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FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD Useful Recipe*. Yellow stains commonly called iron mold are removed from linen by hydrochloric acid or hot solution of oxalic acid. Wash well in warm water afterward. To fasten emery to leather, boil glue very thin, add a .little milk, raise the pile of the leather, and put on the glue with the brush. Then sprinkle on the emery, and let it oool. To preserve soap grease, fill a cask half full of good strong lye, and drop all refuse grease therein. Stir up the mixture once a week. The best fattening material for chickens is said to be Indian meal and milk. a remedy Tor caterpillars, which is used on a large scale in Franoe, consists in a solution (1 part in 500) of sulphide of potassium, sprinkled on the tree by means of a hand syringe. The best and most durable insulation for electric wires is to tin them and cover with pure rubber. Javelle water, used for turning white the dirtiest linen, and removing stains, is composed of bicarbonate of soda four pounds, chloride of lime one pound. Put the sodaunto a kettle ovor the fire, add one gallon of boiling water, let it boil from ten to fifteen minutes, then stir in the chloride of lime, avoiding lumps. Use when oooL This is good for removing fruit stains from white underwear. Biborate of soda dissolved in water, used as a lotion, will removo prickly heat. The average yield of corn oobs is 7-62 parts of carbonate of potash in 1,000 parts of the cobs, which is nearly twice as much as is fnmin>i??l V?r I*" Wr>-? specimens of wood. The corn crop of this country will supply 15,400,000,000 pounds of cobs, from which 115,000,000 pounds of potash might bo made. The way they boil rice in India is as follows: Into a saucepan of two quarts of water, when boiling, throw a tablespoonful of Rait; then put in one pint of rice, previously well washed in cold water. Let it boil twenty minutes, throw out in a colander, drain, and put bock in the saucepan, which should be stood near the fire for several minutes. Save the corn cobs for kindlings, especially if wood is not going to be plentiful next winter. To prepare them, melt together sixty parts rosin and forty parts mr. jlhj) m me cobs, and dry on sheet metal heated to abont tho temperature of boiling water. Equal weights of acetate of lime aud of chloride of calcium, dissolved in twice their weight of hot water, is a fireproofing mixture for fabrics. The nmmoniocal solution of oxide of nickel will dissolve silk ; that of copper dissolves cotton also.?Scientific American. Hummer Prulla nnd Health. A very mistaken idea lias found a lodgment in the minds of many, otherwise sensible persons, to wit, that summer complaints, the geuorio term under which the disorders peculiar to the season are known, are caused mainly by the use of fruit, and that the wise and safe plan is to prohibit its use altogether. This method, which neglects to take advantage of one of the most benefioent provisions for man's use, comfort, and well being, is detrimental not only to enjoyment but to permanent health. The term "antiscorbutic" expresses the value of fruits as food, and the estimation in which they are held by those who understand their relation to human wants. When fruit does harm, it is it is eaten at improper times, in improper aoantities, or before it is ripened and t for the hnman stomach. Fruit onght not to be eaten between meals any more than any other food. It may be taken as a lunch, however, with very great benefit, or as a preparation for a meal, that is before breakfast or dinner. Perhaps the very best time in the day for eating fruit is before or after breakfast. A distinguished physician has said that if patients would make a practice of eat ing a couple of Messina oranges before breakfast, from February till June, his practice would be gone. From June, which brings us the ever weloome strawberries, until November, there is a constant succession of fresh fruits which are a pleasure to the eye and a delight to the mind. The proof of their healthfulness lies in the fact that the more people make it a part of their regular daily diet, taking the place in part of meat, and wholly of pastries during the summer months, the better and finer, more oheerfol and more uniformly well they are, the less fever and thirst do they experience, the less ice water and othei violent reactionary fluids are they obliged to drink, and the less are they subject to changes and fluctuations of the system and of temperature. The principal difficulty with us is that ? Ja W .... ' -* ' " - ? ?rv uv uuv V/WW OUl/U^U U1 IIUIl/ y II1HI WG kill its finer qualities with sugar ; that we drown them in cream. We need the medicinal action of the pore frnit acid" in our system. We need a cooling, corrective mflnenoe, and we should accept it as one of the best gifts of Providence. ?Hearth and Home. CMMkcr Cauip. Take of full grown encumbers, say one peck ; remove tho rind, and cut them down lengthwise, then into thin diceshaped pieces ; strew half a pint of salt on them; let them stand five or six hours; then put them on a sieve to drain until quite dry. Peel and slice twelve large silver-skinned onions, put them with the cucumbers into a stone pot, and cover them with strong vinegar. Add for seasoning a tublespoonful of black popper beaten up fine, a tablespoonful of cayenne, a gill of sweet oil, a gill of Madeira wine, and a few blades of mace. Instead of putting away in one large stone jar, it answers admirably to fill with tills catsup wide-mouthed gloss bottles ; and if you have a few pods of a miniature variety of red pepper, often 9 procurable, to use instead of the pulverized cayenne, it gives the sauce quite an ornamental appearance. It is not generally known that tho largest cucumbers, ripened almost enough for seed, serve admirably for making this sort of catsup. If the bottles arc carefully sealed up there is no danger whatever of spoiling. A A STORY FOR ROYS. How n I.ntl Wheeled Iltmaeir Into n Fortune and Influence. At a mooting of tho stockholders of a Erominent railway corporation, recently eld in Boston, there were present two gentlemen, both up in years, one, however, considerably the senior of the other. In talking of the old times gone by, the younger gentleman called the attention of his friends, and told a pleasant little Btory, which should be read with profit by every poor, industrious and striving lad. lie said : Nearly half a century ago, gentlemen, I was stout, willing and able, considering my tender years, and secured a place in a hardware store, to do all sorts of chores required. I was paid seventyfive dollars a year for my services. One day, after I had been at work throe months or more, my friend there, Mr. B., who holdB his age remarkably well, came in the store and bought a large bill of shovels and tongs, sadirons and pans, buckets, scrapers and scuttles, for he was to be married the next day, and was supplying his household in advance, , as was the groom's custom in those days. nm,.. i ? - * xuc ubiuiun were put:ruh on a oarrow, and made a load sufficiently heavy for a young mnle. But, more willing than able, I started off, proud that I could move such a mass on a wheelbarrow. I got on remarkably well till I struck the mud road, now Seventh avenue, leading to my friend B. *s house. There I toiled and tugged, and tugged and toiled, and could not budge the load up the hill, tho wheel going its half diameter into the mud every time I would try to propel forward. Finally a good-natured Irishman passed by with a dray and took my barrow, self and all on his vehicle, and, in consideration of my promise to pay him a bit, landed me at my destination. I counted the articles carefully as I delivered them, and, with my empty barrow, trudged my way back, whistling with gleo over my triumph over difficulty. Some weeks after I paid tho Irishman the bit, and never got it back from my employers. But to the moral. A merchant liad witnessed my struggles, and how zealously I struggled to deliver that load of hardware; he even watched me to the house and saw mo count each piece as 1 landed it in the doorway. He sent for mo next day, asked my namo, told me ho had a reward for my industry and cheerfulness under difficulty in the shape of a five hundred dollar clerkship in his establishment. I accepted, and now, after nearly half a century has passed, I look back and say I wheeled myself into all I own, for that reward of perseverance was my grand steppingstone to fortune. mi 1 - - xiie speaKer was a very wealthy banker, a man of influence and position, and one universally respected for many good qualities of head and heart. Boys, take a moral from this story, and bo willing and industrious. You do not know how many eyes are upon you to discover whether you are sluggish and careless, or industrious and willing, or how many there aro who, if you are moral and worthy, will give you a stepping-stono to wealth and position. Terrible Position of an Engineer. The Alexandria, (Vn.) Sentinel tells of an accident at Big Bend tunnel, on the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad, by which the engineer, Mr. John Qtiincy Adams Wilkins, was injured. The "BigBend" is what is known in railroad parlance as a " dirt tunnel," being very liable to cave in, and therefore the engineers are more careful to look out for " danger ahead" in passing through them. It was the exercise of this care that probably saved an immense loss of life, as the train had been brought down to a very slow rate of speed on approaching the tunnel. It seems that an end of one of the large timbers supporting the roof had become detached and fallen on the track a few feet within the tunnel, and the pilot of the engine striking it, the jar loosened the other timbers and a large qnantity of earth and stones, and the whole mass came tumbling down upon the locomtive, breaking it to pieces. The fireman, who was standing close to Mr. Wilkins, was mashed to a jelly and could not have lived a moment, while Mr. Wilkins was thrown forward in a standing position, with his throat across the reverse bar, I and a large timber fell across the back of I hia neek. r?nr1?i-tni? if imn^ooiKU i , , mm I M w UU|^/OOiUin IAJ move. He had a quid of tobacco in his mouth at the time, and so tightly was he caught that he could not expectorate and could only swallow with difficulty; indeed, he could scarcely raise his voice above a whisper. Thero he remained for six hours in the pitchy darkness, while every second or two small pieces of dirt and gravel from the roof would fall down by his side, conveying the impreesion momentarily that another mass was about to fall and crush him completely. All the time the shouts of those outside could be heard, as with shovel and nx they forced their way to his rescue, which, however, seemed to him beyond all hope. When they finally reached him he was more dead than alive, and, being completely exhausted, lost consciousness in a swoon which lasted soveral hours. California Farm Lire. There are few oozy, comfortable, middle-class homes. The house is either a magnificent country residence, or a mean, uapainted, redwood slionty, though neither can be occupied by a man immensely wealthy. Everything seems put there, adventitious ; nothing grew oat of the soil. There are no ancient trees, no shrubberies, no grass. Instead of homely farmer-messes, you eat urban fare of beefsteak and hot biscuit made with Boston yeast powder. You hope for pumpkin pie, ami get a can of Baltimore oysters. There are Oregon apples, Cincinnati hams, and stewed prunes from Germany. A man may be worth $100,000 and have no milk to whiten his coffee. The oow runs on tho range and comes home when she lists. A boy may be dispatched for her on his tough little shaggy oow horse, and a man must bo sent to bring the boy homo. The yard fences all look imported, as thoy are ; all things have a contractor-like look, alittlo tawdry, a little cheap. Everything is so naked and so new that no ouo can hang a tradition on it. There is no moss on tho fences ; the nowly-sawod boards and posts aud the houses stand ont painfully ugly and prominent beneath the lovely | sky. SUMMARY OF NEWS. C _ tl (lean *f Interett from Home and Abroad. rc The British Parliament has been proroged b< till the 29th of October. Tho Queen's speech to congratulated the country on the prospect of Q the maintenance of European peace, and the at more complete suppression of the east African w slave trade. The passage of tho Provisional w< Shipping bill and the arrangement for the re- ill i duction of the national debt are referred to in be terms of approval A call for $>10,000,000 M | worth of bonds has been issued by the Treas- wi | ury department, the Bymlicato having made be I another subscription for that Bum. This ba leaves but $38,537,550 of the now five per cent, ta | bonds in the hands of tho secretary, and the syndicate has until November 15 to take this ^ amount There wore three executions on el Friday, August 13th. Thomas Withers, a negro, was hauged at Lynchburg, Va., for da the murder of a young girl. Wright W. gt Wheatley, ono^of the murderers of Franco Warl, was hanged at Helena, Montana. John ^ Webb waB hanged at Knoxville, Teun., in the wj presence of fifteen thousand people The alleged murderer of Mrs. Jarratt was takon ya from jail at Murfreoeboro', Tenn , and lynched. tj( Bishop Gneeen, in Germany, who has w] been acting for Archbishop LedochowskL has been expelled from the province comprising lia his diocese Tho grange purchasing agents ^ will hold a convention at Louisville, Ky., on m Octoberilst Geo. A. Rice and Loughlin & Rice, have been declared defaulting* bidders for thirty post-office routes in the State of mi Texas, and the postmastfer-goneralwill offor tho - OH routes to other bidders and will prosecute tho te defaulters Tho Albauv Y.) Journal ^ published a full official statomont of the debt al] of that State, showing that the balauce of jjU debt unprovided for on Jan. 1, 1872, was $20,- re 260,755.91; that the balance now unprovided ju for is only $605,887.16, and that a tax of a quarter of a mill for the next year will wipe f0 out tho entire indebtedness. J.t says the whole p, State tax next year need not exceed throe mj or throo and a half mills Superintendent pe Chapman, of the Insurance department, lias K( canceled tho certificate of authority of the jK] Teutonic life insurance company of Chicago, ^ to do business in tho State of New York E. S. Jaffray fc <5o., tho well-known importing , dry goods house in Now York, have been swindied out of $40,000 by a man named Church, ^ 1 who was at tho head of tho ribbon department. as At ltocliester, N. Y., Goldsmith Maid won eu the first heat in 2.15V?. Lulu won three straight tll heats in 2.16.}^, 2.15}^ and 2.17, tho fastest p( time on record The crow of tho brig Harry, charged with mutiny, after a hearing ^ before United Statos Commissioner Rogers at gjj Baltimore, wero committed to prisoH to await q( the action of the grand jury, which meets in ^ September Three boys were drowned at ea Buffalo, N. Y., one named Joseph Lyuch, aged seven years ; another, named Otto Baer, aged wj fifteen, and another, aged about ten years, ^ named Oliver Wheelwright Jacob Uascher ^ committed suicide on the Ohio bridge, at ^ Louisville, Ky. Ho paid tho toll ou the IiOuis- ^o villo side, remarked that he did not intend re- wa turning, and when about half way across the (pl bridge h# leapod over the railing into the river Qf below, and placing a pistol to his mouth, fired BO as he fell Two Philadelphia physicians g0 examined Henry T. Ilelmbold, tho Bucliu man, and pronounced bim insane. They then made affidavit reciting tho result of the examination, and Mr. Holmbold was removed to Dr. Kirk- , bridge's asylum Tho London papers give jw. a r&vorabie account of tbo brcadstuffa market, and tbink a furtbor riao is certain Two jxe men were killed and a third badly hurt by a }la runaway car at the alope of the Mount Pleas- or ant mine in 8c ran ton, Pa. tin A large number of United States poatmaa- ^ tera have been dismissed.by the poatmaaiergeneral for improper disposition of postage stamps and nnjustly increasing their salary ')a thereby Two tramps called at the Manton jj^ House, in Johnston, It. L, and after being fed . demanded Uquor. This being refused, one of ju them drew a revolver and shot J. ?. Phillips, the proprietor, through the hand. The tramps feescaped, though pursued to the Connecticut ca line Thirty-one head of cattle lately died lie of hydrophobia on a single Texan farm. .*... A pn good deal of excitement was occasioned at the pn St. Louis county insane asylum over the death I111 of a number of the inmates from the adminia- 1H tration of a sedative mixture to make them nn Bleep The Black Hills miners aro all leaving under protest, but at the request of ? the govorument. They declare that the sec- ^ tion is one of the richest mining districts in ^ the United States. J The Carlist forces sent to reheve Seo de oil Urgel were attacked by the Alfonsists and re- sti treated to the mountains The Sioux and ill Utah Indians are on the warpath and seriously m threatening the settlers The harvesting BO of the crop in Europe has been delayed by un- OE settled weather The steamer Hugh Martin burst her boiler on the Tennessee and five peosons were killed Army worms are doing much damage in New Brunawiok.... C)1 Over forty thousand persons were present ft at the inauguration of the statue of Hermann m at Detmold, Oermany Charles O. Finney, or for many years president of the Oberiiu (Ohio) pt College, died suddenly of heart disease at his til residence in Oberlin. Ho was in the enjoy- te ment of his usual health tfp to tho time of his wi death Vigilance committees are forming m in southern Illinois to look after thieves cc August this year is romarkable for the rainfall F* In various parts of the country, which exceed ^ by far the usual average for the whole mouth. J Herious damage has been done by the floods. The inhabitants of the Bosnian provinces ^ have risen in insurrection aloug the whole HC length of the River Save. Telegraph wires have been out, thirty Turks massacred and all ^ official buildings burned A confidence u. man who had been playing some tricks in lj] Kuoxvillo was tarred and featherod by a mob. pi Roturns from 102 towns of tho amounts re ceived under the new license law in Massacbu- p setts show the total to be $463,456.32. The jjj amount received from Boston is 62,043.75.... f0 Mrs. James Clark oommittod suicide at Frances- rQ town, N. II., nearly severing her head from Ui Mia Imtir Ti.^ n ?- - - * * " j-.. ixnuunuo ui vuo rourui tp Congressional district of Maine nominated the w Hon. J. C. Madigan, of Houltou, to fill the an- ui expired term of Hersey, deceased The til D'mrio officially denies the rumor that Captain-Oencral Valmaseda intends to leave the 8(1 island. He will await the promised reinforce- to icoiit* of 10,COO men and prosecute an activo winter campaign A wealthy man in 1'hiladelphia named Katos is nnder arrest charged J," with the horriblo crimo of pooling kerosene over the person of his wife, intending to born her to death. Neighbors interfered before he ta oould accomplish the work The wife of (I apt. Phillip Bossinger, aooompanied by her iroe children, two girls and a boy, aged tspectively, nine, six and three years, left jr home in Reading Pa., and walked up the iwpath of the Union canal, and when near ring's milt, deliberately walked into the canal id drowned herself and children. The bodies ere recovered The body of N. 8. Grim9od, who ascended with Donaldson in his -fated balloon at Chicago, was found on the >aoh of Lake Michigan, near 8tony creek, by r. A. Beckwith. The body was fully dressed, ith the exception of boots or Bhoee. Letters (longing to Mr. Grimwood, and notes of his dloon trip, were found on the body, fully esblishing its identity. A Spanish vessel, which was shipping marial of war at Barcelona, Spain, Buddenly ploded and sunk. Fifty persons were killed ' the explosion or drowned Mrs. Hal,nd was struck dead by lightning near Frost ation, Tenn., the electricity burning every red'of clothing from her body A steam cht, carrying the Queen and the royal family, lile crossing from Osborne to Portsmouth, igland, collided with and Bknk the schooner cht Mistletoe. A party of ladies and geujmon were on board the Mistletoe, three of inrn worn ilrnwHAJ ? * ** uiunuuu uiu uuo Kiiioa. in one or e royal party were injured Reports wo been received of great floods in Burmah. 10 Irrawaddy baa overflowed its banks tor ilos in the district of Frome, doing immonsc image to the rice fields and to property inerally A party of about forty *nen ado a raid within three miles of Colon, Cuba, eked and burned a storo, killed nine volunors, wouudod about thirty and mado their capo Tho towns of Qluchov, Kizliar id Karizin, Russia, have been nearly totally irnod. Numerous other destructive firos aro ported in Lithuania and elsewhere in Russia.. Springfield, Mass., John J. Kenealey, aged enty-four years, was killed by falling about rty foot from a scaffolding Graham -others & Co., wholesalo grocers and comission merchants, Baltimore, Md., havo susnded, with liabilities of f80,000 D. M. ;y, of Chattanooga, Tonn., has been ?]>intcd by tho governor to fill the vacancy iu o United States Souato caused by tho death Andrew Johnson. Three hundred houses wero burned at Ryeff, rssia Milan, priuco of Serbia, has ad- ' essod a circular note to the great powers king thoir advice as to tho Herzegovina inrrectiou A suit has been bognn under o civil rights law in Washington against the illman palaco car company Mrs. Clara 1 Carter, who was taken to the insane asylum 'Augusta, Mo., committed suicide by straning herself with a pair of elastics . jorge W. Fembertou, who was sentenced to | liauguu foi the uiiiiuoi of Mrs. Bingham iu st Boston, stabbed himself in the neck, J east and arm. Tho doed was committed ' th the haudle of a tablespoon, which ho had i arpered ou tho floor of his cell David i tbbiua, iu Digby county, N. 8., beat out ! i wife's brains with a mallot, sot Are to hor d, and then Hod to tho woodek Tho murdor a evidently premeditated. The wife was a iot, inoffensive woman Latest reports j the cropa in tho West aro favorable?more : than could bo expectod after tho serious ods. I Running a Newspaper. Running a newspaper is like lighting lire in bad weather. Every one thinks ! can do it better than tho one who has s hand in. Through some misappremsion of facts a large class of people 1 ,ve come to the idea tlint it costs little j nothing to conduct a newspaper, and i at most every one can do it as well, if j t better than tho one that publishes ; e paper. It has become a general 3 iliion for persons to call at any newsper office and ask for a copy of the pair, having no idea that it costs the pub- J her money and hard work to buy and int the paper. There is no business which there is more, or even as much. ! uuicial risk as in a newspaper, and w businesses in which there is as much pital invested. More than eight mil- i >ns of dollars have been lost in newsper schemes in the last year. A news- , per is an article for sale and cannot be nl for nothing. There arc few busiisses which require the common sense < d good judgment as to conduct a iwspaper profitably and to the interest the public. Few persons think that cry little item has to bo read over and er to cqji8ider the good points and e bad, and to see whether it will be to >ur interest to publish it. Most every ie who can write at all thinks he underauds tho whole profession better than e one who has his hand in. It is a fact ost every one who can write at all, has mo thought which lie or she can put i paper, but what of them ? Tho reads of the paper will not be interested in em, and if the plan is kept up, the aders will lose interest in the paper, id by-and-bye drop off, leaving the conrn in a pitiful condition. To conduct newspaper so that it will be read with ore interest each week, is what every ie who has an idea of publishing a pair must do. An editor must be unrod, if ho wishes to mnke liis paper inresting. Ho must never bo content ith filling his columns each week, but ust try to fill them with tho news in as ndensed and acceptable a manner as issible. To do all the above things, do em well in each and every week in the ar is what few have an idea of doing, id what few have art idea, nf hn-winr. > done, unless they know something of iO business. It requires a steady and nsible person to conduct a newspaper at it may be financially profitable. It not the writing alone, but putting it 3 in a tasteful stylo that every one will le to read it, and make it financially -ofitable. Their Coaim.?The managers of the ivcifia mills at Lawrence, Mass., are kelv to Lave a claim against the city r damage to their new mill and interiptiou of business, occasioned by the idermining of the mill foundations by ie construction of the new main sewer, liich was rebuilt lost year and carried ider the mill into the river. At the rue fears were expressed by the officers 1 the corporation that the sewer might me time be the cause of damage. Tho wer of the new mill has Bottled about ro inches within a few weeks, and a irt of the work at the north end of tho ill has been suspended on account of ars of further injury. Charlea Francis Adams is the heaviest xpi^rer at Qnincy, Mass., his tax being A Queer EriTArn.?A correspondent at Terre Haute, Ind., forwards the following specimen of ossuary literature, copied from a gravestone in that region: Under This 8Od otir liable LieS, it Nether cRiee nOr IIolErs. IT LiyEd Joat twenty 7 DayS, And lost uS $40. A Chicago chemist, owing to the nonpayment of his fee, refuses to return the stomach of a dead man sent to him for analysis. When the farmer's wife has large i- J- v * ?wuuii({ hj uu, miiu can wive nail ner time and labor by using Dobbins' Electric Soap (made by Cragin & Co., Phil a.) One pound of it is equal to three of any other. Try it. * Important to Travelers. Persons visiting New York or leaving by the cars from Grand Central Depot, will savo annoyance and expense of carriage biro and baggage expressage by stopping at Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot. Over 350 elegantly fnrnisbed rooms and fitted np at a cost of $900,oOO. European plan. Guests can livo more luxuriously for less money at the Grand Union that at any other first-class house in New York. Stages and street cars pass the doors for all parts of the city. See that the hotel you enter is the Grand Union Hotel.? Com. Send for a free specimen copy of the splendid mammoth double-sheet San Francisco wktki.v Chronicle, an able, spicy and fearless naiier. It always contains complete and reliable market, mining aud stock reports ; also a .valuablo agricultural department specially proparod by an experienced editor. Full of valuablo informatiou of the Pacific ooast. It is only ;$3.00 a year, and twenty cents additional for postage, in advance.? Com. A great many people have asked us of lato, "How do you koep your horse looking | ps sleek and glosav?" We toll them it's tho easiest thing in the world ; give Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders two or three times ] a wcok.? Com. j "Time tries all things," and hns proven that Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry is the remedy par excellence for the cure of loughs, colds, croup, whoopiug cough, bronchitis, asthma, pbthisio. sore tnroat, influenza, and "last, not least,' consumption. Fifty cents aud one dollar a bottle large bottles much the cheaper.?Com. ' A gentleman in the eastern part of the State, who was about having his leg amputated on account of its being bent at right angles and ptifT at the knee, heard of Johnson's A nixlyne l.iuhuvnl. After using it a short time his log bix-amo straight and is now as serviceable us the other.?Com. A .1IAS OF A THOUSAND. A OON.SUMFTIVK CURED. ? When death wu hourly expected from foiinuiiiption, nil rerandlee bavins failed, accident led to a discovery whereby Dr. If. Jamf.8 cured bin only child with a preparation of ftxnaoAfa Imiirti. He now irlvee recipe free on receipt of two stamps to pay expensee. There la not a auricle rrmptora of Consumption that It doee not dissipate? Nirbt Swnata, Irritation of the Nerves, Difficult Expectoration, Sharp Fains In the I.udrs. Nausea at the Stomach, Inaction of the Rowels, and Wasting of the Mns.-les omnnnni/ . - ? a w., 1U5X lUCfl Street, Philadelphia., Pa., fclvlnjr name of this paper. The Markets. SEW TODE. Beef Cattle?Prime to Extra Bullosas 99M\S IS1, Bommon to Qood Texan*..\ 08 9 IJfcX MUch Cow* 46 00 <480 00 Hoge?Live 081,9 08\ Dros*ed 10149 K'V flheep 04*9 06* lAtnb*. 08*(4 08 Cotton?Middling 14*9 14>s Flour?Extra Western 6 SO 9 6 30 State Extra 6 90 <* 6 SO Wheat?Bed Western 1 48 @ 1 60 No. 3 Spring 14) #1 43 Kye?State 1 07 4 1 03 Barloy?State 1 36 0 1 33 Barley Malt 1 66 <4 1 76 Data?Mixed Wcateru 71*9 71}* Corn?Mixed Western 79 & 84 Bay, per cwt. 60 9 1 10 Straw, per cwt 66 9 90 Hope "74a,30928?old* 06 9 10 Pork?Mesa 31 40 931 40 Lard 13 *9 IS* Fish?Mackerel No. 1, new 17 00 <418 00 ' No. 3, now 13 00 <413 00 Dry Cod, per cwt 6 00 <4 6 60 Herring, Scaled, per box 86 9 36 Petroleum?Crude 06*903.* Refined, 11}.' Wool?California Fleece 28 9 86 Texas 34 9 84 Australian " 47 0 68 Butter?State 80 9 S3 Western Dairy 20 9 34 Western Yellow It i 33 Western Ordinary......... 10 48 14 Pennsylvania Fine 36 9 38 Cbaese?State Factory 10 9 II " Skimmed 02 <4 06 Western...... 08 9 1054 | Egg*?State 21 9 22 ULUAXT. Wheat 1 40 9 1 40 Rye?State 1 06 9 1 06 Corn?Mixed 86 9 87 Barley?State 1 20 9 1 30 Cats?State 61 9 66 Borrano. Flour..... 6 26 9 8 00 Wheat?No. 3 Spring 1 38 9 1 3"> Oorn?Mixed 76 9 76 t?ata 6f.M Bye 1 IS a 1 16 Barley 1 40 & 1 40 BitmiOU. Clot ton?Bow Middlings KJtflS li)4 Klonr? Extra 8 74 9 8 76 Whoat?lied Western 1 68 (A 1 68 Bye 90 ? 96 Oorn?Yellow 8<J <? 89 Oata?Mixed 63 & 64 Petroleum 06.V& 06}', PHTLADBLYHLA. Klonr?Pennsylranla Extra 6 78 A 8 60 Wheat?Western Bed 13) 0 1 47 Bye 1 00 0 1 00 Oorn?Yellow 8) 0 83 Mixed 80 ? 83 Oata?Mixed F9 0 69 Petroleum?Orude Refined, UK (MHeHHJ The best Investment? RWWl SILVER TIPPED M || | J J SB 91 Shoes. Five cents laid ont for P4f0VjflB Sliver Tips adds one dollar to the m III worth of en.lrot shoes. IsmWMMmBb Also trv Wire Qnllted Holes Bound to go because everybody MenpHVQ wants t hem. Hf tf'l; 4 Vu W CABLE SCREW WIREBsraffatOT Boots and Hlmoe. They are dorable, eaay and dir. HVPl Also try Wire Quilled Boles, frVISITING CARDS. fZfk Klne White Bristol Vlsltloe flsrds with *t\f Nam* beautifully printed ou tliem, poat-pald. for V3 olfl. i?l> H*pp or Dameak, 18(1 ota. Klr**nt Card Caaes, lO ?ta. We hare orer HO different styles of Csrdr, Ineladinr Glaus, Hmwtl.ike, Marble, 17 irrieilji Plaid, eto. Hood etarop for Samples, or lO cts. for Agents' outfit. Address W.1I. B. WAI.OKN, Nor ill Adttnis, Naia. AUKNTM WANTED rvrnwkrrr. Address KUKKK A MTfl GO.. A I Kulton St..Boston. Maaa NEW ENGLAND PEOPLE Now residing In the Wist or rxmtb will find Tl?r Boston Weekly Globe the boat paper for them to taks, as It fflvas sift he New Rogland news and Is also a lire story and aeonral no-reps per. Only fill cts lor it months, postage fro . Tnr (Ii.ohk Pen. Co., Boston. I > ?TIIH IIKKT in ikt World. ' It Glros llnlrersal Satisfaction. I*l?l IVONDKIIFII, Kronomy. 40 IIhi. more Bread to bill. Flour. VvqDZ^V mAVKH .HIIiK, KlifiH, Arc. ,/yi AA ~ One yea-'? tarings will buy a oow. HCSBfiA N?? MOKR HOIIlt lllcKAIk. , I l^|Wj I , Whiter, l.lghtar, Sweeter, Richer. KVKHVbUDV Prnlsee It. The lodlee are all In Ixire with It. Iag^t.1 8KMX I.Ike HOT 4"A K KM. IIf" Bend at onoe for Ctrooisr to T fjlT (IKO. K. II4NTZ Ac CO.. . 1711 llaansMl,, New York. I.111'OHTANT TO tlONNU.MPTIVKH. A gentleman having been so fo. Innate as to ours his son of Consumption In Its worst stems, after being Slven np to die by tbs moat celebrated physicians, do Iroe to make known lbs curs twhloh proses snocsaslnl In srery ease) in those afflicted with Asthma, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, Consumption, and all affections of the Throat and Iaui, and will send the Recipe, free of charm, to all who desire It, If they wfll forward their address to DAN1KT, A DUE. 38 Liberty At.. New York. Utl inn A MONTIIa!!inrxPKNHKHToauTArt!de3 V k/J U| I now, staple as tlonr. Samples free. I.IN-I U riJlMNGTONJjlieWYO^ MERIDEN nTTTT finv Manufacture all Ulndn of uUTLLlll S?2bSr^' PA'TKNT IVOKY ?? or OeUulold Knife. i ? I? n a inr The moat Durable WII1TK COMPAHY saa* aMMMMBMI oall for "Trade Mark" MKRI. | l)KN OUTLKRY OO.. on the Blade. Warranted and told by mil dealer* In Cutlery mnd by the MFRIDKN OUT1.KRT OO.. 49 Chamber* Street. New York. H. T. H. P.?Wo. ? The Kins of the Itndy lathebrmin; the stomach lte tnnln support ; the nerves Its messengers ; the bowels, the kidneys and the pores Its safeguards. Indigestion creates a violent revolt among tvese attaches of the regal organ, and to bring them back to thulr duty, there Is nothing like the regulating, purifying. Invigorating, cooling operation of Tarrant's EfferTOSccnt Seltzer Aperient. It r?ooTate? th? system and restore* to health both the body and the mind. Sold by all Druggist*. Wisconsin Central Railroad Lands. Rzoellent Farms at low prices snd on essy forms. Sure drops?flood Water?Healthy Cllmsto-No Crasshoppers ? No severe winds ? No malnrious diseases. Before going elsewhere send postal card asking lor pamphlets, maps, etc., to till AS. L. COLBY. Land Commissioner, Wis. Cen. R. R. Co., Milwaukee, Wis. Plenty of Timtter on alt thee* Lantle. Anifflf ud Itlorphlne llnblt absolutely and 11 UI 11 M speedily onred. Painless; no puhlictty. 5 B j J :i I IT! Send stamp for particulars. L>r. Caul****** tow. 187 WashingtonSL.Chloago.III. OA FANCY CARDS. 7 Stries.with Name, 10 U\1 eta., post-paid, by J. B. HUSTKD, Nassan, N. Y. AGENTS WAN TED fastest selling book over published. Send for circulars and our extra terms to Agents. NATIONAL PUBLISHINO CO . Philadelphia. Pa. Wll n I IPP A splendid New Illustrated BOOK of UlrC the author's own 30 ?en.rn'life and IN THK thritlinq adveninres nmong Indians, PAR VU.PQT hi bonier wats, hunting wild animals, 1 S11 etc I etc. The Ar?f and ?n/y new and remptete book on the wild Fan West. lis fit* n U 1/thin'f in "11. AflKNTS w ANTED. Wihrr, Watf.bm an A Eaton. Habtkobp. Or. j geo. p. Rowell & co- | NEW YORK TRIBUNE. The Leading American Newspaper. TUB BEMT ADVERTISING MEDIUM. Dally, $10 a year. Semi-Weekly, $3. Weekly. $?. noting* Frr* to tht Snbtrrihrr. Specimen OoplN unci AdT?rti?!a(Kit? Free. Weekly. In clnhsof SO or more, only ft I. portage paid. Add r?w Tlir. TniHt'Nr.. N. Y. Ill A 1|W II AGENTS KOIt TIIK Uf It Ml I k II h?st-?rlllng Prlr.o Pack WW MM IW | age In tlin world. It con WW j^alW W WW tnlna I "> Sheets Paper l& Envelope*, Oolden Peu. Pen Holder, Pencil, Patent Yard Measure, and a Piece of Jewelry. Single Parkapa. wltli elegant Prite, poet-paid, l?.J cents. Circular free. BRIDF. * PP.. 7 MB Broad way. New York. WANTED AI1KNTS. fi.,mVl*t nod o..t/U fr*, Btttrr than goM A. OOIJLTKR A f!Q . (ftiloago. fjlYKK Y FA Ml I, Y WANTH IT. Money In l?| Ci Sold by Agents. Address M N. 1XIVFI.U Wrle.Pa Fort Edward Institute, N. Y. Hoarding Seminary for Ladles and enllemen. To prepare for College, for Rualneas, r for Life. Mil!) for Fall i..rm. September g. JOS. F.. KING. Principal. An J%|M a day guaranteed using our Well AlgN MAuger &. Drills. SIOO a month anl^^al Dild to pood Agents. Aug?-r book tPAsW tree. Jlla Auger Co., Bt. Louie. Mo. IEDIC1IR RKRDERED tSELKSSl . YU lVw/^? Volta's Klectbo ItKLTHaml f f I a. r Bauds are indorsed by the *' \ J rA/v moat eminent pliyaiciaus iu Y I J ft the worlu for thecurvof <\\l|r/mutism, neuralgia,livercom^ . plaint, dyspepsia. kidney dls t??a? eaae.acbee. pal n?,nervous disorders.fits,femalecomplninta f nervous and general debility. nnu oilier cnronic diseases of jH the chest,head,liver. stomach . __ kidneys and blood. Book with IS L I F E. foil particulars free by Volta ' w "*11 *" Bklt Co.. Cincinnati, Ohio. 0PM?iir?si log. Prof. P. Meeker. P. O. Bos 47.%. Lapnrte.Ind. rnilklTV I WANTKD?MISSOURI COUNTY bUUn I I I BONDS. Send lull description and I n All rv n . I amount held. Iilichest rates paid for KriNriS I I land warrants. Correspondence sollcUO I lted. SAM'L A. CAYl.ORD, St-Ixmla. rVlIlK ONLY POLYTKCIINIO IIOMR SCHOOL. J. ST. CI.K.HKNT'H Hull, Kllii ott .11 tl. Fire vacancies, owing to enlargement. Apply at once. DOUBLE YOUR TRADE j Druggists, Grocers and Dealers?/*??re (liina ami Jnjxin | Teas, In sealed packages, *crr%r-tou <ysti*, boxes, or naif cheat*?Grtnrrrir price*. Send for Circular. TilK WILLI Tea Company, gQ i Fulton St.. W. V., P. O. Boa 43HO. Pleasant and Profitable Employ merit.? Beautiful!,f * Charming !** " Oh, how lovely !" ' What are they worth fM etc. Such are exclamation# by thoso who aeo the large elegant New Chromoe produced by the European and American Chrono Publishing Co. They are all perieet gema of art. No one can resist tlie temptation to bny when seeing the Onrorooa. It require# no talkiug to aell the ploturea, they apeak for themselves. Canvassers, Agents and ladles and genMeineii out of employment, will find this the best opening ever offered to make money. For full particulars, send stamp for confidential circular. Address F. CLtCASON A CO., 738 Washington St., Boston. Muss. . WORK that RA.YS I J 11><I p?r Month In made by Axrent* selliuK our splmiId assortment "I N?:w Map, and Pictures. Cutalntrue free. K. C. B KI DC MAN. n Marol&y St., New York and I TO Weat 4th St.. Cincinnati. O. A?J RNTM. 20 KLKOANT OIL CHROMOS. mounted, aire Ox 11 for (ill 120 for M.j. Lmrfrnt variety in the world. NATIONAL CHROSfo CO .Pblladelpb a. The " Beat All" Safety Lamp. Patented Sept. 20th, 1874. Haa aafety tube whioh prevent* exploeinn, and la the moet practloal, useful, oleen and aafe Lamp ever made. Aj/ent* IPanted everywhere. Address B m. IX) WD K.N, Patentee and Manofaoturer, 85 New Chambers Street, New York. g)OK AGENTS WANTED nrw book' ' GLEANINGS FOR THE CURIOUS." F?r30y?r? all literature, art, science, history, theolcrv. earth ana heaven, hare been raked and ranaa'cltrd for (ha ran and curtoua thinga itowcil away In thlaremarkabl# book. II la octoallg m-er/fowonq with Bpl quaint, beautiful, bi i;! thought* and truth*, nquiuta aentiraent, inrenioua derleea, and the moat wu'i drrful facta and eurtoua (aaelea ever known. The people aa r -U'$ VltmHdr Anonta aay "If* a RIO HIT/ -and three now at work report "On."?" TO,"?" SO,"?"90"order* weak I It really outaell* oil other book* (Aree to one tor * only to me it it (o buy it." We want 1O.OOO more truity Agent* now?men or women?and we will mall Outfit Kren to thoae who will cane***. larp nampnlet* wkk full particular*, term*, etc., *ent fyee tp alt. Addreaa A. D- WORTUiMOTOM * CO-. UaaTroBD. Ooaao Thla new troaa ta worn with pwrfeot o om fort A aa r nH night and day. Adapta sfB alilallu U ltaelf to weary motion of L * B U 8 . JV tba bod'i retaining Knpt tare under the nardeat alerolae or aaearaat atraln jf^W nntll permanently oared. \ M Bold oheap by the Elastic Trust Co. N*. 683 Hraadway, N. Y. City, and aeat by mall. Oall or tend for Otronlar. and be cured Batdla eaaa by Prigglata, M oeata and upwarda. /t%ap A A it.OMTIl ? AgenU wanted aeery It'IHII "J'""- Mnalnea* honorable and lirat tllZllll cTaaa. Particular* rent free. Addreaa VBWW WORTH A <!<> Ri. i^nu aa CWAKTII.1IOKK i:nl,l,KllK,N!vnrlhiii?r?, r> llrlnwurr Co., > run. Thl? Inatltutlon, under the rare of Kn.-oda. aire* a thorough collegiate education to both aeiea, :*bo here puraue the aatue conreea of gtudy. and recntre toe aamo degreea. Kor Catalogue, gtrlng full partlculare ac to ooureea of aturiy, tenna.ete. addreaa KDVVARD II. MAUIIX, Pbickiueut. PENNSYLVANIA IWIIItarr Arndrmy, Chcitrr, Pa. Opmu Sept Stb. 01*11 Kngtneerlng, the UUaalca, Kngltah and Military Art thoroughly taught. Kor circular* apply to Qou THBO. HYATT. Preatdont. SOMETHING Sra^S."^. We oath work end money for all, men or women, hoyi ot glrla, whole or apare time. Send a tamp for Catalogue. Addreaa rRAWK OLUUK. Hew Bedford. Maaa J A0COCP*rd*7. Send for Chreno OaUlagoa l9lv'l9?wJ. n. Btirrotti'aSunt. 1J oaten. tauag.