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f fl v1 'L ' Farm, Garden and Household. The Household. Green-corn Podding.?Allow one long ear of sweet corn for each person. Take half a pint of milk, one egg, a dessertspoonful of white sugar, one of sweet butter, and a teaspoonful of salt to etery two ears. Beat the egg and sugar together, and add the milk and salt. Out the corn off the cobs with a sharp knife, andchop the divided grains with a chopping-knife, but not too fine; or, better still split each row of grains down the middle before cutting them off the cobs. The corn must not be boiled first. Stirr the chopped corn into the milk, and bake in a brisk oven in custard-cups or tin pan until the top is nicely browned, but not hardened. Serve hot, without sauce. This is a delicious dish. Some persons prefer it cold. Common corn may be used, if young and tender, but requires as much again sugar. To Boil Green Corn.?Trim cff all Vincho r?nf fKn oovc into V?ni1 innr i uuoaoi .v water, with* a tablespoonful of salt to a dozen ears. If the fire is brisk, tender corn will be dono in fifteen or twenty minutes, otherwise in half am hour. Lay a napkin on a large dish, and after draining off the water from the corn, lay it on, turning the corners of the napkin over it to keep it Lot. Some housekeepers prefer to steam the ears of corn, or wrap them in a linen towel while boiling. Another Way.?Cut the corn off a dozen ears, and put it into a quart of cold water or milk. It should be left oyer a moderate fire hals an hour. Just before taking it off, add two tablespoonfuls of butter, and salt and pepper to taste. Grken-cobn Pie.?Prepare as above, and bake with a short under-crust?no top-crust. If preferred, six iegga may be used to eight long ears: but most persons would like itbest>ith but four, as then the taste of Vne corn predominates. Cutting up lorn, I have prepared the following in reply to a correspondent who seeks information as to the method of corn-cutting at the North: Northern farmers usually commeuce cutting the corn as soon as the kernel has become glazed, using a tool sold by all hardware men in localities where corn is raised. Should there be no such tool procurable, a good substitute can be made by cutting oil 12 inches from the point of an old scythe, and attaching this piece to a handle of wood 18 inches long at ri^ht angles to i it, or in the shape of a letter L. Now commenco on the middle one of five i rows, grasp all the stalks of the hill in the left hand, and with the tool described in the other hand cut them off with one blow about six inohes above the grouud. Cut the first two hills and ; carry them to the third, setting them up against it; then select a sucker stulk aiul b?nd all together. Now cut the remainder of the five rows until six hills have been cut forward from the starting point, or 30 hills in all, counting the one around which the others are set up. As fast as a hill or so is cnt place it against the uncut one, taking care to set around on all sides, so that the shock shall stand firm. Select two good bunds of two sucker stalks each, put one I around midway np the shock, the other j midway between this aud the top ; draw these bauds tight, as the shock will shrink considerably in size when cured. .Then repeat until all the field is served in ine name war. onocxs put up rn tnis 1 manner are allowed to remain until such a time as best suits the convenience of the owner. Some farmers husk in the field, binding the Btalks into small bundles, and these into a large 6hock, to be drawn to the barn and moved away. Others draw the corn in the shock on a sled to the barn, and husk on the floor, secure from wind or cold storms. Corn generally remains in the field until the , stalks are cured before being husked, or from four to eight weeks after cutting up. ?J, S. Fowler, Livingston Co., # y. Cucumber Salad. We have just prepared our winter's supply of cucumber salad, and this is ; bow we made it: There were about a dozen ripe white spine cucumbers lying ; on their vines, and these we picked, washed, pared, cut into strips, taking 1 oat the seeds, and then to each dozen :; cucumbers?which we out up into pieces like small dice?we put twelve large white onions, chopped, six large green ; peppers, also chopped, one quurter , pound each black and white mustard , seed, and a gill of celery seed. These were all mixed together, a teacup of coftree salt added, and tlicy were then , liung up in a cotton bag to drain for twentv-four honrs. TIipi th? unhid with enough cold vinegar added to cover i it, was put into Btone jars and fastened , nearly air-tight. In six weeks it will be fit for use. We found the recipe in an old paper some years ago, and it has I proved one of the nicest pickles we ever used. It looks as well as it tastes, so , white and crisp, and it makes an elegant . salad for a joint of cold meat. Preserving Eggi* A Parisian paper recommends the following method for preserving eggs: "Dissolve four ounces of bees-wux in eight ounces of warm olive oil; in this < dip the tip of the finger and anoint the egg all around. The oil will immediately be absorbed by the shell and the pores filled up by the wax. If kept in a cool place, the eggs, after two years, will be as good as if fresh laid." A correspondent of the Inverness Courier says: "On the farm of Doclinrn, parish of Detail, occupied by Mr. Peter Mackintosh, there is a common barn-door fowl which changes its color twice a year. In the summer the plumage is jet black, and in the winter it is pure white. In 1871, the lien (which is a prol _? \ j l al. uuu wyvr ui uuuerweut iuu eauit* change, of which uot much notice was taken; but on observing last year, at the same time, the color change from black to white, it was considered as something wonderful." A Swindling Phinter.?A New Jersey paper reports that a traveling printer by the name of C. N. Bence, is now engaged in victimizing the craft in a rather novel style. He is accompauied in his rambles by a woman who elaims to be his wife, and states in piteous tones that she was deserted by him in Boston, and is now soliciting aid from printers to enable her to reach her friends iu Pittsburg. After obtaining al she can from the sympathetic typos, she quietly retires and meets Mr. Bence around the comer, to whom she disgorges. She exhibits a couple of working cards belonging to said Bence?one from the New Orleans Typographical Union, and the other from the Vicks* burg Union. The paper from which we quote says that her appearance is cal- j eulated to excite sympathy. Took Befoge In a Log. The romancer of the Detroit Press talks as follows: "A Detroiter named Andrew Steadman who buys cattle, deals in hides, and occasionally makes a dollar by buying and selling produce, went on to Nankin Township a few days ago to buy a span of heavy horses whioh were wanted by a firm in the city. Upon reaching the farmer's house he found that the man was working with a neighbor a mile away. To save the distance he cut across lots, but was warned before he started to look out for a savage bovine which had the run of a ten-acre field. Thinking how he was going to get that span of horses for 850 less than their value, Steadman kept plodding through the field, which had a strip of bushes two or three rods wide running half way across it. There were a few stumps and logs, one small tree, but nothing which prevented any one from crossing the strip. The Detroiter was about ten rods from the bushes when he heard 'a distant thunder sound,' and looked around to see from which way the shower was coming. About thirty rods away he beheld the old bovine coming for him, head down, back up, and eyes blazing. Steadman was satisfied he was the man who Was wanted, and he went for the bushes. He thought the bull Would stoD and run around tli? strip, and was startled when the old fellow dashed through them on his trail, uttering a deep 'biom 1' every instant. Steadman dodges this way and thut, but the bovine tore along after him, smashing bushes and leaping logs, and it was getting to be a red-hot affair when the man spied the open end of a large hollow log. The bull was not over forty feet behind, and into the log went Steadman, finding an orifice about twelve feet long, and large enough to be roomy. ^The bovine had seen the movement, and stopped at the log and ripped off a bushel of bark at the first dash. Then pnttingliis horns under it he guve it a roll, and Steadman spun around like a dried pea in a policeman's whistle. The log was large, but old and tender, and every time the bull hauled back and jumped for it he covered himself with glory and clouds of bark and wood. Sometimes he whirled one end, add then he gave the centre a heave, and then ho knocked a foot off the other end. Steadman swore, shrieked and pleaded, his eyes full of bark and his mouth stopped up, and every act of his life passed before him like a vision. 'W-o-o-h!w-h-o-o-h!'bellowedtheboviue as he slammed away at the log, and every moment Steadman expected to see the roof cave in on him. He was in despair, when-he heard the barking of dogs and the shouts of men, and after a few minutes the farmers succeeded in releasing him, but it took a good hour to get the kinks out of his back and the rotten wood from his ears and eyes. Working-Women in Vienna. A correspondent writes from Vienna that nearly every women and girl, both of the wages and middle classes, work and earn their own living. " Passing along the street," he observes. " it has not been my lot yet to seo a lady or gill leaning idlv from the windows, or sitting within listlessly perusing some novel or other, as we so often see in the cities at home. On the contrary, they are all busy at something from morning until night. At every turn I find lady clerks, store-women, cashiers, womeu in restaurants, women every where,right down to cleaning boots on the public streets ; and they all work for very little, yet seem blithe and cherry,comely and content. Women who labor on the buildings are generally of the peasantry cluss. They are dressed in costumes half manly, half womanly, with colored handkerchiefs tied over their heads as covering; they get paid the same as the Slomacks?the men laborers?from ninety kreutzers (45 cents) up to one florin and ten kreutzers (55 cents) for a day of eleven hours, commencing work at G a. m., taking one hour at noon for dinnt r, then working on and quitting at G p. M. They are allowed to staud up during the working hours and take a lunch and a drink, which they do, taking the latter with as much gusto as the fondest lover of lager beer. On Sunday you should see them dressed, bright red handkerchiefs on their heads, tied under their chins, one end hanging away down their backs ; faces as clean as soap and water will make them ; clean, ,?;ir i?i -i??ii? J I evil* nuutmu, uut Miuri uimuii ureoBCa, worsted stockings, and strong brogans, leaning upon the arm of some private of the Austro-Huugarian army, or sitting with their male comrades in some one of the many beer gardens where the people mostly congregate on Sundays and holiduys." An Unlucky Dream. An Iowa raftsman had a bad fall from a hotel window in Davenport the other night, and afterward explained the accident to his physician. He said that | his name was John Fett, his residence being Franklin, Lee county, where his brotcer and mother reside. For fifteen ' years he has been a raft pilot on the Sliss issippi. Tuesday evening he ar- 1 rived with a raft, and took rooms in ! the Mississippi House, where he had ! frequently stopped before. He took a drink or two before going to bed, and lay upon the couch with his clothes on. j After midnight he had a terrible dream. He said he thought he was guiding a raft on the rapids in the midst of an j awful storm, and at last the strings were caught by a whirlwind and seattored hither and thitlier in the air and in the water. The crew were drowned. He himself was hanging to a single log which was rolling and pitching ou the [ .....TO* CO !... 1... O,... 1.1 muintnin ?UTUO OU lllUl lie UUUlVi 1IU1VI1J his grasp. At last his hands and arras became too tired to hold on longer, and he let go. Down ho sank, in water one hundred feet deep, but offering no more resistance to his descent than air would, and he struck the bottom with a force which jarred him almost to j pieces. Then he aweke ! He could not! at first tell where he was, but his whole frame seemed to be twisted and broker, and he was in tortvre. He soon realised his situation, and he knew that he had fallen from the window. He cried for help, but no one came to his relief, and there he law until after daylight, when a policeman arrived. Examination at the hospital proved that the poor man i was fatally injured. Four of his ribs were broken, and his spine was fractured. "Put down your umbrellas! You'll scare the engine off the track!" screamed the engineer on the Western North Carolina road, to a crowd of country people who had gathered to see the first train of cars come in. They were all lowered at once. The Battle of Waterloo. An Officer'* Account of It. The following is Col. Ponsonby's interesting account of his own sufferings, after a rash and unlucky charge: " I was stationed with my regiment (about three hundred strong) at the extreme left wing, and directed to act discretionally; each of the armies was drawn up on a gentle declivity, a small valley lying between them. "At one o'clock, observing, as I thought, unsteadiness in a column of French infantry, which was advancing with an irregular fire, I resolved to charge them. As we were descending in a gallop, we received from our own troops on the right a fire much more destructive than the enemy's, they having begun long before it could take effect, and slackening as we drew nearer; when we were within fifty paces of them, the French turned, and much execution was done among them, as wo were followed by some Belgians who had remarked our success. But we had no sooner passed through them, than we were attacked in our turn, before we could form, by about three hundred Polish lancers, who bad come down to their relief; the French artillery pouring in among us a heavv fire of grapeshot, which, however, killed three of their own to one of our men. In the meleo I was disabled almost instantly ' ? r\( mo?ma on/1 fnllnwo/1 hr n 1 Li UV/IU Ui IliJ UA UlOj UUV4 tvuvnvu ?? few of my men, who were presently cut down (no quarter being askedor given), I was carried on by my horse, till, receiving a blow on my head from a sabre, I was thrown senseless on my face to the ground. Recovering, I raised myself a little to look round, when a lancer, passing by, sprung at me and struck his lance through my back; my head dropped, the blood gushed into my mouth, a difficulty of breathing came on, and I thought all was over. Not long afterwards a tirailleur came up to plunder me, threatening to take my life. I told him that lie mi^lit search me, directing him to a small side pocket, in which he found three dollars, being all I bad ; he unloosened my stock and tore open my waistcoat, then leaving me in a very uneasy posture, and was no sooner gone than another came for the same purpose ; but assuring him I had been plundered already, he left me, when an officer, bringing up some troops (to which, probably, the trailleurs belonged), and halting where I lay, stooped down and addressed me, saying he feared I was badly wounded. I replied that I was, and expressed a wish te be removed to the rear. He said it was aguinst the order to remove even their own men, but that if they gained the day, as they would (for he uuderstood the Duke of Wellington was killed, and that six of our battalions had surrendered), every attention in his power should be shown mo. I complained of thirst, and he held his brandy-bottle to my lips, directing one of his men to lay me straight on my side, and place a knapsack under my head. He then passed on into action, and I shall never knos to whose generosity I was indebted, a? 1 conceive, for my life. Of what rank he was I cannot say ; he wore a blue JjlCttl-WUUK, JLJJ - UUU" UJ illiVkUCl til 4*1 Ilour came and knelt and fired over me, loading and firing many times, and conversing with great gayety all the while, at last he ran off, saying, 4 Vous serez bien aise d'entendre que nous allons nousretirer; bon jour, inonami.' While the battle continued in that part, several-of the wounded men and dead bodies near me were hit with the balls, which came very thick in that place. Towards evening, when the Prussians came, the continued rattling of the cannon along theirs and the British line growing louder and louder as they drew near, was the finest thing I ever lieurd. It was dusk when two squadrons of Prussian cavalry, both of them two deep, passed over me in full trot, lifting mo from the ground, and tumbling me about cruelly. The clatter of their approach, and the apprehensions it excited, may be easily conceived. Had a gun come that way, it would have done for me. The battle was then nearly over, or removed a distance ; the cries and groans of the wounded all around me became every instant more and more audible, succeeding to the shouts, imprecations, nntorios of 'Vivo rPmnerenr !' the dis charge of musketry and cannon ; now and then intervals* of perfect silence, which were worse than the noise. I thought the night would never end. Much about this time, I found a soldier of the ltoyals lying across my legs, who had probably crawled thither in his agony; his weight, convulsive motions, noises, and the air issuing through a wound in his side, distressed me greatly; the latter circumstance distressed me the most of all, as the case wus my own. It was not a durk night, and the Prussians were wandering about to plunder (and thescene in Ferdinand, Count Fathom, came into my mind though no women, I believe, were there); several of them came and looked at me, and passed on ; at length, one stopped to examine me. I told him as well as I could (for I could say but little German) that I'was a British officer, and had been plundered already ; he did not desist, however, and pulled me about roughly before he left lue. About an hour before midnight I saw a soldier in an English uniform coming toward me ; he was, I suspect, 011 the same errand. He came and looked in my face; I spoke instantly, telling him who I was, and assuring him of a reward if he would remain by me. He said that he belonged to the Fortieth llegiment, but had missed it. He released me from the dying man ; being unarmed, he took up a sword from the ground, and stood over me, pacing backward and forward. At eight o'clock in the morning some English were seen in the distance ; In ran to them, and a messenger was sent off to Hervey. A cart came for me. 1 was placed in it and carried to a farm' house, about a mile and a half distant, and I laid in the bed from which pool Gordon fas I understood afterward) had been just curried out. The jolting ol the cart and the difficulty of breathing were very painful. I had received sever wounds; u surgeon slept in my room, and I was saved by continual bleedings one hundred and twenty ounces in tw< days, besides the great loss of bloot on the neld."'?Al( the Year Round. Many farmers pay but little attention when cleaning wool, to the kind of wate: used in the operation; but it will hi seen that this should nhva;s be taker into consideration. Thus, waters con tnining lime should be curefully avoid ed, since this constituent combines witl the suiut, thus forming an insolubh soup, which seems to produce unpleas ant effects in the processes of dyeing. Prof. Hayden, in charge of the Colo rado Exploring Expedition, has alread; collected and forwarded to Washiugtoi 227 different varieties of North Aineri con grasshoppers. A Profitable Exchange, The following interesting adventure in the life of & hero of a novel will be found interesting: Going down St. James street in London one evening with a person who had treated him with much civility, he is run violently against by an accomplice of his companion, knocked down and robbed of his money. His "civil" friend leaves him in the lurch, and seeks his lodgings, there being no remedy for his loss. To divert his mind, he repairs to the theatre, and takes his stand among the crowd which surrounds the entrance. He observes that the people about him seem watchful of each other; and presently the cry of " Take care of your Sockets I" renews his fears, and putting is hand to his fob he misses his watch! Looking eagerly around he fixed his eye upon his quondam friend, who has aided in robbing him. He goes on to say : "The blood mantled in my face. 'You have stolen my watch,' said I. He could not immediately escape, and made no reply, but turned pale, looked at me as if entreating silence and commiseration, and put a watch into my hand. I felt a momentary compassion, and he piesently made his retreat. His retiring did but increase the press of the crowd, so that it was impossible for me so much as to lift up my arm. I therefore continued, as the safest way, to hold the watch in my hand. Soon afterward the door opened, and I hnr ried it iuto my waistcoat pocket ; for I was obliged to make the best use of all my limbs, that I might not be thrown down and trodden under foot. At length, after very uncommon struggles, I made my way to the money door, paid aud entered the pit. After taking breath and gazing around me. I sat down and inquired of my neighbors how soon the play would begin ? I was told *n an hour. This new delay occasioned me to put my hand in my pocket and take ont my watch, which, as I supposed, had been returned by the thief. But, good Heavens! what was my suprise, when, in lieu of my own plain watch, in a green shagreen case, the one I was now possessed of was set round with diamonds ! And, instead of ordinary steel and brass, its appendages were a weighty gold chain and seals ! My astonishment was great beyond expression! I opened it to examine the works, and found it Was capped. I pressed upon the nut and it immediately struck the hour. It was a repeater !" Think of that position, for an honest man, with the detecting proof of his evident guilt ringing in his pocket. A Romantic Story, The following story is told by the Galveston (Texas) Commercial of a man who was sent to the penitentiary of that State a week or two ago : " He is a German of noble birth. His uncles and brothers ditincnished themselves in the lato Franco-German war; they were high in rank and live in princely pomp. Yet this brother, perhaps of morals as good as the best of his family, will for two years live in the Texas Penitentiary. This young man seems to have been the favorite of his mother, but the hated of his father. He was sent to the first schools of Germany, and is proficient in ancient and modern languages?but he was allowed to spend money at random, being taught nothing that is useful. When of age, he was given a few thousands and sent to this country. Here we may premise that while the young man is neither crazed nor a fool, he does lack that which is called gumption. He married a woman who after a season deserted him. From the time of his desertion he became a wanderer. Being sick he returned to Germany and was sent by his family to the most celebrated springs in Germany, and when he was fully restored they returned him to this country with sufficient to have established him in a small business, but he wasted all?and it is strange that he did so, for he does not appear to be addicted to any of the money-eating vices. Reduced to beggary, he walked from Mobile to New York, hunting employment. Then he got back to Galveston,. Here he acted as scullion in a fourthrate boarding house, waiting on the table and cleaning knives. While engaged in this work he stole two watches worth $7, and on being charged with it, he confessed the offense and begged tho Recorder to send him to the Peniten' xl_.il - -l.l 1 i ,1 onj nary, mat lie migut icurn a mauc ?u? be able to support hijnself. He told the Recorder that if ho was not sent to the Penitentiary, where he cot:ld leani a trade, he would go out and commit some crime that would send him there. He was the most anxious man to get in jail we ever saw. We hope that his residence at Huutsville will he productive of all the good he anticipates from it, and that when he leaves it ho will be a self-sujjporting, respectable citizen." The First Steamships. It was in 1838, says a writer in the Chicago Tribune, that the Atlantic Ocean was crossed for the first time by vessels propelled exclusively by steam power; and pretty much all the credit we as a nation can claim at this day is the honor connected with the fact that the project was first conceived, and ! finally carried into successful operation, by an American citizen. In 1831 we find this gentleman (Junius Smith) in London, engaged in the project of en1 deavoring to secure the navigation of the Atlantic Ocean with steamships. At first he met with not only opposition, but even abuse and derision. In spite of all, however, he succeeded, in 1830, in establishing a company under the title of the British and American Steam Nnvi cation Company. This being i done, a contract was at onco made for building two steamships of large dimen1 sions, which, being completed, were in1 tended to be the finest specimens of ! marine architecture ever constructed. 1 During the delay in building these vesi sels, in order to give assurance to the > public mind, this company, in the j spring of 1838, sent out the small steara' er Sirius. This vessel made but one trip, and was succeeded by their afterward famous steamship, the Great , Western. As soon as the company's r first steamship, the British Queen, was 3 completed, she commenced her trips to i New York. Then came her consort, the - President, which, after crossing the - ocean a few times, was lost, with all on i board?no one knows bow or where? 3 on her return trip to Liverpool. Among - her passengers was the famous comedian, Powers, who delighted immense audiences at the old Park Theatre, New - York, forty jrcars ago. After the loss jr of the President, tne British Queen x made but few trips to New York, when - she was purchased by the Belgian Government. A Hard Case. A lawyer was recently arraigned before the Court of Queen's Bench1, charged with mal-practice. It was a very painful case. The attorney was in partnership with his brother, who, he found, had misappropriated two sums of money?one of ?500 and another of ?1,000, belonging to a client. The choice, when he ascertained this unwelcome fact, lay between denouncing his brother as a thief and ruining the firm, on the one hand, and incurring the responsibility of concealing the truth from the client concerned, on the other. He concluded to conceal it, and paid the client .the interest on the amount, hoping one day to make the principal good. But the brother absconded; the de falcation became known, and the unfortunate and unhappy attorney was summoned to answer before the court. The court, in giving judgment, spoke feelingly of the terrible nature of the temptation to shield a brother under which the fanlt had been committed, of the suffering which the attorney had undergone, and of the utter ruin which had been brought upon him by his brother's delinquencies. Still, for the protection of suitors, a punishment must be inflicted; and the sentence was that tho attorn* y be suspended from practice for nine months. Another Step. ^ The Northern Pacific Railroad Company lias with char&cteristio energy taken another important step in the prosecution of its great undertaking. The camp-fires of tho Stanley Expedition will hardly die out in Dakota, before those of the construction corps will be burning. The Company on the 15th inst., advertises for contracts to grade and bridge the line between the Missouri River and the Yellowstone, a distance of 205 miles, through the country which tho expedition has just now passed; or rather the located line is some 30 miles north of the route pursued by Stanley, avoiding the bad lands through which lie passed, and traversing a rolling prairie region, well watered and covered with the rich buffalograss, which affords the finest pasturage. Tiie success attained by the Engineers of the Company in finding so good a line through what has been re| garded as one of the most difficult sections of the whole route, must afford satisfaction to all interested in this great National thoroughfare. Only four members of the original Anti-Slavery Society are now living? William Lloyd Garrison, of Boston, Benjamin 0. Bacon, of Beverly, N. J., the Rev. Moses Thacher, of New York, and Oliver Johnson, editor of the Christian Union. A bed of peculiar clay has been discovered in Jefferson county, Nebraska, which makes brick of a beautiful bluish tinge, und almost as hard as stone. PAIN! PAIN!! PAIN!!! WHERE IS THY REI.IKVRR I "ciders, you will ttiid it in that Favorite Home Remedy PERRY DAVIS" PAIN-KILLER. It has been tested in every variety of climate, and by almost every nation known to Americans. It is the almost constant companion and inestimable friend of the missionary and traveler, on sea and land, and uo one shuuid travel oh our lakes or rivers without it. Its Msbits arb Ubscrpassbo. If yon are suffering from INTERNAL PAIN, Twenty to Thirty Drops in a Little Water will almost instantly cure you. Ti.ert it nothing equal to it. lu a few moments it cures Colic, Crampt, Spasms, Heart-bum, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, flux, Wind in the Bowels, Sour Stomach, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache. Cures CHOLKRA, when all other Remedies Fail. It gives Instant Relief from Aching Teeth. In sections of the copntry where Fkvkb Alto AnuK prevails, there is no remedy held in greater esteem. FOh Prvbb AJCD AODR.?Take three tablespoonuls of the Pain-Killer in about half a plat of hot water, well sweetened with molasses as the attack is coming on. Bathing freely the chest, back, and bowels with the Poisi-KHler at the same timo. Repeat the dose in twenty minutes if the first does not stop the chill. Should it produce vomitin-(and it Ciobably will, if the stomach is Very foul), take a ttle Pain-Killer in cold water sweetened with sugar after each spasm. Perseverance in the above treatment has cured many severe and obstinate cases of this disease. oeeat "cholera" remedy PAIN-KILL ICR. It is an External and Internal Remedy. For Summer Complaint or any other form of bowel disease ii child cen or adults it is an almost eel tain . ure. and bus without doubt, been more succ ssful in curing the various kinds of CHOLERA than any other known remedy, or the most skillful physl lan. Ill India, Africa and China, where this dreadful disease is more or li?S prevalent, the Patn-Killer is considered by the natives as well-as by P.Uropean residents in those clim ite?. A MURK ItRMKDY: lid while it is a most cM< lent ri-m> dy forp.iln.it is a perfectly s if- medicine in the most unskillful bands. It has become a household remedy, Lorn the fact that it gives immedi ite and peimanent lelief. It is a purely vegetable preparation, made rem the best and purest materials, safe to keep tnd ch in every f.mily. It is recommended by physician* and persons of all classes, and to-day, after a publie trial of thli ty years?the average life of man?it stands unrivalled and unexcelled, spreading its usefulness over the wide world. Direction* accompany each Bottle, Prico 33 etc., 60 eta., and f 1 per Bottle. FIRRY DAVIS A SON. Proprietors, Providence, B. I J. N. HARRIS A CO., Clnctnnetl, O., Proprietors for the Western and South Western 8tates. For sale by all Medicine Hosiers. TOH 1AI.S WHOLESALE BT JOHN F. HF.NKY. New tor*. itr.O. C. GOODWIN t CO.. Boston. JOHNMW JIOl.OWAY A PP.. Philadelphia. Till 11T Y YEARS' EXI'K KlENt'E OF AN OLD KlIRSE. Mr*. Wlmlow'i Soothing Syrup It the prescription of one of the beet Female Pkystciam and Nurs-s in the Untied State*, and ha* b?cn u *ed for thirty years with never fa ling safety and success by millions of mothers and children, from the feeble infant of one week old to the adult. It corrects acidity of tbo stomach, rellevrs wind colic, regulates the bowels, and (jives rest, health and comfort to mother and child. We believe it to be the Best and Sorest Remedy in the World in all rnsi'S of DYSENTERY and DIARRHCK A IN CIIILDKhN. whether it arises from Teething or from any other cause. Full directions for using ? ill ?ccotnpanv each bottle. None Genuine unless the fac-stiniio of CURTIS A PERKINS .s on the outside wrspper. Mold by nil Medicine Dealers. CHILDREN OFTEN LOOK PALE AND SICK from no othor cause but having worms in the stomach. BROWN S VERMIFUGE COMFITS will destroy worms without injury to the child, being perfectly WHITE, and freo from all Coloring or other injurious ingrodieuts usually used in worm preparations. CURTIS <C BROWN, Proprietors, No. !415 Fulton Street, New York. Sold by Drugqitdn and CVmi.it j, and dealert in If en a net at Iwevtt-kivs Cents a Box. THE HOUSEHOLD PANACEA AND FAMILY LINIMENT Is the best remedy in the world for the following complaint!. Tlx.: Cramp* in tbo Limb* and 8tom?ch, I'alu in the Stomach Bowels or Si la, Rhrumatiim in *11 it* foims, B-lioue C< lie. Neuralgia, Sore Throat, Spinal Complaints, 8prai< and Bruises, Chilli and Fever. For Internal and Ex ternal ate. Its operation is not only to relieve the psttent, but entirely removes the cause of the complaint. ! It penetr-t- a and pervades the ? b< le syat- in, reI aioiimr healthy action to all its parts, and quickeni'-g the blood. Tlie llonaeliohl Panacea la purely Veir. etable and All Healing. , Prepared by CURTIS <fc BROW5, No. id 19 Fulton Street, New York. I For sale by sll Drugei-t*. Cholera, Craxp*. Inrtkn-a. and all Bow-el Com' | plni its, are tpee tly cured by Dr. Jay r'iC i ra n alive Balaam. It lake* aw. y . 11 a (oi e-s -f the ' abdomen, soothes the stomach, and lestorcs ill I net'Talsc l -n. CRIL.L* axo Frier can n> ly b- cur-d by a re rai-valr f Ihe eau*c. Shallenberger't P-llauo tbli Instantly, and vigorous health is sure to folio v. Squeaking Boots and Shoes.?To 1 prevent the soles of boots and shoes 1 from squeaking, says the Shoe and | Leather Chronicle, rasp, with a ooarse rasp, the outsole and insole, and every other piece of leather that comes in contact in friction by the action of the foot Then apply freely good wheat or rye paste. If this is well attended to from heel to toe, the boot or shoe will not squeak. 2 Destruction in Disguise.?It is a fact that mixtures of'bad liquors and j acid astringents are often given for L medicines. They are potent to destroy ! and maybe safely wai ranted to ruin, morally and physically, any human being who sticks to them long enough. More drunkards have been made by ^ these villainous concoctions, labelled medicines, than by the liquors of com- p, merce. Alcoholio poisons, advertised , as remedies, are more mischievous than 'j', tavern drams. For intermittent and re- .Y mitteut fevers, as well as for all other diseases which these fiery frauds are , falsely certified to relieve, Dr. Walk- ' eb's Vinegar Bitters, the neplus ultra of vegetable medicines, is a positive cure. But this is not all; the great Temperance Elixir is a sovereign spe- .. cifio for the depraved appetite for \ stimulants, created by the false tonics and bogus restoratives, of Missionaries >k of Intemperance. Within the present 1 year many well-known citizens have !. certified that a course of Vinegar Bitters invariably obliberates the desire for spirituous excitants.?Com. 'sjc ? :lfi An ingenious arrangement of ropes r? and pulleys has been invented by which ^ a cradle, a churn, a rocking-ohair, and Ul a fan are all kept in operation at the same time, while the operator is left at \ liberty to sew or read. g* A Denver paper 6ays that a hundred jurymen could be selected there any r?r day in twenty minutes, for any cose, at m any price. Who Pays J m [From the Boston Daily Advertiser.] ^ If there should be & disagreement between & the president of a savings bank or trust com- Qj pany and its auditor, resulting in tho retirement H from the company of tho latter, and the presi- HI dout should then publicly charge him with hav- If ing been removed for insulioruinatiou and in- 3 competency, and he should publicly allege in f? his clcfenco that the sole cause of the Presi- I dent's dissatisfaction with him was his refusal It as auditor to certify the correctness of accounts, I which he knew to have been falsified by the gj President, and tho said President should then, | without any explicit denial of this, launch upon I the Press an overwhelming amount of adeertis j ing patronage, ingeniously ooutrived to load the J public mind away from the true issue, who ought to pay for this advertising?tho company i or tho President hvnwlff This question is respectfully submitted to the I policy-holders of the Mutual Life Insurance |j Company of Now York, hundreds of whom are S doubtless readers of the Adcertiser. It is of 1 some material interest to them. In replv to the 1 card of Siieppahd Humans, lately printed in the J Adcertiser, stating rather pnngently why Mr. h Winston, then President, wished to get rid of r him. a very costly advertisement is going |? through the leading new-paper.- from one end of the country to the other, and tho nearest it l| comes to answering Humans' damning acctisa- H tion against tho President?not against the I company?is this: " Mr. Homons was removed n from his position in this company for sufficient K cause, by the uuauimons action of its board of K trustees." (J Fur anything that appears iu this volumin- E ous and irrelevant advertisement, the thirtysix trustees, whoso names are appended to iU may havo "unanimously" removed Mr. Homui u \9 (lint' At-or sli/1 eiitfiliiti/v r\9 flia onpf v"1-' '">"b "? l"D owiijllSt because lie refused to audit false accounts. The money is thrown away, even as a defence of Winston ; and the company has not been attacked. How long are the policy-holders goiug to allow WiuHtou to tight his battles with their M money, especially when he has nothing better 1 than the Chinese weapons of fog and fragrance 1 to oppose to Minie balls ? August 9, 1873. Elizur Wright. The most astonishing cure of chronic # diarrhea we ever beard of is that of Wm. Clark. I Frankfort Mills. Waldo Co.. Maine ; the facts * are attested bv Ezra Treat, Upton Treat, and B M. A. Morrill, either of whom might bo ad- ft dressed for particulars. Mr. Clark wrh cured n by Johnaon't Anodyne Liniment.?Com. ?> in Hon. Joseph Farewell, Mayor of ? Rockland, Mo., Isaac M. Bragg. Esq., Bangor. ft and Meatus. Pope Bros., Macluas, 5Ie., lumber merchants, fully endorsed the Slieri'lan Caval- 0 ry Condition Powders, and have given the pro- ,, priotors liberty to use their names in recom- ,< wending them.?Com, The bnowns and Blacks produced by " that sterling preparation, Cristadoro's Excklsios HAin Dve. cannot be excelled by Nature; its tints cliallonge comparison with Nature's most favored productions, and defy detection. ? Com. , criatped Hands, face,rough skin, pimples, ringworm, salt-rheum, and other cutaneous t affections cured, and the skin made soft and smooth, by using the Juniper Tab Soap, made D by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. Be ft certain to get the Juniper Tar Soap, wado bv <t I us, as there aro many imitations made with s common tar which are worthless.?Com. ft Flaoo's Instant Belief.?Warranted to relievo all ltliouniutic Alllictious, Sprains. Neuralgia, etc. The best, the surest, and tbo ??i quickest remedy for all Bowel Complaints. Re- *J hef gn&rr&iiteed or the money refunded.?Com >. ilAlUKLS UW.> UKaXEIJY?l'EHUVIA^ OlliUi'. Frank Mill.-rV lltiniesH Oil is tho best. Wuitl <>f Vitnllly. If a deficiency of vital otiergy is not a disease tn Itself It is a condition which lays the ayatem open I lo the attack a of all c.iuccivable maladies. Night ' and day wc arc surrounded mora or leas by delitelioua influence*. Noatmosphere ta entirely |.u e, . no water utterly free fr< m 1> Jurioua partlclca; V while in many localities both are post iv. ly uu- (, wholesome W at d fence has the weak, languid ayatem, in which the Tltal prlncipl is deflcieut or ( dormant, against any of tho morbid Influences 4 wbi?h produce epidemic and other diseasea ? None " whatever. Tnerc is uo safety a -re in art'flrial reinforcement. Hosteller's Stomach filters hare, beyond all question, a vitalizing eftcc*. If the nervous forcea < f the body have been recklessly expended in exhausting 1 hysical or mental labor, or dissipated in the Indulgence a < f a " fast" life, this poweiful veg table tonic and corrective will restore them. If the defective vitality ta a constitutional evil it ran bttretnediea to a groat extent by this wondeif il ii.vigorant. At a season of tho year wheu tho air is moro or luss linp-egnatcd with the seeds of pcriodicfcvers.it la erpecially desirable that the dig. slion should be p Tfect, tho habit o body regular, the liver active, tho blood pure and tho ncrvis Arm. Thtsa conditions are the best protection against all disorders, and they are condi'ious whi h tho Bitters are better adapted than any other medicinal agent to promote and secureSee to it, however, that no imitation or couuteifcit is ruhsli'ut' d f r tho gonuino article, and let all * u b<> value health and have an antipathy to pulton i beware of the local bitteis made f on condemned nrugs and vilely a.11 Iterated a cobo*. whicn have apiungup like unwbolcseme fungi over the country. PqopIocc fMnihoc Wrinnpr I uoi ivwg vivmvu vv i im^vi L. HBVNIOEB <t CO.. Xfl Pulton Street. V. T. CANVASSING BOOKS 8KNT FREE FOR UNDEVELOPED WEST * OK, | Five Years in the Territories, The Ijr complete hlatniy ?f tlji* r*?t reytnii between th> M ppl and 'he Pacific: I" B I urce?. Climate ! hab taut,, N itttral Cur, etc. It 0-II ulna '-44II fl'iu enyiavi ye of ttaa Urmery, Lance p.opl- CU'tniitlee. eto , of the Great West. , Agents are e< Tim from IS tn 3fi copies per day. end we kcnti e eanTA>?iiiy b"Ok free ,< any < nk itrent. ' A M?r?? lAllny i xoericnce, etc., NATIONAL PCBUSHISO CO., Philadelphia, P?. AGENTS WANTED end PreeeiTe Health, by W. Olensou, M D Study emi unAirti ?d r -ureelf I erme liberal. addr.ei.C P BBAPWAT, Publisher, Danri.lc Pa. ! 01*74 nn BACH WIU-iSIKTI WAVTCD ?p / O.UVBuUMM ItgUlmats. Parti I??'*r? e. J. WORTH. Ht Lone. ?o . Woe ** i a Drum n. e hodcr. . on xa ?a i hbm n., A CUk,". eyecwiiyiTaa TaeiTnyrr er lUeer Dieeisee ^ ff hlWiiil'lllllirft Dr. J. Walker's California Yin :ar Bitters aro a purely Vegetable B pparation, made chiefly from the na- I re herbs found on the loner ranges of n s'ierra Nevada mountains of Califor- ^ a, the medicinal properties of which * 1 o extracted therefrom without the use Alcohol. The question is almost lift- asked. ''What is the cause of the iparalleled success of Vixegaji Bit:rsF Our answer is, that they remove o cause of dise^-se, nnithe patient revere his health. They are rhe great ood purifier and a iMfe-giving principle, perfect Renovator and Invij:orator the system. Never before in the story of the trorld has a medicfae been iti|M)unded possessing the remarkable alities of Vinkoar Bitters in heaJiujr the ;k of every disease uian is heif to. They o a gentle Purgative as well as a '.Tonic, iieviug Congestion or Iulloinniatio.i of e Liver and Visoeral Organs, in Bilious seases. The properties of Dr. WALrat'e irkoah Bittrbs are A perient, Diaphoretic, irtuinative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, sdative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, AltfltUr re, and Anti-Bilious. It. II. McDOXALT) A CO.. ajrsrUt* nntl On. Apt*.. Rnn Frnneinen. Colifhrnja, il cor. of Washington and Charlton Su. X. V. Sold by fill ntid n nl<*r*. ^ r y u~y0 ? JON^^ION And Its Cure. WIT T dd"fcT\J*fil larbolated Cod Liver Oil i n aclentlflc combination of two well-known medl. nc*. Ita theory la lirat to arreat the docav. then ilM no the ayntem Phyaiclaiia And the doctrine eon >t t. The really "Urtltug curea performed by Wilt >n'a Oil uro proof. CnrboUc And i.oxillrtbj arrexu Decay. It la tha out powerful autUei>tlc In the known world. Boring Into the circulation, It at onco granplca with irruption, and decay ccaaca. It porlfle* the aourcea f dlacaae. Corf liter OilU mature * oui wmnaru w raamij on*uinpll<D. Put np In large wwlge-ehaped bottle*, raring the Invcntor'a signature, ana u iltl by the beat Druggists* Prepared by jr. a. wiujaow, 83 John Street. Blew York* " W. and g fo'in' flue Brno h-l o-?- toff ublr Qun? ! 'a. furnithe 1 t-> C?w"Ciub [ Milwaukee, and otbera. belti-re 1 t" be the lent ' rcb loader now ute. At 'Vuatle-I.nadert." wry variety nf ?tuf?, tire and price " W. and C. tiA so t New Illustrated W'<> k no Brerrh-Load* t.''b-oiiid tn ni'.rwoo,2S< ? ti b* mill. 8"nl fir ice Melt and cinuiart to wji.LIAM RKaD A O.NS. 13 y aural I till -qimre Button, Ag.ntl K <?oQ per day I Agents wanted l All claan ? of working people of either tes.youi * rold, make more money at work for oa tti tbni pare aiotaeiitior all the time than at anything elta rtuulari free. Addr-ti O. 8TIN80N A CO.. Port p <1 We jMantitll Thoa-Noctar B|S|8K?* Black TEA JynBBiiffw With the Oreen Tea Plan r ArwKtch'hiuTtAr The brtt Tea Impurtod fir \ fOkVapNA tale eeerywhero. And for twit MWtugK Y wholrtale only by the OR> AT ar ntAtl ATLANTIC A PAC1PIC TKA l O 9 rrfllftSM) No. IP] Pulton 8t. A'.'A 4 Choie St., Hew Tork. P. A Boa. MO I tjlw Sena for Thea-Nerlar rtren'ar IflflnPKK MONTH. CI.K.VK I Agents 'III III (male or f m-l. ) wa-it?l reerywtiere. 1/1 tddrett. al?h t'smp, JNO W JOHNSON ' LI U U ? COu B"? 723. St. Lo lit M i. 510 to $20 Iron in the Blood TTTE rrRrVTAU ?S YEP P^ Vitalizes tr.il Enriches the Illond. Ton** np tho by item. Builds upth Broken-down, Cure* Kruiale Complaints, Props v. Dc-blllty, II u-. mors, I)ys[*-paia. 4cThousands have been changed by tlio UMi of thU remedy from weak, sickly, suffering creatures, to strong. healthy, an<I happy men and women; and invalids cannot reaaonably beaitato to give It a trta'. Caution.?I to mi re you get tho right article. P i that "Peruvian Syrup" Is blown In tho rlasa. l'ainpklotafree. Send for one. 8ET1I \Y. EOWLK 4 SONS, Proprietors, Boston, Mass. Pur aalo by , __dru?*lata generally. STRAUB MILL COMPANY CINCINNATI, O, Manufacturer* of Portaf\ (A I?l?' Mill*,Wheat,t orn, fllil ?? * "ooal,>-tiirr?|>11itile* uu/okl der-runnera, rock heutl /gJlljZE9I upper-runners for Farm /BJfrGgk 3(1 vi or Merrhnnt lVorJi. LOf^R \ Si-ml for Pamphlet ami Uampson IVhltchlH A fo., ***** Ko. 33 Cortlandt Eu, U. t. ',aivierTcansaws7 |? BEST IN THE WORLD. . MOVABLE-TOOTIIED CIItCULARfl, PEurouATrn cnn*s cuts. \ 8*nd for Pamphlet to . 1MERICA3T SAW CO., XEW YORK.