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FIRM. WARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. ??? To Make Hncknhrnt CnktH. FiRsr Rbcipr.?One quart of buckwheat Hour. ? small teacr.pful of Indian uieal, one and a half teaspoonfuls salt, four tablespoon fills good lively yeast; mix with milk and tepid water enough to make it the consistency of muffin batter; then beat well for fifteen minutes, and set in a warm place to rise over night. In the morning the batter may be sour; if so dissolve a teaspoonful of soda in a little waim water and stir in; if the cakes are not sweet add more saleratus; do not beat the batter; add a tablespoonful of molasses to brown the cakes?the milk does not always brown them sufficiently. Bake on- a well-heated griddlo that is perfectly clean; a soapr* id /I /11 n rt/v on l l?r\n oi/v/nci ^iiuuic uwv.13 xiv an uvu griddle rhould be greased with a piece of rind of ham or fat salt pork on a fork. Butter and silver-drip* syrup are best to eat with buckwheat cakes; maple syrup is also good. Second.?Take one cupful of flour, two of buckwheat flour, and one of yeast: one tablespoonful of sugar, and salt according to t*ste. Mix with enough water to make a stiff batter, and set to rise over night. In the morning add water in sufficient quantity to make the batter ruu when poured on the griddle. Third ?Let the buckwheat be of the hulled sort and fresh. Pat into a twoquart "pitchor one and a half pints of tepid water; add four tablespoonfuls of baker's or as much " compressed " yeast as will make one loaf of bread?other kinds in proportion?with a little salt. Then stir in buckwheat enough to make a thick batter; cover the pitcher and set away to rise over night, after beating thoroughly. In the morning add three tablespoonfuls of molasses, and a quarter of a teaspoonfnl of soda, dissolved in about three tablespoonfuls of milk. Beat all well together, and pour the cakes from the pitcher upon a well-heated griddle. QiieitUoi and Answer*. What percentage of sea water is 6alt ? Answer?Ordinary sea water contains about three per cent., by weight, of salt Is there anything that will dissolve shellac besides alcohol ? Answer?Shellac dissolves in a hot solution of borax in water. What will remove from the walls of a brick buildiug the oozings or collec ion of saltpeter ? Answer?It is probably not saltpeter, for if it were the rain would remove it, it being very soluble in water. If it is an insoluble salt of lime, try a little dilute muriatic acid, and then wash well with water. How are buckskin gloves, etc., cleaned ? Answer?Wash them in lukewarm soft water, with a little castile soap, ox gcu*, vi uiau wjw, iiiicu auriuu tiiriu uu wooden Lauds, rub them with pipe clay moistened with beer; let them dry gradually, rubbing them from time to time so that they do not lose their shape in dryiDg. We want to bore a well in low land, where salt water flows and penetrates in the earth to the depth of fifteen feet Will galvanized tubrng prevent the salt water from mingling with the fresh without the joints being screwed or soldered together ? Answer?If you strike a spring of fresh water the tubing yon speak of will answer very well. What kind of oil should be nsed as a base to mix with powdered slate to paint a roof with f Answer?Linseed oil is the best to use, and the expense for one roof would not be very great.?Scientific American. Potatoes lor Horoe*. . I onoa came near losing a very valuable horse, a correspondent writes, from feeding hira dry hay and oats with nothing loosening. I have never believed in dosing a horse with medicine, but something is actually necessary to keep a horse in the right condition. Many use powder-*, bnt potatoes are better, and safer, and cheaper, if fed judiciously. If those who are not in the habit of feeding potatoes to horses will try them, they will be astonished at the result. I have known a horse changed from a lazy, dumpish one, to a quick, active, headstrong animal, in five days, by simply adding two quarts of potatoes to his feed daily. If very much clear corn meal is fed, they do not need so many potatoes. Too many potatoes are weakening, and so are too many apples. When I was a lad, I was away from home at school one winter, and had the care of one horse, one yoke of oxen, and one cow, every one of which 1 had to card or curry every day. The horsi had three pails of water, four quarts of oats, two quarts of small potatoes, and two quarts of corn extra every day he worked, with what hay he wanted, and a stronger and more active horse I have ; never yet seen. The Plodder. Take two young men?one plods and the other works. The plodder saves X) a year for thirty years, and regnly deposits it at. six per cent, com- j pound interest?that is, he invests in a good six per cent, stock his every year's : $300 and all the interest of all the dehnnits?And vhat. in ilia r a cm If ? An. swei?$25,140. "What of the worker ? If he is one in ten thousand, he has about the same. Unless he is one of ten thousand, he has little or nothing. But the $25,140 is sure to any one of, the ten thousand?in a word, to anybody at all who could earn $300 a year more than he could use. If he oould save but one dollar a year it would be nearly a hundred, or rather it would be a trifle over if kept for thirty-three years?that is, $103.18. Idiocy in the United States. The number of idiots in the United Sfcates^aecording to the census of 1870, was 24.527, of whom 14,485 were malas i and 10,042 females; 3,188 were colored, \ and 1,845 foreign born. But the number and their proportion to the population amnot be ascertained with any satisfactory degree of accuracy. The census statistics are untrustworthy, both from the different standards adopted by enumerators, and from the difficulty of persuading parents, from whom the returns are generally obtained, that their ohildrcn are idiots. Some of the worst cases in idiot asylums were brought there by their friends, not as idiots, but as ! being peculiar in their habits. The effort has been made in several States to < obtain returns from physiciaus, clergy men and town officers, but with very moderate success. So far as these returns go, however, they show a much greater prevalence of idiocy than has J belen commonly supposed; and it is now generally conceded by competent judges j that the number of idiots is greater than that of the deaf and dumb or the blind, and as great as that of the insane, the proportion being not less than one in one thousaud of the population. Assuming this ratio, Hie number of idiots in tho United States would be more than 38,000. Dividing- Her Money. For mauy years Mrs. Margaret Laps, an eccentric but estimable lady, has been a re-ident of Watorvliet village, N. Y. Dining the past five years she has been an ininat > of the family of James Macklin, her son-in-law, who lives near the Shaker settlement. The eccentric conduct of the old lady?she being seventy years of age?has of late beer a source of much trouble a*id auxiety to her relatives. One Suuday evening she left home and did not return. No trace of her could be found. Tho search for her was kept up by her son-in-law until Tuesday morning, when, in passing a deserted building formerly used by the Shakers as a hotel, he heard a noise inside, and, pulling a block out of a clink in one of the walls of the building looked in. What was his surprise to discover his mother-iu-law iu one of the apartments kneeling on the floor. In front of her were several piles of greenbacks and three piles of gold coin. She was evidently counting the money. As it was not kuowu that she was possessed of any money, Mr. Macklin was at a loss to understand the matter, and, appearing before the old lady, requested an explanation. She was greatly surprised and annoyed at being discovered, and told her son-in-law to go home, assuring him that she would soon follow. He returned home, and on entering the house was astonished to find his sister-in-law, who lives in New York, there. Before he had recovered from his surprise his brother-in-law, a resident of i5unalo, entered the house, his coming having been entirely unanuounced to any ot the household. Explanation from the new comers revealed the fact that they had both been peremptorily summoned by their mother to be in Watervliet on that day. While they were explaining Mrs. Laps came in. It seems that she had saved up during her life 32,500. Feeling that she had not much longer to live, and determined that there should be no wrangling over her little fortune after her death, she had written to her son and daughter to meet her at her son-inlaw's. She then gathered np her money and repaired to the deserted hotel, where she might count and plans its division without interruption. The result of her deliberation had been that she should divide the money equally among her children, which she at once proceeded to do. AmoDg the money were two hundred English sovereigns, which she had kept fifty years. The rest was greenbacks. None of her children knew of the existence of the money. A Unique Contest. Among the many contested seats in the United States House of Representatives is one from New York, the deiails of which are reported from Washington as follows: At the last election a successor to Hon. A. F. Allen, member of Congress, deceased, for the Thirty-third district 'was to be chosen. Nelson J. Norton was the Republican candidate, and Charles S. Cary the Democratic. The district is oomposed of Cattaraugus and Chautauqua counties. .The board of State commissioners have not yet met, and no declaration of the result has yet been made, but an examination flirt rtrttllifr l?rtf nvno efiAttro fl^ ia ufnf n r\t VI VIU WUilVJ iVUVUUO OUU >T O I JL11 O OMIU U1 fact*: In Cattaraugus county Nelson J. Norton received for representative in Congress 4,961 votes; Charles S. Oary, 4,525 votes. In Chautauqua county, for representative in Congress, Charles S. Cary received 4,614, and Flint Blauchard (Rep.), seventy-two votes. For member of Congress Nelson J. Norton received 5,809 votes, and a few scattering. For the representative in the Forty fourth Congress, Augustus N. Lowry received five votes. If the votes for the representative in Congress aud for member of Congress be held to have been cas. for the fame office, Mr. Norton received in the two counties 10,770 votes and Mr. Cary 9,139, making Mr. Norton's majority 1,631. But Mr. Lowry claims that his five votes were the only votes which can be legally counted because described as cast lor the Fortyfourth Congress, and, therefore, he has given notice of a purpose to contest Mr. Norton's right to a s at if he is awarded the certificate by the State board of commissioners. How to Choose Christmas Gifts. A writer says, apropos of choosing Christmas presents: The usual practice in choosiug Christmas gifts is to start out with a full portemonnaie and come home with it empty, having scoured a dozen book and print and curio shops meantime to "find enough pretty thiugs to go round." The gift sent to one friend might have been offered with equal propriety to a hundred others. Now everybody (worth remembering at all on Christmas day) has a fancy, or whim, or association, wh ch a trifle will recall and gratify. Now that we have so little mouey, let us set our brains to work to remember these whims or hobbies, and to And the suggestive trifles, and, our word for it, we will startle our friends with a more real pleasure than if we had sent them thie costliest unmeaning gift. There must be a nice discrimination, too, in assorting these trifles. There are certain folk whom we know to be sorely in need of articles for the wardrobe, and to whom we must therefore give utterly useless follies, because they knew that we know it; and there are other and better folk in like coudition who will receive a collar or a pair of gloves with as hearty and sincere feeling as though the offering were a strain of Christmas music. There is one cousin whoso gift must smell of the ( shops aud the dollars paid for it, and an- i other who, if we send her our worn copy ! of George Herbert, or the little broken ! vase which has stood for years on the ! little study table, would receive them with wet eyes, and dnd them fragrant with old memories. Marriage in Borneo. This is the way the matrimonial knot' is tied in Borneo : On the wedding | day the bride and bridegroom are brought from opposite ends of the village to the spot where the ceremony is to be performed. They are made to sit on two bars of iron, that bleSSinors ns laftt.ir>cr anrl Vipjilth as vicorous. may attend the pair. A cigar and betel leaf, prepared with the areca nut, are next put into the hands of the bride and bridegroom. One of the priests then waves two fowls over the heads of the couple, and in a long address to the Supreme BeiDg calls down blessings upon the pair, and implores that peace and happiness may attend the union. After the heads of the affianced have been knocked against each other three or four times, the bridegroom puts the prepared leaf and the cigar into the mouth of the bride, while she does the same to him, whom she thus aoknowl- j edges as her husband. A millionaire living at Terre Haute, j Ind., has, during the last twenty-five?! years, given away nearly $ii,000,000 for oharitable and educational purnoses * SUHHARY OF XEWS. a \ It?m of lateveat from Horn* nnd Abroad. ' t Spain continues to eeud soldiers to Cuba . Pern is exultant over the fact of having secured a contract from parties in Paris for ^ 2 000,000 tone of guano. The newly-discovered beds of guano are considered richer than the ^ Anoj Tlioro liufi KfiAn ft V*oavr onrl rlia_ astrons gale off the coast of Fifeshiro, Kng- C laud. Some fisbiug boats wore lost. Sixteen fishermen are known to have been drowned, and fourteen are missing A lunatic named Hile, at the county hospital at Gettysburg, Pa . killed a woman named Beatty, who went into his room to clean it. He choked her until insensible, and then drove the small end of a broomstick into her brain. She had been repeatedly forbidden to go into his room without one of the keepers Henr Ward Beecher preached on the common schools and pointed out objections to reading the Bible in them A fire in the large building, corner of Ann and Nassau streets, New York, destroyed property to the value of $100,000 According to custom, the governor of Massachusetts pardoned four convicts on Thanksgiving day A lad twelve years of age, named Cross, committed suicide at Brattleboro, Vt., by shooting The rotarv bleacher 111 Bichmond & Co.'a manila paper mill, at Lowell, Mass., burst from its position, and was thrown seme distance through the walls of the adjoining woolen factory. The paper mill was badly injured, and the damage is estima'ed at $9,5.0; no insurance. ... The losa of the steamer Pacific is now charged to have been entirely the fault of the ship Orpheus, which ran directly across the steamer's coarse. Tony Nellnm and Alice Harris, both colored, were hanged at Monroe, La., for the murder of the husband of the woman. Fully five thousaud people were iu attendance at [the execution. Tony managed to free his hands aud grasp the ropo above his neck and one of the posts of tho scaffold, and the sheriff was ! 1 obliged to hold his hands down uutil be died. ' Two other colored murderers were hanged at ^ Bardie, Miss., in the presence of four thousand people The schooner 8unshine, from 8an Francisco for Coos bay, is ashore bottom up at the month of the Columbia river. She is reported to have had thirty passengers, besides a crew of ten. All are supposed to be lost An altercation between two women took place at Fallsburgh, N. Y., during which one of the women raised an iron poker and killed a child in the hands of the other Chief-Justice Waite, whose friends have mentioned him as a possible candidate for the Presidency, lias written a letter in which he^ considers it derogatory to the Jiigh office he occupies to be concerned in politics HarnmaD, of Auburn, Me., beat Avery in a fiftymile walk. The distance was made in ten hours and twenty-six minutes The railway men, at a meeting in Chicago, advanced the rate of freight East While three small boys were flaying in an excavaation in Brooklyn, N. Y., the earth, caved in* burying them several feet under the surface, so that life was extinct when they wore exhumed In spite of the bad weather, the funeral of the late Vice-Pro8ident was attended in Washington by a large and sad body of people. The Senate chaplain conducted the services, and the Rev. Dr. Rankin pronounced an eulogy. Socretary Chandler has offered E. 8. Toby, of Boston, the office of commissioner of Indian j-ffairs tx-Gov. James E. English, of New Haven, Conn., has been appointed by Governor Ingersoll to fill the unexpired term ! of the late United States Senator Ferry J Chavez, lieutenant of tho late bandit Yaequez, : was shot and instantly killed near Arizona. ! while attempting to escape arrest The Ontario*(Can.) manufacturers have adopted resolutions calling for the taxation of Ameri cau rarm prooucw, invmacn as i>&uiiaiaii produce ie taxed on crossing to this side; also that the customs te more strictly looked after. The officers of the lost steamer Pacific : were blamed by the coroner's jury for poor diecipJiue Col. Des Anges, a New York custom house official, concerned in the rovenue frauds on smuggled silks, has been sentenced to two years' imprisonment and pay a fine of $10,000 1.c Xord, the Russian organ, says that the purohaae by England of the j 1 Suez canal stock will not affect the peace of ! Europe.. ..It is stated that, with a view to ' preventing Austrian intervention, Montenegro has proposed to Servia an offensive and de- j festive alliance in favor of Herzegovina, and f the offer is accepted both countries will | take joint action in April The roofs of , the Chauucey and Grand Tunnel mines, in the Wyoming valley, Pa., caved in. entailing a loss j 1 of over $100,000, besides throwing an immense : j number of miners out of work at a critical j ( season of the year. The miners, one hundred j! a<id twenty-five in number, cecaped only two : hours previous to the disaster; and it was : owiDg to be watchfulness of one of the proprietors that they were not all crashed. ( On and after January first the single rates ] of letter postage between the United States ] and Japan by direct service, via San Francisco, 1 will be reduced from fifteen to twelve cents 3 per half onnce or fraction thereof, prepay* ' ment obligatory The United States supreme 1 court gave a final decieion in the great Union * Facific suit in favor of the company The 1 B >ston rubber shoe factories were destroyed ^ by fire, throwing eight hundred employees , oat of work. Loes, $600,000; insured $156.- j 000 There will be no sales of treasury j j gold ordeied for the month of December, the ] currency balance being large enough to ob- | j viate the need of sales, which, the secretary j, says, are never ordered for any other purpose ; than to replenish that balance . A special ] telegram from Alexandria says the Abyesin- i ians had surprised and killed a body of 1,200 Fgyptians, including seventeen officer* < R. W. Baylor, of Norfolk, Va , and Col. James 1 Keegan, formerly of the army, fought a duel J near Baltimore, and Baylor received a severe * flesh wound The Russian forces iB Sho- 1 kand lost heavily by the recent uprising ] Charles Atkinson, colored, aged twenty years, of Franklin, La., committed an outrage on j a little white girl, five years old, the daughter , of ft respectable widow. The negro was cap- j tured and lodged in jail. Shortly after he was , taken from the custody of the sheriff by the j ciraged people and hanged to a tree. 7 ho clerks in all the departments at Wash- < in? oo are to be hereafter required to work !1 dai y until four o'clock, iustead of until three o'clock as heretofore The entire enginehoUKo at the Grand Trunk railway station, at Belleville, Can., was burned. Ten engines < were cotally destroyed. The lose is $150,000 : insured in English companies The sentence of death passed upon Dr. Davis and his wife, the Canadian abortionists, for the murder of Jane Gilmour has been, by proper authority, commuted to imprisonment for life. The step was rendered necessary bv the aid they have furnished by means of their confession in securing the conviction of t'e soducer of Miss Gilmour Thefattinad train between New York and St. Louis will moke the distance iu thirty-five hours instead of forty-six. Re heretofore The Senate cf ihe State tribunal at Berlin sanctioned the indictment of Count von Arnim for troaeon | The Liberiaus are badly iu need of forei? t hJ j against the natives The repoit of the j c ! trollor r.f the currency favorB the national ! hanking system Reports from Lake Michigan itafe that there are forty vessels ashore. in raiiotw stages of damage, as the effects of the j\ ate gale The roply of the United 8tates b o the recent Spanish note ie amicable lattle thievea from Mexico still ply their trade, ind it is stated that they have an order for ? .8,000 head of cattle, which they expect to y iteal out from Texas Thirteen seats are o be contested in the United States House >f Representatives. The College Rowing Association met at ! springfield, Mass., fixed July 19 as the date of ^ he regatta, and invited three British uuivertities to the race The government land tales are about 2,500,000 acres less this year a ban last John Ucannell, who shot Dona- ? ine in New York, and got off on the plea of ? nsauitv, has been eent to the insane asylum ^ it Utica The public printing for the last a iscal year cost $1,648,425, the department Jjjj imploying twelve hundred hands Keene, ^ H., felt earthquake shocks.... The steamer p ?hil Sheridan was burned while near Buffalo. c The steamer Sunnyside, rnnning on the ? dudsou from New York to Troy, was cut down n ind sunk by ice on a downward trip and eleven o )ersons were lost. The Sunnyside left Troy jj! n the afternoon, and when near Poughkeep- ^ lie was cut through by the ice, when the cap- s inoKniiv nn Uor nahnrA. hnt she aliened P mil lUOVCUiMJ * uu MV4 ?W -W. - J ? r )ff and sank. Meanwhile a life boat bad been ^ ;ot afloat and the women put aboard, when it a vas overcrowded with frantic men, and cap- ? tized?oleven being drowned aa above stated; 1 iix of them baiug colored. The balance of the p maseagers, after excruciating suffering from o he cold water and winda, were rescued from ^ ,ho wreck by ruc-ans of a rope which the cap- D aiu had marie taei to the shore?there being o 10 much ice that small boat* were comp&ra- ^ ively useless Intelligence has been re- p jeived from Toledo, Spain, to the effect that die authorities had closed the Protestant ? :hurcn there and expelled the pastor and J ichoolmsster .Since January 1, 92,000 im- p nigrante have arrived in this country, princi- r jally at this port. Of the*? 25.600 were Qer- ? nans The public debt statement for a November shows a decrease of $4S0,00u. v b The Darien Canal Project. c a The commissioners appointed bj the f President of the United States to report 1 is to the respective merits of the varijus routes surveyed for a ship canal to ( jonnect the Atlantic and Pacific oceans o report that in their opinion, after a full r uvestigation, the Nicaragua route is the l! jest, aud they estimate that the pro- * oosed ship canal, from the harbor of c Brito on the Pacific, to Greytown on the r \tlantic, can be constructed at a total 6 rost not exceeding $66,000,000. The J jommissioners say that obstacles of an tl ilmost insurmountable nature were u found in all but the Panama and Nicaragua routes, and notwithstanding its t] greater length, 181 miles, they give the ? ^reference to the later. It is the only j, route where the climate is not danger- & >us to health. In the lower routes the nalaria would cause the death of the greater part of the workmen before the c sanal could be completed. It is, too, the b >nly route where an unfailing and prop- u jr supply of water could be found, Lake ? Nicaragua, upon this route, supplying a a jonstaut and uniform stream. The com- c nission, after speaking in general terms ? )f the enormous saving of distance, a' ;ime, cost, and risk which the successful milding of the canal would accomplish, n ihow the entire feasibility of the Nicara- & jua route, and add : I It is now regarded as of the highest mportance that the United States pro- ? reed at once to carry out the feasible c alans of the ship canal in order to prercnt either France or England from joming in and reaping the honor and 6 profit of this great enterprise. The re- " suits of this work cannot be fully esti- j mated, but doubtless when the canal is a rompleted nearly one-half of the carry- C ing trade of the world will be revolutionized. For the comparatively small mm of sixty odd millions of dollars, the v :om mission assert that an enormous re- e turn would be made. One item alone, t it is thought, would make the expense 1 Df building tne canal a good investment, ^ md that is the shipment of California , products to Europe and the ports upon the Atlantic coast, but more especially to Europe. California ships large quantities of wheat to the European markets, it present all this wheat lias to go 1 iround by Cape Horn, meeting the dan jers of the stormy quarter and encoun- f tering a long delay and expense that L would all be obviated by the canal. i To allow any foreign power to build j, this canal, while we pay toll to them for d its nse. is something which the commis- t sion thinks the people cf the United v States will not tolerate. D t An Empty Honor. , r The London correspondent of the 11 Chicago Journal writes: The bank- ! r ruptcy of a baronet and ex-lord mayor is j * not a nsual occurrence, though it would 1 be of little account if it did not point a a moral. Mr. Sills John Gibbons, a re- * ipectable London tradesman, who had been for many years an alderman, be- p 3^.me in due course, two or three years 1 d ago, lord mayor of London, and j \ strutted his brief year on the stage, , being made a baronet during his term. 1 That over, he sank back into his posi- ' don a3 an alderman. A few weeks ago j t it was announced that, owing to ill- j ? health, he had resigned his aldermanic i j %own, and we were all sympathizing * with him. A little later, his name ap- ^ peared in the fatal Gazette among the ; c aames of the bankrupts, and he is now 1 undergoingthe processor whitewashing, v The moral I alluded to is this : He was 3oing a comfortable business, and if he j f liad been contented with that might i c have retired in ft few years and lived j ? somfortably the rest of his days. But! r no?the height of a London tradesman's i p ambition is to be lord mayor for one ! [ brief year, and poor Gibbons could not j I resist his destiny. The result was that j 1 the ?10,000 or ?15,000 it cost him (be- . sides the salary) during tho e short ; months was more than his business * would justify or his capital could stand, and the result is his downfall and the { prospect of spending the rest of his i Aana in nrnrorfv Tt 1R the old StOI*V Of l"V ? I " J the silly motli. A New Office. An enterprising young man of Chi- ; 1 cogo is a " profe&sional introducer." ! , For a fee ranging from 85 to $50 lie will ' j introduce young gentlemen to young { ladies they desire much to know, or, for , a similar amount, with a percentage if anything comes of it, he will make young ladies acquainted with young gen- ( fclemen. He is also prepared, with neat- < ness and dispatch, to advance the suits ot customers or to set back rivals with ; innuendoes as to their character and connections; and hopes, by a strict atteu- i tion to business, to have the confiden e aud orders of those who have been j pleased to patronize him in the past. M. Quad, wjiose new book, "Quad's Odds," everybody is reading, is equally at home in wit or pathos. He makes his readers laugh or crv just as he wiils ' it. ' I Tosh Billings Bays: ' * Yn can't change ! date by cussing after an edition has j een worked ofl.' We trnst the time will come when every ne will use Dobbins' Electric Soap made by Cragin <fe Co., Pbila.). Its sale t daily increasing, as is always the case rith articles of merit. Try it. * Common Sense t? Prejudice. iv B. V. Pieroe, M. D., of the World's Dispensary, Buffalo, N.Y.. author of "The Peoples Common Sense Medical Adviser," etc., etc. I am aware that there is a popular and not Itogetber unfounded prejudice against "jratnt medicines,' owing to the small amount of lerit which many of them possess. The ap-" ellation, "patent medicine," does not apply } my remedies, as no patent has ever been j eked for or obtained upon them, nor have i hey been urged upon the publio as " cure- j lis." They are simply seme favorite prescrip- j ions, which, in a very extensive practioe, have | roved their superior remedial virtues In the 1 ore of the diseases for which they are recom- , lended. Everv practicing physician has Lis avorite remedies, which he ofteneet recomlends or uses, because he hoi 'be greatest onfidence in their virtues. T* patient does j ot know their compositic? Even preecrip-1 [one are usually written in a language unin- I elligible to any but the diuggist. As much eorecy is employed as in the preparation of roprietary medicines. Does the fact that an rticle is prepared by a process known only to he manufacturer4render that article lees valuble? How many physicians know the elelontary composition of the remedies which bey employ, some of which have never been , nalyzed? Few practitioners know howmor- j bine, quinine, podophyllin, leptandrin, pepsin I r chloroform are made, or how nauseous rugs are transformed into palatable elixirs ; j et they do not h*?eitate to employ them. Is it ot inconsistent to use a prescription, the ompoeition or which is unknown to us, and iscard another preparation simply because it i accompanied by a printed statement of its ropertiee, with dirt ctions for its use ? Some persons, while admitting that my machines are good pharmaceutical compounds, obect to them on the ground that they are too ften used with insufficient judgment. I propose to obviate this difficulty by e; lightening be people as to the structure and fauctions of heir bodies, the causes, character and symporas of disease, and by indicating the prope** nd judicious employmcjt of u medcines, ogether with such auxihiry irej!m?-f - mai e necessary. Such it one of the designs c< he People's Medical in viser, forty thousand opies of v hich have already beon publishe 1, nd are sold at the exceedingly iow price of 1.50. and sent post-paid to anv addrets within lie United States and Canada. If you would patronize medicines, scientifislly prepared, use my famuy medicines, loldeu Medical Disooveryis tonic, alterative r blood cleansing, and an uneqaaled oough emedy; PleasaDt Purgative T >liets, tcarcely irger than mustard seed, constitute an agreeMe and reliable physic; Favorite Prescripi n, a remedy for bilitated females ; my k-mpound Extract of Smart-Weed, a magical emedy for pain, bowdl complaints, and an unqnaied liniment for both Unman and horseesh ; while Dr. Sage's Catarrh B.medy is nown the world over as the greatest specific ur catarrh and "cold in the head" ever given 5 the public. These standard remedies have been before l.e public for many years?a period long rough to fully test their merits, and the beet rgument that can be advanoed in their favor s the fact that their sale was never so great a auniig me past mix muuiuo.?r,i/r/?. Premature loss of the hair, which is so amnion nowadays, may be entirely prevented .. tbe use of Burnett's Cocoaine. It baa been sed in thouesii is of caeee where the hair was oming out in Lnndfula, and has never failed o arrest its decay, and to promote a healthy nd vigorous growth. It is at the same time [ rivaled as a dressing for the hair. A single application will render it soft and glossy for ever&l days.?Coin. Dr. Wistab's Balsam of Wild Cherry lay be well called a " wonder of medical rnence." 11 cures coughs and colds instanter I t soothes the irritated parts ; it heals the inanimation; and even consumption itself ields to its magic influenoe, Fifty cents and ue dollar a bottle, large bottles much the beaper.?Com. Bad enough to look and feel bad yourelf; but no excuse for having your horse iok and feel badly, wben for a small sum you an buy Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Colours. which given in grain two or three times week, will make him look and feel well.? lorn. Winter is now fairly upon ns, and the aatns are hastening to the lumber woods in arious parts of the country. Our advice to very man who goes to the woods, be he capain, cook, teamster or any other man, is to ake along a good stock of Johnson's Anodyne '.inhnenl and Pars ms' Purgative Pills. Many aonths of labor (in the aggregate) may be aved by this precaution.?Com. slhenck's mandrikk pills r Vill be found to possess those qualities necessary to he total erad cation of all bilious attacks, prompt to tart the secretions of the liver, and give a healthy tone o the entire system. Indeed, it is no ordinary discovery o medical science to have invented a remedy for these tubboru complaints, which develop all the results pro[ncod by a heretofore free use of ca'omel, a mineral us"ly dreaded by mankind, and acknowledged to be lestmctivein the extreme to the human system. That he properties of certain vegetables comprise all the irtues of calomel without its injurious tendencies, is iow an admitted fact, rendered indisputable by science researches: and t!i(.<e who use the Mandrake Pills rili bo fully satisfied that the best medicines are those rovided by nature in tbe common herbs and roots of he fields. Those pills open the bowels and correct all bilious denotements without salivation or any of the injurious fleets of calomel or other poisons. The secretion of I .i!o i? nmmnted bv the?o rills, as will be seen by the I itered color of the stools, and disappearing of the allow comp'exlon and cleanaing of the tongue. Ample directions for nse accompany each box of pills. Prepared only by J. II. SOHENCK A SON, at their rincipal office, corner Sixth and Arch Streets, Philaelphia, and for sale by atl druggists and dealers, rice 25 cents per box. The Markets. raw TOM, leef Cattle-PrLi^e to Extra Bullocks C9V# 133k Icromon to Good Texans 07% 4 - 09.H lilch Cow* 30 01 #16 0) fogn?Live.. 07, %4 07% Dressed 0? <* 09J{ hocp 0407 ambo 0 %<& OX lortun?Middling 1*S9 13k lenr?Extra Western 6 *5 # 6 (0 State Extra. 5 SO 4 5 9-: Cheat?Kod Wee tern 1 2S ? 1 21 No. 2 Spring... 1 5 & 1 w tye? State S5 8 91 Urlsy?State...... >6 id 1 15 tsrley Msit 1 4*1 ( " 4* fats?Mixed Western.. 40 ?S j lore?Mixed Weetern "3 it >5 lay, per cut 65 >i ' '< *? I Itraw, per cwt 60 < * 1 05 j lope ...76's?i*2 -4'6 ... olds 04 ni i>7 I 'crk?Mersey. ....... 2 6?< i+rl ^ -nrd !!?. 3 V, if 12X ' 'ah?Mackerel, No. 1, new....... . .20 (*> ' ? S JO | " No. 2, new 4 i'O 141.00 Dry Cod, per cwt 6 CO C 2? Herring, Scaled, per box . 22 (? 3< I etrcleum?Crnde f67*.<e' 7 Refined. 12k [ Vool?California Fleece .. 27 A $2 Texaa " i* <3 :C Australian " 25 i? ?8 latter?State... . 24 4 3 Western Diiry '.'0 4 i'6 Western Yellow 18 * :'i Western Ordinary !4 (4 16 Pennsylvania Fine 8" 4 38 Jheese?State Factory ?7 <4 13* State Sldccrned 08 <4 r8 Western 4 1" f.g^-State 27* 4 Z9 ALBAXT. Wheat 1 40 & 1 45 Bye?State 9 ? 4 90 Doru?-Mixed 75 <# *.5 Barley?State...... 88 (4 1 08 5a ts?State .. 45 4 51 sutraLO. Floor ? to (A 8 f-0 Whaa*?So. 1 Spring.... 1 34 (41:4 Horn?Mixed............ 64 4 4 Data 40 (4 40 Rye 82 1# 82 Barley. 1 OS 4 1 05 BALTIKOSX. Cotton?Low Middlings I2V4 32V Floor?Extra 8 76 <4 8 75 Wheat?Red Western 1 t3 4 1 31 Rye. 10 4 FS Corn?Yellow 70 (4 70 Oits?Mixed <0 4 42 Petroleum 06*4 PHILADELPHIA. Flonr?Pennsylvania Extra 6 00 a 8 fO Wheat?Western P.ed J 05 4 I !9 Bye t-9 & 89 Oorr?Yellow. 76 4 77 Mixed 7) 6 76 Data?X.jM 4> 'S 41 Pitrolenrc -Orode |) (41 1 Refined. i2 A City's Railroads. The street railroads of flew York city carry over 160,000,000 passengers everyyear. To perform this immense work, over 12,000 horses are required, and 1,500 cars are in constant use. About or.e hundred miles of the streets of the city have double lines of railroad track laid along them, requiring, with turnouts, side tracks, and branches, about 450 miles of rails. About $30,000,000 has been expended in building and equipping these roads; over $750,000 is required yearly to maintain the roads and real estate, and the expense of operating and repairing the lmes amounts to $6,500,000 annually. A Reason for IU There is, of course, says an exchange, no reason to doubt the truth of the story told by the officers of a bark of their discovery at sea of a fight between a sea serpent and a whale ; out it might perhaps be as well to say that the bark was laden with rum, and that the selfrestraint of the crew, in seeing only one 1 J x~ 1 J.J J XL - serpent, uewerves tu ue rewurucu ujr uo owners of the cargo. Chapped hands, face, pimples, ringworm. ealtrhenm. and other cutaneous affection h cnred, and rough rkin made soft and smooth, by using Juniper Tab Soap. Be careful to get only that made by Caswell, Hazard k Co.. New York, as there are many imitations made with common tar, all of which are worthlee? ?Com. HHBBpSIB A penny eared here and ta*re fkli S C' counts np at the end of the year. Bay onhr ElAIUUll HIT.YER TIPPED Shoes and yon will save dollars inAlso try Wire Qnllted 8ole*. Remember BVIIiMi CA Hl.K SCREW WIRE (fiVsinM Bon's ap d Shoes hare no nails or ^pgygmas^eM pegs sticking through the bottom ^>\Cl ?| to prick the feet or wear the Mr^HHTWff3 stocking B 1 1 1 Also try Wire Qnllted So lea .WMMWiRB Have vou ever seen Tho illustrated catalogue of The Bxcelsiar Portable Prating Prettet t g.l Pre*a now ready. Every man hit oien printer. A few d * Ian buj a a press and type for printing cards, labels, envelopes, eta, at quarter printer-' prices. Sor' money ami increase bveinett by live cuir-rtiting. Send two stamps for catalogue, to the M'l're. W. KFLNXV A CO., Merldcn, Cous, D 4 Dltf rv>c For the toUet or bath It haa J3xjLXVx? Hi I 0 no equal. It is more oleea ant than ?d; Cologns, ToUet Water or Handkerchief Extract ORANGE aSI to the person using It, and to FLOWER 5*5 It has no equal. GEO. T. BARNEY A CO.. Boe! TV" A fTI PD ton. Mass. Title seeured. TRY V> \ icirts IT! TRY IT! TRY IT OA FANCY CARD*. 7 Stylee.with Name. I Or. ?t\) Address J. B. HtTSTKD, Nassau, Reuse. Oo., N. Y. dfc/? For Nothing. Areata Wanted Frerywben. ?fln Address J. KENNEDY A CO.. Richmond. Tnd. A CJTIIV A and t'Htwrrh Snre Oure. Trial free. APIIlXlIil AddressWK.Bellie.TndianapoHs.Ind. Books Exchanged. Furnish all new Want old. Write Name this paper. American Bmk Fxcbaure. V. Y. WANTED AOFNT*. ^trnlw ami fht'4J Ere* TV Better Ok*n PoM. A. OOULTER A 0O..nMesm #c 1. eon adaratK-rme. Samn'es worth *t sent >0 10 31U free. 8TTN8QN A PP.. Portland. We. $") i day at bone. Areata wanted. Outfit and terras 1L free. Address TRUE A CO.. Augusta, Maine. ACCMTC 20 Plegsnt Oil Chr?mos, mounted. HUriVIO gig*tan.far JjH. Voreltieo aod rhromos of ere.-y deerrip'ion. National Ohmreo Oo.. Phi la. Pa. PTVOHCFS legally ob'alned tor Inoorapatiblllty, etc : residence nnneoe^sry; fee after decree. Address P. O. Box 1037, Chicago. TIL O". HU*.Ma TT? amhb 111...... . _ s a a. O.SSk - a r irinrr* i uur *?wu hi lift "W? with an 8 oag- paner, ortl* H2.ftO 7??r rear. Sand 5c. "?*mp for aampla pap* r to Iirprx.OanibridBcboro.Pa. 7J ^TJiS' ENCYCLOPEDIA. Nrw.RpTpnm frvmw. / 160.000 Articles. JW00 RnsrraTfncs and t* splendid mf na. Amenta ^anted^ Barm. Davt* A Oft.. Pti|i?. (JfrtPA A .Tfenr?-.?Asranta Wgnta'V ? 1 h*?t .*1?. JrtlDU ,n* aOlelas 'i? the world. r?na mmn'* t"?a. _ Addr??. .r. Wl?Q\ao\. n^trolf. Wh. d[li}A Daily to Aranta. 85 naw articles and the hast ' 0\f FaraHr P?rwrH An??rie". with twn 06 Chro. mos, free. AMFR. WFr; pp.. 2ftg Bw??dw?r. 8. V We want an A grant In every Cr*u*a In tha land. Bl* prv. no investment, Q Af ftj Address for nartlo i'Mi and frm * OI " eonr of ** Oranre in S< ?aion." W. M. KENNEDY, nfgos, VHnnit. TV^ciUfawianlf. Chromes. Stan? Pnrravtnes. PhotoI " waphs.5cran-book Pictures. Mottoaa. at?. Eleeant g? mn'es and catalogue ?ant poat-na Id for 1O eta. A ?ent* Wp.nfpd. J. L. Pattan A Co., 182 WUHam St.MewYoirk. PI:RSIAM?NT AND PROFIT A RLF FITPTiOYWPNT can he aaenrad by ona ladr In a**"- town hi tha TTnlted States. Addraaa J. HENRY SYM ONDS. 68 Deroosblrc Street. Bos'on. Maaa. /hnVV A WEEK guaranteed to Mala and Fa. l|v # # mala Aranta, In tbatr loeaUty. Costa C7| | NCTWTNO to tar H. Particulars Fraa. P. O. viOKERY A OO.. Anamsta, Ma AUTfW and WarpMnf BaMf absolutely and IILf|||fl| apaadtlyenrad. Patnlass; no rnihHMtr " * l U "1. Bond starrn for Parttenlara. TV. Oa*Ttow. 187 Wwhlnrtmi St.nhlMfo, Til At a ara A I7IONTW ? Aranta wanted ?W UVJKII "'bora- Bnatoaaa hono**hle and ^rd /.If II Parttenlara aant fraa. Addrar < V V WORTH A OO.. St, Louis. Mo. I NIIHHM A" Want It?thousand* of llraaand A l_|flyinv mintens of property earad brit-fortmiw /\ l7 (1 It 1 lJ made wtth it?partioplara fraa. 0. M. _____ ^ntnrOTQy A B BO. .MawYork A Chicago. f| 1 VrfFD SnrrrMfallr Trented. without I ft nil I f. |C aaa of Knifa or Caustic*. DR. A. H. VlrS.till J.?111 BROWN, New Haven. Conn. Sand two stamps. Correspondence from physioians solicited. W\>'TFD?AGFNTS in all parts of the country, to c%nrn?? for our new book, "T\t Faam of (A* r-vt'irv." bv Ph-be A. Hsnaford. One volume. handvm<!y illn?tr*tad. The rrandeat Centennial book In the mirk-t_ B. B. RU88ELL. Pnbiiaher, Borrow, Mass Tour Name Elegantly Print11'ilLy ed oa 1J TKABSPABSirr visitibo UK^r Cabds, for U Grata. Each card coo tains a 'ce-.e which ! not vitibU until held towards the light Noth nglikrthrmrverbefbreofferedln America. Blf inducements t? Acer.U. Notki.tt Pristiso Co.. Aahland. Ma* I'vorr ranitar of this paper should acid lO cents for n copy of the LIFE WTOi'K JOrRNAI/. and the great Inducement offered for Meenrtnc *nherriber?. The Jonrnal is r ronounred the REST of Its elans. Address l.lve Slock Josrnal, Buffalo^ N. V. OA Ornamental Cards, ft dasigrns, lOcta: 20 A. V Mixed Cards, wtth name. 10eta.: 20 Acquaint. ano* Cards, 10ot*.,post-paid. Agents wantedeverywhere. Fcr grant's Outfit send three-eent stamp. Addreas L- JOVKS A CO.. Naaaau. ggoggjagPa.W A?pn^ WRntrd ! Medals and Diploma- Aw-7 id *" skw Pictorial BIBLES. oprawsai nc ?*rof. I>. ilfffken P. 0._Box 475. Laporta.Ind Jtfl'CHOMAWCT, or Boul Charmliu;." How either ?<-x may fascinate and fal:> the love and .' tlon of any j*mon ttiey cliooae, Itutantly. This art a'.l ear * <free,by mall. V- cents; t?retber with a Lor?'* Gal.I# ' ; ptian Oracle, Dream*, Hlntato Ladlea, Ac. 1,000.CiO ?oid. A 111. e- hook. All ln?e T. WILLI A MS a CO.. Pnb'a. i " v * FX "V A CUT B?OADWAlf, V Ork #1 II xjLOXI a manufacturer of 8otr:- Gorr IA vVELRY of every description. The otock la large, eery c . ice,and la offered at retail at trade prices to keep oar ? ! amen going. Bill* under )# 15. P.O. order in advanoe. ?'v-r<l5?O.O.D privilege toexamine. Catalogue* tree. A I a Invested In Wall Street tHIIIS WAnn often leads to fortune. A kV*lV^ (ff9VV 72 p?g? book expJatntng I 9 very thing and trivia* Drlce o* stocks CCWT CDCC .TOHV HICKUNO A CO. Renkers j ornil rncc. k Brokers. 72 Broadway, WewYor*. Do Your Own Printing Outfits from SI up rcldingJb Co., Afanufs, Washington Sg,Boston mag a Finely Printed Bristol Visiting M V C'nrds aent poet-paid for 25 eta. Send I stamp for samples of (ilaee C nrds, .Marble, Hnowtiakee, Srroil, Oa. w w mask. lire. e have ovor 1 (10 strlea. Aq hu Wanted. A. H Kttlueb A Oo.. Brockton. Mae*. GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK The Oldest Muubi? in America. " A Prmrni Chhomo," Th* mobitnto Call, will be given to even Subscriber, whether single or In a club, who pays 1 > ad vanoe for 1*70 and remits direct to this offioe. Address L. A. COOKY. Philadelphia. Pa. HI All ^ Agent# wanted to canvaas every w V ill/ I# citv and town in America for l V " Quad's Odds." the De'roit Tree PreM man's book. Thirteen thousand copies sold in six weeks. Tbe th'rd edition now ready. Everybody knows him, and every, bod v subscribes for his bock. For A Vinil V o tfi's. address R D. S. TYLER 11 11 II U V A CO , Detroit, Mich. REVOLMS'Sf3.no New Buffalo Bill Revolver MWIWV Sent with 100 Cartridges for $1 Full Kicklb Plats. I Satisfaction guaranteed. Mtutraied Cat at e*ru e FREE. H E8TEKX GUN WORKS, Cliicsuro, 111., ' 69 Dearborn-st (McCormick Block). P. O. Box 540. i HEWULDSTEATED CATALOGUE MASOO HANLi CABINET ORGANS. 24 Quarto I'u*rs. Ig uow ready, with FRICImPQT; and very fall information, presenting accurate drawings, of these celebrated instruments, with detailed descriptions; including many new styles, with valuable improvements ; new stops and elegant cases. It is not questioned by disinterested judges that these are THE BEST OF ALL EST* STRUMENTS OF THIS CLASS; tinequaled, and, if judged critically, unapproached by others. Their *ame is world-wide. They have ALWAYS obtained highest awards in American Industrial Expositions and received FOUR FIRST MEDALS and DIPLOMA OF HONOR at the GREAT WORLD'S EXPOSITIONS infPARIS, 1867; VIENNA, 1878; and LINZ(A.ugtria), 1875, being the only American {organs which ever received any premium in competition with the best products of European makers, The best musicians in'Europe and America pronounce them unequaled. Prices as low as consistent with best workmanship and material, and lower than those commonly demanded for very inferior instruments. Organs sold for casb or time pavments,or rented until rent pays for them. Every one thinking of buying an organ thould at leant nee this new catalogue. It will be sent free and post-paid. Address the MASON A HAMLIN ORGAN CXX, 154 Tremont St., BOSTON; 25 Union Square, NEW YORK; or 80 and 82 Anams Street, CHICAGO. Come on, Book Agents! Now is the time to Make Money. MARK TWAIN'S NEW BOOK Is on the treok end is bound to win. It win sell, sad you know tt. Don't wait to experiment on other books end lose this. Get your names in tor territory sad cheaters at onoe. OurFirs Fail Address AMK1IOAN PUBLISHING PP., Hartford, Conn. $18 SHOT GUN A 4aa>>k> bsrrW r>a- bar or Ooo?a**ae teaks; vsr-aotad r*tte' uriM harrata, and a food ibootrr, oa mt sals; fttfe TU?t, r*. Sard Wvl-conrr. fbr SIS. Cm haaast 0. 0. D. aiU prlita euala-brforaparts* MU. flrn 1 fliasai ii i la nlai Si f ro .TU e SOW, 8u DanJarr as Mala SC. riaatiaaU. O. TTN817RPAHWFD Ghaaoe for Ageute, Men sad U Women, on " The Contrlbutwr," 64 oolnmne. Religions end Seoaler; 8. 8. Lessons; reports ef Bar. A. B. Ferie,Mood/,etfc: Housekeeper: Stories,etc. A msffnttleeni premium. The marvel of all is the price, onb ' j?l.l(> eyeer. AH olaeeee, old and young, are charmed with it; No wotk like tt for agents ne says,."Never sew a ay I hi t# take like it;" another. No trouble to selL" for Amenta' Terras, paper, reports, etc., sddreee wttb temp. J. H. EARLK. 20 Hewley Street, BOCTOW. TWO MONTHS FRBEI! The New-York Tribune, The Leading American Xeicapapcr. On reoeipt of *2 end this advertisement. TRT VVRRKLT tRIBUNR will be sent, postage paid to any address nnttt December 31, 187uTor for 3I2.50w This now Trues is wor with perfect ooinfor SS^mV^SSIg cured. Sold cbaap hyth Elastic Truss C*. N?.I683 Brttdway, IN.l Y City, ad sent by mall Call or send for Olrenlar and ho?ted. * HOLIDAY GIFS Jfr THE BEST THAT CAN BE HADE. JJ? kitrcctivi, ProiUtk. ?ad Tudutkf. iWOVELTT IS AH FEINTING FBES& 5??ttaS81 iMS-Jzt Mm la alt kMi of PKUTI5? MATttUL, BlHitl F?*rtJ Street, Beetee. Centennial Gaines ** 01 Ameki' an Hibtoet for WSB old and yonug. dO new K9T eiwrniNtAi Cnra?* ?" 0" card, Prto*^ CINTCNNIAL *- oenU. -Ti^ [ A U t Q "Ulo rivil >* th'komt cirrU* Hp^H A IyI * - PniLir Pbixjim, >ta?r. r9 H Alao a cbaitning BlbleXfc. Ml PPfW tory pastime: TUB TKF MM JV H'IfcVtSI PLAGUKS OF EGYPT. 4 HxA ^HP new games on 4<> LUastrat? ed c ird*, 50 cents. Agonte oW&TflKH 4 Wan tod. E. B. T^EAT, lap j Broadway, N. Y. n AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ENTENNIAL - HISTORY"aAS. T J? groat Into root tn tho thrilling bteW^^Hnr country moral this tho fewest aeUmc Tkxjs ?l^abllahad. It oontalni 442 rlno hlitorlcal OBcrartnga and 825 pegea, wtth a fall aooonnt of tho awproaahlag grand Oentoanlal exhibition. Bond for a rail deacrlptlon and extra tonni to Agon to. NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.. Philadelphia. Pa. < CRAND CHANCE FOR AGENTS, wf_ WtfeNo. 19. ANN ELIZA YOUNG'S NEW BOOK. ,n;n m%L&m sal i* bLYCAMY, iitruductlon by JwQo b. Gouga and Mrs. uvweiore. Agents e-l.frm 10 to 20 rTery day: Jiucd rd? arr doitr 11. and YOlf ran J0'1- Tn< b?*t soil lag w>:!cof the year. 2C0 1 L.LUSTRATIOK*'. Wrltofor Illustrated drculaS iTn^Toil'-' IVTIS', SjLMANA CO., llAarroao, Co?*.,'" .?.,? att. Ohio. F. 6c F. Hire 6r Co.,fr??r?, AnMiMaaA Bo*trm, aoy.- "Tour Sea Foam ' glvea perfect aatiafactlon. " It < excellent. I vffflYtsW Ccmrlle 6c .llwmford, (fro. I mFTYai err I, Protidr*e*, Hal., "ay ; ''Your I MjAarl Sea Foam Is wider nl. Onr aa'ai I (TCSBl I Are Immense Everybody praise* a llwmFl 1 > it." " It Al .oi Bread Richer, I A ' <Fbtar, Whiter. Purer, Sweeter, IIN^HP^/1 &nd More^ Wholesome than any Ustk.lM 0 The "created thing to aeB yon LTHkAB^i oversaw, bend at once for Circular H>t TTHi I^tQ (,KO F. GANTZ & CO., I ^6 liuaor Wt.. New Yarh. I 'V . Jfir HALE'S HONIY op HOREHOUND and 1AR rob thb cube op Coughs, Colds, Influenza, Hoabsbness, difficult breathing, and all Affections of the Throat, Bronchi al Tubes, and Lungs, leading to consumption. This infallible remedy is composed of the Honey of the plant Horehound, in chemical on ion with Ta^-Balm, extracted from the Life Principle of the forest tree Abies Balsa mu. or Balm of Gilead. The Honey of Horehoond soothes and scatters all infta^as and inflammations, and the T*r>Balm cleanses and heals tt', airoet and air-passages leading to the longs. f ra additional ingredient* keep the orga icool, motet, and in healthful action. Let no prejudice keep you from trytg this great medicine of a famous doctor who has saved thousands of lives \y * 1 in h*i large private practice. N. B.?The Tar Balm bas no bad tabtis or smelL fbicss, 60 emirs a*? per bottlb. Great earing to h. ^ largo siza Sold by all DrnggisU, * Pike's Tooth ae. ^ Dropf*' _cnre in 1 minute. SYS !J Kt. |?? * TITIIFN B'>'I1INC TO A I-VLIil IM UN, ' ' VV plrn.-f >a? (but yew ?aw ibr mlvei ti?r 1 M?at. In. thf?. paper.