The tribune. (Beaufort, S.C.) 1874-1876, March 03, 1875, Image 4
FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD.
Swine IlrcetUnK*
The Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture
discussed this subject, and in
its discussion Mr. Harris, of New York,
said it must be admitted, as a rule, that
' the true office of the pig was to use and
ecouomize food which would otherwise
bo wasted or sold at a profit, but still
farmers could sometimes better afford
to feed corn or wheat to well-bred pigs
than to sell it at the market price. He
did not know any more profitable branch
of farming than raising pigs and selling
them at four months for from $7 to $8 a
head. He was certain that pigs could
be raised that would dress moro than
fifty pounds at four months old, and by
studying the wants of the market and
paying more attention to quality, we
should be able to hold our own against
the West. The aim should be to produce
choice meat and rich manure. Mr.
Harris said he had endeavored to find
out how much pork there was in a pound
of corn, and he 1 ad found that two
pounds of corn would produce a little
more than one pound of increase. Liberal
feeding while the pig was growing
would not only be moro economical but
they would get more rather than less
meat. One hundred pounds of corn,
over and above the amount required to
sustain the vital functions, was capable
of producing sixty-one pounds of dressed
pork. Science had produced a pig
nearly perfect in form, with a small proportion
of bone and offal, and what was
now wanted was a pig with strong digestive
apparatus. The pig must have a
good appetite in order to make pork, and
sliould be kept warm, dry and happy in
his pen, with no disposition to runabout
. and stick his nose into other people's
business. The restless native pig required
twenty-two pounds of corn a week
to keep him alive, while the quiet and
ntorlif.nfivo Vaoor vxirr milvr nno/1o<1 flu'i.
UtVUtVUVilV AJkK^A |/1 ^ V/m J UUOUtVl tliu.
teeu pounds; and he believed a pig could
be bred that would do even better than
that. In feeding pigs, the first object
should be to reduce the cost of running
the machine. If pigs were kept in a
damp, wet, or dirty pen, more food was
required to keep up the heat of the body.
Regular feeding was important, because
irregularity in this respect induced restlessness
and iudigestiou. If two pounds
of corn, over and above the amount required
to sustain the vital functions, was
capable of producing a pouud of dressed
pork, farmers should understand that
every extra two pounds of corn required
to keep up the heat in cold, damp pons,
was an actual loss, not of two pounds of
corn, but of one pound of dressed pork.
On the subject of pig-manure, Mr. Harris
said he estimated that he got 41J
cents' worth of manure a week from a
pig whose food cost him 371 cents. II :
presented tables showing the value ol
the manure obtaiued from feeding various
kinds of grain anil roots. Pig manure
was very liable to bo wailed, then:
was so much urine connected with it,
and great care should bo taken to absorb
the liquid, which w?3 a very powerful
manure.
Wlicrnt?Broaden*! and Drilled.
Dr. E. M. Pendleton, Professor ol
Agriculture in the Georgia btato Collegi
of Agriculture, lias made some experi
ments iu sowing wheat broadcast, and it
drills, the results being largely iu favoi
of the latter system. In the iirst placi
less than half the quantity of seed it
required per acre, if sown in drills, that
broadcast, this being no small item saved
where a largo area of land is cultivated.
The yield reported is nearly fifty pei
cent, in favor of drilling, besides, foi
every bushel of wheat obtained from
broadcast sowing, one hundred and
thirty-seven pounds of straw were pro(IhpoH
orwl fwim flio
MUv/uvk) wxva iium VUU Ul&UC\l UUIJ UUXU^J*
nine pounds. From this showing it
would appear that a raau in raising
thirty bushels of wheat per acre in drills,
gets a half ton les3 straw than by the
broadcast system; consequently drilled
wheat is the least exhaustive of fertility
iu proportion to the amount of grain
produced.
In the experiments referred to, it was
further shown that culture of the growing
crop?- produced decidedly beneficial
results. After the crop was well started
in spring, a subsoil plow was run between
each two rows, breaking qp the earth,
but throwing none against the plants.
If stirring the soil about corn in summer
is beneficial, we can see no good
reason why it should not be for the
young wheat plant. Whether the increase
iu yield and quality of grain will
be sufficient to pay the extra cost of culture
remains to lie determined by a
series of experiments extending through
several years. uno or two failures 01
successes are not to be taken as conclusive
in demonstrating the value or
worthlessness of such systems of culture.
Farm Notea.
Sawdust is bad for floors of the hennery.
Fowls are likely to pick it up and
fill their crops with it, and it is bail fox
them. A clean earth floor is far better.
Even a plank floor is better.
No one has yet discovered that pari*
Sreen, applied to potato vines to kill the
olorado potato beetle, poisons the
tuber. On the contrary, careful experiments
made to detonnine the fact prove
that it does not.
If you want to increase the wood
growtli the coming season prune any
time before the sap starts, only you are
not advised to choose a day when the
wood is frozen. If the object is to secure
fruit the following season, prune in
June, which will chock the growth of
, wood and develop fruit buds.
Millet should not be sown with oats.
It should be sown separately and later?
say last of Mav to 10th or 15th of Jnn?
?<>n clean well-pulverized land and cut
(if for forage) wnen in bloom and cured
like other grasses. It is ?u annual plant
and the sowing must be repeated each
year.
The Prosperity of France.
Recent tables published by the French
government show that the exports and
imports of 1874 amounted to over 81,800,000,000,
excoeding any former year,
and showing an increase over 1873 of $56,000,000,
and over 1868, when the Empire
was in the tide of prosperity, of
nearly $280,000,000. Tins shows that
there is marvelous prosperity iu France,
that the war has not diminished the
thrift, industry and enterprise of that
extraordinary people.
SUMMARY OF SEWS.
Ileum or Intcrent froii] Iloum iiiid Abroad.
Auother attempt vae made to revive il>c
franking privilego in the United States Con- !
| gress It in understood that the Canadian 1
i government intends to extend the Pacific railway
in the direction of llato Inlet as booh oh
j possible. It is bound, as soon as the surveys |
in British Columbia aie completed, to spend at
; least f2,000,000 a year cn the road in that pro- !
i viuco. and to complote the lino from Lake
j Superior to Esqnimault by 1890 A boy in
I New York, while defending his mother, shot !
and fatally wounded his father Mr. E.
j Perrault, of Montreal, litis been appointed
I Sccretaiy to tho American Centennial Expoaij
tion commission Senators MncDonald and j
! DeCosmos and Mr. Punster arrived at Ottawa, j
| Outario, from Kan Francisco in seven days,
and from British Columbia in teu days and
a half altogether 'llie widow of the late
i Commauder Cashing sent to Alfred lversou,
of Georgia, a sword presented to that gentlei
man by citizens of Columbus. Ga., when he i
i was a lieutenant of Unite! States cavalrv, be|
i fore the war, but which had been captured by
: Commander Gushing in one of his raids.
United States Minister lYashburno, in a dis !
i patch from Paris, denies that ho received
$10,000 as a bribe from the Texas and El Paso
road for getting its bonds on tho Paris Bourso. j
Cyrus P. Jones, a wealthy farmer aud
politician of Illinois, living near Pontiac, wbb
assassinated by an unknown party at his homo.
President Grant has approved the act I
j making appropriations for fortifications aud
) other works of defense for tho fiscal year end- j
| ingJuneOO, 487G Senator-elect Jones, of j
! Florida, was born in Ireland in 1S34. and came j
! to the United States when ten years old. In '
1854 he took up his residence in Peusacola, j
! where ho has since resided, lie is a solf-mado
j man The French Btcamer Montezuma.
| coffeo laden, went ashore at Great Inagua
I Island and is a total loss During the
j Franco-Gorman war from August 2, 1870, to
Jauuarv 19,1871, there were killed and wounded
! izu,:*U rrencii and 112,3UG German troopw
Iu a New York saloon, a poor drunken man was
thrown out of doors, struck the curb htoue
as he fell, and died from the injuries received.
Extraordinary Scone in a Church.
The Manchester Courier says: On
Sunday morning the service at tlio Irongate
cathedral, at Albury, was interrupted
in a somewhat alarming manner.
The service had proceeded to the reading
of tho prayers, when Captain Syrnes, a
member of tho congregation, was observed
to leave his seat. He at once aseended
the stairs and entered the pulpit.
Closing the door, he stretched forth his
hands and addressed the congregation.
, He said ho was commissioned by God to
deliver a messago which would not be
heard with favor. At this juncture
several of the church ollicials rushed up
, to tho pulpit stairs and begged the gallant
captain to desist. The request was
, met by the captain drawing a sword from
I a sheath which was concealed under his
coat, and waving it above his head, he
said that if any person interfered with
him iu the delivery of his message lie
f would run him through to the heart.
5 A precipitate retreat was made by the
ollicials, and in the meantime Captain
1 Symes proceeded to address the congre:
gutiou, warning them that it was his duty
5 to tell them that perdition was their fate
5 if they coutinuned in their present faith.
1 Mr. Armstrong, a barrister at law, and
L an intimate friend of Captain Symes,
left his seat, and running up the pulpit
stairs begged him to come down. The
captain raised his sword, and striking Mr.
1 Armstrong acroas the hand nearly severed
I- one of his lingers. The alarm caused
" by tlii3 extraordinary conduct was very
great. The ladies of tho congregation
< screamed, and many of them fainted.
The male nnrtinn of fho mnrewmitinn
left their seats, and, assembling in knots
1 in the aisles of the church, called to
' Captain Symes to come down. One
' gentleman, undeterred by the injury in
1 llieted on Mr. Armstrong, ascended the
pulpit stairs to expostulate with the cap1
tain. The only reply hq received was
the presentation at his head of a loaded
revolver. Hearing the click of the
weapon ho slid down the stairs on his
back, and hid behind the staircase.
Duriug this scene the Duke and Duchess
of Northumberland, who are regular attendants
of the church, left their seats.
The Duchess fainted, and was carried
1 from the church by her attendants.
Captain Symes had now full .possession
of the pulpit, and, striking the sword on
the Bible, he was proceeding in a loud
tone to deliever what he termed his
i message, amid the screaming of the
females and the vociferous calls to
"come down" of the men. The officials
of the church had by this time armed
' themselves with long poles, and with
these they went to the pulpit, and after
a tremendous scuffle succeeded in knocking
the sword aud revolver out of the
J hands of the captain. They then laid
; hold of him, and lugged him down the
pulpit stairs. A ropo being procured
he was bound with it, and and foot ,
and tied to one of the pillars of the
' building. Mr. Parke, of the county
> police, was sent for, atul the captain was
' given into his charge. He was taken
almost immediately before Mr. R. I hoy,
1 one of the county magistrates. Two
surgeons were ordered to examine him
I and on their certificates ho was removed
' to a lunatic asylum.
1 The Coolie Trade.
Mr. Myers, of Pennsylvania, introduced
in the United States House a bill
having especial reference to tho coolie
trade. It provides that when immigrants
have entered into a contract or agreement
for a term of service with tho United
States, either for lewd or improper
|Miijiuwnt nuuil llUili^r<lblUII rvilllli ItWl? IM*
deemed voluntary and the United States
consul shall not deliver the required permit
or certiticate. It makes it a penal
offence for American citizens to bo engaged
in such trade. It forbids the importation
of women for the purposes of
prostitution ; invalidates all contracts
in relation thereto and makes the importation
or the holding of women for such
pnrposes a felony, punishable by fine
and imprisonment. It ulso makes the
, immigration of the following classes un'
lawful: Persons who aro undergoing
i sentence for felonious crimes other tliau
political or whose sentence has bein remitted
on account of their immigration,
and women imported for the purpot es of
prostitution.
UNITED STATES COX GUESS.
Semite,
Tho committeo on naval aiTairs reported un- 11
favorably on tlio bills authorizing tho 1'r sident G
to purchase a sito for a coaling station, navy 1 tl
depot, and ether government uses at Fort ! f,
Point, Port ltoval, 8. C. ; and authorizing tho jj
purcliiu-o of tho harbor, privileges, and land
for tho establishment of a naval and coaling \ tl
station in the Samoau Inlands. j V
Mr. Hitchcock. of Nebraska, called up the : c.
House bill to perfect tho United States govern- ' 0
mcnt's guarantee of the District of Columbia 1
.'1.05 bonds, and to authorizo them to bo regie- I ^
tered in tho United Statos Treasury, and it was '*
passed. e
Mr. Coukliug. of Now York, presented amc- o
morial of the OliHniber of Commerce of Now (j
York citv, asking for an appropriation to enable
Gen. Newton t > continue the work in which lie I :
is engaged in regard to the improvement of ! '!
Now York harbor. . j 11
The Sonute l>ill to grant a sito for the Pea- | h
body school in St. Augustine, I''la., was taken ' K,
up, to which there was an amendment pending, I 1
submitted at tlio last session by Mr. Edmunds, |
providing that if at any time any distinction 0
shall be mnde in the admission of pupils on ac- I ?
count of race or color, the site shall revert to e
the United States, and it was rejected?yeas, f(
23; nave, 24. Messrs. Cameron, Ferry, Gil- 1
bert, Morrill, Schurz and Spraguo weic among [ ^
those who voted in the negative. u
Mr. Aloorn, of Mississippi, said the vote iu- li
dicated the fact that the Republicans had be- ' ?
come thoroughly demoralized ou the subject of ^
civil righ s. j ,
The bill was passed without a division. I 11
The llouso hill authorizing the President to \ s'
appoint a commissioner to attend the Interna- t
tional Penitentiary Congress, to be held in ! p
Rome next year, was passed. I ,
On the consideration of the bill to provide a government
for tlio District of Columbia, Mr. '
Morton's amendment, to have the commission- P
ers elected hv the qualified voters of the Pis- \
trict, instead of appointed by tlio President, r
was defeated by a vote of?yeas, 28 ; nays, 28. '
House. I *
Mr. Albright, of Pennsylvania, from the ,
committee ou military affairs, rejxirted a bill to J
constitute a national cemetery out of tlio par- '
I col of ground ceded to the United StatcB in the t
Hospital Hill cemetery at York, l'a., in which )
soldiers from sixteen States are interred. *
Passed.
Mr. Myers, of Pennsylvania, introduced a 1
bill supplementary to the acts in relation to ^
immigration. Referred to the committee on j
I foreign affairs. The bill hats reference ospeI
cially to the coolie trado. It provides that
! when immigrants have entered into a contract f
j or agreement for a term of service within tlio ,
United States, cither for labor or for lewd or {
improper purposes, such immigration shall not ,
bo deemed voluntary, and the United States ,
Consul shall not deliver tlio required permit or ,
certificate. It makes it a penal offense for ,
American citizens to bo engaged in such trade. ,
It also makes the immigration of the following ,
classes unlawful : persons who arc undergoing ,
sentence for felonious crimes other than politi- |
cal, or whose sentences have been remitted 011 ! j
account of their immigration, and women im- j
ported for the purposes of prostitution. j
Mr. Clayton, of Arkansas, introduced a bill (
construing the act to place the colored persons
who enlisted in the uruiy on the same footing ]
as other soldiers as to bounty and pensions. 1
Referred to the committee 011 military affairs. |
The House then went into connu tte'o of the (
whole 011 the Post-olliee Appropriation bill. |
The amounts recommended to he appropriated
are : For the general service of the l'ost-othco
department. s?3(>,000.801 ; for steamship sc-r- '
vice. S'537,500 ; for official postage stamps for
the use of tho Post-otlico department, sJ9SG.000
fntiil *47 jwi 4c.i . 1... r
follow.-!: By the revenues of the department, i
estimated at ?2),143,13t>; by an appropriation i
for dolieieucy out of the treai-ury, i?t>,H52,705 ; \
by direct appropriations out of the treasury,
$ 1,533,500. Tin! total amount recommended 1
by this bill is Ions than the estimate*- therefor
by *1,538,173. Tho decrease is in the amoint
to provide for tho general service of the department
$'J3*i,173. a lid iu tho amount recommended
for steamship service $575,000. Tho
items for stoamship service are : $500,000 for
steamship service between San Francisco,
Japan and China, under act of February 17,
1805 : and $37,all ' for the Brazilian mail steamship
sexvice.
Mr. Tyuor, of Illiuois, who lind charge of
tho bill, explained it, and stated that tho expouso
of tho department was five per cent, less
than last year, wnile tho incrcuso of business
was eight to ten per cent. more.
Mr. Ilolinau, of Indiana, moved to amend by
adding a proviso to the railway mail transportation
item, providing that no money should be
used to increase the rate of compensation to i
i any railway company beyond that now paid ;
the amendment was lost.
Mr. Merriam, of New York, offered as an
amendment that no assessment for political
j purposes shall hereafter be mado on post-oflico
I clerks ; rejected on a ^oiut of order.
5Ir. Smith, of Oliio, moved an amendment
I repealing the law of 1372 for additional mail
| steamship service to Japan and China, and aii!
nulling the contracts made under it, which was
agreed to without discussion.
Tho House in Committee of tho Whole, reI
suined tho consideration of tho Post-office
| Appropriation bill. The bill and its aniendI
ments wero adopted except the one allowing
j members to send public documents and seeds
free.
Housetop Gardens.
Housetop gardens, says the Gardener's
| Afat/azinc, have not attained to the imi
portunce predicted of them in tho days
i when the lowering of the price of glass
j brought that useful article into demand
i for a thousand uses untliought of preI
vi iusly. Hut a sufficient number of ex!
amples are to be found, in Loudon for j
| example, to suggest that the covering of
i roofs with glass will iu a few years bei
come common. The photographers
] nave given an impetus to tlie enterprise j
| by showing how sunlight, previously |
| wasted on unsympathetic tiles, could 1 e j
! utilized for the advantage of mankind.
I A housetop garden not only provides a
I souree of pleasure, and it may bo even
| of prolit, in itself, but it adds materially
! to the comfort of a dwelling by equaliz- i
I ing the temperaturo of the upper
| rooms. By screening the sunshine
! from the roof, the suffocating heat that
! often prevails in houses in the height of
j summer is abolished, and in the depth
; of winter the chambers nearest the roof J
I are some degrees warmer than they
I would bo were the roof exposed to the '
; chilling influence of wind and frost and
snow.
To the Suffering.
An old retired physician, who is candid
enough to tell the truth al>out progress,
has declared that the recent discovery by
I>r. Walker, of California, of Ids herb
remedy, Vinegar Bitters, is one of the
most importaut in medicine. Ho has
tested them thoroughly, in his own
family, among his friends, and irport
himself; and lie is driven to the conclusion
that they possess rare and unexcelled
curative properties. He says of
! them: "They contain no dangerous
, drug. They never reduce the patient?
; never render one liable to take cold?
j never interfere with the overy-day business
of life?never make their continuous
use ft condition of cnrc, and aro adapted
to even the moat delicate organization.
They act oa. kindly on the tender infant,
the delicate female, or infirm old age, oh
on the rigorous and athletic system; exercising
healthful effects upon every
l)lood vessel?on the brain, 'nerves and
lymphatics?on the blood, bile, gastric
juice, etc., enriching impoverished fluids,
and imparting vigor to mind and body."
? Com.
BnaBBnBBBHMMMflaHHMH
Maltreating a Hoy.
A very interesting case, and one sho
lg in n strong light the necessity f
lie formation in all parts of the con
y of societies similar to one recent
irmed in New New city for the preve
011 of cruelty to children, was on tri
fow days since in n county court in
Western State. A brutal farmer w
barged with grossly maltreating ai
verworkiug an orphan boy only twel
ears of age. The neighbors wl
rouglit the allegations against the fori
r asserted that the cruelties extendi
ver a period of three years ; and tin
uring the present winter, the HI-fed ni
liinly-clad child had served as a co
erd, remaining out of doors from ear
lorning until late at night, and that 1:
amis, arms, face, and lower limbs hi
uvcral times been dreadfully froze
le had always been denied the articl
f food on which the family of his bar
mployer subsisted, and had been fed i
orn meal and mush. When he was u
ortunate to sleep as lato as sunrise
rinter, the farmer punished him 1
ragging liini to the pump, and delugii
is half-paralyzed body with cold wah
)nco or twice the child strayed to t
oases of the neighbors in search
ood, warmth, and rest; but on eve
uch occasion he was pursued, reec
ured, and desperately beaten. Oued
Iw. Iu.v ,,...,1.1., ?... 41 4.
UU 1/uj ?u-t UIIIIWAU tw nmuuj;c KUC UUi
onfidcd to his care, as his limbs wt
rozen, ami ho could not walk, but str
;ered about like a drunken man ; a
vhile he was in this condition the fam
aountod his horse, and hastening to t
>a- ture, beat the child with his lion
chip until he was senseless. At tl
>oiut the neighbors interfered, tookt
>oy forcibly from his master, and cans
he latter to be arrested. He lias be
leld feir trial at the circuit court, and
lie neighbors are thoroughly inceiu
oward him, he may have to renu
without bail and in continement ui
\pril.
No use of any longer taking the largo, rcj
live, griping, dras'ie and nauseous pills, c<
ootcd of crude and bulky ingredients and
ip in cheap wood or pasteboard boxes, w.
ire can, by a careful application of clicm
science, extract all the cathartic and ot
medicinal properties from the most valut
roots and herbs, and concentrate them biii
minute granule, scarcely larger than a must
seed, that can bo readily swallowed by those
(be most sensitive stomachs and fantidi
tastes. Each of Dr. Pierce's l'icusant Fin
tive Pellets represents, in a most concentr;i
form, as much cathartic power as iH emlsx
in any of tho largo pills found for sale in
Irug btores. From their wonderful catlia
power, in proportion to their size, people \
liavo net tried them are apt to suppose t
they are harsh or drastic in effect, but suci
uot at all tho case, the different active m
einal principles of which they are compo
being so harmonized, one by the others, a
produce a most searching ami thorough,
gently and kindly operating cathartic. '
pellets are sold by dealers in medicines.? C
No Time to be Lost.?In the incipi
stages of consumption, the tirst symptoms
generally a hacking cough, pains in the ch
diliiculty of breathing, or oppression of
lungs. Something should be done at onci
cheek tho cough, allay and heal the irriti
parts. Allen's Lung llalsam will break up
cough in an incredibly short time ; also pret
the formation of tubercles. Where tuber
are once formed, the disease is bard to c
For sale by all medicine dealers.?Com.
Wo noticed in one of our exclinn
this wotk the statement of Deacon John Hi
kins, of 8011th JcfTcrson, Me., whose son
cured of incipient consumption by the us<
Johnson'S Aliodum l.iniimot Wo ro.fr.i- fr.
at tl?:H time aw tending to coiTobo-ato the st
mciit wo mode lu.st week in relation to this
meut aa applied to consumption.?Com.
If Congress had employed as mi
scientific skill in tlio arrangement of ita "
construction Policy" at the close, as the
department did in the beginning of the wai
arranging Tor the mnnafacturo of what
called SutTiiUin'n Cavalry Condition I'oxrn
for the ubo of the cavalry horses, no dotfbt
Union would have been roHtored long ag
Exchange.
The most unhappy person in the wc
is the dyspeptic. Everything looks dark
gloomy ; he fec-ls " out of sorts ' with him
and everybody elso. Life is a burden to 1
This can all be changed by taking Peru'
Syrun (a protoxide of iron). Cases of SI yc
standing have been cured by it.? Com.
SEED TIME COMETH
Our Flower nnil Kitchen <?nrt!cn llliistri
Directory for 1875 (the twontr-sccond Kdit
with Supplement of Novelties and Speriiiltit
SEEDS and other <1 urden requisites for tho So;
is now being sent to all customers of last yenr?sue
he sent to others Free on application. Address,
D. T. t'i'KTlS & t'O., lloston,jtlai
u n suic ont nf.w catat.ootte
V/ IVI In pages. containing tlie grei
/ a /xritr ivy variety ol Harden and 11;
( r Jr\ (J \J\j l\ Seeds .and Uio host st rains of I
grown seeds for 51 arkettiardc
C? F P Family Hardens, Amateurs
w Am Ga V9 Florists, sent free to nil whoa
HOVKY & CO.53 No. Market St. Boston,M
To the Flower mid V ? ? ? I it It I c? <aitr?len. B
Ufully Illustrated. Will l>o mailed to any address FR
on receipt ot two 3-cont stamps to pay poetaao. Add
C'ltO.S.u AN HHP'S, ftoelM-Mler, N.V. (k" 1
My annual c itnloane of Veaataldn and Flower f
"or 1876, will i?? nflnt Jree to all who apply. CnvtoT
Inst Muon not)d not write for It. In it will be f?
several valuable varieties of new veffctahlon Introdi
ior the li ret timo this reason, having dim do new \
tables a specialty for mauy years Growing oetr ??
ired atul /i/ty rarietUe on n?y several farms, I w<
particularly invite the patmnago of market garde
sndI all others who are especially desirous to have t
leed pure and fresh, and nf the trry best strain All i
/*"?wwnnuiiiom. Aio covered i>y (
warrant* a* given In mv catalogue.
J A .11 KM J. II. <i|{R<iORV,
iWnrhlplifnil. Win
U I nV CTf Our New CnlnloKin
In MilIVk I with prions for Sjtrinq of I*"
now nf the disposal of all
wish for it, and will be ?ent
GARDEN PoRT f,ik:kon a"P'-hati
It contains liata of tho chol
vailrtiea, carefully (frown 1
AND beat of stock, specially au
for tho moat aelect Market i
vav ? -r , hon and llot-llod nan: Kn
FT .() Private Gardens and Gr
*?< a. Vhotiaea. Address,
Hrklecel, Kvcrett dfc (
8EED8 ION. Market Htrcc
%
This nmxr Trtln* U Wntu
with porfort comfort
W- 01I.A8II C J% ??$ ?f ove^T moUooPoT
QI> WL T B US Si Mj& body. routining Ktip^^w^MnnM|^Sr7
turo under tho hardest
II- exercine or severefit strain
1 __ \ Vv?U\E*.J3r^ W until permanently cured.
?y \ M Bold cheap by tho
11- Elastic Truss Co.,
l' No. 083 Ilrondwny. N. Y. Oily,
1 ? and sent by mall. Call or Bond for Circular, and bo cured.
i C?1 i I 1? I'Elt HAY?So ml for "Chroino"
111 gVI ' ' catalogue. J. H. HUKKOltlVS SONS. Boston.
VO (hen ofi>nn A Week and oxponsos to all. Articles
110 Nh HiSmII new. staple as flour. Sample free. C. M.
n J U L1N1NGTON A BUG..N.YorChicago.
i l*?W ^ A WEEK. A rents wanted everywhere. For
tj) I ') outfit 35c. 1'nncu A Wai.keb. Dayton. Ohio.
Dnlrnt Novrlllen. Largest Stationery Package In
111 I I. the World. FKl.TON A CO . I IP Nassau St.. N. Y.
W- &h)ik Dnilv to Agent*. 85 new articles and the
,l? 0^1? best Family Paper tn America, with two ?5.00
V Chromes, free. AM. M'FO CO.. 3QO Broadway. N. Y.
? REAL ESTATE^
I lS Person* wi lling t?buy, sell or eichongo Kcal
08 Estate may advertise their wanta at very small
?t, eiponso hi several hundred Newspapers in Now York,
1 ] New England, Now Jersey. Pennsylvania, ote. Cata
nil loauea sent free to any address on application to
I K. \V. l'OSTKIt, lftO Worth St., New York.
in- I _ T ?
,in nnmu
l?V ' I I III HII known and sure Remedy,
dg j U I I V m NO CHARGE
for treatment until cured. Call on or address
ho | DR. J. C. BECK,
of U2 John Street, C1ACIXXATI, 01110.
'y | Krrlrr. Holme* ?Jfc Co.,
ip- ^ Virueen, t\oriralk. tt., m, :?" Wo
? V W have the assurance of our custom"J
J 7't7'M 1 cratbnt Soa Foam is the best BnkIjo
' \ lng Powder. Our .ales of it increase
continually."
'l'O (irMi.l'laifln tV Co.. f>n.fng^S\'\
gi'f, I'roti-lenre, H. /., say .--"Your
'{?" 1 llJbt'w) I Sea Foam is steadily gaining in
ml V VVsS^yv/ A iavor. All speak well of it." It is
V^dS-?-rffc'>9 thobest. Farmers wives can excel
ler I New Yoik liotei Cooks by u-ing
t, _ VW.y ia Sea Foam. Try it and be happy.
? WflWT , Rend for circular to
3e- 1 i?KO. K. liANTZ vV CO..
\ I7?l Onnin- St.. Now Vorli.
i FREE OF CHARGE.
'Oil
ns SPECIMEN COPIES OF TIIE
m Mi Jftmt fUpavtev,
A weekly 16 pago quarto, financial Journal,
ml- containing full reports of sales at tlio
>mE2
New York Stock Exchange.
her '",'10 ncs'" uu,n^M>r w'" contain valuable In form niblo
lion re^ai dins ilio most successful metliod
0 a of operating with
"ol STOCK PRIVILEGES,
OHM
gn- A full explanation will l>o si veil of Puts, Calls,
ife;l Spreads nml Straddles in which
$10, $100, or $1,000 |
YllQ Can bo invested with a chance of rcalizins
lrit
^ enormous protlts. Tlio subscription prico of tlio
RKl'OltTKit Is *1.01 a year. Specimen nnnibors
used will bo mailed free of charge, by addressing
Wall Street Publishing Co.,
?'? 135 & 137 William Sheet. New York.
ent AGENTS WANTED 'VJX
aelling book over published. Si nd for Specimen pagos
arc and our extra terms to Agents.
e8t, NATIONAL I'UHf.lSUiXC. CO.. Philadelphia.
tl.e jsqok AGENTS WANTED
r. fpaTELL IT ALL
, ent fly Mrs. Fti-nhouoe of Salt Lake City, far So
.... the r ife of a Mormon High Priest. In
HrHnbo'birlion by Mrs. Stone. Tula story of
ure. flH Bl ./Oman's experienro lay. bora the "Aii/dea life."
H mysteries, secret doing., etc. of the Mormon, as 1%
" K tJcHiuxiie woman tret them." bright. Furs
vBSWand Good, it is th? brst now book out, actus.", y
Overflowing with good things for all. It is popular ereryrrpa
where, with rvecybody, and outsells all other books time to
o vne. Minister. .ay ? Owl ejierti it." Eminont women
mi:- I cnuoiK iu r.vcryuouy warns ill ana agon la are solium
?an ,rom to SO a day f Both thutuatvi now in press I Wis
" ! wanti.UOO more tnnty agent. NOW?men or women?ani
0 Of ore w ill mail Outfit Free to those who will canvass. Ijti' i
thin pamphlets with full particulars, terms, etc. sent fret to u!*.
Address A.U. 1 .tuinqtom a Co- Hartford, tXinp
ate
The Ways
licll -y-w-*
B, ?J Wo.
WHb by Prof. J. V*. C. SMITH, M.D.,ona of th? rao?t remarkable booh
?v?r Uiued from the American pre**. Dr. Hall ?ay?, **Ev?nv
at 0 Chiiti* 1a a mica uim or isroiUATiox." The New Yn;.*
UM3 World ?ay?,*It ia a book full or ?oukd imfokmatiox j.rn.
O.? anH?ui.w Dr. Mothe, the celebrated French physician, aa"j,
MKrr?T nci is whiat, niBCHarr is MiasiNc/* A rrand
par. unity for tjr?*nte to make money! WHY SIT STIl L.?~>mpUlnlmrofhard
time?t This beok will *!). Send for clrcnlarsj
>rlli rase. PI'STIN*, GILMAN A CO., llartfora, coca.
ul'l'f PPI! P PQY or FITS cured by the use of Rons
iheil Ll ILLl o i Kpii.eptii; Remedies. Trial Pack
11111. unaoaBaa >1ir frrr. For circulars, evidence of
lian <ucc"-,?. ?tc.. ad.'reas ROSS llHOS.. Richmond. Ind.
iroret farms qf ~{?ilep. i.f-p
Han noHY, S e 110 ru 1. a , Rin<?
tl 1 njwims woiim, s.m.t riiel-m, canI
I CKll. ('at aII nil, N KU It ai.ii I a,
i 1 ^vrlfslll i 4 rheumatism, a b t h m a .
, , pujl iliuieu Dyspepsia, Kidneys, ami
rieA?AMK<fl a" diseases of the skin and
IfetK i^sbs kixniD. Kntirsly ret/ftahle.
ion Money returned In all caaea
s in of luiIuro^im^l^W I.E. < ?mist, Huston. Sold
json, everywhere. $1 a bottle. S?nd for Circular.
.r Iowa R. R. Land Co.
lias fur Bale 1,500,000 Arrra of Railroad Lands In
, 150 fl"> Middle Region of Western Iowa.
'test IIUTTElt I,AN OS AT CIIKAPKlt FIMCKH
>wer thnn can he found elsewhere within civili7atlon No
loino grasshoppers. No ague. No Indians. Aveiage credit
incra price SJ5 and !#SC per acre. Start right 1 Cs 11 or send
al"l totlie Company's office, 02 Randolph Stni< l, Chi ago,
pp'y and obtain full information and how to reach the lands
!as. ft'"''- ?"or ">apb and pamphlets, witli nrice* and terms,
address Iowa Railroad l>and Co., Chicago, or. Cedar
Hapids, Iowa.
joiin n. cAi.iiorN,
I.nnil <OniiiiiMsinnrr,
IVrrt'^JTt'V made rapidly with Stencil A Key Che<k
iii " ^ All A Outfits. Catalogue, aamplea and full particulars
Froe. S. M _SpKNrEIt, 117 llanover St., lloston.
k /5II \VTe will send O Ynrlft IfN PI' It K KM1W.
V3 I ' ' Kit NKKIIS (your choice from our CatTl
I alogue), for 15 eta. All true to name and warm
I If fin I ranted, lit! for *1. Sond 10 contii lor a puck
JH PIN I ngo of our Nrwrnl llwnrl' lloiuviict Antfr
I anil our Catalogue) of Doinotftic and Imported
I 4"> I Sftodfl for 1K76.
V I Zj?1 I iwivvi'i v # /? ??i .? v
r WATERS'NEW SCALE PIANOS
l are the best made; toiirli i lnnlir. uml a II11
1 mIiikIiik lone, powerful, pure on.I even.
WATERS' Concerto ORCANS
?*" cannot be excelled in lone or beniity 5 thru dely
KK-. compel 11 ion. mt Concerto Stop ?? a fine Inn"*?.
t tnlion of the Human Voice. l'lflt'KH K\.
?"> > j TRK9IBT.Y I.OW/w cnolt ditriuu this .Month.
I Monthly Iu*t aliments received; on I'lnnon,
? K?( . S2(); Oruims, ! > SIO; Second linnil
nnlriimeiilM, S3 tr S,>, monthly after Urxl I?? ?
j posit. AHKNTS \VANTF.O. A liberal diecount
to Teacherr, Minietere, Churchea, Schools, f.O'ltjrs,
etc. Special inducement's to llie trade. Hliietruted
t'ntaloKUCN .United. HOKAf'K \VA^
THUS A- SON, 48 I tt'dw'y, New VorU./io-r 3M7.
WIRE RINGS.
'-yAi' .Will not Itgit or make tho
'' /u9v . VT, llotf'. Nom More.
J, * . \VH?rdwnr# Dealers sell them.
^A^RPrT >v BltiBer.H.OOs Tin Rings, po.
iaWr\ - x\ IOO. 0Oo -t Coppered Hinge,
UlTalr co?- 1 Tonga. $1.28 j by mall,
*SflMFl'.po?tpalrt. Circulars free.
w. UUlAc Deo?ur J1L
31 The Tribune Almanac
r*e- AND
,.uid Political Register for 1875.
Oldest, Contest, first. 148 I'n?es.
. The Standard Political and Statistical Annual. Price
hn? poat-pald, 20 Cents x Seven for S I AM).
Addreaa. TIIK TKIIHJNK, New York.
*? \A/ n.nlrooli o \A7 o fnw
p WW MIMAVOUW *1 (UUV^X
MINERAL ROCK SPRING,
0!f Cores Dropsy. Dyspepsia, Diabetes, Constipation,
Gravel, Jaundice, Bright'* Dtsease, Scrofula, K?wr
least s<ir?*, remain Weaknnaa, In all Its forms, all Diseases of
rem tlio Kidneys and ljvor,
(;gr. Pmcr Barrels, $12; half do. $7; cans, jugs, dnmlrma
Johns and bottles, 60 cts. per gallon ; packages extra.
Monoy must acoompany the order. Send stamp fcr onr
book of K1 pages, giving description of the above
C. C. OLIN A CO.,
Wnukeibo, WU.
Yr^Trr~*'
Dr. .1. Walker's ;Wiioruia i i\Pgar
Bitters are a purely Vegetable
preparation, made chiefly Iron-, tlie native
herbs found 011 the lower ranges of
the Sierra Nevada mountains of California,
the medicinal properties of which
are extracted therefrom without the uso
of Alcohol. The question is almost
daily asked,14 What is tho cause of tlio
unparalleled success of V in nr. Ait Hitters?"
Our answer is, that tin y remove
the cause of disease, and the patient ro'
covers his health. They are the great
blood purifier and a life-giving principle,
a perfect Renovator and .lnvigorator
ttf tha oratom Kr>rAV hnfnrn in fh?
history of the 'world has a medicine been
ioirpounded possessing the remarkable
Snahtios of Vinegar Bitters in healing the
iick of every disease man is heir to. They
ft re a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation of
the Liver and Visceral Organs in Bilious
> Psoases
The properties of Dk. Walker's
vinkgar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,
Sedative, Couuter-Irritant Sudorific, Alteraiivo.
and Anti-Bilious.
r. ii. mcuonald a co.,
DrnjrjrLsts and Grn. A cts., Sun Francisco. California,
and cor. of Washington and Charlton Sts., N. Y.
Sold by all Drnggisti. and Dralcn.
N Y. H. U.?No. S. .
a month to nrr-tits everywhere. Address
m f kxcki.shw m'k't; go.. Hnchnnnn.Mich.
A CENTS. chang Chang sells #t Bight. Necersnryas
so.-.p. Goods tiro. Iio.?ton.
2 *15911 PI-R DAY nt heme. Terms free. Ad
h dress Gr.o. stinson a Co.. Portland, Mo
rhrt ^ a utintit -Aycnts wanted every
a where. ru-dncsa Imnoralilo and firstclass.
Particulars aunt free. Address
~ worth a co.. St. i.oulb. mo.
ACJF.NT.S wanted. Men or women. 834 a
week, or $100 fiirfsitnd. i'a'irihle emr-'oi trrr.
Writes! once to k. m TtWKD Khrhth Street. now Vnrk
CO Afifl a Year. Salary und expenses paid.'Ontt^)w,
iu j tit free. a valuable pttcknpe scut for Riots
return postage. c. 11. < .i'l'.nky, Water i )or<) contra, Mo.
bigt.es,sh0t-cuxs, pistols x! revolvers*
Of any -.nd cvcrykl-d. Send stamp ^-/
i)f t alocue. Addieas CJrcnt ^Wnlrrn Ciur
Bad kflsUl P l^TbUt'BC Ua PA.^
(Ocobozcft'sry'slnsiauf full POHfler \
will nmkc m pint of kkrt b'.aoe ink tu urc roinutrs.
tl lipordi., $l.Ji by mill. If. G. O. O.BY, Zsi.nvlilr, O. f
Br ASTHMA a CATARRH,
IK* llavinf sti uggl.-.l twenty >curs between lit v n \
death with IIMA, I experimented 1?y coin'
jiouiiUIuj? i^oots and her*>e ?ml inhaling the tiled*
t#B remedy and ^ur? cure for Asthma and Catarrh.
War: anted to relievo owrvst paroxysm In_JLddreM
A?. LA.\UEL1.| Applet ? i <??.*, OhUw
A fine f vn.tr ?r .-.Ml ACHES FOR sal.t .
t tniin fi u": 1 . ? jo,* e. s ac it 1
loo in Cnltlvati .eft' ... ''(> -sc' i
itoiise, hr.rrti. o.-ohsids. sl's'.k. - -r
Will divide into !w isnr ivn.. y
tho first of April, or S'.htOU K. nt fur tlie ?
Price. SI(K, p-r i. ' i- -r.
JOIIN SAYI.Olt. Ilo-s 4, K.-uloti, O. .
^^Habst Cured
Accrtaiiiar.il sure cure, with mlt Inconvenience,
end fit home. An antidote tl-nt stands purely on its
own merits. Send for iny quarterly maguzlno (ft
costs VOU nothlnnl. mntnliilnccnrrlllcntes nfhundreds
that have been permanently cured. I claim to have
discovered and produced the first, original anl>
only sure curb for opium eating.
_ PR. S. B. COLLINS. lilt Porte, 7nrt.
MMIHIRtl HAblTi CUBED at Home. No
5flBIs 3 1 I'nbiicitv. Terms modernte.
;, S W* (1 H S Time short. Four years of un?yi
IVKal paralleled success. Describe ease.
MM testimonials. Address L)r. K.M arsh,tjulncy.Mic'u.
(S ei eu f\ and expenses n month to nRents. Address
iII?UUa.L tSTUDDAKlr. Jonesvillc, Mich.
$K / t i LIU and the N. Y. Sntnrdiiv .lour*J
V_y 1\ nil mil. the Great Literary Weekly of
America, fur ohm year for the it t unlnr .Niibnerililtou
Price, S3, Pumtatj* faht.
\f \'Jf % Nantes entered Impartially as received, and
r 1/J ( Five llnllurK C'uhIi sent at once to every
fifth subscriber. Clubs id live (at $3each) "I'17 rr/'.ot thn
Sfiii! Tills is our "chiomo"?a Cash premium of ifii to
every tilth subscriber! '1 lie firm name is n -utiicient
KUaranty of fairness and fiiliillm nt. Send money order
or registered letter t? ItKADLF. A AUAM.S, Puhllsho:s.
HH Willlsm Street. New York.
This PAYfeNT CABINET ?r
Pinanii?Lai? LETTER FILE is useful to every
KES'ttf i'SrS3 businsasman.to l;?cn U1LI,H,I,ETEjSSUiil"
1???! TEE3 or PAFEI18 always clean
I OUwlbiftiSS^Hli APd ln alphabetical order; holds
BSBti'MFlrSSBB 4.000 Lcttcrs.caa bo used on a deale
S382l''iiRiS%E3i or hung to the wall. Wo prepay
K^iTllufniyy.VB Express eb"i3tea. bond for circular
11 11 1 1 and prloo list with 1,000 references.
Address C. A. COOK & CO., Chicago, 111.
mACICNTS WANTED RVKUYWIIEUK.?Tho
choicest in the rvntld? Iinportnrs' prirea?(orgest
Company In A ronrtra?staple nil iclo-plt.isea
everybody?trade bicrc'ising?best inducements
?don't ?n'n time- send for < ire ills r to KOllKIlT
WKLLg. 4 3 Ve-oy Sire, t. New York. 1*. O. Ho? I *87.
P" "T Ti WHAT ARE PILES 1
| B | It K A I?! "PLAIN 111,1 NT
| ? Facia," a Treatise on tho
a Cnusue, History, Cure mill
a Prevention of 1*1 LKN. PnblAlishcl
br P. NKUSTAKlt
lTKK a CO., id Walker Street.
' 1 New York, bent KItKKlorli
I Mparts of the United Sta'cs on
^^rocclpt or a letter atanip.
ADVJKUTINKltM! Send 2f> cents to OKO. P.
ROWKl.l, k CO.. 41 Park Km*, N Y.. for tbolr
l"amyhl't nf IOO fiflr*, containing lists of 31 )(K ) newspatiers,
and natimate* showing cost nf advert Istnjr.
/ CONSTANT KAIPI.O Y.HKNT. -At home, Male
or rotuale, 9,10 a woek warranted. No capital re.
coired. Particulars and valuable sao.ples sent free. Ad
die*. u It h .e return stanin. i I 1'iifcS.W Pll.m. .l,u. ire . VY
THE FAVORITES.
FAMILY PAYOKITK. 1 The Titles
.\IANCFACTl ItllltS' FAVORITE. Indicate
OKNKIf Al. FAYOUITK. v the Uses.
For full iiifnrtonUnn resixjctinceur floods, or Auonc.es
for santo. nddrms IVliKII SUM IMi JIIAC'IUNK
COMPANY at llnrtlurd, Contt., or our branch
Offices In leading (Jit ins.
dtfcQfT PKR DAY (Jommlauion, or SSOtwwkHi'.
tarjr and KxpenBH*. W? offer It and will pay
it. Apply now. U. WF.RHKR A (it).. Marion, O.
^U0H
SENT FREE
A Book exposing the mysteries of *rr A T ft m
end howsny one may oueruto snc- VV XXXjJLi k) i
ceaefully with s capital of *oO or Jji 1UOO. Complete
Instructions and illustrations to any address. Tl itlBHIIMJi:
A CO., 13 am; me am? BroKUiB Wall
Street, New York.