University of South Carolina Libraries
r Farm, Garden and Honsehold, Housekeeping Department! Soda Cake.?Four eggs, one pint sugar, one tea-cup butter, one cup sweet milk, one quart flour, one teaspoonful soda, two cream tartar. Qcixce Pcdding.?Stew and strain eight quinces. Add half pound sugar, Bix eggs, a pint of milk or cream. Season or not, as may be preferred. Bake in a dish lined and ornamented with pastry. Keeping Honey.?To keep honey all the year round, let it run through a sieve to separate it from particles of wax, then boil it gently in an earthen I vessel, skim off the foam whicn gathers on top and cool it in jars. After cooling these lightly set them away in a ' cool cellar. Treatment of Calicoes.? Calicoes often fade simply because they are impioperly washed. To insure their not ffuliuc. infuse three eills of salt into ! four quarts of water ; put the calico in while it is hot, and let it remain there until cold. By this means the colors of the goods are made permanent, and will | not fade by subsequent washings. To Mend China.?Take a very thick solution of gum arabic in water, and stir into it plaster of Paris, until the mixture is of a proper consistency. Apply it with a brush to the fractured edges of the china, and stick them together. In three days the articles cannot be broken in the same place. The whiteness of the cement renders it doubly valuable. To Japan Old Tea Trays.? First clean them thoroughly with soap and water, and a little rottenstone ; then dry them bjr wiping and exposure at the fire. Now get some good copal varnish, mix it with some bronze powder, and apply with a brush to the denuded parts. After which set the tray in an oven at a heat of 212 or 300 de- | grees until the varnish is dry. Two coats will make it equal to new. Baked Potatoes.?Have tliem nearly of a size, or so carefully graduated that all shall require about the same length of time for cooking. Bake quickly, and yet without burning. Toward the last, watch them very closely, and try them by feeling them through a towel; and as fast as they are done, squeeze them until the skin breaks and lets out the steam ; then lay them in a hot dish, cover with a folded towel, and serve as soon as possible. Preserving Eogs.?J. C. Higgins, Delhi Mills, Mich., writes : Dip them in boiling hot water, taking out immediately, then lay them in fresh salt, separate from each other, small end down. To my certain knowledge, eggs that were packed ufter this plan last summer were as fresh apparently when usd in April last as when laid. I know one woman who sold a hundred dozen at one time, during the winter, when they were high, that were put down duing the summer in this wav ; the'*' were all good." 3Iice In Orchard!. The Germantown Telegraph commends the following way of preventing the ravages of mice among young trees in the orchard: "There was a great deal said last spring of the injury done to vouug apple-trees during last winter by mice, and the ouly remedy that wo have yet seen suggested is to stamp the snow firmly around the trees. This is, however, not believed to be a remedy at all, and we doubt if it is of much advantage. But our method iB a remedy, and we have tried to impress the fact upon our contemporaries for the past twenty years, but we should say, judging from their ignorance in answering imploring correspondents what they must do to save their trees, that it has received but little attention from many quarters. "It is simply to bandage up the stems of the tree with any cotton or woolen cloths, if of old muslin with two or three wrappings, letting the bandage go into the ground an inch or two, and six or eight inches above grqnnd, and tie up. This should be renewed every autumn if necessary, until the trees are lame enoutrh not to be iniured. Those who are in earnest for a remedy will try this and save their trees; but it will be too much trouble for others to devote a couple of hours to this labor annually, and they will rather run the risk with the mice. " This method will keep out the borer also, as wc have stated on several occasions. Rabbits^can gnaw, when the stem3 are small enough, two feet from the ground, aud would require the bandage to be much higher. Tarring would help as a protection, but we have known in many cases the simple bandage to be all-sufficient." Washing flutter. Z A very large majority of buttermakers wash the butter ; a minority do not, and claim washing is not only unnecessary, but injurious. Good butter is made by some of each way of thinking?and poor also when washed or unwashed. At a recent meeting of Chautauqua County, X. Y., butter-makers, the President decided the sentiment of the meeting to be in favor of careful washing with the best water to be had. Several speakers thought but little water i should be used. One man is reported ! to Iiavo made the extraordinary state- i ment that applying salt freely would answer the purpose of washing, and that butter would dissolve no more salt j than it needs.? Western Farmer. Parkins for Ice-llousc. Some substance that will not easily fermeu: and mold and rot is to be selected fur packing for the ice-house. Fresh sawdust, tan-bark, or charcoal dust are the best if they csu be procured. The next in usefulness are the chuff from the thrashing-machine, finely cut straw or sawdust that has already been used for some seasons. Fine chips from a planing mill is very good packing. Buckwheat hulls or hemp heads are too easily rotted and fermented to be used for this purpose. Head us Off. A correspondent tells of a county clerk in a rural town, who had a pet j calf which he was training up in the ' WWJ3 VI IUC VA j 111V lull lltUAVU kUVUUU ( very peaceably under oue end of the ] yoke while Mr. Clerk held up the other end, but in an unfortuuato moment the j man conceived the idea of putting his own neck in the yoke, to let the calf see j how it would "seem to work with a partner. This frightened mister calf, and elevating his tail and his voice he struck a "dead ruu" for the village, and Clerk went along, with his head down and his plug hat in his hand, straining every nerve to keep up, and crying out rat at the top of his voice, "Heiewel come, dang our fool souls, head us, somebody!" j Bazalne's Sentence. Leaving, meanwhile, the lessons of the trial and condemnation of Marshal Bazaine to speak for themselves, says the New York Times, it may be well to explain the grounds on which he was arraigned by the Council of War, which the evidence taken before that council tended to establish, and from which the sentence of death followed as a natural consequence. The military law of France is several centuries old, and re mains to-day pretty much in the same form as it had in the ago of Louis XIV. It absolutely prohibits the commander of a fortress from negotiating with the enemy ; it is equally explicit in forbidding a General to concern himself with politics, and the capitulation of an army is held in all cases to be utterly unjustifiable. These provisions logically follow from the idea of the functions of the Government that the military officer serves, and to whom alone it belongs to enter into negotiations, and to determine the force of political considerations. Under these three heads Bazaine's guilt has been fully established. His offense would have been technically as great had he commanded the least important of tho strong places of France. But it is, of course, impossible to regard his crime apart from the fact that he was intrusted with the very key of the destinies of France ; that the army under his command was the only fully organized one at the service of tne Government, and that, though the surrender at Sedan preceded that of Metz, it was owing to Bazaine's weakness and duplicity that MacMahon was induced to direct his march toward Montmedy, and that two armies fell into the trap prepared for them at Sedan. If the Emperor and his remaining Generals had not relied upon .Bazaine's confident assurance that he could break through the German lines when it became necessary, the crowning disaster of September, 1810, would at least have been deferred, and, as Frenchmeu tnink, altogether averted. Nevertheless, Bazaine's judges, tliough admitting in evidence such testimony to the gravity ' of his offense, have doubtless been led ' to condemn him simply for the breach of the strict letter of the law. It is equally certain that their recommendation to mercy must have been dictated by a regard to the peculiar circumstances under which Bazaine thought himself justified in disobeying that law. His defence was substantially as follows : "Up to Sept 15, I claim to have strictly conformed to both the let- j ter and the spirit of the military law. But after that date there came into ex- J A /?f 4l>irt/ya nnnnllvr noir I 151UUUO u nctitu vi taiugo cijuuii t uvh, i unforeseen, and unprecedented. France j liad no longer any tangible Govern- ; raent, any central authority ; all that was legal had disappeared amid the tide of ruin. The law which I was i bound to observe never contemplated : such a situation, for it is based ou the ! idea that there is above the General a Government qualified to negotiate and j to relieve him from the necessity of i concerning himself with politics, I found myself in the position of being my own government, and under these circumstances I could not perform what I considered to be my duty without a technical violation of the law." Sophis- ! tical as is a good deal of this, it is natural enough that the Oc facto j Government of September should have , been viewed by the judges of Bazaine j as a Government dc jure only with some necessary reservations. Their | recommendation to mercy can hardly | t)0 justified ou any other ground, and ; as President MacMahon is in no danger of failing to see the strength of these recommendations, the life of Bazaiue is perfectly safe. The decision of President MacMahon, of France, in the case of Bazaine is an- I nounced. The sentence of death against the Marshal J is commuted to twenty years' seclusion. He is to bear the effects of degradation from rank, but will be spared the humiliating cere- j mony. Marshal Bazaine addressed a letter to i his counsel, thanking them for their efforts in his behalf, and concluding as . follows: I shall not appeal against the sentence, not wishing to prolong in the eyes of the world the spectacle of such a painful struggle. I request you to take no further steps, i "look no longer to m< n for judgment. Strong in my con- ; science which reproaches ino with nothing I confidently await the justification which will j come with the lapse of time and the subsidence of party passions. The Conservative press generally approve of the commutation of the sentence. The Sicclc says it will create a painful feeling of surprise in the country. Rheumatism. A correspondent in the English Mechanic gives the following remedy for curing rheumatic gout, of which he had long been a sufferer. He insulated his bedstead from the floor, by placing underneath each post a broken-off bottom of a glass bottle. He says the effect , was magical, that he had not been free from rheumatic gout for fifteen years, and that he began to improve immediately after the application of the insulators. We are reminded, by this paragraph frou our English contemporary. of a patent obtained through this office for a physician some twelve or more years ago, which created considerable interest at the time. The patent ! consisted in placing glass cups under the bedposts in a similar manner to the above. The patentee claimed to have effected some remarkable cures by the use of his glass insulators, but we have not heard from him for some time. Wc cannot vouch for any merit in the idea, but it is ouo easily tried ; and as no harm can arise from the experiment, we hope some one will test it aud give us the result of his experience. Rid of It. A contractor who had engaged to remove a rock at the entrance to the New Haven harbor, left a can of nit.-o-glycerine on a staging of railroad iron, which was demolished by the waves during a storm, and all went to the bottom. The iron being in the way of ( navigation, the contractor offered ouehnlf of it to any one who would remove it. This offer was accepted by a New York captain. The men engaged in the work were "skittish," especially the diver, for fear of being blown np without a moment's warning. A local paper suggested that it he left where it was, . in case any Spanish gunboats should happen to run up the harbor. The can was subsequently washed ashore, and > an old man, who found it, set it up as an ornament 011 his front stoop, aud got ! a friend to read the inscription. The 1 friend, comprehending the gravity of the occasion, drew oft' a little, and ; issued the following order in military ' style : " Take that can off this stoop !" and suited the action to the word by decamping himself. 1 Christmas Cheer. Soar on, fierce wind from over seas. Besiege the roof-tiles, shake the pane, 1 Bend half to earth the quivering trees, And plow wild fivrows in the main ; You cannot reach our joyance here, Couched in the heart of Christmas cheer. ? Tiie Santiago Massacre. > i An Kye Willie** Graphically Deicr lit* j Its Horrid Atrocities?Statement of , Mr. Cofflii, of the Bark Morning Star. About 200 marines formed in line at j ' the landing to receive the captain and the crew of the American steamer Virginius. At nine o'clock they landed from j the Spanish war steamer Tornado the 1 captain and 3G of his ciew. Each man, ^ excepting the captain, had his arms 1 pinioned behind his back. They were ( then taken to the office of the captain of * the port, where the sentence of death ^ was read to them. They were to die at 1 half-past four that afternoon. The ma- rines then marched up to the door and ( opened ranks. The crew were then or- < dered out and fastened together, four ( abreast. The captain came out, under j guard of four soldiers, and took his j place at the head of his men. They j were marched up to the prison to await ( the hour of death. During the time the prisoners were landing a guard was j placed over the residence of Mr. Schmitt, j the American Consul, to prevent him j from having any communication with ] them. At three o'clock he was granted i an interview with the captain. At halfpast three he left the prison, as the captain wanted to have the last half hour alone. Mr. Schmitt used every means in his power to save them, but only received insults from the Governor. At half-past three regiments of foot soldiers, numbering about 1,500, marched through the town, followed by a troop of the mounted guard, and formed in line at the place of execution. This is a piece of waste ground (slaughter house) on the outskirts of the town, ( bounded on one side by a stone wall, , eight feet high. In front of this wall j the men were to meet their death. At four o'clock the prisoners were J taken from the prison, having their arms fastened behind their backs and irons upon their waists. They formed in line, four deep. Accompanying each four was a Catholic priest. They were then surrounded by 200 marines, and i marched at a slow step to the place of death, followed by hundreds of people. While on the march I had an opportunity of speaking with most of the men. They were in much better spirits than a person would expect. They all stepped out with a bold, manly step, fully believing that before many days America would avenge their wrongs. When they arrived at the place of execution the doomed men were placed in a line about lour foot apart, with their faces to the wall. The marines formed a line, two deep, about 10 feet from the men they were about to murder. The prisoners were tnen ordered 10 Kneei. The signal being given to fire, a volley of 200 rifles were fired at tlie 37 men upon their knees 10 feet olT. One man only lay dead ; that was the Captain. The rest were wounded in the most horrid manner. Up to the time of the firing of the first volley I was not able to get nearer than 200 yards from the prisoners. The moment the volley was fired I jumped over tfio wall and ran along until I was abreast of the prisoners, ami then mounted the wall and witnessed the most cruel murders. The marines had reloaded their rifles and were shooting the wounded men in the mouths, ears and eyes, placing the muzzle of the gun close up to the head and blowing it to atoms. One man was lightly wounded. Two men stepped up to liim; one ran his gun into the man's mouth ; the poor man grasped it with both hands. The other put his gun at the man's ear. They both fired together; nothing was left of the head. This kind of work lasted for 20 minutes before the last man was dead. Five dirt carts then ; came up with 10 men from the chain gang, and the dead were thrown into J these conveyances in all shapes. There j was not a man of the 30 who were wounded whose head was not blown off from the mouth up. They were buried in a hole. The troops marched back to town to a lively air. Is this to bo the last of it ? Is the American government to turn a blind j eye and a deaf ear to this deepest insult that ever one nation offered to another ? Where is the American navy j to protect our citizens in foreign lands ? The moment the Consul was allowed ' to send a dispatch he telegraphed to Jamaica for help to save life. No American war vessel was to bo found. An Tvnrrlieli mou.of.wnr fVinf. wnR l'lvinf* O at Kingston slipped her anchors and flew to tho rescue, but too late 10 save > the steamer's crew. How is this to end ? | Nothing but blood can wipe out this stain. Is the American flag to be trampled upon by a set of cowards on the high seas ? That steamer was taken ' in English waters, 18 miles from Mataut ! point. Tiio Captain tolil mo so 10 minutes before his death. If the head of the government is going to let this p.iRs without giving them a Yankee shot, I say let the people of the nafiou arise and avenge the blood of our countrymen, niul send tho murderers to a coward's grave, and if need be, wipe the Spanish out of existence. I, for one, am ready to return with a rifle that will send terror to the cowards' heart". Frauklin Tied Ills Money l'p. Dr. Benjamin Franklin, in n codicil1 to his will, left his native town of Bos- j ton the sum of one thousand pounds to he lent to the young married artificers j upon good security and under certain < other conditions. If the plan should be carried out as successfully as lie Avnnr.fit.1 lm r.inl-niin.1 #h?ifr lliiu cum woukl amount, in one hundred years, to one hundred and thirty-one thousand pounds. It was his wish, and so oxpressed in his will, that one hundred thousand pounds should be spent upon public works, "which may then be i judged of most general utility to the inhabitants, such us fortifications, j bridges, acq tied nets, public buildings, baths, pavements, or whatever makes living in the town more convenient to the people, and renders it more agreeable to strangers resorting thither for health or a temporary residence." It was also his wish that the remaining thirty-one thousand pounds should again be put upon interest for another hundred years, ut the end of which time the whole amount was to be divided be- j tweeu the city und the State. The be- i quest at the end of the first hundred years may not attain the exact figure be ; calculated, but it is sure to be a large j snm. At the present time it is more j than a hundred and eighty thousand dollars, and it has about seventeen years to run. Franklin died in 1790. Postal Telegraph. Kenton* for Adopting the Syilem-Whtt | bi Congrt?i Should Do In Order to Re- j '1' ducethe Ratei on .llenalri ?nd Newt. The President of the Western Union ti Telegraph Company, in his letter to a i j|j STew York paper, says: " The Herald m s probably correct in assuming "that 1 JJj further reduction in rates will not be j i? nade by the companies now doing the w ;elegraph business for some time to wjome.'-' The Western Union Telegraph Company have adopted some uniformi- a, ;y in their charges within a few years ?ast, and made a few other eductions d n^their rates, to the great benefit of the public and of the company; but the public are under no obligations to the ;ompany for making these reductions ; D 'or President Orton, in his annual re-1 sort, informs his stockholders that they 1 p vere forced upon them from the com- ^ aetition from opposition companies, j w The have recently purchased the prin- is :ipal opposition lines, and have reduced j tl ;heir rates so low that the remaining 51 sompanies are unable to make any noney. Now that this great monopoly s free from all fear of competition, they 111 mnounce that they will make no further 1 ai concessions in rates. That the company are able to make '1,1 further reductions is shown by the 111 Facts given in the annual repots. From h iheso it appears that the rates have , ie jeen reduced nearly one-third in six iw pears, yet the cost of doing the business ; oi is so much less, in consequence of its 1 5 great increase, that the net profits are greater at the lower than at the higher tl rates. Mr. Orton has so often reiterated h the proposition that the expenses in- <? crease in nearly as rapid a ratio as the , ?< business, and therefore reductions in ^ rates cannot be made, that he has persuaded himself of its truth, and is unable to appreciate the force of the facts which we have given. ' c Mr. Orton truly says that the tele- a graph is only in it? infancy. The growth C of its business is much more rapid than that of the express or post-office, and at t] the same ratio of increase the number * of telegrams that will be annually sent it ten years hence is larger than the nuin- n ber of letters sent when the postage was reduced to five cents. The immediate ( increase in the correspondence that followed upon the use of the five and three 1 cent postage stamp was enormous, rap- , idly increasing from 50,000,000 to 500,- i 000,000. There will.be the same increase in the telegraphic correspondence if the same relative reductions in rates were made for the same causes would operate to produce like effects. The people cannot hope for such reductions from p the Western Union Telegraph Com- 11 pany, because there is now no reason to * induce it to make them, and because [ the loss of net revenues from the great a reductions in rates neeessary to popu- c larize the telegraph would be greater than the saving of expenses on each telegram from the great increase in the business. Such reductions can be made q ni'lop Hio nnstnl tplpfrrnnli RucfpTii fnv ii ""v I'~ O ?X ? """ that will save nearly one-quarter of the ; present expenses, and would therefore authorize a reduction in rates of nearly a forty per cent., and yet leave a sufti- j, cient profit on the greatly increased li business. F The Postmaster-General will ask Con- j gress to purchase all existing lines of . telegraph, and built the new ones re- i quired for the business. The expense of purchasing these lines has been estimated bv committees of Congress at r from $40,000,000 to $70,000,000. I do c not think Congress will feel disposed, t in the present condition of our finances, ? to authorize such expenditure,especially f as the object sought can be accom- 1 plished without an expense to the gov- i ? em men t. t The Post-office Department will fur- ? uish the offices and the Postal Tele- a graph Company will transmit the mes- ? sages at rates fixed by Congress. v If the people desire to have a cheap telegraph, and to have the news fur- < nished to tho press at low rates, they must support the postal telegraph sys- r tern, and urge Congress to pass a bill a authorizing the Postmaster-General to contract as he now contracts for the , carriage of tho mails. If, on the other t hand, they desire to perpetuate an .? overgrown monopoly, which is every ' day growing more powerful, then let them continue the present system by which a single private corporation con- j trois the telegraphic correspondence of a nation, and has the power to give or withhold news to the nress. and to mold public opinion in its own interest. Sncli a power is too great for any private company to hold, and should be in the hands of the people, to be used only for their benefit.?Chicago Intcr-dcran. Newspaper Postage. There is quite a stronge influence operating in Congress, says a Washington correspondent, for a change in the c postal laws to restore the free exchange 1 of newspapers and periodicals, and the free transmission of the weekly papers to subscribers in the county of publication. Senator Davis introduced a > bill in the Senate for that purpose and favorublo action seems very possible. There will also be a strong effort during the session to restore some of the provisions of the franking privilege. The Post-office Committee of the House Iiuao determined to report a bill pro- < vidir.g for the free transmission through J the mails of public documents and tlie free circulation of newspapers within the counties where they arc published. \ A Nation ok Dvsi'Eitics.?We live ' fast?dissipate in everything except J righteousness, and till early graves. Wc drink nil kinds of poisoned alcoholic ! spirits, and swallow, without mastica- ( tion, pork, grease, and every couceiva- I bio carbonaceous, soul-dwarfing, life- , destroying, system-dogging, indigesti- j ble food. Jin. Walker's Veuetahle Vineoar Hitters cannot stop this iu u | radical manner?hut it will remove the , i evil effects, and the recovering patient, ' with fresh, pure, vitalized, electrical blood flowing through his arteries and ' veins, will have a clearer head and a ' cooler judgmeut, which, coupled with ! experience, will cause him to abstain 1 in the future. Good, nutritious, diges- , * tible diet, which the most delicate stomachs may take, cnu be found in ' . cracked wheat, corn bread, tomatoes, ( raw or soft-boiled eggs, baked apples, j boiled rice, plain rice pudding, corn I starch, rare beef, mutton and poultry. 1 With Vinegar Hitters and moderation . in eating nnd drinking, there is no in- ' curable case of dyspepsia.?Com, ' ? L Widows who cry moHt are easiest con- } soled. There is nothing like wet weather : for transplanting. |' ( Peerless Clothes Wringer. j L. Heyniger & Co., 18 Falton Straot, S?w ! v Fork.?[Com. 11 ? ? ?? ??I?? Symptoms of Liver Complaint. A sallow or yellow color of skin, or yellowish rown spots on face and other parts of body; illness and drowsiness with frequent headdie ; dizziness, bitter or bad taste in mouth, rvnese of throat aud internal heat; palpitaon; in many cases a dry. teasing cough, with ire throat: unsteady appetite, raising of food, loking sensation in tnroat; distress, heavibhs, bloated or full feeling about stomach and des, pain in sides, hack or breast, and about louluers; colic, pain and soreness through iwels, with heat; constipation alternating itli diarrlia-a; piles, flatulence, nervousness, ilduess of extremities ; rush of blood to head, ith symptoms of apoplexy, numbness of limbs, ipeciallv at night; cold chills alternating with it Hashes, kidney and urinary difficulties; illness, low spirits, unsociability and gloomy irebodings. Only a few of abovo symptoms kelv to be present at one time. All who use r. Tierce's Alt. Ext.. or Golden Medical Disivery for Liver Complaint and its complicaons are loud in its praise. a cube of liveb disease. Rusk. Texas, May 10th. 1873. r. R. V. Piebce : Dear Sir .-?My wife last year at this time as confined to her bed with Chronic Liver isease. 1 had one of the best doctors to see sr. and he gave her up to die. I bought ono ittle and commenced giving it. Sne then eiglied 82 ths.; now she weighs 140 lbs.. and robust aud hearty. .She has taken eight botes in all, so vou see I am an advocate for vour Medicines. WM. MEAZEL. Perry Davis's Pain-Killer,?This lediciue has been before the world so long id its virtues have been so thoroughly tested tat a commendation of it would seem superlous. Almost every family in the land has Med it. and liave had occasion to thauk Mr. avis for giving them in ho cheap and conreunt a form, such a powerful pain antidote. It a household remedy. Always keep a bottle f the Pain-Killer in your house.? Florida 'aj'list. Worthy of Note.?An exchange says lere is scarcely a day passes that we do not ear. either front persons coming into our office r in some other way, of the success of Johnm's Anodyne Liniment in the cure of coughs ltd colds, so prevalent about town just now.? 'o/n. If wo can benefit the readers of this apcr by recommending Parsons' Pnrgatite 'ills to be the best anti-bilious medicine in the mint it. wo are willing to do so. We have had bout "as good a chance to know aH any one.? 'om. The Browns and Blacks produced by liat sterling preparation, Cbistadoro's Excellos Haib Dye, cannot be oxcelled by Nature; s tints challenge comparison with Nature's tost favored productions, and defy detection. -Com. Jonsumption can't kill any person who j will 'ake Hale's Hose* of Hobehousd and Tab when he's ill If a cough that 110 other prescription will still 1 Pike's Toothache Drops cure in one minure. I - Com. Pr.nrviAX Syrup gives an iron constitution. -Com. Chapped Hands, lace, rough skin, imples, ring-worm, salt-rheum, and other cumcouB affections cured, and the skin mado soft in! smooth, by using the Juniper Tab 8oap lade by Caswell Hazard & Co., New York, (e euro to got the Juniper Tar Boap mado by s, as there are many imitations maddArith ommou tar which are worthless.?Com. Flaoo's Instant Relief.?Warranted 0 relievo all Rheumatic Afflictions, Sprains, leuralgia, etc. The best, the surest, and tho uickest remedy for all Bowel Complaints. Relof guarranteed or the money refunded.?Com. A Consumptive Cured. ? Dr. H. ames. while experimenting, accidentally made , preparation of Cannabis Indica, which cured lis only child of Consumption. This remedy m now'for salo at first-class Druggists. Try it; t-s.v/x W frv* rnnrufllf A9 Sfl. Kftllfl HtftTTin or circular! Craddock <fc Co., proprietor*, 032 llaoo St., Philadelphia, Ta. I'll 1 it I V VKAH8' EXPERIENCE OP AN OLD NUKSK. MRS. wnrsLOWS BOOTHINO byrup is toe 'RERCRIPTION OF one of tbe belt Female Physlians and Nurses In the United States, and has icon used for thirty yoars with nover failing safety .nd success by millions of mothers and children rom the foeblo infant of ono week old to the adult t corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind olic, regulates the bowels, and gives rest, health ,nd comfort to mother and child. We believe It to le the Best and Surest Remedy in the world in all ases of DYSENTERY and DIARRHfKA IN CIIIL)REN. whether it arises from Teething or from ,ny other cause. Full directions for using will acompany each bottle. None Genuine unless the ac-stmilo of CURTIS A PERKINS is on the outside rrapper. 80LD BT ALL MrmciltB DSALKRt. :HILDUKN OFTEN LOOK PALK AND SICK rom no other came than having worms in tho tomacb. BROWN'S VERMIKUOB COMFITS rill destroy worms without Injury to the child, icing perfectly WHITE, and free from all coloring ir other lnjurlons Ingredients usually used In vorm preparations. CURTIS A BROWN, Proprietors, No. 413 Fulton Btrcet, New York. Sold ly Pruqqist* and CAe<ni*ts, and dtaUri in dtdi' net at Twsntt-FiviCknts a Box. THE HOUSEHOLD PANACEA, AND FAMILY LINIMENT a the best remedy In the world for the following omplalnts, viz.: Cramps in tbe Limbs and 8tom* ich, Pain in tho Stomach, Bowels or Side, Rheu* natism In all Its forms, Bilious Colic, Neuralgia, Iholera, Dysentery, Colds, Flesh Wounds, Burns, loro Throat, Spinal Complaints, Sprains and iruiscs, Chills and Fover. For Internal and Ex ernal use. Its operation is not only to relievo the patient, iut entirely removes the cause of the complaint, t penetrates and pervades the whole system, re* itoring healthy action to all its parts, and quick* ining the blood. THE HOUSEHOLD PANACEA 19 PURELY VEG* itable and All Healing. Prepared by CURTIS i BBOWN No 413 7nlton Street, New York. BROWN S ,A COUGH, COM), SORE THROAT BRONCHIAL _ .. . TRnrHr<! Requires Immediate attention, and v.rT should be Checked. If allowed to enrieoc continue Irritatiouof the Lungs, a COUGHS permanent Throat Affection or an and Incurable Lung Disease, is often COLDS tho result. BROWN S BRONCHIAL TB0C1IF.8 Having a direct Influence on the parts, give Immoliato relief. For Brourbitis, Asthma, Catarrh, Consumptive and Throat Diseases, Troches are istd with great success. 8INGERS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS Will And Troches useful in clearing the voice when ;abc'l before Hinging or speaking, And relieving tho throat after an unusual exortion of tho vocal jrgans. Obtain only " Brown's Bronchial Troches," and lo not take any of the worthless Imitations that nay be offen d. Sold Everywhere. Poultry. Specie, Ac. Delta's Journal. I 'liainlwreburg. I'a $500 R E WAR D VftU. AL oJCU. fe.li..u. iua?4.IUC.. AMw M|i> C?., Ua. llfc 2Por Pont Wot Improved Parm First MortiLl l/Llll 1st, i , u?nds guaratiiee.'.vle:id tor circular, Ac. J. i: Watkhhi. Lawrence, Kan a. Fill Your Pockets S'V.SVcllK rcrms free; with .1 samples, lo ets.. outfits (IH laniples) ?' cts. H A. OSBOUN. Buleui, Ma*s. KVKIIVONfC SHOULD TAKE rHE CHRISTIAN LEADER! (E. It. CH1PIN, D. I>., Editor.) It gives with issues rf *71 the finest Oil Chromu ver presented with any puhllratlon. Specimen copy sent on application, by staling he name of the pspcr this advertisement was akeu from. Address, CHRISTIAN LEADER, AS A S7 Vesey Street. Ai.siits Wanted. New York. wrnrn [ C CQfl P*r day! A(tnU?utrd! All classes 9 J IU 9ZUof working people, of either sex, young r old, make mora money at work lor us in tbalr a pa re nomenta, or all tba time, tban at anything alaa. Partirnart fraa. Address O. HTOiSOM A Co., Portland. Maine. il K Per Day. 1,000 Agents wanted. Bpnd 71 *> atamp to A. H. Blair A Co.. tit, f.onls. Mo I k|V sending us tba addrcai often person* wltb 411 1 I 10 cts. will receive,/ree a beautiful Chromo IMC end instructions bow to gat rich,post-paid. J Pit [ City Noraty Cb., 106 South 8th St., Pblla-Pa. D T^rp of perpetual beauty. Raw seljJuLIllJ X antiflc discoveries. Particulars Ui. South waste rn Agency, Carthage, Missouri. MERCHANT'S II GARGLING OIL V The Standard Liniment of the United States. p IS GOOD FOB V Burn* and Scald), Rheumatism, P* Chilblain), Hemorrhoid) or Piles, *5 Sprain.t and Bruises, fore Hippies, chanped Hands, ('abed Breasts, NY Flesh irounds, Fistula, Man-.e, Frost Bites, . Sparins, Siceeney, f F.xternal Poisons, Scratches or Crease. /< Sand Cracks, Striiu/halt, Windfalls, / * Galls <\f all kinds. Foundered Feet, /Q Sit fast, Binjbone, Cracked Heels, m* Poll Erit, Foot Rot in Sheep, 1/ Bites of A nival), Roup in Poultry, \J Toothache, Lame Back, Cjc., c}c. v Large Size f 1.00. Medium 50c. Small 25c. J Small Size for Family Use, 26 cents. The Gargling oil has lx-en in use as a liniment since 1833. All we ask is a fair I trial, but lie sure and follow directions. Al Ask your nearest Druggist ordealer in Pat. pfja cnt Medicines for one ot our Almanacs, and ? read what tlie people say nb.ut the Oil. PreI The Gargling Oil is for sale by all re. tive s pec table dealers throughout the United States and other countries. . Our testimonials date from 1833 to the pres. ma, cut, andare unsolicited. We also manufacture ^re iTIeroliant'a Worm Tableta. 0f i iWe deal fair and liliernl with all, and Jaji defy contradiction. Manufactured at ' Lockport, N. Y., U. S. A., by Merchant's Gargling Oil Co., the JOHN HODGE, Secretary. covi M>c i r. * H :; - itids up' t h ^ ^ ilto, and will be the largest newspaper office in the world. It will bo nine stories high, and will cost, exclusive of ilto, one mill.on dollars.] &nb\xnt Gl The Leading American Newspaper. FAI "NEVER SO fiOOD AS IT IS TO-DAY." Terms of the Tribune t j J'h?o" Paii.t (by mull), one year, $10. | Illisl br>n Wr.KKt.Y, one year, $3; f.ve copies, ono j ,(Hi, year, $12 00; ten copies (and 011c Extras, one year, A((,. \V*?klt. one year, $2; five copies, $7M): ten j ph'jjfl copies, SI2.Ml; twenty copies, $22; and thirty I coiilcs, $30. Each person procuring a club of ten or more sub- MP cilbers Is entitled to one extra WEEKf,Y, and ol flfty or more to a SEMI-W&EKI.Y. l'apots addressed separately to each metnoer of clubs will he charged ten cents additional to the above rates. \ Specimen copies sent free. Toa<B The VVksklv Tniiitr.ta aims and claims to be tho vi'fl best agricultural piper published. It contains 4 more columns of special uitertst to farmers and their families, fullc. and more reliable markets? or ' grain, prmluco, dry goods, and miscellaneous? valnB and all the agrlenltuial, as well as general news nteoB Df the country. The Wkbkly has rcajers and con- WatB trlbutors in every county tn the United States, t<-grH sud is therefore valuable to farmers tu all parts or youfl ?* *? 111 11M me country. " Extra sbeete " are Issued occaelonally,and con- Rem tatn the latest and beet things tn art, science " Ki literature, history, and religious discussion. Ban The fourteen Extras now'pub'ished sent by g?n mail to any addicts In the Unit-d States for cttpl Due Dollar. Descriptive circulars, giving full de- the] tails of the contents of each Extra, sent true. hie; Add A CHANCE TO SAVE MONEY. ? cost A Magazine nntl a Xewepnper. Tun S0T1I FOR I.ITTL.A MORS THAR THE PAZCE OF 0!fE. |f| I The Tribpjib will suppl) the principal magazines I and periodi als of this muntry and Europe, to- I ) gcther with either edition of The Tkibcme, at the following vciy maikod reduction from the ?III regular subscription ptttcs: girt Publishers' With With ?"* regular Weekly Semi-Wly atlb. price. Tribune. Tribune. And Ilarpcr's M'gar.ino . $4 00 $0 00 $0 ifl Hcribner's Monthly , . 4 00 5 CO 6(0 v' The Nation .... 6 00 6 00 7 Oil Atlantic Monthly . . 4 01 fi 00 6 oft m, Ilirnor's liazar . . 4 TO 6 00 26 hi t.vo 8t. Nicholas .... 8 00 4 25 6 Of "2Harper * Weik'y . . 4 I'd 6 00 6 00 . ' New York Weekly . . 3 m 4 60 6 60 Galaxy ..... 4 00 5 00 6 00 " Leslie's Illus. Weekly . 4 no 6 CO 6 ?i Scientific Amcrn.au . 3 >0 4 60 5 60 * Appleton's Journal . 4 00 6 CO 6 Oi Jfr Popular Science Monthly 6 00 6 75 I, Oodeys Lady's Book 8 (O 4 25 6 2! " 'J Phrenological Journal . 8 00 4 25 Hi! Bend the money for any of the above directly to and Tiir. Thibctse, at the published rate, and you will CO. recive both newspaper and magazine. Remit by chi registered letter, draft on New York, or postal ?? order. Address, Ti THE TKIIU XK, Xtw York. ** j^rr^gri| Thea-Nectar ?$i?8 AVjyjJ 331aclt T EA With tb Green Tea Flavor ^aPvacotiNtMrtA^ The best Tea Imported. Fot cLIGBBRT"sale everywhere. And for salt OBwiWK wholcsalo onlv by the ORF.AT ? ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TEAC( 9 No. 191 Fulton St. A 2 A 4 Churcl ^B?S2Sll&/ St., New York. P. O. Boa, 5.6P ?* Bend for Thea-N?et?r Clrrnlar. i?j*> K Per Diiy commission nr 530 ? weak f| tjrtmft Salary, and cxm-nsr* Wo offer it and will pay t?. Apnlv now. (?. WKBBEK A CO.. Marlon. 0. U U'nuitn. SIon.fiIrla and Boy* wanted to anlloar ( * T French and American Jewelry. Rooks, flames, Jo. No canltul needed. Catnb<uuo, Terma. do. sent free. p. o. V1CKMY ? CO.. Auiruata. S!e. \ l.ADY AGKST WAS'TKU OS' SALARY P ro take the money for theUrrat lllus'ratt-d Faintly j u1 Story l*a|>er. Over r/O new Subscribers p?ur In I . very day. The CRICKET ON THE HKAKTII, Is j la a i M-piga favorite paper, crowded with fro?b and j elm thrilling Stories, Sketch* a and l'orms, aparkllnif ! f>lll with Humor, mid adorned with contributions from f*cl Kminent Writers. Only 31.00a Year, or l*> cents for j wit Tbrcc Months. The beat OH Chrorao ever offered, i C tltvcn to every Yearly Subhcrlber. A fair Salary n,?' and Kxpenses will le paid to an approved I.ady \ lt'rl Atrent in every County. Subscribe and get coufi- C^T iientlat terms, with fliat paper. . Jt'NKS i II AUI.KY, Publisher a, 17H Broadway, N. X MONEY FOR ALL. i Safe. me. Honorable. Valuable Sample* a d In- *01 I at ruction* free. Male and Femiile. F.nclose'Jn rta. j for Post aire, Ac. IIark rit Association, Wyuiruiiir.pj. I NEW YORK, 1873-4. WEEKLY, { THE WEEKLY SEN is too widely know tion; but the reasons which have already gi which will, we hope, give it many thousands i It is a first-rate newspaper. All the news densed when unimportant, at full length wlie a clear, intelligible, and interesting manner. It is a first-rate family paper, full of enter t-l?J bet .nnt.inini. nn?)iinrr tblAt. ran offend t tWUU, UUfc It is a first-rate story paper. The best tal are carefully selected and legibly printed in it It is a first-rate agricultural paper. The I agricultural topics regularly appear in this de It is an independent political paper, belon lar. It fights for principle, and for the clecti pecially devotes its energies to the exposui weaken and disgrace our country, and threatei altogether. It has no fear of knaves, and aski It reports the fashions for the ladies, and cattle markets, to which it pays particular att Finally, it is the cheapest paper published any subscriber. It is necessary to get up i SUN at this rate. Any one who sends a singl THE WEEKLY SUN.-EJght pages, < from tbis rate. THE SEMI-WEEKLY HUN.-Same alxe as SO per cent to Clubs of 10 or over. THE DAILY SUIT.?A large fonr page newapap over 120)000. All the news for 2 cents. Bat To dabs of 10 or over, a discount of 20 per oent 12Irs?. * j' ' ^ . ? \ J; s >r. J. Walker's California Tinr Bitters are a purely Vegetable )aration, made chiefly from the naherb* fooni on the lower ranges of Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor- "" the medicinal properties of which extracted therefrom without the use Ucohol. The question is almost y asked, "What is the cause of the aralleled success of Vixeoae Brrs V' Our answer is, that they remove cause of disease, and the patient rejrs his health. They are the great >d purifier and a life-giving principle, erfect Renovator and Invigorator the system. Never before in iry of the world bos a medicine been pounded possessing the remarkable ities of Visegab Bitters in healingtne of or?rr Hiaonsn man is heir to. TheV a gentle Purgative ad well as a Tonia iving Congestion or Inflammation ol ^ Liver ana Tisceral Organs, in Bilioua * ases. t 'he properties of Dr. Walker's boar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretio, ninative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, itive, Counter-irritant. Sudorific, Altera, and Anti-Biiiou& n. ii. Mcdonald ? co., ? pints and (ion. Agtm. San Francisco. California i;or. of Washington ami Chariton Stt.. X. V. _ old by all Druggist* and Oralen. [ T It U-Ito SI iron in the Blood THE PER TITIAN BYBCP Vitalizes and Enriches th? Blood, Tones np the KIj 'III Byatem.Bnildsuptfcj Broken-down, Cares Female Complaints, Drop* v, Debility, II amom. Dyspepsia. AcThousand* been charred by tho w3^igllly use of this remedy from weak, sickly, suffering creatures, to rong, healthy, and happy men and women; and vallds cannot reasonably hesitate to glvo It a trial. Caution.?Bo sure you pet tho right article. 8eo at "Peruvian Syrup" is blown In the glass, imphlotsfreo. Bend Ibr one. 8ET1I W. FOAVLE SONS, Proprietors, Boston, Moss, for sale by ugglsts generally. . AGENTS WANTED FOE TEE HISTORY OF THE RANGE MOVEMENT OR THE SMER'S WAR AGAINST MONOPOLIES. Ingafulland antbentic account of the strapof tho American Farmers against the extors of the Railroad Companies, with a history of rise and progress of the Order of Patrons of ^ bandry ; its objects and piof)>ecti. It sells at t. Bend for specimen pages and terms to nts, and see why it sells faster than any other [. Address NALIONAL PUBLISHING CO., adelphla, Pa. >ld Maids, hers, Students, Clergymen, Postmasters, and a awake Young Men, and Men and Women of lasses: u can easily earn a flrst-rlass Sewing Machine; looks sufficient to stork a Library; or some able Picture* to beautify your Homes; or a Stereoscope; or a good lime Keeper (Clock or chl; or a basic Box; or a Gold Peu ; or a Fhoaphir Album; or a stand Kerosene Lamp for r Parlor: or a fine Accordeon ; or Webster'a rated Quarto Dictionary; or Roger's World rtwned 8latuary Groups ; or a Fine Violin ; or minuton Rifle Cane ; or a Remington Double rel Breech Loading Shot Gun ; or a Cabinet Orworth Sl<"; by simply working up your unoccd time iu a way explained In the circulars o M. H. P. Co. Perfectly legitimate and respect* many would s?y philanthropic, ress, M. H. P. Co.. lat East Ig-th St., New York. ECIIKT OP srC'CKSS IN WALL ST. pages. Balls, Bears. Profits on puts and calls, mg *10 to $100. Mailed for stamp by Valentin* ibridgc A Co., Bankors, Brokers,SI wall 8t.,N.Y. IKES ON fcHTJps <L Silermtn t irry Ward Rsxchkh's family newspaper ?s every subscriber a pair uf the largest and at OLEOGRAPHS?two moat attractive |ecta, that " take" on sight?painted by Mri. erson. ai contrasts and rnnip.<nious for her ids Aicnke'' nnd ' Fast As'cn." Amenta have tlKSiSK Sl'CCEtaSt rail it "brat bualneae r offered for canvassers." We furnish the lightand handsomest outtlt and pay verv logh comslnna Etch aubacriber receives without pit at beautiful pictured whi< h are ready for MEDIATE DELIVERY. The paper itaelf ids peerless among family Journals. being ao ularthatof Its das* It baa the largest nrridaI in the trnrld! Employe the beat litera-y taI. Edward Egjleatnn'a errlal atory Is Just be* l ning; bark rhjptera auppbed to eaih snbscrlblire 8towo's long expected at quel to " Sly > and /" beglna in the i.ew year. Ai.y one wlaha good aaltry, or au independoot business, ul J. lend for clrriilire, * ft C it T 8 terms to J. B. J-OIID A lASf. r-TVte* , hew York, Boston. W A N TED. rngn. Cincinnati, or Ran Kiannaro. TT^TTVrTtl1^^ Enterprlalng young and U iolll Jjiniie tulddle-aged men and wo:i ambitloua to make a successful start in bust* a, are offered superior facilities for preparing maelvea at the 8PKNCER1AN BUSINESS COL(>K. Milwaukee. Wis. owlimoN And Its Cure. WILLSON'S arbolated Cod Liver Oil scientific combination of two well-known tnedJfs. It* theory la Brat to arrest the decay, then em! the doctrine cor* [U ""fhe really aurtllns cure* performed by WU1 arbuUeVdS?po?ltttttv arre*U Prmy It U the it powerful nntlocptic In the known world, tnrut Into the circulation, It ot once irrspplM with ruption and decay ceaaca. It pur Idea the iourcea llYlJrtr Oil U Xaiurc't but cutUUint In rcalitlnf ? isuinptlon. I >ut up In Inrtce %rnlKf-?li?P"l botllea, irin J (lie Invrntor'a algnuturr, niul U tl by the beat I>ru?Kl?t.. ITcparfd b7 jr. h. wxxiLsow, VI John Htraet Vnrfc, $gutt SEMI-WEEKLY, AND DAILY. n to require any extended reeommendaven it fifty thousand subscribers, and more, are briefly as follows: of the day will be found in it, con. n of moment, and always presented in taining and instructive reodingof every he most delicate and scrupulous taste, les and romances of current literature s pages. most fresh and instructive articles ot partraent. ging to no party, and wearing no colon of the best men to offiv.^. it es e of the great corruptions that now 3 to undermine roouolican.institutions s no favore irom their supporters, the mars eta for the men, especially tha ent.on. L One dollar a year will secure it for i club in order tohave THE WEEKLT . e dollar will get the paper for a year. J Solum us. Only fl.OO a year, no dlsooonts the Daily Son, $9.00 a year. discount of / sr of twenty-eight Columns. Dafly Cliualstioa ?crlptioepneefOeeatsaiaoatft,?r$Oajwa j