoie palA'TtT*I OUST Made rapidly with BtaBetl < *?y CbatA Outfits. Catalogue*, ?ampjC? andftillj>ertlo ra rn? 8. M. 8pefreer, 117 Hanover 8U. Boston MinKiAij?jis.,fw. V J""' rtidloi, eajti' XCiMWi Hirblfttsn ItoooodfolBOIhoiliiOB ? Qi rclsatloeolT rinaanl 1 bars aaedlt la ? pre***tol&a. Uoo Cor a aaabor of/tare, id knew Croat expertoeeo tfeat It la a mot tomtit, ~ M. B, Miiitna. M.&. North KmT <?ctl6?., ltd.: Or nintiu bore horoB ?eed (Wiaood tor MIBHLMtl ZTTSBS. I hare atad U la atr procdco with pod nratta, >d do aot booluto M nuaand It a* a nHorili tomtit. odr? s . tor mlarlT la effeettoa* ot lb* kkiaoje. A. T. Baker, M. It, Uaeaotor, Pa.: During theaatttaa rareSrr ore meetaefal la imonj caaoo wbaro AUeeathle, Wiaai*i|*lkli id Hjdrepalble treatment bad tolled. I contldor II the aM Soacfcqa rrrnedj jot dlocorend tor Dlwaaea arWag torn to bordered Stomack, Uror, Kldaojo or lotto. ~~J2??J2SB!lgVAim-?. ? loderful eaatbiaatloe of Medicinal Bwba ho oror tow." B* ratred tor maaj roan freai aa oremote aObctlea of tbo kldaojo, id hoadradt of hlo frloadt ot Waahlafteo and Loaoaotor kaow at bo atuibated tbo prolongation of hit life to tblo Oroat oretle. Votblne floo rollored blm. Ill NIT HI MTTUI) BCAIIII AMYI TIAN BAWL I IV Kuterprtsitig poung ?&4 JlJnLi* JCitJIOo middle-aged men and wood imbitiont to make a successful ftart In buol? *, are offered superior facilities for preparing lemtelrei at the BPXNCXBIAM BU81K1B8 COLrKOB, Milwaukee, Wl?. ' T.K or wrfh Dr. Body* of Hrnwm Mmd fjrfrrimm* tad Bomt ~ Unft Botorirty Curve ftuiaatntd. Ktw Kio. > Ilrauf ifiil Chmmoi mailed free for VA eie, t Ageutl wanted. BOLK8 4 CO., Medford, lf???. ilvrr Hall Bnekwheaf.?Something new I ^ Quality and yield fxtraordtuary. S6 bu. from Iba. town reported to Awl. Dept. 4 lb? by mall *1. In. ?* ParMcultrt furnitbed. H. S. Ooodale, I. Kgremont, Berk Co.. Mm. i a Per Week IN CAHHVi good Agent* " Addrett A. CotTLTia A Co..Cbarlotte.Mtrh1 DHTTn OrratOfferl Pictured Frame*' New I K V \ Sample and '.'4 Page Catalogue rt?. J' LIU 1 U Jat GOULD. 20 Bromflaid St., B tion, Ml. ?0RKINflCLA88.^;^^SAK-^ * ile emploj-mi>nt,at home, dayorerening: necapital mjuir>1; "nil f net ruction* and valuable package of gnodeteut re* by mail, Addreee, with six cent return etamn, M. YOlfhO A CO., 16 (Jortiaodt-aC. New York. ^ ksam Hniletl Almanac sent frte on application ggSSggJll Thea-Nectar w"^*he^nMa ^re^f L? r Cnw^MrSSnK#" The best Tss Imported. Pat ]MiUL sals arery'wbere. And for sal* Itl'ISticlaJ/A^PVC n jflfiM Ho. ?1 Psltoa StdSdtChurch St., Hew York. P.O. Boa, MOT amdtbr Thsa-lcsctar Circular U tn MA paf dap I i*enU wkntad I iil classes J w ^u of working people of either eas,ywaac fl >r aid, make mora money at work for as tn their M ipara momanta or all the time than at anrthlag also. ,? -V| >artlcalars free. Address G. STIKkOX A CO., PorV , tod,Ma . .. lj- . 1' Dr. Whittiar, grp.' Ei^'i^T^,t;sr:sSts55^J