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Poeket Calendar for 1S7C. mm iii? j jtt -- ?! ? - -^| | J?lj -j - - ?| 9 1011121314 15 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18;19 20 21 22 16 17 18 19 20X122 28 24 25 96 27 28 29 23 24 25 26 27 28 29, ., 30 31 ... -| . 30 31 L F?k ... -.I l1 2 3 4 5 Aug. ... _ 1 Xj 3 4 S> 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ^ 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1314 15 16 17 18,19 1314 15 16 17 18 19 20X1 22 23 24 25 X6 20 21 22 X3 24 25 26, X71 38 29 ? ...L. ? 27 28 29 30 31 ?.... I IlX. .-CU ll ?; 3 4j Sept J?. 1 2 5 6 71 8 9 10 11 r 3456789 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 19 X) Xi;X2 23 24 25 17 IS 19 20 21 22 23 , 26 27 28 29 30 31 ... \A. 24 25 26 27 28,29 30 April U~? l Oct i| x s 4 ?| 6 r, ^ 2| S| 4 8 6 7 8 8 9 10 11 12 13 14! 9*10 11 12,1314 15 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 1617 18 19 20 21 !22 22 23 24;25 26 27 28 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 _ 29 30 31!... ... ! . (39-.I~L. L..J... i Sot. 11! 21 3 4 IT-. I1 X 3 4 61 6 5 6 7 8 9 1011 7 8 9,lo!ll 12)13 12 13 14 151617 18! 14 15 16'l7 18 19 20 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 21 22,23,34.25 26X7 _ 26 27 28 2930 _ 28 wapsC......! Dec. L... 1 X Jut .J~L|.^ 1 2, 3 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 7 8l 61 7 8 9 10 10 11 1213 14 15 16 11 1X 13 14,15 16 17 17,18,19 20 21 22 23 1819X0 21 22 23 24 24 25 26.27 28 29.30 25 16 27 28iX9 301... 1 31 J J ,.1 r\KH, ttAKU?A AMJ HUL'SLllULll. Hare the Scraps. Every good housewife should utilize to the best advantage the scraps left over from each meaL Every bone (not left on a plate) should be stewed down for gravy, or stock for soup. With a slight coyering of meat they may be devilled. Cold beef may be rewarmed or corned, minced, and served with poached eggs, scalloped with bread crumbs, etc., or served in cold slices, steeped in a mixture of vinegar and mustard, and garnished with slices of hard egg or beetroot. It may also be made into croquettes, olives, or cakes. Cold mutton may be rewarmed as hash or curry. Cold lamb is best eaten as it remains with lettuce. Cold veal is best minced; it also curries well; scalloped is excellent, or it makes good blanquettes. Cold pork can be curried. Cold salt beef makes excellent bubble anil squeak, or curry, or cold slices. Cold rabbit can be fricasseed or curried. Cold fowls may be fricasseed, minced, curried, or put into a mayonaise. Cold tnrkey?The white meat may be miaoed;-and legs broiled and laid in it; or it makes capital fricassee. The secret of economical housekeeping is in knowing-how best to utilize the scraps. ? Fori J#zers for Cabbage. S. W. asks: "May I justly conclude from your article that guano on good land will insure a luxuriant crop of cabbage for any unbroken series of years withe nt any other manuring ? Is there any advantage in hill-planting in the field over plants set out from the bed ?" "L> 1.. C! V 1 : I i. j.vcpijr.?ouuu a uuuviumuu wuuiu uut be warranted by anything in the article referred to. Ail cabbage-growers know that this crop is very subject to a disease known as "club root " (which is caused by h small insect), when it is grown a seoftifd time upon the same ground. This is sometimes, but not always, prevented by a liberal application of lime. Then cabbages contain a large portion of sulphur, so that some fertiliser containing sulphur would be needed. Guano is a very good fertilizer for cabbage, and upon good ground 1,000 pounds of it per acre would doubtless give a handsome crop. But for the reason mentioned it might be risky to hazard a second crop without another intervening. We have no doubt that by proper fertilizing corn might be profitably grown year after year, -or wheat, oats, barley, or beans; but cabbage, tarnips, and other plants of the same botanical family, are affected to so great an , extent with this disease that they'would probably fail. We would rather plant out cabbage from a bed than sow them in the field in hills.?New York Times. Shutting In Been in Winter. M bees wintered upon their summer sUiftls tar# confined in their hives by slides of perforated tin or zinc, or by wire cloth, it does very well at first, co long as the weather is cool; but aft<-r a month or two they want to take a flight . to discbarge their faeces, and if the wc^tief be very mild, and the ground frefe of snow, they should be allowed to oome out; but as spring approaches the bees, when not safe to allow them to come etU, will gather at the entrance in a mass, shut off a free circulation of air, beoome chilled and die there by the handful; and every day these dead" bees must be removed, and at iast, in some cases, almost the entire family of a hive may thus perish. If the bees are not thus shut in, they will leave their hives often when there is snow on the ground and will drop down and be lost in this manner; or they may come out when there is no snow and become chilled by windn nn/1 A A n ? n A i 4A wiu niuuo nuu uc uuttuie WJ rcfciuii WJ their hiyea. What we need is a method of arranging the passageways so that no tight shall be admitted, while the bees shall have all the air that is necessary, and not be confined, and their owner be able to admit light withont any trouble arkL allow them to take a flight whenever it shall be proper to do so. Wealing Lambs. A letter was read before the American farmers' elub as follows: An article I read on '' weaning lambs," the other day was very appropriate, but I think "might be extended. I had a friend who used to make a specialty of bagging lambs after they had been weaned. He had some fine meadows which he sowed early, and thus had a good spring of young grass, into which he turned the lambs with a few old sheep, and taught them fcx eat salt from board troughs, V shaped first. W-en the early frosts came he would begin to feed corn in the ear, usually the "nubbins." The lambs easily masticate only round corn, and it compels a more thorough mastication if they are compelled to pick it from the cob. In his winter managing he usually allowed about one hundred in a flock, with free access to plenty of straw. If the lambs were well handled, as they were in his yards, they were iifa oonuition for the butchers in February, and could be found in the markets as spring lambs, as in truth they were. His theory was that if a lamb was well kept from weaning till February, more money could be cleaved from them than in any other time of their lives. His practice proved the truth of his theory. One Moment with her Boy. * * i saw her take a golden ringlet and twine it over her fingers, j>ress it to h^r cheek. It touched her lips. Tears dropped upon that golden treasure; no words were spoken. She wrapped it carefully, laid it away in its little casket. Her eyee were brighter, her step firmer, her speech more cheery, as she took up again the duties and burdens of life. It was her boy's. He went home years, weary years, since. She, his mother, is nearer to-day than ever before. Absence has strengthened mother^love, and with joy she liasteth onwaid to* that day. SUMMARY OF NEWS. Ioterrstli.f Items from Home and Abroad The report of the treasurer of the Boston base ball club shows that the total income of the club for the past year to be $37,767.06, and the total expenses $34,509 99, leaving a balance of $3,257.07 The Canadian lumber market is dull, with plenty of stock on hand ; labor is scarce and wages poor The Mechanic*' savings bank of Boston has reduoed the rate of interest to five per cent Thomasse.n, the passenger on the Mosel owning the dynamite whioh exploded at Bremerhaven, has oonfessed his intention of Wowing up the steamer. The box was an infernal machine worked by clockwork. His idea was to set the clockwork in motion and leave the Bhip at Southampton, a few hours after which she wouid be destroyed. He had heavy insurance, f.nd hoped to realize largely. Since the failure of the plot ho has committed suicide by shooting Tennessee cannot pay the interest on her debt this January A deficiency of $30,000 has been discovered in the accounts of the late Daniel Blaisdell, former treasurer of Dartmouth College. His family has tendered his entire estate in reparation. The man Thomaasen?or Thompson, as the unguuu uuue UUD W nuv vvuvx the death of bo many at Bremerhaveu, died from the injuries he inflicted on himself. Before hie death he confessed in fall the details of his terrible crime to destroy the vessel. The infernal machine had been arranged to ran eight days. He was a native of this country, and had the explosive material shipped him from here As a Mr. Glass, with bis wife and child, were boarding a schooner in mid-river from a rowboat, after dark, at Sarnia, Canada, the child fell from its mother's arms into the river. The mother tried to save it and both were drowned. Daring the excitement the boat was capsized and Mr. Glass only saved himself by clinging to tbo chains of the sohooner A terrible explosion occurred in a coal mine at Framieres, near Mons, Belgium. A full force of men were at work at the time, and the loss of life is appalling. It is reported that 110 miners were killed. The accident was caused by fire-damp. On demand of the British government the Egyptian mei^-of-war will be recalled from the territory of Zanzibar, and the expedition to Abyssinia will confine itself to exacting satisfaction, after which the troops are to return to Egypt Capt. J. W. Hall, marine reporter, places the number of disasters on the lakes during the prosent season at 1,056, a decrease from last year of 131. The total amount j of property lost, including hulls and cargoes, is estimated at $3,791,300, which oxoeeds that of last year by $1,047,000. ....Charges were brought against Auditor Thayer by the New York State canal commission, for buying $260,000 of canal certificates at a discount.... A iwency-ae ven-oa nce nugget, 01 gotu was found by & Black Hills gold miner The three negro murderers, Weston, Ellis, and Thompson, were executed in New York. The crime they oommitted was of so brutal a character and the wretches proved so utterly devoid of any human feelings, that little or no sympathy was felt for them. It will be rememberei that they followed a peddler named Abram Weisburg into Lydig's woods, in Westchester county, and beat his brains out with stones, in order to rob him of $14. On their arrest each one informed against the other,and they wen.) promptly brought to trial and convicted. They seemed to have no friends. Tho number of killed and wonnded by the Bremerhaven disaster is now stated at two hundred Ihe Tnman steamship company are to start a* line betweeft Philadelphia and Liverpool Thomas Burt, of Carson City, Cal., was hanged by a vigilance committee at that place. He bad been connected with crimes of arson and robbery, bat had escaped the law cn vcoount of tbe absence of the witnesses .^The Hurst and Watkin committee of the Erie bondholders in England have proposed a scheme to be carried oat under foreclosure by a committee of whioh Gov. Tilden is to be invited to take the chairmanahip The unemployed laborers of Montreal, to the number of three thousand, gathered about XV- -;j? V . *i J -a ID? city QUI BUU UMUftUUDU nui& *uu uiowi. An ale and also a bread wagon was sacked by the mob, and other disturbances arose. Trouble is apprehended During the election in Peru a fight took place in the town of Huants, between the parties of rival candidates, diring which over twenty were killed and many wounded. The police were not allowed to interfere' lest the government might bo accused of trying to intimidate the voters The strike of the coal miners at the Sydr.ey coal mines in Nova Scotia is over, and the men have returned to work at the reduced wages The Missiseippi steamer W. S. Pike was burned at her dock in New Orleans, and two passengers and several of the ere* rnre supposed to have perished. Loes on vessel and cargo amounts to 3200,000 rreaidert Grant, with members of the Cabinet and congressmen, many of whom had their wives, in all making a party of four hundred, were in Philadelphia viewing the Centennial preparations, at the invitation of Philadelphia merchants, who subscribed 310,000 for the purpose. During services a fire broke ont in the Congregational church in Norway, Me., and entirely consumed it Masked robbers forced their way into a United States express car in Missouri, bound the half-asleep messenger and locked him in a package trunk, and then rifled the safe of 312,000 A party of Mexicans crossed the river betow San Felipe and stole eight hundred head of cattle and fifty horses from Strickland and Slaughter James Carr, eighteen years old, was found frozen to death on the Merrimack river at Lowell. A woodohopper named Moilen was fonnd frozen to death near Tremont, N. H.... The Cul?ans captured a train of seventeen oars from the Spanish forces Forty hunters from the United States were arrested in Canada for shooting ont of season. They ? i tk.i. rr?.? "ciw uuvu AiiLi ^auicuuiiuovauou.t.tinu brothers named Hiokey quarreled in Toronto, and one stabbed the other in the cheat, inflicting a wound which will result fatally. Speaker Kerr has appointed the standiug Sommitt ees of the House. Morrison, of Illinois, is chairman of the Ways and Means; Randall, of Pa., chairman of Appropriations ; Cox, of N. Y., chairman on Banking and Currency An earthquake in Porto Rioo on the night of Dec. 8 and 9 created great alarm, and the town of Arecibo was almost entirely destroyed. Two churches and only six houses remain, and they are so badly damaged they may fall at any moment The Pacific jockey club of San Francisco have definitely named the twenty-second of February as the day of the gretU $30,000 race. All the owners of the original nine horses entered are satisfied, and everything is harmonious The Bice grammar school in Boston, Mass., was accidentally set on fire by the janitor while thawing a steampipe with a red-hot poker. The flames ran up the ventilators and destroyed tke upper story ar;d a part of the second. Loss, $25,000; noinstaitace Captain-General Yalmaseda, : the commander-in-chief of the Spanish forces ( in Cuba, has resigned, and has been succeeded by General Car bo The oourt house at Camden, Ark., the finest in the 8tate, was j destroyed by fire, with all its contents I There have been forgeries in the office of the ] treasurer of Kaneas to the amount of $30,000, I anil tbat official has boon removed by the i governor. ] The governor of Sagua, Cuba, has offered a reward of ten gold doubloons for each insurgent brought in, dead or alive Yale Col- ' lege has withdrawn from the American rowing association Bands of armed Indians are on the Texas frontier, and trouble is apprehended The archbishop of Philadelphia has excommunicated the mefhbers of the Molly Maguire association from the Catholio church Henry Wainwright, convicted of the murder of Harriet Lane in Whitechapel Road, London, was hanged at Newgate prison. General Jovellsr, the Spanish ninister of war, has been appointed captain-general of Cuba. Goneral Ceballos will suoceed Jovellar as minister of war The steamer Louisiana, of the General Transatlantic Company, came in coUisieu with the steamer Gironde on the river Gironde, France, and sur k, sixteen lives being lost Mount Vesuvius is in an erupive condition, and Professor Palmieri predicts a long period of eruption A Portugese gunboat has been ordered to the island of St. Thomas, in the Gulf of Guinea, on account of an insurrection of the nogroen. ON THE NEWFOUNDLAND COAST. A Wreck and a Terrible Situation?Heroiaa In Newfoundland. A little vessel, the Wat-erwitch, with twenty-four people on board, four of whom were women, struck a rock while endeavoring to double Cape St. Francis at the entrance of Conception bay. The water was deep and the vessel rebounded, but was presently hurled a second time against the rocks a few yards distant from the plaoe where she first struck. Here nine of the men leaped for their lives and managed to cling to the surface of a sharply slanting rock, over which at times the waves were breaking. The Waterwitch reeled nnder the tremendous blow, staggered back a few yards and sank, carrying down with her eight men and four women. The sitnation of the poor fellows who were now clinging to tho rocks was terrible in the extreme. They were holding on to a slippery sloping rock, only a few feet above the surface of the water, and barely large enough to give them room to crouch on its, surface. The spray dashed over them with every wave, and at intervals a heavy sea broke over the rock, as huddled together, they clutched it for dear life. They dared not move, for the sea was all around the rock, and a few feet off they could see a dark, perpendicular cliff shooting np six hundred feet into the itfidnight sky. The huge waves were thnndering at their feet, and the snow storm roaring overhead. A few feet from them they knew that some of their nearest connections lay dead at the bottom of the sea. The position of the captain and his two companions was not quite so perilous, as they found it possible thongh at great risk to scramble np from the shelf on which they first found a footing. They heard the voices of their companions on the other side of the gulch, and cheered them by telling them that they were abont to make an attempt to scale the rocks and bring them sncoor. The nearest house was at the distance of a mile, and the men had no knowledge of the locality; but with desperate efforts they clan bered up the steep rocks, forcing their way painfully through dense brushwood where there was no pajh. At length, almcst exhausted, they got to the summit. It was pitchy dark, and they had no notion of the proper direction, but hearing a dog bark they followed the sound, and at length reached a fisherman's cottage on the outskiits of Pouch Cove village and awoke the inmates. It was now 1:30 o'clock. They told their sad tale, and described as well as they could the place where their companions were clinging to the rocks. Soon more than half the village was astir; ropes and other appliances were got ready, and a rescue party mustered to save if possible the shipwrecked men. The Rev. R. M. Johnson, minister of the Church of England in Pouch Cove, accompanied the party, bringing with him a " hurricane lantern," which he fortunately possessed, and which was invaluable in such circumstances, and also some cordials to revive the sufferers. The task that lav before the rescuers was a diflicult and Perilous one. They had to force their way through a pathless wood in pitchy darkness, and they could not conjecture where the sufferers were to be found. With wonderful instinct, however, they managed to reach the top of the clin at the bottom of which the shipwrecked men were desperately clinging to the rock. Their cries for help faintly reached the ears of their deliverers out of the dark and awful abyss, 600 feet in depth. " Help I help ! for God's sake a rope! we can't hold on i much longer." What was to be done ? The sufferers were not visible, the exact spot where they were could not be made out in the darkness. The wall of rock was an almost perpendicular height of | 600 feet. There was but one way of saving them. Some one must go down into the dark chasm, at the peril of his ; life, swinging at the end ef a rope over the edge of the precipice and thus try to reach the perishing men, get a rope round each in turn, by which he may be dragged up the fearful height. It was a desperate expedient,. Dut it was the only one, as the wretched men must * soon perish by cold and exhaustion, or be swept back into the sea. The rescuers look for a few minutes into one another's faces. Who will go If A stout- < hearted fisherman?a true hero?Alfred Moores by name?volunteers for the ! perilous undertaking. Fastening a j stout rope round him, he is launched j into the black abyss. Three times, how- I ever, he had to be drawn up again, being unable to get near the sufferers; but on descending the fourth time he finds a slight fissure in the face of the cliff, down which he is lowered till he oomes within thirty feet of the rock to which the men are clinging. He has a light hand-rope which, alter several menectual casts, is at length caught by one of the men. By means of it a stronger rcpe is passed down; one of the men fastens , it round his body, and the word is given to haul up. i Several men, supported and guided by the stout rope, at the end of which Moores is swinging, have now crept down the face of the cliff, and stationed < themselves at intervals, so as to trans- i mit orders and aid in passing up the j rescued men. It is a moment of awful j suspense when the first of the rescued , men is swung off the rock and dragged i upwards. At length he reaches the top; < a little brandy is poured into his lips, ; and his first words are : " That was an awful long haul, but, thank God, I am ] saved." One by one eight are thus drawn up, and without accident reach the summit safely. But the ninth is not yet rescued. He is a mere youth, and ; without shoes or hat, drenched and < shivering, he is clinging to a shelving < rock at a short distance from his com- i panions in distress. Doubts are enter- ! tained as to whether it is possible to ( save him. But the gallant Moores ( makes another cast with his rope, and the youth has just enough strength left bo pass it around his body and swing himself clear of the overhanging cliff. He is drawn up more dead than alive, but the brave rescuers have now the happiness of knowing that by their courage and skill all are saved. The men had been on the rock ten hours and a half, and what long agonizing hours they must have been to them, expecting each wave to hurl them into the deep! In the village to which they were borne they met with the utmost kindness and attention, and all have recovered. A more wonderful deliverence has seldom been witnessed, and the heroic men who accomplished it merit the highest praise. The gray dawn was Appearing as the last sufferer was drawn up, so that the work was done during the darkness of a stormy night, and when the cold was intense. Who will doubt after this that there are brave and generous hearts among the stout fishermen of Newf oundland ? FORTY-FOURTH CONGRESS. The Bulneis ol General Interest Transacted. SENATE. Mr. Morton, or Indiana, suDmitiea me 101lowmg concurrent resolution relative to State rights, as follows: Resolved, that the doctrine that a State has the right to secedo from the Union is inconsistent with the idea of nationality; is in oonflict with the spirit and structure of the constitution, and should be regarded as having been forever extinguished by the suppression of the rebellion. Mr. Morton asked to have the resolution printed and laid on the table, and it was so ordered. He gave notice that at some future time he would call it up for action. An effort was made in the Senate to pass a resolution calling on the secretary of the treasury for all telegrams, orders and instructions relating to the prosecution of the whisky thieves, but by roason of opposition after a lengthy discussion it was withdrawn. HOUSE. A resolution to render the currency act of January 14,1875, effective by placing in the haud of the secretary of the treasury whatever powers may be neoessary to that end, was referred to the committee on finance and banking. A bill was presented- by Mr. Starkweather, of Conn., to ameDd the law relating to postage on mailable matter of the third class, providing that from the let of January, 1876, the postage on pamphlets, transient newspapers, periodicals and magazines, handbills, posters, unsealed circulars, prospectuses, proof sheets, and corrected proof sheets, shall be one cent for every two ounoes or fraction thereof, and that the postage on all other mailable matter shall remain as now provided by law. He moved to suspend the rales and pass the bill. The bill was referred to the postal Committee. Mr. Holman, of Indiana, presented a resolution against the government granting any more subsidies to public or private enterprises. On its adoption Mr. JHoar, of Massachusetts, inquired whether the resolution was intended to cut off an appropriation for the Centennial. Mr. Holman replied that it was not *e intended, and he did not suppose it would have the effect, through he himself was wilhng that it should be so oonstrued. By a vote of 223 to 33 the resolution was adopted. Mr. Springer, of Illinois, offered the following resolution, and moved the previous question on its adoption: Resolved, That in the opinion of this House the precedent established by Washington and other Presidents of the United States in retiring from the Presidential office efter their second terms has become by universal concurrence a part of our republican system of government, and that aity departure from the time-honored custom would be unwise, unpatriotic and fraught with peril to our free institutions. Hie previous question was seconded and the resolution was adoptedyeas, 232; nays, 18. Their Methods. in nmnmnff ilaiinnniinri f\t f V>O ItlAfTind Ail OUi UOilig UVUVA A|/VtVU v/4 vuv adopted by French singing masters was recently given by a writer in the Paris Figaro: Take M. Delsarte, for example, who lives au sixieme at Man trus ter. When a young man goes to this professor, something like the following scene takes place : ? 44 Have yon any courage ?" 44 Yes." 441 warn you my method is severe. But we will try it. Run down my six flights of stairs as quiokly as possible, and then run up again, crying out 4 Bonifaccio ' in varying tenes. Do that for eight days, an hour and a half each day. Then we shall see about beginning lessons." The famous M. Wartel is less severe, though equally original He asks a candidate to vocalize with closed mouth, and if a protest be ehterod against the possibility of such a thing, exclaims : 44 So much the worse. You must do it, if I am to be your professor." But a well known tenor employs a stranger method still. A young lady goes to him, for example, and is met by an order to stretch herself at full length upon a couch. She remonstrates, but finally obeys, and then the master piles upon her a heap of books, surmounting the whole with a glass filled with water. 44 Now sing," be commands. 44 Sing, sir !" exclaims the victim. 44 Yes, my child; in singing you must respire as little as possible. When you sing thus, so as not to spill the water, I will undertake your training?not before." ^ To make a fashionable muif, cover an ordinary size tumbler with cloth or velvet, and put fur or satin bows on the edges. Put one thumb in, and let your arm hang as if broken. Clothes last longer when washed with Dobbins' Electric Soap (made by Ciagin & Co., Phila.), because no rubbing is needed. Clothes are worn out more on the washboard than on the person. * * : Burnett's Ooooajnk. See Advertisement. From the World's Dispensary printing office and bindery, Buffalo, N. Y., wo have received "The People's Common Senee Medical Adviser, in plain English; or, Medicine Simpli ed," by R. V. Pierce, M. D., counselorIn-chief of the board of physicians and surgeons at the World's Dispensary. Whoever helps humanity in its struggle with its inherent weakness and* diseases, to bear or cnre, is its benefactor. Ignorance js not only of itself a cause of disease and mortality, but it is the enemy of every effort to cure or mitigate. Nothing will so speedily remove tbis cause as knowledge (an elementary one at least) of the disease* to which we are heir, as well as those superindooed by our own imprudence. Dr. Pierce has rendered, in our judgment, a benefactor's service, both to the afflicted and to the profession, in his diagnosis of the diseases treated ef, and in the presentation of the philosophic principles involved in their cause and removal. He is sparing of remedies, and usually prescribes such as are safe in unskilled hands. As a book merely of abstract knowledge, it is exceedingly readable and interesting, especially the following subjects: Cerebral physiology, human temperaments, pseudo-hygiene, the nursing of the sick, sleep, food, ventilation, etc. In one chapter on another subject, so delicate in its nature that it is shut up beyond the domain of warning to ail but physicians, so accursed in its results in modern society, he is most explicit, and alike true to God, to virtue, to Hfe, and to society, shows the truth as presented in the teachings ef Scripture?that life begins with conception ?with great force, to which is added faithfnl warnings.?PhiladetpJiia Presbyterian. Price of the Medical Adviser $1.50, sent poat-prid. Address the author at Buffalo, N Y. ?Com. A Friend in Need.?Dr. Wislar't Balsam of Wild Cherry is a friend indeed. Who has not found it such in curing diseases of the lungs and throat, conghs, colds, ind pulmonary affections ? ihe siok are iseured that the high standard of excellence en which its popularity is based, will always jo maintained by tho proprietors. 50 cents ind $1 a bottle, large bottles much the eheaper .?Com. Burnett's Cocoaine. See Advertisement. Verjr Badly Hurt. A young man who had entered the National Theatre, in Washington, in an intoxicated condition, seated himself in the dress circle and soon fell into a profound slumber. When all the spectators had retired he slept on, none having thought of waking him. When he did ^ open his eyes he found himself in dark- in nebs and alone, lie attempted to make u, his way to the door, but in nis bewildered state fell over the dress circle railing to the parquet below, a distance of about eighteen feet. His head struck one of ( the chairs, which laid open the flesh and inflicted a severe wound on the right side of his face just below the temple. He was also badly injured about the back and side. Three chairs were broken by his rapid descent. A carriage was procured and he was taken to his home. c The base ball mania is prevalent in Southern Kentucky, and the Nelson g Record says " the girls at school join to make up the nines, d< o Pimples on the face, rongh skin, c chapped hands, saltrhenm and all cutaneous _ affections cured, the skin made soft and a smooth, by the use of Junipeb Tab Soap. That 1 made by Caswell, Hazard & Co.. New York, is % the only kind that can be relied on, as there ~~ are?mauy imitations, made from oommon tar, / which are wortWees.?Com. I HCHENCK'S [>IANDR IKE PILLS J Will be found to possess those qualities neoees ary to M the total eradication of all bilious attacks, prompt to ^ start the secretions of the User, and aire a healthy tone to the entire system. Indeed, it is no ordinary discovery ; in medical soienoe to have Invented a remedy for these * stubborn complaints, which develop all the results pro- 1 dnoed by a heretofore free nae ol calomel, a mineral 4 ;ustly dreaded by mankind, and acknowledged to be destructive In the extreme to the human system. That j the properties of oertain vegetables comprise all the J virtue* of calomel without its injurious tendencies, is jj aow an admitted fact, rendered indisputable by scien- d tiflc researches; and those who nae the Mandrake Pills I vrlll be fully satisfied that the beat medicines are those [ provided by nature in the oommon herbs and roots of the fields. These pills open the bowels and oorreot all bilkras de- tc ranged ants without salivation or any of the Injurious effects of calomel or other poisons. The secretion of 1 bile la promoted by these pills, aa will be seen by the altered color of the stools, and disappearing of the ? allow oomplexion and cleansing of the tongue. 0 Ample directions for use scoompany each box of pilk. ~ Prepared only by J. H. 80HENCK A SON, at their I principal offioe, corner Sixth and Arch Streets, Phils- g dllphla, and for sale by all druggists and dealers. A Price 25 cents per box. fL The Markets, 1 NCW YORK, 1 Beef Cattle-Pr'me to Extra Bullocks 07 <3 Common to Ck i ?i lexacs 07 @ 09 Milch Govts 65 00 @80 00 Hogs?Live 07 07X Dre8?eJ. 03 @ (9% Sheep 03 @ 06 Lambs 08 @ 03 Cotton?Middlings 13*@ 13* Flour?Extra Western... 6 63 @ 8 60 _ State Extra ..... 6 66 @ 6 90 _ Wheat?Bed Western 1 20 @ 1 SO 1 No. 2 Spring 1 24 @ 1 26 I Bye?State 93 @ 96 " Barley?State . 55 @ 90 Barley Malt 1 16 @ 1 35 g< Oats?Mi'.ed Western 46 @ 60 ? Oorn?Mixed Western 70 @ 75 eu Llay.percwt. 60 @ 1 14 _ Straw, per cwt 00 @ 1 26 ( Hops. vj75'8? 12 @15 olds?_ 04 @_ 07 V for*?.nees w igxi jo ? I*rd 13 @ 13 tfc Fiah?Mackerel, No 1, new... ....26 00 @28 00 fy No 2, new 16 00 @16 (0 gj Dry Cod, per cwt .... 6 00 @6 00 Herring, eca'.cd, per box 28 @ 82 Petroleum?Crude 07)?@07X Refined?18 _ Wool?California Fleece..,,.. 26 @ 83 1 Texas ? 28 @ 83 J Austra.lan ' 46 @ 48 Butter?State 24 @ 34 T Western Dairy..,.,,.. 2J @ 82 Weat#tn Yellow.. 18 @ 22 Western Ordinary 14 @ 16Jf Penn>>lvania Fine 30 @ 83 I Cheeae?State Factoiy 07^@ 13H ' State Skimmed...... 03 @ 06 ij Western Wtf@ 12 J Egga-State 30 @ 80* ,1 ALBAlTt. a Wheat , 1 87*@ 1 37* f. Rye?8tate 90 @ 81 ! Corn-Mixed 78 @ T3 * Barley?8tate 1 (0 @ 1 00 *~ Oats?State 40 @ 68 4 BUITALO. * Flour 6 ro @ 8 to Wheat?No. 1 Spring 1 38 @ 1 86 I Corn-Mixed 62 @ 62* ^ Oats 38 @ 31 ? Rye 82 @ 82 v Barley 80 @ 1 05 . * BALTIMORE. . R Cotton?Low Middlings 12*@ 12* Flour?Extra 8 76 @ 8 76 Wheat?Red Western 1 85 @ 1 S5 Rye 80 @ 3.7 i Corn?Yellow 70 @ 70 Oats?Mixed 44 @ 46 Petroleum,,.,, 06J(@ 06ft PHILADELPHIA. Flour?Pennsylvania Extra. 6 00 @ 6 50 Whea??Red Western. 100 @120 Rye 80 @ CO ' Corn?Yellow 72 @ 72 ? Mixed 70 @ 71 \ Oats?Mixed 43 @ 45 Petroleum?Crude 10*@10* Refined?12* C ^ From Mat. s to California mil- * cheapest and never wear through n 5Y?j 91^1 At Uw to6w J; Also try Wire Qnlited Soles. ^ To convince you of the great ?' popularity of thcT _ BilMflil _ CABLE HCKEW WIRE VaflafTSRH yon need only see the base Imita- |^^n|f@1V tions and vain attempts to get op j something similar. VAIjftg Also try Wire Quilted 8olea. y O/k FANCY CARDS, T StjlN, with Name, 10c. P ?i\3 Addrees J. B. Hustkp, Naaaan, Renaa. Co., N. Y. 11 1 (K) FARMS FOR SALB a DsL, Md., Va., and ri Pa. Send for catalogue. J- POLK. Wilmington. DeL V A LIVE PAPER! Specimen free! ! 3 nnmbeni /) *? ?-. .t.M. 1 1 t mmIiU Viiiior. Sindatky. O. H JUE. XUI avu UMiuy i ? I A,?.WW ? ^ AQTITWA *nd Catarrh Sure Core. Trial free. flPllIiIIA AddressW.K.BeUls.Indlanapolls,Ind. Oooks Exchanged. Famish *11 d?w. Want old. Writ#, j 13 Name tbi* pi.par. American Book Kxohangs, N. V. f $? -} a day at borne. Agents wanted. Ontflt and Urn* * ' ? free. Add row TRUE A PP.. Augusta, Main*. WANTED AGENTS. SamplM and Outit fru 2l,.tUr than 8fUL A. COULTER A CO.. Chicago C? ift eon a day at bono, Sampios worth (11 seat 90 10 free. 3TIN8ONA0O.. Portland. Me. Send for Cltfoino Catalog ^ 3) 1U H14) L vJ. H. BPTroao's Sows, Boston, Mm Z ELLS' ENCYCLOPEDIA, Nnr.Rrritro Edition. 160,000 Articles. 8000 Engravings and 18 splendid maps. Agents Wanted. Rakjb, Da via k Co., PAlk. MQCO A Month.?Agents Wanted. 24 best sellIDuOU '-ig articles In the world. One sample tree. ^ Address J* HRONMQNs Detroit, Mich. <&?>?? PER WEEK to Male and Female Agents. dpAJtJ Article New. -Needed In erery boose. Address WRIGHT A LAOBY, T85 Broadway. N. Y. DO/1 Dally to Agents. 80 new articles and tbe best ' ?i\' Family Paoerln America, wttbtwo fto Gbro- mos, free. AMEK. M'Ffl OQ..292 Broadway, ti. Y SINCLAIR'S COMMON SENSE CHAIRS. Cj Uneqoaled for Style, Durability,Oomfort and Finish. Send for Illustrated Price List to F. A. SINCLAIR, Mottvillc, Onondago Connty. New York. A Miniature Ofl Painting, your own Likeness 00 Can- 1 raae, Free, with The Home Weekly. Specl- J mens two weeks, 10 eta. One Agent made 929.1>0 In a I Day- Addrasa L. T LUTHErTmW Village.Krie Co.,Pa. fl * ? ^ Drcakonanir, Chromns, 8teel Engravings .Photo- t,l graphs. Scrap-book Pictures, Mottoes, sto. Elegant in samples and catalogue sent poet-paid for 10 eta. Agents C Wanted. J. L. Patten A Oo.. 1G2 William St.. New York. ? i ft I HI in All Want It?thonsands of lives and A flFNTV Ukonewt property eavsd bwtt-fortunes A ItPjlII 1 u nude with it-partlcularsIrwe. C. M. u Lumrorow A Bbo. Jew YorkA Chicago. AflTfW Merpklne Haklt absolutely and 11 If 111 |H speedily cured. Painless; no publiolty. ill I U 111 Bend stamp for Particulars. Dr. Cablwwasm ^ 187^yashln?ton St.Chicago. Ill ftinn A WEEK guaranteed to Male snd^Fe- J M # ouit juesu, in buou fwf %D i i NOTHING to tiy ft Particulars Free. t P. O VlQgHRV A CO., Augusts. Me. aba -A MONTH - Af?nti wuwl ever? U* *1K11 whsre. BntbtH bononbl* and t!r-t j| Xalll class. Particulars seat free. Add rose m OWS/V WORTH A PP.. 8t Louis, Mo. F SECRET CORRESPONDENCE.?No invisible l' Ink; no humbug?a very Simple sag certain methpd. If If yon wish to know how to write letters that no peiwn on earth bat the right one cansowiVy read, send 95 cents to J AS. L. BOWEN, Springfield, Mass. SATE 75c. on Rvery Bottltf; AH ingredients of the HAIR RRSTORATIV ES in popuar oak can be obtained at any Drag Store, and a superior article C S re pared at trifling cost. Get formula. Send 954*. to " . LEARTLKYT 278 Noctoaad Asa, Brooklyn. N. Y. Mind Kcadiafi Pncbanucy. nueiimtlei? Sonl Charming, Mesmerism, and Lovers' Golds, showing how either aez may faaeinate and gain the lore and affection of any person they ohooss instantly. 40U pager. By mall 5Qc. ifnntl do .139 S. 7th St..Phils. ^ rkon't Forget It!"?Singer's Safety Guard is U worth all the Burglar Alarms ever invented. Agents wanted everywhere. Silver-plated sample prepaid on receipt of 25 cts. Address A. U. SINGER, P 438 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Musical Gifts for Christmas ! 11 lusical Gifts for New-Year!! ] Gems of English Song! Gems of English Song! ( Gems of English Song! Bi of the bests songs extant, collected In a handsome a me of 232 [mask sire] pages. With elegant gilt binding, <T00. In cloth, $3.00. _ boards, 9*1.50. alform in style, prioe and binding with tha shore pleadid book, we hare othsr books of" Gams," , German, Scottish and Sacred; atao of beat Irish Melodlee,and the ohoto. . eat Operatic Bongs. \ CHRISTMAS CAROLS! By Howaid. 38 eta. ANTHEM! There Were Shepherd*. By Mn.T.ABP. Tfi ?ts. JERRY CHRISTMAS! Piano piece. By WrLSOK. 60 eta. Rejoice the hearts of tha Old Folks with Centennial Collection for Old Folks' Concerts. 40 eta. By E. Toubjxb. Gladden your Sabbath Schools by introducing Hxlninc River I tlu f ^ . -a. .J C^a%- DiwsU vuc vi wc oitoomiii ui i^u? . ???T Order the above booka of any of the principal mode i telen, or by mall [ineloetnc retail prloe], of LITER DITSON 4c CO., Bee tea. HAS. H. DITSON 4c CO., 711 Bread way. New Yerk. K a a A WEEK.?Areata wanted. Bnaineaa per- ! ryi'l maneot. So soliciting required. For farther Me/ particulate.addreea ^ J. KENNEDY A CO., Richmond, lad. \ tVIVTTU Habit Cared at Heaae. No pub } IDT fill Uolty. Time abort. Terma moderate. II I 11 III 1,000 testimonials, 5th rear of as* '* paralleled anooeas. Describe ease. Addreea Dr. F. K. MARSH, Qalncy, Mich. PRINTERS' ROLLERS iade from the Patent** Excelsior" Coaipooltfen, III recaat, not affected by the weather; prloe, 30 oenta M pound, la need In printing thla paper. J. K. COLE, Art., 9Q Ann St., N. Y. < mm JA Finely Printed Bristol Flatting I ^ (R Caioeaent Doet-oaldfor 26ets. bead I stamp for samples of Glnae < nrdo, > W Marble. Hnowflakes, Scroll, Da. I w Dituk. Etc. * e hare onr 10U styles g?nU Wamtvi. A. H. Futunt k Co., Brockton. Mas*. Every reader of thin paper ehoaId aead 0 cents for a copy or the LITE STOCK OURNAL, and the rreat inducement offerd for eecnrlM oahecribere. The Journal 1 pronounced the BEST of ite claee. Adreee Live Stock Joarnal. Buffalo, N. Y. II.UJ" 1 Cards, for25 Cents. Each eardoontaia* ternt which la not visible until held towards the light, othlnglike them ever before offered la America. Btgindueetents to Agents. Notkltt Peixtixo Co ..Ashland. Mas* HOlMooJS^S rerythln* and firing price of stock* FWT CRFP JOHN HIOKLINO A00.,Bankers Till rnEu. a Broken, "72 Broadway. NewYork. Do Your Own Printing riSSs Outfits from SI up htUUmg* Co., Mamfs, WaMngUm Sq, Boston i|fANTED IMMEDIATELU I Ml Til Morn Young ilen to I^arn TKLE- W gKAPHY. Good situations (ruiranfeed. V Arldre&a, with stamu, SUPKRINTEN- I IV DENT UNION TELEGRAPH COM- | PANT. OBERMN, OHIO. wmsmm The cheapeet and best weds in the market Send two I nt etampe for illustrated catalogue, to eee and coca pare ices. W. H. SPOONJCR, Bostoit, Haas. lETDLTEBStS^M HQ New Boflklo Bill RotoItot VwlwW rat with 100 Cartridgee for ft& FULL NlOTLB PLATA itisfaction guaranteed. nlmttraUd Catalog** l*U PRSTKKff GUN WORKS, Chicago, HL, 8 Dearhomot (MoOormlck Block). P. Q Box 540. tARDS.-50 white or Tinted Bristol, JO eta.; 50 j Snowflake, Barbie, Rep, or Damask. 35 eta.; 50 lass, 40 ota; with yonr name beaattfnlly printed oa tern, and 66 samples of type, agents' pitee-het, ate., mt by return mall on receipt bf prloe. Discount to lube. Beet of work. W. 0. GANNON. 46 Kneel and treat, Boston. Refers to 8. M. PrrTCTgm. A Go. The Beat of All Good Ceupwiy. PTTR T) A NBTTRY NEWS ~~UNEQUALED AS A HOMR PAPER, erms. now, 92.10 per year. After Jan. 1, 1876, 92.50. postage paid. Sold by all Newedealan. Send stamp for Specimen Cop/. BAILEY <fc uONOVAN, Panbary, Cw. IJ III I Bill tain* 24 sheet* of first-class paper, w m * mm* mm 24 first oh? envelope*, engraved ilver-plated penholder, golden pea, penotl. and a ralablo prize. Sample package, with elegant prise, poetaid, for 60 cent*; 9 pact*gee,post-paid, 93.60?a lvcr dollar guaranteed as on* of the nlae prises; 24 Jrrr dollar* and a 96 cold piece in every 900PMkces. Agent*' elrenlar wa ^ SAVE MONEY y sen dine 94.75 for any 94 Msgazlae and THE fEEKLT TRIBUNE (regular price 96). or 96.76 >r the Magazine and THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIUNE (regular price 98). Addrea* THE TRIBUNF* New-York. A HOLIDAY CIFTI .ms- THE BUT THAT OAKII Mill. jM bitraettw, Travails, ud Taadaatiac. n WOYELT? fm XV psn^ma psass SaMS!*&7t?& M^BB4tFed*raiatre*t,?*??Mu F^ONE CENT ^ ay* for a Postal Card, and, on receipt of your addree* ritten thereon, we will tend you a sample oopy of our reat illustrated Literary and Family Journal, " The ticket on the Hearth." a mammoth 16-page aper (size Barpcr's Wttkly). containing splendid oonnned and short stories, sketches, poems, etc., ete. nly 91 a year, with elegant premium porrfoHo, Gems of American Art," executed by Aldim Go., or 5 cent* without premium. On trial three month* for liy 15 cenls Write at ence to F. M. LUPTON A OQ..37 Park Row. New York. A. Great Offer!! iclnding WATKK.y, at lower prices than ver before offered. Monthly installment* uanlng from 12 to 36 SMktki received, formated fer 6 yearn, Seeoad-hawd fa> truments at extremely low prices fer cash. lustra! td C ttmlogue* mailed. Ware rooms* 481 (roadway, New York. HORAC E WATERS dt SONS. This new trass Is warn with perfect comfort WEL*siioB SL^ JJKS eiPrclse or severest strain * v'IVSbL'v W until permanently cured. \ M Sold cheap by the %Jr Elastic Truss Co. No. 683 Broadway* New York City* id sent by mall Call or send for Circular, and be cured I aT"" BEST in Che WorM. L-KZfcaiY It Gives Universal Satisfaction. WONDERFUL Economy. 40 lbs. more Bread to bbL Floor. SAFES MILK, BOGS, dee. rAjrm \A* One year's savings will boy a oow. /WfflCm NO MORE SOUR BREAD. I WKPI I ? Whiter, IJghtor.8we6tor,Richer. W*% SELLS Like Hot Cokes. llreWm^ll t ?T Send at once for Circular to jHUnSMfL .GEO. P. GANTZ dc CO., ^ 255^9 176 Pnnnc St.. NewYork. mm CENTS thenM writ* for Agency fer new book by A Inn Eliza ?Y<mng illinz at the r??* of | .000 ** * Fnl1 ,x*nt * lh* ho,rf* e iy?te-n of Polygamy. Illustrated Circntor?, with complete fonra.'vn free to all. A Jdre?i nearest otflee of DuStlfl. lllman ?l CO.t'lwtr r.l,CU,Cblcaco,lll.,Cin<-i?ilatl. 0. PORTABLE GRINDING BILLS. ? Rent French Barr stiff spindie under-runnera, cock heed u^pcr-nmocra^ir^ani^oc /AgrVl ftbajfiraaiMDatehAn! //BID tts&is /#^H Iffvl Clean*!*, (leering, Shafting, ZJhP^H IkkS Pulliea, Hangers. etc.. all kind* of Mil I Machinery and Miller*' ^*fcT^C^I^^#anpplie*. Send foe Pamphlet. Slraub Mill Coaapaay, Box 1-W. Ci?Haai\il. O. Ml 0R6AN 60. Boston. Mw. 7hse Standard Instruments old by Music Dealers Everywhere Agents Wanted in Every Town. Sold thro a* boat the United Stntea on the INSTALLMENT FLAN t That la, on a System of Monthly Payment*. ar jhaaer* ihonld aak for the Smith Amuioah Oil Ontelcfue and fnll ptrtionlara on application }i D "fcJ"CvV 'C or toliat or bath It baa LJxxXvi^l X-i X O now^naL ^Ooiojna f"oUe kerchief Extract ORANGE ir-SJ oalnc it, and to FLOWER ?? . ,h#tDOMESTIC /^"SSMM% SEWINC gMjpi MACHINES. \v OKZjHr rw .liberal Tenna of XzJy chanfefor Second-Mad 'DOMESTIC PAPERFA3HIOHS. I u ? Beat Pattarna made. Send 5 eta. for dataloftie. | Address D0X3BSTI0 8SWET9 MACHBTC COL Aoxxn Wumo. ~Cft SKW TOUt" laifn?eMacceaa! ! ^OOOjfth^Oeaaiiia i (ready told. Tb? thrilling story of a nobis Hf* to the wild Uod of tho Nfl? mystery, UpMrs Gold, the Lions Lair, and mSliona of sapentluoas balnea Grsphls daicrlpilona, spleodid lliastratlons, Millions want iL Wa C AGENTS WANTEO FOR THE , ENTENNIAL HISTORY or THE U.S. ; The exeat intarast ta the thrilling history of ov aoonuy mas as this the fastast tailing look avar pn bits had, It oootaias 448 Una historical ?ngiaitnw and 98ft pacts, with a fall aoooant of the spproaoMnc trend Centennial axhthtKnn. Seed for a full dsaartoJoa and aztra tarns to Agents. NATIONAL PtJBI JSHiye PP.. Philadelphia. Pa. ___ A Gam worth Reading!?! Diamond worth Skeiog! ?AVE YOUli Bl RESTORE your SIGHT, IflWW iVil I0CE SPECTACLES, By raading ftnr Illisstrated PHYSIOLOGY AND ANATOMY of ths EVESIGHT. Tells how to Rc- J* store Impai.-ad Vision and Overworked Byes; how to en? Wok, Watery, Inflamed, and Near-Syrhted Eyes, and all other Disease# of the Eyes. waste no more mqney by adjusti&o huge glasses on your nose and dtsfi*. uiz:.\'g your face. Pamphlet of 160 pages .Hailed Free. Send your addresstoasalso. Agents Wanted Geitlesten or Ladles. $5 to (10 4 day guaranteed. Fall particulars seat free. Write hnasdJatelr, la DR J. BALL St. CO., (P.O. Box 96?) Bo. 91 Liberty Stwst, Jaw Tork City. 1.1. 9STsZ3FOBD* These GUMS re- ?i Persona ashf" more all morbid should adapt ths or bad matter ? Ud dose to.thehr Infrom the system, ?? V dividual eonsU supplying In h y tition, from a their plaea a ^ teaspoonfrsll -to healthy flow ofa|Mi Ublespoonfhll bUai Ikvtgorat- LB accordlngto oftug tha stomaeh, ' ^ fteC For all a?> eon sing fbod to M factions of Ue "fti Mm, irregnWFYD(G, TUB a Ian larItiea nf If ?i BLOOD, tiring aeh and Bowole, tone and health r dlseasea depee*. to the whole ma- U X ent on orcanaed ehinery, f*J ' j i-ruli jmangii * lag the estse of J iment as Btnona tha dlaeaaes. ef- ~ M attacks, CoatiroMing a radical K, nesa. Chi nnlii MSTmoicfre ? c s^Tasss 1R IISiFB, H hpytnQill tn\an t ommcnMiJuw or an unci m HI AOAOHEcvMialffnUnvtM.MM (TorIAIXOWSH?XiPETOVTHF! Lbjrlboltlu. THYITS Forptnpklci co (toininn useful infbsmntion apt all bout Unlfwr, addreii DB. If ?w York. MLO BT ILL BBOCNUIT*. Burnett's Cocoaine, Burnett's Cocoaine, Burnett's Cocoaine, Is as invaluable remedy for , ,. DANDRUFF. 1 Borrow, Octjo. I bare used ten than a bottle. The dandruff and . the irritation which caused it, have entirely disappeared. and ay hair was sOrr before in so food gpndition. A-A'FULLER. BALDNESS. jk . Chicago, May Since the M?e?t use of your " Cocoaine," my previouslv bald head has been covered by a luxuriant growth of hair. I had always esteemed your preparation as a dressing, knowing many persons who regarded it very highly as such, bui never before knew how valuable it was as a restorative. J. G. LEWIS. LOSS OF HAIB. . Eangor, Match j,1868.. Your u Cocoaine " is the only dressing for the hair used in my family for tlte last eight years. It not only stopped my wife's hajrfrom coming out, bat increased its growth. Iam also under obligations to this same " Cocoaine " for saving my own hair, whith was very fast ooaiing oat previous to using this valuable preparation. J. C. MITCHELL. IEBITATIOS OF THE SCALP. . Watctviuji, M|, Sept. ic. I purchased a bottle only, for the puipoee of a hair dressing; but. to my surprise, it has entirely removed the irritation of so long standing. I have recommended it to several of my friends, who were afflicted in the same way, and it has wholly frracficated the disease. .'; JOSEPH HILL, Jn. HAIR-DRESSING. New Yokk, Sdpt. aa. For some time past I have been using your Cocoaine, and think it far preferable to anything I have ever used for .the hair. FRANK. LESLIE. JOSEPH BURNETT A CO., Boston, Manufacturers and Franrietor*. m * '' t t J if | ' HALE'S Honey or Horehound and 1 ar yob thx' cubb of cocgml ooldfl, influenza, hoabse-* nbbm, Difficult Breathing, abd ail Affection! of thb Thboat, Bboechial Tubes, abd Lungs, leading to consumption. This tnfklHbto remedy la composed of thrHoBST of the plant Horehound, in dvemical onion with Ta^-Balm, extracted from the Life FuBofls of the forest tree Abbs Bsuuiria. or Balm of Gilead. The Hooey of Horebotod soothes abd scarbbs all lrrits^uos and inflammotions, and the Tar-Balm cleanses abd hbals tK inroat and air-passages leading to the longs. B n additional ingredients keep the organs cool, moist, * * ana in healthful action. Let no prejudice keep yon from tryug this peat medicine of a famous doctor who has sated thousands of lives ^ : t in his large private practice. ft r?The Tar Bab?*baa no bad tascb or smell. fbicb8,50cebts abff 1 peb bcttul Great fsvfeg to large slit. Sold by all Druggists. "PDWl Toothache Dropp'? cmein 1 iwfowtA. BTBP No. 5* yxthbn writing tomad? ertigebn. U plwue amy that raa^mtt* neat la thia paper.