University of South Carolina Libraries
FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. The Potato Beetle. Haying had three years' practice in fighting the Colorado potato beetle, says a correspondent of the Country Gentleman, I offer my erperienoe to iny farmer friends of the East, whose knowledge of the pest has not had a chance for development. My first experience was like many others; when the beetle first made its appearance on my farm 1 thought I should have no potatoes for n timo at least. My first attempt to destroy them was by brushing them off the vines with a light brush and covering them up with the plow; iu this I failed, as thoy would get out of the ground and crawl on the vines before I could get around. My next attempt was to harrow the ground level and mash them with a heavy roller; it was better than the first plan, but injured the vines by bruising and mashing them. My next plan was to use paris green, adulterated with the cheapest grade of flour, one pound of green to ten of flour. I bought paris green at forty oents and fifty cents pei Eound. (An experience of three years fiS TirnVPfi fllftt t^oria r.w . vmmw |/wtin ^icru bliUli UUOW but twenty to twenty-five cents, Suiter atod with twenty pounds of either dry, fine, sifted, unleached ashes, or twentj pounds of flour, is equally fatal to the bugs.) I prefer the flour, as it can be more evenly mixed, since it does not hide the green as readily as the ashes. Ashes are much the cheapest. Ouce in every ten days is as often as I have applied it; the first time, as soon as the potatoes began to show. My journal shows that it cost me for green and labor of applying on eight and one-half acres, in 1873, $17.42. It cost less in 1874, as the lady bug destroyed the eggs as they wore deposited. I used flour in the above estimate that cost$6.GO per barrel; $4 flour would have answered as well. Twelve pounds of green served eiglil and one-half acres of potatoes, which is about a fair average, when bugs are numerous enough to damage the crop. With proper caro not to inhale the green, there is not a possibility of danger. I have mixed for myself, and sold to others, over two hundred pounds in the past three years, with no bad effects whatever. Some ot my neighbors went to the expense of having cans made especially for the purpose, that were in n VYtAnna? ? -1 ' 1 uocian. X HHt) OKI tWO-qU&Tt till fruit cans, melting off the top and putting in a wooden head in which to insert a broom handle. First bore a one and one-fourth inch hole in the head to put the mixture in; punch the bottom full ot holes about the size of No. G shot, and your can is ready for use?at no cost, comparatively. Walk alongside of the row and make one shoot at each hill, and your game is as good as dead. Apply in the morning, when the vines are wet, or just after a slight rain. Three smart hands will go over six acres whilo the dew is on. Attempts to introduce bugging machines with some of my neighbors met with no success. I prefer paris green and flour above all bug destroyers, as more practical aud cheaper, as well a* certain and effective. i ore warned is forearmed. Chemistry has demonstrated that nc bad effects follow the use of paris green therefore farmers need have no fear ol using it. Consumers and speculator may, for mercenary motives, attempt tc prejudice farmers against the use ol paris green. Potato bug-machine inventors. orrents. and -- __ , -p ?y vuvou luimxrobCU Hi their sole, may apeak and write gliblj about the danger of paris green; heed them not, but persevere, and my word, learned from experience, will prove the correctness of my judgment. Fruit Garden. Cultivate the soil between the currant bushes often, unless the ground is heavily mulched. Qooseberries are more profitable when marketed in the green state, and should bo picked as soon as large enough for use. If mildew appears, use sulphur freely. Thinning fruit pays in increasing botb size and qnality, and if practiced judiciously, will provo profitable, and with young trees just coming into bearing, is often absolutely necessary. The new raspberry and blackberry canes should be tied up to stakes as soon as they are long enough, otherwise a high wind or driving storm may break them off. Leave only three or fbur canes to grow to each stool, and shorten them when four feet high for raspberries, and five feet for" blackberries. Tie up the young grape shoots as fast as they grow; if allowed to become too leng, there is great danger of breaking. Soft cotton twine, without starch, is the beat ArH ?:-1 rr'1 ' iiinicnui. J. 11111 OUl the fruit on Tines just coming into bearing. Apply a top-dressing of ground bones or ashes to the soil between the vines, if not already done; stimulating manures must be avoided.?Agriculturist. The Clever Crop. Clover seed will bo scarce, says the Prairie Farmer. If reports aro correct there has never been so general a winter-killing, both West and East. It now seems probable that clover seed will be almost impossible to obtain as the produce of the present crop. It therefore behooves all those who have living clover to cut it early, in order to obtain the second crop for seed. In the neighborhood of Chicago every piece we could hear of we have examined, and And it heaved somewhat from spring freezing, but healthy, owing to its having been oovered with snow in the winter; but, then, in this vicinity there is none raised for seed, nor indeed much raised at all except for pasture. So our advice is, save all the clover seed you can. It will be worth money. TsraJps ?d Cera. A Westchester county (N. Y.) farmer is in the habit of sowing yellow Aberdeen turnips amonp his corn at the last passage of the cultivator when tne plants are about five feet in height. The turnips do not make much growth until the corn is cut, after which they swell rapidly. The cost is nothing except for seed and harvesting, and corn, being already cut, is not injured when the turnips are gathered in. From one to four hundred bushels of turnips per acre have been thus obtained without lessening the oorn crop. Weeds are not tolerated, and tits whole strength of the land is devoted, as it should be, to useful erops, . NEWS OF THE DAY.' 1 i Itama of Infarct Iron Home end Abroad. ] Th? New York revenue officers are daily ' seizing thousands of dollars' worth of silks, 1 plushes, crapes and other goods belonging to 1 houses which have been in the habit of in- 1 voicing their goods too low. Deputy Collector 1 Kirk and several minor officers resigued on the unearthing of the enormous silk frauds and i have since disappeared By a fire at Portlaud, a small village near 8t. Johns, N. 11.. 1 St. Luko's church, sixty-eight houses and , shops, a large number of outbuildings and a ship on stocks woro destroyod, rendering one hundred and forty families homeless. Loss, $250,000 The liouso of J. II. Cowman, 242 North Eutaw Btroet, Baltimore, was robbed of a tin box containing bonds, bank stock certificates, etc., of the value of $10,000, belonging to Mr. Conman's mother-in-law The Concord (N. H.) Monitor, the llepublican or1 gan of the State, calls for the impeachment of I Gov. Weston The houso of John Cox, railroad flagman near Garrison's, Putnam Co., 1 N. Y., was broken into by live men, who bound and gagged Cox and then robbed him of $1,700 | in gold and sil\ or,the savings of thirty yeam Advices fioin Constantinople give brief details of a terrible earthquake in the province of ^ Bronesa, Asia Minor, by which six hundred ( houses were destroyed, one hundred and sixtyi one lives lost, and ouo hundred and eighty; seven persons injured The latest returns from tho Holyoke disaster place the number i of victims at one hundred and twenty, of whom seventy-one wero killed, twenty-two fatally burned, and twenty-two ' otherwise 1 burned or iujnred The Governor of Westphalia has summoned tho bishop of Munstel1 to resigu bis see Information from Fort ' Laramie lias been received of the capture of the Gordon Black Bills outfit by Col. Anson Mills' , command. The entire outfit was destroyed ' and the men held as prisoners. < Stephen Grant having sued the Portland 1 Press tor $10,000 for calling him the biggest ' liar in Maine, the jury gave their verdict for tho defendant The Secretary of tho United ! States Treasury has instructed the assistant ^ treasurer of the United States at Now York to sell half a million dollars in gold on each ( Thursday during the month of June. The . total amount to bo sold is $2,000,000 The referee in the recent scull race between Plaisted k and Regan for tho championship of New Eng1 laud has ordered the race to bo rowed over on account of tho interference with Plaisted by i uuieiuura. ah ueia are ueciaroa oil Farther details of the earthquakes in Asia i Minor show that several villages wero destroyed and two thousand jiersouB lost their L lives James Kelly, aged ten years, while running down a railroad embankment in 1 Providence, It. I., struck his head against a 1 passing train, fatally fracturing his skull. At [ about the same time, Howard King Morrow, aged >five years, sprang from the step of a , horse car and his head struck the step-of a passing car, fracturing his skull A judicial investigation ahows that the offer of Friesinger to assassinate Bismarck was merely part of an attempt to extort money, and that the man had I no accomplices Adam Sting and his wife, I an aged couple, wero burned to death in their house in East Hamburg, N. Y L. A. Chase > aud Daniel Millard, aged twenty-one years I each, wero drowned in the Connecticut river, ^ at Northampton, Mass The second trial 1 of William Cunningham, of Newark, N. J., on 5 charge of conspiracy to murder his wife resulted in a verdict of guilty. The facts, as shown by the testimony, are that Cunningham , hired ono Norwood, a desperado, to assassmate i Mrs. Cunningham. A dispatch from Ottawa, Canada, states that 1 destructive fires were raging in the Mattawa and Tcmiacaming country, Upper Ottawa. No rain nati laucn within tlio pant two week*. Houses, barns, and fences were being consumed, and the fire was encroaching* upon valuable timber limits The greater portion i of the business houses in Ripley, Tenn., were t [ destroyed by fire.. ..An old shed on which one ' hundred men and boys were seated watching a ' game of base ball at Columbus, O., fell with its living freight, seriously injuring eight and bruising many of the others Three brothers named Hood, Elisha, and Thomas Cravens, living near Liberty, Mo., quarreled about a division of land. Thomas struck Elisha with a hoe, when tho latter shot him through the heart, killing him, and also shot and wounded Hood, perhaps fatally The trustees of the University of Pennsylvania, at Philadelphia, have received a formal notification that the late John Henry Towne has devised them the residue of his estate, amounting to a million dollars. The llepnblicans of Ohio held their Rtate Convention at Columbus and nominated II. O. Hayes, of Sandusky, for Governor, and Thomas L. Young for Lieutenant-Governor. The platform adopted favors a tariff for revenue; declares that the States are one as a nation and , all citizens are equal un^er the laws; is in favor j of free education ; that there should be no | connection between church and State, and ] opposes all legislation hi the interest of one < particular sect. Of the third term, it says: The observance of Washington's example, in 1 retiring at tho close of a second Presidential terra, will be in tho future, as it has been ... , , . . . - . i ui iuh inwt, lu^nraou ?s a iunaamcni&i ruio m the unwritten law of the republic Landif, j who shot Carrnth, of the Viueland Independent, ^ has been admitted to bail in the sum of $50,- | 000, Carruth having recovered from his , wounds so as to be beyond danger Fifty | lodges were represented at a meeting of the 1 Grand Lodge of colored Masons in Mew York. The Masonic parade in Now York was one of the most successful and important } events of this kind which ever took place in ) the United States. Commandories and lodges i from all sections of the country were present, 1 and it is said that there were twenty thousand Masons in the procession Tho Macon and ( Brunswick railroad was bid in by the State of , Georgia at the sale in Msoon, Ga., for $1,000,- < 000....In a civil rights case against the mane- ' ger of the opera house at Galveston, Tex., the j Judge deoided that the indictment he quashed t i on the ground that the act was nnooustitu- i tional Right Rev. James A. Healey was j installed as Gatholie bishop of the diocese of j Portland, Me., with' imposing ceremonies i President Grant has left Washington for Long 1 Branch, and the members of the Cabinet have j scattered to different parts of the country A mass meeting oomposed of eighty thousand persons was held in Hyde Park, London, to ex- j press sympathies with some cabinet makers , who had just been released from Jail. They : were sentenced for trying to induce workmen to leave work and join a strike The Ger- J man gerwnaent announces that it reeerve |, the right of holding an inquiry on the loss of the steamer Schiller, in addition to the one held at Greenwich A violent storm of wind and rain passed over parts of Indiana, [)hio and Kentucky, doing great damage by ' Hooding crops, washing away railroad embankments and bridges, and unrooliug buildings. Several lives wore reported lost. 1 The coal exchange of Chicago having re- i duced tho wages of coal wheelers from f 5 to $3 per day, Beveral hundred of tho men struck, and then went about to the different yards and drove off thoso who were willing to work?Several non-strikers wore severely injured.... fiio committee of the New York board of aldermen appointed to investigate tho official conduct of Comptroller Green submitted a report charging-him with gross official misconduct, carelessness, neglect of duty and waste of public funds. Tho report was adopted Sixty persons wore drowned by the capsizing of a lighter in the Tagus, near Lisbon, Portugal A dispatch from San Diego says that a letter to the San Diego Union, from Uucs Sonora, reports that general excitement prevails over the Mexican raifls in Texas. War is feared there between tho United States and Mexico By the explosion of a locomotive at IUiinobock, on tho Hudson river road, the engineer and lircm&n wero seriously injured. A heavy cyclone on the Chinese coast is reported to havo dopo much damage to ship- j ping President Grant has extoudcd the j timo of the court of commissioners of Alabama claims for a period of six months after July 22 Pliil. 11. Sheridan, Lieutenant-Genera of the army, was married to Miss Irene, daughter of Quartermaster-General ltnekor, of Chicago. A Startling Statement. The report made by the superintendent of rates and surveys, presented to the board of fire underwriters in Now York recently, makes the remarkable statement that of the sixty-nine hotels in New j York city, twenty-four of them have j framo Mansard roofs, thirty-nine have i wooden cornices, fifty-live have unsafe j gas-brockets, twenty-five have unsafe | steam-pipes, twenty havo unsafe flues or j fireplaces, forty-nine have unsafe laundries or drying-rooms, fifty-one havo uncovered lights in basements or wine | cellars, tweuty-five have repair-shops in I the buildings, twenty have unprotected j boilers, twenty-six have open elevators, I while, in all, the stairways are open. The report further stab's that thirtythree, or about one-half of these hotels, have four of these soveral defects, and not one of the whole number exists without one or more of these defects. In other words, there is not an entirely safe hotel in New York city. There is not a hotel in New York city in which the guests are not exposed to death by tire, explosions, or accidents in elevators and at stairways. There is an average of 20,000 people exposed to these perils every day in New York. The Trump. i An exchange, in referring to the annoyances to which farmers are subjected from tramps, says: Every village and every individual farmer has the remedy at hand. Tramps pursuo their present calling simply because they find that it pays. So long as that is their experience, they will continue it. Withhold assistance from t^eru, and they must turn to something else. If the farmers and pcopie generally uirougliont the country would, by unanimous cousent, refuse to accede to even the smallest of their demands, the nuisance would very speedily he removed. There is no charity in helping these people. It is not a question of charity at all. Within the last two weeks a woman called at a country house, and told a long talo of distress, the burden of which was about a sick child dying for want of food and warmth. Sho was supplied with fuel and food, and before sho had gone a , hundred yards from the house she had 1 thrown bath away into a ditch. She wanted money, to spend in all probability in whisky, but it was evident that she did not want a meal. Trichina) have lately-been found for the first time in the flesh of a wild boar, killed in the Hartz mountains, Germany Hitherto this parasite has been supposed to lie confined to the domesticated animal. Good Tidings for the Slaves of King ' Alcohol. IIow many a manly form is palsied ; how many a noble mind is destroyed; how many a priceless soul lost through the curse of strong drink I To the despairing victims of tho satauic tyrant, alcohol, whose shattered nerves, and trembling limbs, and racking headaches, seem to find no relief except in the renewed use of tho fatal poison which brines tliem nvcrv dnv nearer fr> MioJr I miserable end, we announce glad tidings :>f great joy! Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bitters contain not a single drop of alcohol in any form, but are a sovereign remedy for tlio ills of drunkenness. They restore tone and strength to the lystem, and entirely eradicate the pe ruinous appetito for liquor. Try a few hottles of Vinegar Hitters, and you will never crave strong spirits again, but Incl your health repaired, your mind restored, and be once more a man in the best sense. Health is cheap when Vinegar Bitters are $1 a bottle. * We cheerfully call the attention of our renders to the merits of Dobbins' Elec;ric Soap (made by Cragin & Co., Phila.), who confidently ask a trial. The soap will tell its own story. Try it. * Save Money and HEAi/rn.?The repuation of (ho Wilson rhuttlo sowing machine is to thoroughly eetablislied that no word in its commendation in necessary. The plan adopted >y tlio manufacturers of this famous machine >f placing their prices so low as to come within :h<; reach of the poorer classes. certainly endtles thi^to the gratitude of those who are -eally mfllPin need of auch an article. Machines will be delivered at any railroad Btation in this county, free of transportation charges, if ordered through the company's branch house ?t 827 and 829 Broadway, New York. They tend an elegant catalogne and cbromo circular Free on application. This company want a few more good agents.?Com. If Johnson's Anodyne Liniment is half m valuable as people say it is, no family should he without it. Certainly no person, be he lawyer, doctor, minister, or of any other profession, should start on a Journey without it 1 No sailor, fisherman, or woodsman should bo without it In fact it is needed wherever there is an ache, sprat*, out bruise, oongh or sold,?Com, Let the People Speak. Manhattan, Kan. i R. T. Pierce, Buffalo, N Y.: Dear Sir?Your Favorito Prescription has dono my wife a world of good. 8he ban taken nearly two bottles and hai felt better tbo past two weeks than at any time in tbo past two years. No more periodical pains ; none of that aching back or dragging sensation in her stomach she bad been accustomed to for i several years. I have so much confidence in it that I would be perfectly willing to warraut to certain customers of ours who would bo glad to get hold of relief at any expense. I have tried many patent medicines, but never had any occasion to extol one before. Very truly yours, Geo. B. Whitino. Mrs. E. R. Daly, Metropolis, 111., writeB : "Dr. It. V. Pierce?My sister is using the | Favorite Prescription with great benefit.'' Mary Ann Frisbio, Lehman, Pa., writes : "Dr. It. V. Pierce?What I have taken of your medicine has boeu of m?ro benefit to mo than all others and hundreds of doctors' bills. '' Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is sold by dealers in medicines generally.?Com. Life has few cliurms for the dyspeptic, which is not to bo wondered at when we take into account the amount of bodily and mental suffering that this distressing uialody generates. The Peruvian Syrup (a protoxido of iron) lias cured thousands who were Buffering from this diboase.? Com. FarmerR aud "horsemen" are continually inquiring what we know of the utility of Stwriilan'* Cavalry Condition Powder*, and in reply, we would say, through the columns of | this paper, tlist we liavo heard of hundreds 1 who have used them with gratifying rosults; j that is also our experience.?Com. w "BUY MK, ANI) I?I.I. ><> YOP GOOI*."It Is justly conceded by our leading family physicians that flit. l.ANUl.KV'S UOOT ANI* II Kit It IIITTKItS are the beat, safest and surest rprinc and j summer medicine. They thorouyhly purify and cleanse tbo blood of ail impurities, remove and counteract dyspepsia, liver complaint, constipation, piles, jaundice, vert lie), foal stomach. Joss of sleep and appetite, scr fulous sores, carbuncles, skin diseases, pimples and nervous dobillty. Thoy nro in the truest and deepest sense Incomparably more popular .s a faintly medicine than any Other yet discovered, tv id by all druggists. GKO. 0. GOODWIN A OO., Boston, Wholesale Agents. PIWWPW A imlr of mill taTf n'd 3t ZS only & conts nion* with a cillsl'l silver tip on tbnti without, and it will add ill J JB^B twice the cost of tho shoe to tbeir wearing vain*. Lost! 1 bo name of tho person npBBHMVQ who did not liko m% w? ?N CA1ILB HV11RW Will E J||i Boots ami Shoos. Any ono finding such a person will l>o liberally ro- MPWjrPj'pJJ warded by buying a pair and try- MVlljJJ roiilampe!lmns~m Address Johnson. Clark Ac Co., Boston, Mm.; New York City; Pittsburgh, Pa.; Chicago, 111.; or St. Louts, Mo. IOOO AvciiIh Wanted. Entirely new business. Clrcnlara free. Big profit a. YOUNb. 25) Broadway. N. Y. for you Sells at eight. /ifJLJli X XXXi^l \T Onr Ag't* coin money. We hare work and money for all. men or women, boys or girls, whole or spare time. Send stamp for Catalogue. Address FRANK GLUCK. New Bedford, Mass. for complete Illustrated Circular? Highest /Vr. k> miuma at Tirentj/.tiro >hir? and A'xjmxmtiona, including American Institute teat qf thrte mo/i/A*. IS7U and ltf74? for l\jrtnble Safety boilers & engines FOR FA It .>1 Kits AND OTHERS. HI* Sizes. 2 to 1 2 ll iree Powers. French Burr Stone Grist Mills, etc. Q A ~ Discount to the trade. Whitman ?V llnrrrll, Mtilr Fit I N. V. agents | livingstone's wanted i new book!! His own story of the last seven years of his Idle. Send for Circolam to U W. BLISS J: CO., Hartford, Ct., or BLISS A CO.. Newark. N. .L O XO a month to male nnd female agent* ever; where. Kureka MTg Co., Buchanan, \jlch Smith tV Reynold*. Norwich, j Ci., ami We have sold aud usod 'your Sea Foam for several year* g and unhesitatingly re.ominend it :i? the best Baking Powder in the rV?market." /.VI* 1 Smiili, (.'age iV Co., Grot-era, lT Sffll 1 l\rrtlmui. Mr., my :?" We use it in w I \ wtSKw 1 I a oar own families and believe it to l>e M decidedly the best Baking Powder M It* economy is wonderful; it I u?C?*^4 1 makes 4 0 lbs. more bread to a birrel of flour. Millions of cans sold and not a single complaint. [ Send for circular toCiEn F. G.\NTZ A Co.. 1 7G Dunns St.. New York. Bit. LANGF.LLHl IVIW ASTHMA Alii CATAHhU REMEDY. Having struggled (wanly years between Ufa and death with ASTHMA, I upeilmented by compounding roo*s and herbs and inhaling the medicine. I fortunately discovered a wonderful remedy and sure care for Asthma and Catarrh. Warranted to relieve Instantly so the patient can Ue down to rrat and sleep comfortably. Drugeicta are eupplied with sample packages for rat.* distribution. Call and get one. or address II. LAA'GI-LL. Apple Creek, Ohio. (9*Sold by Druggists. Full-alxo Package, by nail, $1.25. rnn r pop **arw.j -? p r I I rr'^T T, "' c? ?y iw ow 01 Horn u 1 Ifc-l-roi RpiIJtrTIC Kemxpikb. Trial Pack I wwMwmeman age/>< *. Kor circular*, evidence o! success, oto.. address HONS BROS.. Richmond. Ind OPIUM Habit Cured A certain and sure cure, without Inconvenience, mi at homo. An antidote that stand a purely on 1U * W?1 tncrlta. Send for my quarterly magazine (.U 'rou nothing), containing certificates of hundreds UiCtlievd been permanently cured. 1 claim to have ildCOV3rcd and produced tho fikbt, original and 5MX.T rtriue cure for opium rating. PR. S. II. COLLINS, La Porte, lnd. FT p? AW'KEK. Agents wanted everywhere. Foi CP I *9 onttU 15c. Kbitch A WAI.KRK. Dayton, Ohio. V Of tlie Prettiest tlarda you oversaw. M n with your uai! a handsomely printed on B them, sent, post-paid, upwn receipt of 2(1 centa. Your friends will all want them when they sue }ours. Address, W. O. OAWNON, 4B Knoeland Street. Huston, Mass XJL We sell on trial the if ItOijlIXGER m 1%, Turbine Water Wheel. TO? It is the host Wheel In the roari*.. .- / Sfaappr,. k''t. I>okb NOT Ct o<?. dates ate Independent closing. It is ocoWnomtcal In the use of Water and 1 HiTTBIBTprMWL baa an Adjustable St? p. Pit 3*$ Bend for Pamphlet to YOItli. Al'F'tl CO., Vrtk-k. I'n. "Established 1858. m the ^^5^^ TRADE HARK. PATJm'l'XU. The best anil eheapent Paint In the World for Iron. Tin or Wood. For sale by TVialern everywhere. PT1IWCES' METAX.LIQ PATNT CO.. Miinnft'rere, 9C Cedar St., New York. f3TC AIJTION.?Purchascra will pleaee bco that our camo end trado mark arc on each and every package. Send for a Circular. nt W>?thw for wm mM whtoh ??."Terl\. !il l?,th? Uart w? know of no prop tiss^SS. " " " < MERCHANT'S ( * , This new Tmss Is worn M with perfect comfofr1 V fW E L A 8 T I C n .I1*?} *ni dA*- Adapt* H m ti n m a H Itself to ererjr motion ol 1 ? 8 the body, retaining Rop- S ^^J^SgggyajKyy^r ,uro under Vhs bardret V exercise or eerotnet strain <Xgfcareyjr M nntll permanently cured \\ tjf sif Sold cheap by ths [J Elastic Truss Co.. No. 883 tiroarfway. N. Y. City. / md Bent by mall. Oall or icnil for Circular, aad bp cared tj A<; ENTS?Send ub jronr addresa and receive by re- ~p turn m*ll something that will pay yen for your ? trouble. Variety Bracket Work., S rnth Bend. Indiana. ATTKNTION. OWNERS OF HORSES. ^ 1. ? Ask your Harness Maker for ? ?K. /?\ the ZINC Collar PAI). /4 |R, Thoy nro warranted to cure /t-i W 11 any now nock on horse or J . \"M mills, or mon^y refunded, If I VoxV / jj print*Hl dirvctionsaiefollow- > 0 r_IJr \w *>ond 7**c. for samplo. 1 Zinc Collar Pnd Co.. Sole ManufVrs, Buchnnau.Mlch. a SMI ORGAN CO. i Boston, Mass. j*." Thene Stautltirtl Instrument* the ma Sold by Music Dealers Everywhere, are of Agents Wanted in Every Town. dai ; uu Sold throughout thn United States oil ths 1 i TK INSTALLMENT PLAN : t^1( That Is, on a System of Monthly Payments. i Purchasers should ask fnrthe smith american OrOAN. blc Catalogues and full particulars on application. \ ?Sk N. F. BURNHAM'S of W TURBINE | hi? Water Wheel cot Wiih Srlertrd, 4 years ago. and put I 0.?' /to ivorll in the Patent Office, Wash- gicl lngtou, D. O., and has proved to he 1 ? ? i the beet. 1II sizes made. Prior* B,JVySfllfrSZV jawer than any other first-class i rfil ?dT Wheel Pamphlet free. i ?i., jP N. K. II11KNHAM, Yrmit. Pa. ?" ^'PITAIIiCs? Bl'T I P, written by Rev ! R^/JLVlJ ifllJO T. Dr. Witt Tai.maoe.1s tne beat | book out for any one afflicted with Oysix-pala or the y. Blues. It can't fail to do you good to road It. The new j * 1 edition contains elegant Illustrations. Elegantly bonnd. Cli Price S2.IMI. Agents wanted In every oonnty. Address | c S. T. SOUDKR A CO.. 7 111 Sansom St.. Philadelphia. I D? .yfHWI AfiKNTS M'nnlnl for Crnnlns KdllIon. Life and i.abors of 1VINGSTONE. *, By Rrv. J. K. CHAAIBIjTR^. who from hlr personal Dri irritiwf* (Including the " LAST .IOURN AleS") unfolds J riritily hl(i Grand A chlevomcRta, ftl?o tho rurlotitiet. Wonder* and Wonlth of ti at marvelous country. Fruits, Minerals, Reptile*. Beasts. Savages Kto. 8O0 pages. ?C ICO rare Ill's. Rich fu Interest, laow in Price. Out- nfsel.s everything. 3<MK) tfrst 3 \rt?Ua. Address HITS* ^ BARD iiUOS., Publishers, 723 Sanborn Street, Phila. 3^] A riTT.X'T'fi WA\T17Dl '"? *h? mi i? X A a 11 1. I! X* ?. Jl-J I * IUIMI olllnc Book ever published. Bund for circulars and our r6' HXtrn term* to Arrntt. NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.. Ph tsd.lnhla. Pa. TruxnCM, Supporters and Pile HI J6?Siar !L Pipes. Seeley's Hard Rubber lor f a\>n ^ Trusses." Cool, cleanly, ll?ht. p*r- r y ESTV J fectly safe and comfortable, free til! from all sour, ruaty.chatin*,strnp<T" " \'~Z'n ptnr. or poulticelike unpleasant' bill ?* n?o; used In bathing. Indorsed by fll the profeealon, long tested, always reliable. BKWARK or IMITATIONS. Genuine stamped "I. B. Seelej." gaj Katabllshmenta. 134 7 Cheetnut btreel, Philadelphia, ^ and 737 Broadway, Now York Sent by mall or express it aud sold by lead 1 ok druggists. Send for catalogue. gj, A a'SA.MPI,K Free and lily Pay to Male and fh "W * Female everywhere. Addreas, VpS* TUB UNION PUB. CO.. Newark. K. J. CIJ <? { f"l e (? 0 C |*or day. Bond for Chromo Catalogue. 4) 1 yj 4) Zi v/.l. 11. lltrrroKp's Sown. Beaton. Alusr. SOI (C h 17(1 l'P.K DAY at home. Terms free. Ad in1 g ?iU dresa Geo. Swnson A Co., Portland, Me j.g 4HOCK AGGXTS WAMTEW aa |p"?TELL IT ALL ? ^gttC3B Hv Mn. Strnhouse of Salt Lake City, tor 2/ irn mrtfEm ycara the wife of a Mormon High Priest. In b1* jWHHtruduction by Mm. Mowc. Tnis story of -j IB x'omiD'i experience lays bare the "hidden Ufa* *~_ |H mysteries, secret doings, etc. of the Mormons an . Ul iB|^H 44 %cuU-au>aAx toomtm sets them." Bright, Pore oa and Good, it is the hrst new book ouL adstuV ovr- \uu ina with good things for all. It is popular i^enr prf whart, witn everybody, and outsells all other books three1 ovf- Ministers say * 6'w/ rpccd /.* Eminent vomcc hn endorse tL Everybody wants fit t and agents ore celiuy from lO to 20 a dsy I ST?th thownxntl now in press/ *r - Bt) rant 5.000 son- trusty agents NOW-mrn or women- -n* I we will mail Outfit Km* to those who will canvas*. Lai "o &D psir.phkts with full particulars, terms etc. sml/res to Ji f.,, oddrcaa A. 1). Woktuixotu* ft Co.. Hartford, Cool. iU / tyi PORTABLE bj fe SODA FOUNTAINS 2 Kfe *10? *60' *75' k *100* o Ee riSw rn\i ilk niTDiur v 4 wn nuir 1 i. ns* IfJjSn Shipped Ready for Use. fi Manufactured by C.'HAPi>IAN A P. CO., Itlndleon, Ind. iJl <? I gW~ Send for a l '-atalogue. ID 4%KAM TO CCRR Corns, Nenralrls, T t "* B W^kM Aslhmn. Chills end Fever, Drank* s*l Mi nn ennesa, Rheumatism. r? g| II WW TO MAKE Hslr Grow. Ottawa, Ll ? Keer, Hoots Waterproof, Yeast. tO ""end lOesnta fbrelthor receipt or the 10 for QO cents, r\, PKRRV tOO . P.O.Bos g?V11 or 212 Broadway.N.Y. <->1 LHKI1Y VARIi.Y WANTS IT. Monov In It ?f Li So1,: i.y Aftunia. Address M. N. l,OVKI*I>, Krle.X'a jjji <Siiyi\4\ a month to ocents everywhere. Addrear 'PaOl f KXOKl^lOHM'Pr, CO., Hnohanan.Mlch g^ i Knra7^ n ?u rjj J ^ Tlir World Is In liloom. Nntnre wears her Rnra- th .nor smile. Bat the victim ot Nervous Debility Is like a th ^liKbted brunch in the ?uti%hine. I/*it hiin revitalize, ar tone and purify his ey.it* ux with Tarrant's Effervescent Seltzer Aperient, S? and within a week lie will feel like a new man. b?i.? ii y ai.i. iiHunnjsTS. to I Geo- p. Rowell & Co. I I ^ ^ I Mr Oil will Im found an Inralutbln IJnlment., and worthy 4 rietarjr rnodioino or aitlol? now uaod in lbe United Statu m tree tuen this. Fellow wrapper for animal end white tor |j 3-ARGHiIN G- OIL j illehnd 1N33. Urn ?lt? Sl.OO t nwdiara !?*, SO B "" Jl - jjjpESfr ULIJ Vf4 Dr. J. Walker's California Yinnr Bitters aro a purely Vogetablo sparation, made chiefly from the nae herbs found on tho lower ranges of i Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor,, the medicinal properties of which ' i extracted thorefrom without tho uso Alcohol. Tho question is almost Liy asuea, wu.it is mo cause ui mo paralleled success of Vinegar BitrsT" Our answer is, that they reuiovo > cause of disease, and the patient rovers his health. They are tho great >od pui ficr and a life-giving principle, pericc Kcnovator and Iuvigorator tho ; ostein. Never beforo in tho tory o tho world has a medicine been npoun< jd possessing the remarkable ihties f Vinegar Bi tters in healing tho k of e ery disease man is heir to. Tliey i a go tie Purgative as well as a Tonic, ieving Congestion or Inflammation of > Liver end Visceral Organs in Bilious senses The ptopCTlios of Dr. Walker's nkoar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretio, rminat'/e, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, dative Counter-irritant Sudorific, Alterae. an' . Anti-Bilious. ui'uu'iui i t;d^ pror iavm "V.3t .Ait Bitters the n>os; wonderful In roraut that e 'er susta'ned the sinking stem. No Person can lake these Hitters cording to directions, and remain long iwell, provided their bones are not do- t royed by mineral poison or other sans, and vital organs wasted beyond pair. JBilioiis. Remittent an ! Tute> itteilt 1* overs, which are so preva ic ii> the valleye of our great rivcir roughjut the United States, espeeialb oso of the Mississippi, Ohio, Misf.ouii, inois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arken3, lied, Colorado, Brar.ot, Kio Cranio, sari, Alabama. Mobile, &.a" unnah, Booke, James, and many others, *ith eir vast tributaries, throughout our tire country during the Summer and ituipn: and remarkably so during soaos of unusual beat and dryness, aro variably accompanied by extensive deugements of the atoroach and liver, , d other abdomiual viscera. In tiioir latment, a purgative, exerting a po-yfill inlluence upon these various or. ns, is essentially necessary. There no cathartic for tho purpose equal to i. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitters, they will speedily remove tho dark- \ y torod viscid matter with which tho wels are loaded, at tbo sume fcmo . UJUlUllUg l/Llt) BCUrtJIIUUS OI LUP llVttf d generally restoring tho heaUhy actions of the digestivo organs. Fortify the body against disease r purifying ar! its fluids with Vinegar [tters. No epidemic ?an tako hold a system thus foio armed. Dyspejisi a or Indigestion, K\odhe, Pain in the Slnuildcis, Coughs, ightness of t'ne Chest, Dizziness, Sour ructations of the Stomach, Had Taste the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, Inflammation of* tho iinge, Pain in the region of tin* Kidys, and a hundred other painful syrnpms, are tho offsprings of Dyspepsia, le bottle will prove a better guarantoe its merits than a lengthy fdvertiso ent. Scrofula, or King's Evil, White rellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Nock, >itre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent flanunatious. Mercurial Affections, Old ires, Eruptions of tho Skin, Soro Eyes, ciothese, as in all other constitutional Dieses, "Walker's Vinegar Bittkus have own their great curative powers in the oat obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflammatory and Chronic lieu mutism,* Gout, Bilious, Remitnt and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of e Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, ese Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases e caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases.?Persons eniged in Paints and Minerals, such as iumuers, Type-setters, Gold-heaters, and iuers, as they advance in life, are subject naralvsia of the Rowels. To miwJ taiiist this, take a dose of Walkbr'b Vi?iar Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptionn, Tetr, Salt-Ubcum Blotches, Spots, Pimples, ustules, Boils, Carbuncles King-worms, raid-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, rurfs, I)iscolorutions of the Skin, Humors id Diseases of tho Skin of whatever namf nature, aro literally dug up and carrier it of the system in a short time by the us? ' those Bitters. Pin, Tape, and oilier Worms, rking in the system of so many thousands, e effectually destroyed aud removed. .No rstein of medieiue, no vermifuges, no an leliniuitiea will free tho system from worms to these Bitters. 1 For Female Complaints, in young old, married or single, at the dawn of wo- / anhood, or the turn of life, these Tonio 1 itters display so decided an influence that lprovement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Wood whenrer you find its impurities bursting through 16 skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; eanse it when you bud it obstructed and uggish in the veins; cleanse H. when it is w; your feelings will tell you when. Keep le blood pure, and the health of the system ill follow. R. H. NeDONAIill 4c co., rnfffrisUandGrn. A?rt?., San Kranoixoo, California id oor. of Wuhinvton mid Cliurllon Sis., N. Y. Mold 1?V Mil Urtifrrri 1a mid llr ttYrrw w? * ?y. v??wo. if Acftd to c*n? by Dmirlsta, II c?uta mm! upw*nla. lO YOUR OWN PRINT INCI KN pb^TIihFPM!^ Fop Profctilonal and Amntenp Prlnlcrt, School*. Mwlcllei, Man. ?n%?;Jj?POP*? Merchant*, ?nd othenltli