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. " ??? * i .. Farm, Garden and Household. Long Island Cora. I live on the south side of Long Island, at the head waters of the gTeat South Bay; our soil generally is a sandy loam, although of great variety; yetit is favorable for the growth of Indian corn, and in ordinary fruitful years we have good crops of this Btaple, as well of wheat, rye, oats, etc. Some 40 or 50 years ago we planted the large-eared 10, 12, 14, and even 18-rowed variety, with stalks to correspond ; but oqr occasional severe drouths (one of which we had last summer) were too severe to support stalks and ears both, and of oourse the ears had to succumb, as the stalks grew first and absorbed all the moisture and most of the manure. We then ohanged to a small eight-rowed?? Wk T*kifo anrl vollnw. al? B)U WiObJT, uvvu niun. ._v though the yellow was a smaller variety than the white, but did well on our light, sandv soils, but for heavier ones the white (being larger ears and stalks) was considered more profitable. But as we improved our farms by manuring and cultivation, the stalks of our white corn became, like the old variety, too large for the ear, which we oould regulate by the seed. I at length found a "similar variety of the same oolor and number of rows, but with a much smaller stalk, small oob, and a larger ear and kernel than the former variety. It is this latter which I will endeavor to desoribe. The past season has not been favorable for the corn crop, on account of the drouth continuing so long as to deprive the ear as well as the stalk of sufficient moisture, although I have saved for seed, while husking, sopae ten or more bushels of ears, whioh are filled out, or capped, as farmers call it, over the small end. Last season I Bayed some 15 or 20 bushels, many of which ears grew two on a stalk, and 1 T -1?!1 ~J nf fVimri oh W lit? II X 8116I10U iWV B/UOUVI9 V? ? we usually measure ears, I had seven quarts over one bushel of shelled corn, and I presume a struck bushel of which would have weighed 60 pounds, as a bushel of any other or oommon corn weighed 59 pounds, and the stalks are smaller than the common size beside. As it respects saving of fodder in. husking, after a suitable time for curing I cart my corn on the stalks into my barns as I wish it to husk ; this saves all the loose busks and litter for the stock ; ,r-, , the smaller stalks I separate for my horses, which they eat clean without i* y ~ cutting, and whioh, with our meadow hay and a little grain, keeps them in apple-ple order, prevents heaves, and enables us to sell our English hay and thus profitably "kill two birds with one stone.?John S. Jeasup, Suffolk Co.. N. Y. Tht Model Sheep Man. The best sheep man we ever heard of was a soldier, who saw somewhere how yaluable sheep are for renovating wornout land, and after the cruel war was over, he went home to his poor farm, and bought thirteen ewes, all that, for1"* moo oKlo fr? V?nv TTo nnk VUUAVTlJi UO nwo wv?v ?w ??y . ? x them in a small field of briars and weeds, which they soon destroyed, then he led them on bran and meal. In the winter he sheltered them well, feeding oats and swamp bay, and in the spring he had thirteen fine lambs. Saving the manure, he planted the old briar patch with corn, and harvested a fine crop. All his spare time was devoted to caring for the sheep. The next spring he had more lambs; he was able to plant more corn; then came more lambs, when he sowed clover and grew tnrnips; and now, to-day, as the result of such small beginnings, ho has several hundred fine young sheep, free from disease, bringing him $2,000 a j| year, while his farm has become ex^4 tremely fertile, and he is a rich man. ' ^We know that thousands and thousands of poor young men have a free oourse open to them to beoome wealths by beginning in the same way. Bn the trouble is, the way is too humbl# and slow ; they want to get along faster ; they have no patience, no faith, no pluck. Truly, it does seem small busi' ness to watch a dozen sheep, as if it were beneath the attention of a bright American youth ; but if said youth will look the subject all over he will see it worthy of all his powers. A young man can well afford to sit down with a dozen sheep on the plains, live in a dug out, and feed on antelope meat, rather than undertake to become independent in a city on a clerkship of $1,000 a year. Maxims in Life. John McDonougb, the millionaire of New Orleans, has engraved upon his tomb a series of maxims prescribed as the rule for his guidance through life, to which his success in business is mainly attributed. They contain so much wisdom that we copy them : Rules fob Guidance of My Life, 1804. Remember always that labor is one of the conditions of our existence. Time is gold ; throw not one minute away, but place each one to acoount. Do unto all men as you would be done by. Never put off till to-morrow what you can do to-day. Never bid another do what you can do yourself. Never covet what is not yonr own. Never think any matter so trifling as not to deserve notice. Never give out that which doe.3 not first come in. Never spend but to produce. Let the greatest order regulate the transactions of your life. Study, in your course of life, to do the greatest amount of good. Deprive yourself of nothing necessary to your comfort, but live in an honorable simplicity. Labor, then, to the last moment of vour existence. Pursue strictly the above rules, and the Divine blessing and riches will flow upon yon to your heart's content; but, first of all, remember that the chief and great duty of your life should be to tend, by all means in your power, to the honor and glory of our Divine Creator. Without temperance there is no health ; without virtue, no order ; without religion, no happiness ; and that the aim of our being should be to live wisely, soberly, and righteously. A gambler, who makes the Maine railroads dangerous for fools, caught a Tartar the other day. The stranger fonnd those four kings in his euchre hand, and was quite eager to bet. Of course the professor had the four aces. The two men kept raising until the gambler had his last dollar on the board. Then the " green one " arose and slapped down a pocketbook containing nine hundred dollars. The professor went through the train showing his hand, and endeavoring to borrow so as to get a "sight" for his money. No one woirid lend him, and after a time the stranger raked in the two hundred dollars on the board, smiled benevolently, and got off at the next station. ? The Famlae in India. Imminence and Extent of the Danger. The London Times devotes its leading editorial to a vigorous article on the famine in Bengal, decrying the red tape system in vogue and urging the Yioerov to be guided by instinct rather than by precedent and evidenoe. The editor says: ' h Ic is not possible to read with any attention the successive letters ani telegrams from Calcutta without a fearful misgiving that we are on the eve of a terrible and irreparable disaster. In a very few weeks we may And ourselves reoording the irresistible progress of such a famine as that in Orissa, and that other nearer home, twenty-eight years ago. All the figures point to suoh a conclusion. There appears to be such a distrust oi native statements, as alarmist or interested, that the heads of the government are devoting themselves to the task of divesting them of exaggeration. They who speak in behalf of the cultivators seem wild in their terror, while the proprietors, and with them the mercantile class, seem more disposed to suoh an estimate of the impending dearth as would make it unnecessary to interfere with the regular oourse of trade. The effect of the government purchases for the relief works has already been to raise the prices at Calcutta, and to lower them in the districts threatened by famine. * * * * " The population immediately affected by the drought and the consequently bad harvest is nearly equal to that of Great Britain. But there are a a HI I* 1 L important uinert,*ucua uciwcuu tuou case and ours. They depend almost entirely upon their crops?that is, upon the rain from heaven. They have no other industry or wealth to speak of, and the whole constitution ef their society is agricultural. Being inland, they cannot, as in our case, be reached by a hundred open and accessible ports well able to receive and diffuse the produoe of eveiy food-producing country in the world. Those twenty-five millions are surrounded by other millions wanting all the food they can grow, and only less affected by the dearth. Northward lie the mountains; Northwest are provinces which can lend but little help. All, or nearly all, depends on what can be done from Lower Bengal. When all things are taken into account?the existing store, the possible aid from the Cpper Provinces, and the results of the forthcoming winter harvest, of which there are so many conflicting estimates, but which at the best will be but a fraction compared with the harvest which has passed and failed?it will still be necessary that the distressed and jeopardized population reoeive from Bengal more than two thousand tons of rice a day for the whole period of the pressure. That is upon a low calculation of what is necessary to support life, and, as the deficiency has been calculated at four months, it follows that considerably more than 200,000 tons of rice, or rather grain, will be required, it mu6t be said, at the liandB of the AngloAa?tI A f r? *n/>nnf /lafn XilUiOU VXVTCiUUiOUV. AU H *wvu? uuw only about 25,000 tons, that is, about a fortnight's 6upply?had been stored for the relief works?hardly a tithe of the whole believed to be necessary. It is evident, then, that the work is only begun, and that force will have to be applied to public opinion, and not less to the energies and the resources of the administration. England cannot bear so great a scandal as that which threatens her, and which certainly will be attached to us if she fails at this emergency ; nor will it give her credit that she has faithfully stood to the inexorable law of political economy and free trade." To more clearly understand this article, it should be borne in mind that Bengal is threatened not only with a food famine, but with one of water also. The Hooghlv at Serampore in November was as low as it hod been in the hottest months of' the year, and the tanks in its neighborhood were threatening to dry up. A gentleman writing to one of the Caloutta papers says : " The scarcity of water attracts much notice." This new form of danger Sir G. Campbell appears to have recognized by a timely offer of loans to municipalities and landowners for the making of new and the deepening of old wells, the cleaning out of tanks, and the improvement of other sources of water supply. A Husband's Fatal Mistake. Reuben M. Murdock, a special officer who does police duty in Greenwood Cemetery, Brooklyn, shot and killed his wife, Emma C. Murdock. He says that his wife started to visit some friends in Flatbueh.with the intention -i -a * -11 -lAi? "Ar J _ -1- 1_ _ 01 staying uii niguir luuraocs, wno was off duty, remained at home in the evening. About half-past 9 o'clock his attention was attracted by a noise in the yard. Taking his revolver, lie went into the yard and saw a form entering his cellar door. He fired, and the heavy fall of the supposed intruder testified to the accuracy of his aim. He rushed to the spot, and was horrified to find his wife, with a bullet in her head. Death was instantaneous, as she did not utter even a groan. The police and neighbors were soon on the spot, and Murdoch was arrested The police were unable to find any evidence to contradict the assertions of the husband, but locked him up pending an investigation. Murdock is a middleaged man, and is said to have been at one time a captain of police in a neighboring city. The neighbors are unaware of any domestic troubles, and those acquainted with the family believe that the shooting was accidental. The Brain. This organ has been studied with three objects: the descriptive anatomy of its parts, the comparison between the braiu of man and apes, tho illustration of function. After a pretty careful study of specimens and consultation of all workB in which brains are accurately delineated,we feel justified in asserting that we cannot as yet characterize the fissural pattern of any mammalian order, family, genus, or even species, without the risk that the next specimen will invalidate our conclusion; that our studies in this direction should be based upon the careful comparison of accurate drawings of a much larger number of specimens than now exist in any museum; that nearly allied forms of carnivora should be compared, and that the most satisfactory results aro obtainable from large series of foetal and young brains of the same speeies, and if possible, family and sex, in order to estimate the minor differences. A well known authoress gives it sb an item of domestic felicity that the man of the family should be ab.tent at least is hours per day. m * XLIIld CONGRESS. BXMATS. Mr. Cameron, of Pennsylvania, in discussir the Salary bill, thought the whole eyetem < mileage wrong. It cost him but ?5 to oorr from Harris burg here, yet he received mileage. Members might go around evei which way to get to the capital, and thit themselves justified in drawing mileage f< the whole distance traveled. The Oovemmei of the United States thinks it is right in sen< ing the mail for Elmira from here to Baltimor then to Philadelphia and New York, and the to Elmira, though Elmira ie nearer to Waal ington than it is to New York. Mr. Sargent, of Cal., presented a petition < Susan B. Anthony and others asking thi women be allowed to vote, or that the san right be extended to them as to colored men. Mr. Cameron, of Pa., presented the memori of the Russian Mennonites, setting forth th they desired to become citizens of the UniU States, and asking that they be allowed I occupy publlo lands. Objected to. Mr. Conkling offered a substitute for tl House Salary bill and all the amendments, r pealing the act of March S. except that portic relating to the salaries of the President at Supreme Judges, and providing that all ba< pav returned be declared the money of tl United States; tbe bill waB passed after di sussion in which the leading members Ux part by a vote of 50 Yeas to 8 Nays. The House resolution to fill the vacancies i the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian I stitution was taken np and passed. The Cba appointed Mr. Sargent, of California, a memb of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonii Institution on the part of the Senate. Eulogies were pronounced on the late Janr Brooks and W. I). Foster, and resolutions < respect adopted. Mr. Ferry, of Michigan, said as he shared the public anxiety that the Senate should a on the question of finance immediately, 1 proposed to modify his substitute for the res lution of the committee, so as to narrow tl subject down to a moderate increase of tl currency. He, therefore, withdrew the su stitute formerly presented by him, and su nutted the following: " That the Committee on Finance bo direct* to report to tho Senate, at as early a day i practicable, each measures as will restore cor mercial confidence, and give stability ai elasticity to the circulating medium through moderate increase of the currency." Mr. Frelinghuysen presented a bill to secui resumption of specie payments without co trading the currency, and it was referred the Committee on Finance. It authorizes tl Secretary of the Treasury to issue $225,000,0 of six per cent, ten-forty bonds, to be disposi of from time to time, for the purpose or pu chasing $200,000,000 of gold ooin, with whicn redeem legal-tender notes of the United State and it shall be in the discretion of the Secreta of the Treasury, so soon as he shall deem it e pedient, with such amount of gold as for tl time being he may have procured, to commem and continue the redemption of legal tendeT When redeemed they are not to be reissue exoept in exchange for gold coin at par, ai when so reissued ther snail be redeemable gold coin, but the total amount of legal tende outstanding and redeemed shall at no time e ceed $356,000,000. The bill farther providi that if, after commencing said redemption, tl Government shall be unable to redeem a pa of said legal tenders in gold, the Secretary mi redeem them by exchanging the aforesaid boni at par for them. Senator Conkling. of N. Y., presented memorial of the New York Chamber of Coc merce calling the attention of Congress to tl inefficiency of the merchant marine service i the United States. The resolution from the Finance Commits looking to a resumption of specie payment was discussed. Mr. Schurz delivered a lengtt speech in which he urged an immediate r sumpuon 01 specie payments, iuiu uppoocu c inflation of the currency. Caleb Cushing's nomination to be Chi Justice was withdrawn by the President, In his reply to the Finance report of Senat Schurz, Mr. Morton, of Indiana, said : " T1 United States could not be guided by the e perienoe of England in the matter of co: traction. There was hardly a man living fh miles from a bank, and most of them lived I towns and villages in sight of banks. T1 facilities for bank credits there were mu< greater than in this country, and there was n the necessity for so great a volume of cu rency. England, with her 81,000,000 neopl has $600,000,000 currency. And the Uwt< States, with her forty million people, had 011 eight million currency. He aid not think o currency redundant. * It had Deen argued th we had built railroads too fast. He did not b Ueve a Senator on this floor would sav h State had one railroad too many. Probab sometimes they had been built m advance 1 settlement, but they were always the pionee of civilization. He desired to again state th: the recent panic in our country did not sprit out of any defect in our currency. The cu rency did not run down during the panic, bi -on the contrary increased in value. He sa behind all this contraction argument the o State banking system looming up. Mr. Howe, of Wis., introduced a bill for tl withdrawal of irredeemable national notes ai the substitution of redeemable national bat notes. B0U8K. The bill for the relief of aged or infirm pr emotion settlors on public lauds was passed. The motion made by Mr Kelley, of Peni before the holidays to suspend the rules ai adopt a resolution declaring it to be the sen of the House that the taxes shall not be i creased, but that the extraordinary meanB, any be required for the support of the Cover ment, shall be obtained by a temporary loan loans, bearing a low rate of interest in curren and redeemable in United States notes, car up for action. After discussion the vote w taken and the House refused to suspend t! rules. Yeas, 155; Nays, 82?less than tw thirds in the affirmative, so the resolution w not received. Air. turnout, or jui., mtroaucea a 0111 cua tering a double track railway from tide-wat on the Atlantic to the MiBeouri River, and limit the freight thereon. Referred to t Committee on Railways and Canals. Mr. Holman, I ml.,' moved to suspend t rules and adopt a resolution declaring that the judgment of the House, there is no uec< sity to increase taxation or to increase t public debt by a further loan, if there shall economy in the public expenditures, and tli m view of the condition of the natior finances, the House will reduce the appropr tions and public expenditures to the lowc |K>int consistent with the proper admiuistrati of public affairs. The rules were suspend ana the resolution adopted.?Yeas. 221; Nays Mr. Hawley, Conn., moved to suspend t rules and adopt a resolution declaring it to the sense of the House that tlie expenditm of the nation can be aud should be so reduc and regulated that they can be met by exiBtii taxes, and that in no event should there be increase of either interest-bearing or no interest-bearing obligations of the Governmei The motion was agreed to without the yeas a nays, and amid some laughter and applause. The Education bill was discussed and pof poned till March. The Senate substitute for the House Sala bill was passed by 226 Yeas to 25 Navs. A new rule, requiring that all bills makii appropriation shall be tiret considered in Coi mittee of the Whole, was adopted. Supervising Architoct Mullett has recoi mended to the Post-OfBce Committee t forfeiture bv the Pacific Mail Company of tl n.Mllln,.!,! ui.n. r.f flftf! Mr. Cox. of N. Y., quoted from the Art) and Xari/ Journal in corroboration of a stat ment which he had made before the holiday that New York was at the mercy of forei) iron-clads\ and remarked that its only protect! was in a refined system of torpedoes. Mr. Kelley, of Penn., also stated that win the chip Cathedral could not get into N< York she had to bo sent around to Philadelpl and to have her cargo discharged there a sent to New York by rail. A bill relating to United States courts w panned; a codification of the statutes was i ported, and it was agreed to hold two eveni sessions a week for its consideration. Mr. Smith, of N. Y., from ti e Committee Elections, reported a resolution declari Messrs. Wilson and Martin entitled to Bei from the First and Second Congressioi Districts of West Virginia, and a minority i port was presented by Mr. Huzelton. of Wis. The consideration of the Naval Appropriati bill was completed and the bill passed. The Committee that went to New Orleans investigate the charges against Judge Dur believe that he will be impeached. Tho Naval Appropriation bill was pass without amendment, just as it came from t committee. The entire amount appropriat is Bixtceu and a half millions. This is fully millions less than the average annual appi priations for the last five or six years, and within a million as low as the appropriation 1 1859. The House has passed, and the Sena with a slight amendment, has concurred a bill appropriating four millions for the < traordiuary expenses of the navy. In the lower branch of the Legisl j tare of Iowa there are 47 Republic members, 48 of the Opposition, and I Independent i Not to be Led Astray. i From various signs in the principal coW * cities and labor centres in the United te States, says a leading New York jour- inU I8 nal, in referring to the working-men's gtai ik riot there, it may be perceived that witl ^ there is a small knot of busy propa- ?th( I- gandists of disorder, who, in the name ** 8. of theworkingman, make towards broils kee >n and turbulenoe on evejy opportunity. j ihe unfortunate financial crisis gave two these little centres of spitefulness a duxt at momentary potentiality they did not ie expect?that is, furnished some ma- , . terial in the shape of unemployed work- thi? men on whose hopes and fears they kJ oould work. These men in very raie cun to instances have any home interest in Joh this country. They are the revolution? ists by profession in Europe. The Jju ,n greatest tyranny to which they object <__ id is not that of capital, but labor. They :k hate work. The little band of frowsy 18 conspirators which headed the move? meats which culminated in c brief row " are not a novel institution in this city. ^ in They have met and frothed and talked ^ a- weekly foryears past; but until the panio and gave time and to spare for listening to trot " evil counsel they were unheard of. I* ? Then they were swift to promise relief ou" aa of everr Kind, like Satan on the high ??* of hill, if the workingmen would only c??< . worship them. The workingmen are m* ct too sensible to think that the fsntasti c ??< ie trickB of these would-be leaders, or the wra o- excesses to which they would egg them Jfc 16 on, can remedy any of their oircum- ch stances. Socialism cannot be inaugurate ted on empty stomachs, and when froi stomachs are full the socialist dema- atoi >d gogne is left to his orations, and the " workingman rejoices tranquilly in his will ^ home life. In this broad land, where ^ a the people are the rulers, there is no ex- or cuse for turbulence to obtain that which W01 re is wrongfully lacking. We were not slow to indioate some weeks ago that if the & J? question of providing for the nnem- *ti DO ployed poor was not taken up by the id proper parties it would be grasped in J"- ghouMike glee by the noisy conspira^ tors, whose aim is personal aggrandize- 111 * ment. While we condemn unreservedly x. the little knot of mischief-makers who "al io inaugurated the affair in this oity, we Ch0 =e are iu nowise led to spare the authori- sor ? ties who so maladroitly managed it that Bm 1(j it led to what the safely-hidden com- ton in munistio individuals desired?namely, bt|* rs a row, which might have been a serious it p * riot TH1 Post-PIgeOM, eUj g A Paris correspondent writes that frequently as many as forty or fifty post- Vl * pigeons pass during a day to and ~b ,e fro between Paris and Versailles. The BB of operator who dispatches the birds has Q so a little office opposite the Oour du Ma?, roc. Thus the reporters have but to ( jy rush across the street, attach the paper e" beneath the wing, and away flies the ,u tiny messenger. The man who keeps di? ef the birds is a small, singular looking oor man, with a long beard. During the or sessions be sits holding a Dira in eaon 10 hand so that no time maj be lost. The wu *1 pigeons, only too glad to escape, fly ire swiftly to Paris. Great is the crowd org iu that daily stands gaping and staring at , ?e the busy little birds. * Ot fori t- A Sad Picture. Me i e Blcl J(i We do not expect to dissuade people )y from kindling their fires with the dan- = at gerous aid of kerosene, though we have probably printed accounts of from 40,- b?< ly 000 to 60,000 accidents, more or less of fatal, the result of this inoautious ex pedient. It may do no harm, however, Mn at to mention thata woman in Fort Wayne, h<h Ind., who, a week or two ago, had a at pair of beautiful arms, is now totally w wanting in those beautiful limbs. Am- no id putatedf, both of them ; and all because 10 of kindling with kerosene! id ik Will Wonders Never Cease I When Dr. Walker proclaimed that he o?r had produoed from the medicinal herbs gt*: e- of California an Elixir that would re- Hoi a'euerate the sinking system and cure jjj very form of dis ease not organio, the ptt H0 ncredulous shook their heads. Yet his bq< u- Vinegar Bitters is now the Standard if Restorative of the Western World. Unu" der the operation of the new remedy, ?y Dyspeptics regain their health ; the ' oe Bilious and Constipated are relieved of aa every distressing symptom; the Con- ** he sumptive and Rheumatic rapidly re?* oover; Intermittent and Remittent ^ 118 Fevers are broken; the hereditary taint hoi ir- of Scrofula is eradicated I Skepticism er is routed, and this wonderful prepara- co! t0 tion is to-day the most popular Tonic, oat "e Alterative, and Blood Depurent ever jj*' lie advertised in America. We don't sell Lai in Rum under the guise of medicine. We 5s advertise and sell a pure medicine '1C which will stand analysis by any chemist ooi '? in the oountrv.?Corn. Bu J o?i [*] A Boston court has decided that if a !Mt woman lends money to her husband she nn cannot get it back. The decision will a,, ed not be new to many wives. . Pel ^ Pimples, Eruptions, Rongh Skin. 010 ,eB The system being pnt nnder the influence of ej Dr. Pierce'8 Golden Medical Discovery for a Oot n? few weeks, the skin becomes smooth, clear, Flc soft, and velvety, and being illuminated with Wh . the glow of perfect health from within, true beauty stands forth in all its glory. Nothing [1(j ever presented to the public as a beautifler of the complexion ever gave such satisfaction for ac this purpose as this Discovery. The effects of all medicines which o]?erate upon the system ? through the medium of the blood are ueces* sarily somewhat slow, no matter how good the remedy employed. While one to three bottles TB clear the skin "of pimples, blotches, eruptions. Ill yellow spots, comedones, or " grubs," a dozen ' jj. "may possibly be required to cure some ctscs l,e whore the system is rotten with scrofulous or |je virulent blood poisons. The cure of all these diseases, however, from the common pimple to m the worst scrofula is, with the use of this most U e. potent agent, only a matter of time. Sold by f 1 ,g all Druggists. Covered With Eruptions. Cured. ,,n Clave hack. Columbia Co., N. Y. tVt Dr. D. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.: Bn Dear Mr?i am sixty years 01 age, ana nave | 3W been afflicted with Salt ltbeum in the worst ua form for a great many years, until, accidently, ? a(j I saw one of your books, which described my ? case exactly. I bought your Golden Medical I fj aH Discovery and took two bottles and a half, and fj 0. waj entirely cured. From my shoulders to my n ug hands I was entirely covered with eruptions. ^ also on face and body. I was likewise afflicted -p. on with Rheumatism, so that I walked with great lj difliculty, and that is entirely cured. May God t<8 spare you a long life to remain a blessing to ir1 mankind. With uutold gratitude. lk re Mrs. A. W. Williams. ? ' If congress bad employed as much ? n scientific ekill in the arrangements of its TT , 'Reconstruction Policy " at the close, as the HI u War Department did in the beginning of the r I war, in arranging for the manufacture of what j was called Shiritlan'* Caralry Condition Pototiers for the use of Cavalry horses, no doubt ^ the Union would have been restored long ago. H 3 j ?Exchange H ro- Hale's Honey ok Horehound and Tar 18 will arrest every ailment affecting the lungs, 14 throat or chest.?[Gom. m . jn' Pike's Toothache Drops cure in one minute. iz- ?[C0 - 1 For coughs use Wiptar's Balsam.?[Com. of au [a. CmsTADORo's excelsior Hair Dye {?, stands unrivaled and alone. Its merits have ? " been so universally acknowledged that it would I 5 be a supererogation to descant on them any " further?nothing oar. beat it. ?Co?n. 9 V J * / l Frekxd in Nhnd.?For sudden 1b, producing colic or neuralgic peine, the a-Killer of Pxrbt Dattb acta like a charm. b equally efficacious applied externally or irnally. Throughout the New England lee it is the family doctor. No mother does lout it. Whenever used, in this or any ar land, it ia everywhere acknowledged to the world's " Pain-Killer." All druggiats p it*?[Com. ^iiioo s Instant Rkliep has stood Ta trrerrenfn/1 fn ffivA {ffltlUU to alT Rheumatic, Nenralgio, Head ; and Back acbea. or money refunded.?Oom We noticed in one of oar exchanges i week the statement of Dea. John Hodgj, of Sonth Jefferson, Me., whose son was sd of incipient consnmption by the use of neon's Anodyne Liniment. We refer to i at this time as tending to corroborate the ement we made last week in relation to this iment as applied to consumption,?[Com. wry TEARS' EXPERIENCE OF AN OLD NURSE, U. WINS LOWS SOOTHIHQ 8TBUP IB THS (SCBIPTION OV one of the best Female Phyllis end Horses in the (Tnlted States, and has a used for thirty years with never failing safety soeoess by millions of mothers and children, a the feeble Infant of one week old to the adnlt orreete acidity of the stomach, relieves wind e, regulates the bowels, and gives rest, health, comfort to mother and child. We believe it to he Best and Sorest Bemedy in the World In all >s of DTBBHTXBT and DIABRHCEA IN CHILIS, whether it arises from Teething or from other caose. Foil directions for nslng will >mpaoy each bottle. None Genuine nnlese the simile of CURTIS A PBBXIH8 is on the outside pper. ilp sr all Mspicnm Disuse. ILDREN OFTEN LOOK PALE AND ICR. a no other canst than having worms in the nach. BSOWH'S VBBMIFUQB COMFITS 1 destroy Worms without injury to the child, ig perfectly WHITB, and free from all oolorlng other injurious ingredients usually used in m preparations. COB TIB A BBOWN, Proprietors, Ho. Mil Fulton Street, Hew Tork. id by Druggists and Chemists, and dealers in lieines at Twnrrr-Fm Carre a Box. THE HOUSEHOLD PANACEA, an FAMILY LINIMENT he best remedy in the world for the following iplalnts, vis Cramps in the Limbs and Btom, Paint in the Stomach, Bowels or Side, Rheulsm in al :ts forms, Bilious Colic, Neuralgia, lera, Dysentery, Colde, Flesh Wounds, Burns, t Throat, Spinal Complaints, Eprains and tees, Chills and Fever. For Internal and Bxlalute. s operation is net only to relieve the patient entirely removes the cause of the complaint enetratee and prevadee the whole system rering healthy action to all its parts, and quickenthe blood. I HOUSEHOLD PANACEA lis PURELY VEO tale and All Healing, repared by GUBTIB A BROWN, Ho. 210 Fulton Street, Hew York. or sala by all Drngglits. ROWN'S A COUGH, GOLD, SORB THROAT OITOH1AL RomrPS Requires Immediate attention, and ahonld be Checked. Hallowed to nrrn-a* continue, Irritation of the Lunge, a OUi*HS permanent Throat Affection or an Attn incurable Lung Dtieaae, la .often GOLDS. tho result. BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHBSj ring a direct Inflnenee en the parts, give lramete relief. For Bronchitis, Asthma, Catarrh, isumptlre and Throat Diseases, Troches are i with alicayt good rucotMt. SINGERS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS 11 find Troches useful In clearing the voice when en before Singing or Speaking, and relieving throat after an unusual exertion of the vocal ans. btatn only "Bsows's Bboxchiai, TaooHBS," and not take any of the worthless Imitations that f be offored. Soli Kvtrytckort. last and Oldest Family medicine.?San i't Livtr Inoigprator-a purely Vegetable Catkar and Trmie-torDyspepsia. Constipation .Debility, k Headache, Billons Attacks, and all derangeats of Liver, Stomach and Bowels. Ask your igglst for It. Brteart of imitation a ? --- rz s . The markets. if Cattle?Prime to Bxtra 4 .13V* .13 V First quality. 11 ha .13 Beoond 10 Va .11* Ordinary thin Cattle.., .CO a .10 Inferior 07*a .09 ch Cows 40.00 aSO.0.1 I??Live 08 *a .05* Dressed .06*a ,07a ?p 06*a .07* ton?Middling 16*s .17* ur?Extra Wee tern 6.75 a 7.06 BUte Extra 6.90 a 7.05 eat?Red Western' 1.70 a 1.70 No. 3 Spring 1 60 a 1.65 > 96 a .98 ley- Malt 1.50 a 1.65 a?Mixed Western 64 a .65 n?Mixed Western 91 a .94 r?per ton -.. 18.00 a29.0i> tw?per ton. 14 00 al8.(0 ps.._.. "73s, .25 a .40?"69s ,f8 a_.15 K?mess i? uu Kio a d 08?.'? .09 rolenm?Crude 05>;i.5^ Refined 14J< Iter?State 30 > 40 Ohio Fine .24 a .32 " Yellow 10 a .29 Western Ordinary 19 a .22 Pennsylvania fine 35 a .39 MM?State Factory ll>ia .14 " Skimmed (3 a .08 Ohio 09 a .13 la?State 27 a .28 wmiA ii Cattle. 3.75 a 6.31 MP .'. 5.25 a 6.25 ' rr?Live 5.28 a 5.90 7.25 a 9.25 eat?No. 2 Spring 1.45 a 1.50 n 72 a .77 ? 48 a .50 1.00 a 1.00 rley 1.45 a 1.62 d 09 a .09 ALBANY. eat 1.45 a 1.95 a?State 90 a .90 rn?Mixed 85 a .90 riey?8tate 1.50 a 1.50 s?SUte 54 a .56 rnmnsr.raiA. iur?Penn. Extra 7.50 a 8.25 ieat?Western Bed 1.C0 a 1.65 rn?Yellow 82 a .88 Mixed 73 a .80 rolenm?Cmde 10Reflnedl3\ Ver Seed 8.50 a 9.01) Timothy 3.00 a 3.50 BALTMOM. ton?Low Mldllngs 15^'a .15.V nr?Extra 6.00 a 7.00 eat 1.35 a 1.80 m-Yellow 83 a .87 62 a .05 ;k your druggist or grocef for CONTI'S mm CASTILE SOAR amd CONTI'S mm FLOATING SOAP PERFECTLY PURE, IILE THE COMMON MOTTLED CASTILE IS ADULTERATED. ROSE r.E.vriNE VSLEMH RHANDED . cowti & ficli, livorno, IIMWSWVn to ?100 Crested in Well St. 111 0",n leads to a 1'ortane, Na ri?k. 32pa*? pamphlet freis. 1'uUntinr rumhrittg* it ?\?.. ZdaSBJ Bad ken and Broken. 38 Wall-sL.N. T. 'TTUTVT^UC Enterprising young an< U k51 ll J2iklkle middle-aged men and wo >n ambttloni to make a successful start In bad i*. are offered superior facilities for preparlnf mselves at the 8PKNCKRIAN BU81NE88 COL OE. Milwaukee. Wis. _ rAJKMOTH BRONZE TURKEYS I L. L. BRED. Aubnrn. Ohio. Circulars free. feeilln TTnnnnliold Hnirnmnn ? nuusGiiuiii iay.il/iuG, THE BEST DOLLAR MONTHLY. k K J /tj-i made *7 can TA VL1 ^ Tiding for tbli mag t%J Uv u)lu aalne-now In 111 Utl toI ?with Chromo, The Yosemite Valley, IxiiO Inches, In 17 (Ml Colors, igaztne, one year, with Mounted Chromo, (2.0 guloe, one >eir, with Unmounted Chromo, 1 S gkilne, alone, om year, - . 14 tzamlni onr ClnbMng and Premium LUti. rwo PIrsf-clasa Periodical* for the prlci one. We toilot Kxpaiienced Cinnaiert d otheri to lend at once for termi and Bp?Ci n Mig sine. Address H. B. 1HUTKN, Put liar, li Path R 'w, V. Y. City, or K-wbmgh. V. t T 1 A |T We hare found something rrw toi J LKII agents. H will eell betterthaa ant ilng nmr handled. Samp lei 25c- F.URKKA MAH rZvf PB*& CO-,M? CI ark or U4 Madison 01,Calca?i ASON I CABINET {?) ORGANS. ? - f 1 Unrivaled! Incomparable! wiNKznfl or Tito Billies! Medals and Diploma of Hoior At Vienna, 1873; Airs THE First Medal at Paris, 1867 or GOLD AND SILVER MEDALS OB OTHER HIGHEST AWARDS In AMERICA ALWAYS! The Mason and Hamlin Obqah Co. hAte, by the oononrrenoe of the 8ped*l Jorjr, the Internationa] Jury and two 8ob Juries of moat eminent artiste and experts from different conn tries .been officially awarded the First and Highest Medal at the Vienna Exposition in competition with the best makers of all oountries. In addition the Austrian Industrial Society at Vienna awarded to Mr. Emmotp Hamlin, of this. Company, their Grand Silver Modal and Diplomi or Honor, for the valuable improvements exhibited, and extraordinary superiority displayod in these Organs at the Exposition. Other American Kzhibitors weri not found worthy, in oompariton, of any aware whatever. It is significant as to the superiority of tlu Masox A Hamlin Cabinet Oboanb that the] are the only American Instruments of the claw which have ever obtained any award in oompe titiou at a World's Fair, and that tbey have always obtained the highoet award at Industrie Exhibitions in America, there not having beer half a dozen exceptions at hundreds of sad comparisons. Testimony from 1,000 Musicians Is published by the Mason & Hamlin Orgai Company in a Testimony Circular, which wil be sent tree to any address. It will be found t< include the Judgment of most of the leadiuf organists, pianists, conductors and composer of the country, with the most distinguishes vocalists and instrumentalists; the genera tonor of whoee evidence is that the superioriti of the Mason A Hamlin Oboans to all other in the world is obvious and material, that tho; have purity and excellent quality of tone no yet attained by others, which will not only pleat* at first, but continue to pleaae; that they ari oqnally remarkable for tneir variety of effoct their power and delicacy, their promptness ant equality of scale, and, espedally, their tbor oughnoee of constrnotion and durability. An 1 this is the judgment not only of Ameri can musicians, but of many of the Most Distinguished lu Enrope. The Testimonial Circular alluded to contain testimony from many of the very most emineu musicians in London, Paris, Vienna, Berlin, Prague St. Petersburg, and other principal European cities. So highly are the Mason A Hamlin Oboan annreciated in Eurone. especially in England tli*t eight hundred of them have been sold i; London alone daring the year 1873, the domain for them having doubled yearly, on an average since their introduction there, a few year since. The Plan of Selling Secures fairness and lowest prioee to alh Tn lowest pnicEs are printed in the pbioz-lut of the Company, and are therefore fixed an< Invariable?alike to alL Ouly smallest commie eions can be allowed to dealers, who therefor nometimes recommend inferior Orgam on tehic they are allowed larger profile. New Styles Ready. This Company have recently completed an now offer a number of new styles, tho mot beautiful in external appearance, having th greatoht musical capacity, and sold at price which render them the cheapest wliieh the have ever mado. Among them are Five 0< tave Double-Reed Organs at $110, $125, $lf to $185; with three and four sets of rco<'i $175 to $325. Other styles up to fourteen so of reeds at $1,500. Many of these aro in th now Upright Resonant Cases, of groat oxco leuco and beauty. Some contain tho new ster Viol d'Axoub Ecpuone, Improved Vox IIi mana, and the Revolvino Fall-Board. Organs rented with privilego of purchaa or sold for payments running through one t four years. Illustrated Catalogues, Price-Lists, Ac., fir Mason & Hamlin Organ Co B08T0N, NEW YORK and CHICAGO. MERCHAIfT'S GARGLING OIL The Standard Liniment of the United States. IS GOOD FOB f Burn* and Scald*, Rheumatism, Chilblain*, Hemorrhoid* or Pile*, Sprains and Rrultts, Sore Nipple*, Chapped Hand*, Caked Bream, Flesh Wound*, FUtula, Mange, Frost BUe*, Spavin*, .Sweeney, External Bolton*, Scratchet or Create. Sand Crack*, StringhalL WindgaUt, Call* of all kind*, Foundered Feet, Sil fa.it, Ringbone, Cracked Heel*. Boll Evil, Foot Rot in Sheep, Bite* of Animals, Roup In Poultry, Toothache, Lame Back, <fc., <fc. Large Sire $1.00. Medium 60c. Small 25c. Small Slse for Family Use, 2fi cents. The Gargling Oil has been In use as a liniment since 1833. All we askIs a fair trial, but be sure and follow directions. Ask your nearest Druggist ordealertn Patent Medicines for one or our Almanacs, and read what the people say about the Oil. The Uargling Oil Is for sale by airrespectable dealers .throughout the Lnitea Statu an<l other countries. Our testimonial*date from 1833 to the present, and arc unsolicited. We also manufacture merchants Worm Tablets. We deal fair and liberal with all, and defy contradiction. Manufactured at Lockport, N. Y., U. 8. A., by Merchant's Gargling 011 Co., f JOHN HODOE, Secretary. B?? ? Thoa-Nectar BIAOIL TUA ?w/^Wh*X<C?. With the Oreen Tee Fleet . Cpwc^HiwmEAi1 Th? beit Te? Imported. I everywhere. And for ) /W|KnMk jT wholesale only by the OBI 1 ' Sr McaII ATLANTIC A PACIFIC TI CS JWSJI nr., No*. 35 end 35 Veiey 8 qUBmgBBBf New Turk. P. 0. Bo*, A,fit Bend for Thee-Necter Clrcul aT^P.0AT,I5FL^ 18, .Yarn it i, end thO^TZXIOAT, LtjyOB ' which docs not dry np ft ronirh end leavo the caoae behind, but loosen* It, cleanses the lungs end allays Irritation, thus removing thoceuso of the complaint CONSUMPTION CAN BE CUBED by a timely revirt to this standard remedy, as I* proved by hundreds of testimonials It ha* received. Tho atnuin* Is algned "/. Butt*" on tho wrapper, 8KTI1 W. FOWI.K ?fc BON'S, Propri*tob8, Boetox, Mam. Bold by d-elers generally. AMY ending us the address of ten persons wl His lOcts. will receive,/rer,a beautiful Chror ntlC and Instrncclen* how to get rich, pottpal UNC Oity Novelty On., 108 South 8th St.. Phlla.,1 I ? _ C{ 1 K Per Day. 1.000 Agents wasted. Be i3 1 ?) itanu to A. H. Blair A Co., 8t Louts, 1 ; KOOEWARD5SS3F.53S mMLLAlttt*. BmUlh? A??? UO. > 1 lii 0+-, ?U Lmt+ U O r? ,) Kaar> w?ek. a?/?n?? wanted, partlt Q|^ Ian ftH. J WORTH A CO.. 8'. Lonl?, > 200 PIANOS AND ORGANS New and Hecond-hnnd,FlnbcluiMaiur w<U fc?*>Mo/I^wer Fneeeyor< <?**, ?r?* leetal A: HON, 481 Broadway, Una arrr before oflei ed In New \ ?rk. AieitaWantedk>c" Water Celebrated Piano*, Concerto and Orcbeetn (Iriatin. Illastrntrd ('alaloanca-niW. Urea iBdorementkto U? Trade. A large dlnconi 0 to Mlnlatera. Chnrchea. Mnttaay.flcheola, eb Itflijlj iWMmmm c .' ' - ?- - v.* / ' > -?* ? figs I all fl II Pi Dr. J. Walker's Califoroia Vinegar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made chieU/ from the na- * j tive herbe found on the lower ringee ai the 8ierra Nevada mountains if Caltfor, " j oia, the medicinal properties otf which are extracted therefrom without the nee * - < , of AloohoL The question le almost 1 daily asked. "What is the c&le of the 1 unparalleled soeoees of VnrttAit Bit| tees 1" Our answer is. that they remove the canee of disease. the patient ye. covers his health. They are the great 1 blood purifier and a life-giving ptfncinla, [ a perfect Renovator and invigortftar " . of the system. Never before in the I history of the world has a mediae been I compounded possessing the remarkable > qualities ot YursoiB Bittbes in healingfhe , , h nek of every disease, mania heifHoi Thev | the Liver and Yfeoeral Organs, in Btitone , Diseases. ?, . . .. .. .? It * > The properties of Db. Valid* VureoAEBittbks are Aperient, Diaphoretic . Oarminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretio, . * i Sedative, Oouater-Initaat,8odariflc Alteon l tive and Anti-Billem. ] Grateful Thousands proclaim Vnr- j i igar Bitters the most wonderful In- * i rigorant that ever sustained the sinking 1 imfem."" '' t + i >'o Person can take these Bitten ir according to directions, and remain long < unwell, provided their tones are not de-. ? Btroyea by mineral poison or other ? / means, and vital organs wasted beyond " { d repair. >? Bilious. Remittent and Inter. mittent Fevers, which are so pnera- " ( lent in the valleys of our great riven throughout the Uuited States, espedafflr . * S * those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Mitamri, 1 Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Bed. Colorado, Brazos, Bio Grande^ ' Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many others, with a their vast tributaries, throughout onr I. entire country during the Summer and jj Autuqin, and remarkably so during seai( sons of unnsual heat and dryness, art a invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In theh I treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow? d erful influence upon these various oni gans, is essentially necessary. Them ? is no cathartic for the purpose eqoal to . n Dr. J. Walker's Vijtxgab Bitters, as they will speedily remove the dark- * d colored-viscid matter with which the it bowels are loaded, at the same time e stimulating the secretions of the liver, * and generally restoring tbe healthy I functions of tbe digestive organs. o - Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vinegar * Bitters. No epidemic can take hold j. of a system thus fore-armed. ? Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head' ache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, 8 Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Soul o Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpita" tation of the Heart, Inflammation of the T.nnfffl. Pain in the rerfon of the Kid 1' neys, and a hundred other painful symp_ toms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia, One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise* ment. * Scrofula, or King's Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammation^ Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old 8ore8, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc. In these, as in all otbar Constitutional Di? eases, Walker s Yiabgar Bitters, have shown their great curative powere-in the most ob8tinato and intractable cases.' For Inflammatory and Chronio Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious. Hem it. tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood. ; Mechanical Diseases.?Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, Buch as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in hfe, are subject to paralysis of the Bowcls.-r-^Mpard against this, take a dose of WaJkbr^Pwboar Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt-Rhenm, Blotches, Spets, Pimpies, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scarfs. IJiscolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system in a short timo by the use of these Bitters. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, larking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. Ne S~ stem of medicine, no vermifuges, no an* elminitics will free the syBtem from worm* like these Bitters. if. For Female Complaints, in yonng J' or old, married or single, at the dawn of woii manhood, or the tarn of life, these Tonie ! A Bitter* display so decided an influence that ?' improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when. ever yon fiad its imparities bursting through ^ the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstructed sluggish in the veins; cleanse it whpn t is foul, your feelings will tell you wheu. Keep the blood pure, and the health of tie system will follow. r. h. Mcdonald k co.. Druggist* and Oen. Agta., San 5ranciacc>, California vid cor. of Washington and 0hiuiton Sta., N. 7. old by oil Drugoriita and Dealer*. nth U-Mo 4 Dr. Tomer's Gie to lealtli. OlvlngaU advice ntcaaaary for avery on# Habia to uiseaaeaf any kino, married or etugle old or yonng; for ail age*, acxea. or condition* In Ufa Agent* wanted for tht* the beat aelll. g book pubHalted ; lend fiO cent* fir aarapl* copy to Dr. Lu TPRNga, 906 Waahlngton Avenue, Bt Loula. Mo. ? Poultry. Kaeda. Ac. Qgili'a Journal. Chamberaho-c. Pa f CONSUMPTION And Xta Our?. i WILLSON'S h Pnrl I S.rnp All S barUUItfldU bUU LIVCI UH ? la aadentlflc combination of two well-known u# it met. fterwilr turningcsrea performed bjr WUfc o> ton* (MLare proof. i T tCf1n?If.10 tbectrcolattoo.It at once cnpplce wUfc I ' CC**C* " Pgr**** tfc> aonmcf )j S(UUrt ,b*U a**MnAt reacting * . *' HMnMmTlt?Wi v' f ^ . \ ^ y* jto "^5ia ' > *