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Captain Moss and the Mojave. Cip^aiu John Mo >s has a wonderful history, especially when he is permitted to relate it himself. Moss has lived alternately among the Indians and the whites for over thirty years. He is not lawless, unless lying is lawless, and nobody ever accused him of lying with malice aforethought. He spins big yarns just for the fun of it. Most of Moss' time has been spent in prospectir?nr ff\r A liinff fthoilt 1862. HlSt ftt *"6 *Vi ? * * the time when there was such a furor on the Pacific coast over mineral discoveries in Arizona, he struck some greenhorns whom he induced to shell out 5*120,000 for a half interest in a mine which be had opened up on the Colorado river. Wheo he had got the cash for his raiue he started on an Eastern tour, taking along with him as his friend and traveling companion, Aratoba, a chieftain of the Mojave tribe, who had great influence among his people. % The Indian had never seen more than a few hundred white men together at a time, and his notions of Eastern civilization were very crude. Moss and his companion went from Lower California to San Francisco on a steamer, and when the city and its shipping opened before Aratoba's vision he became unmanageable from amazement and excitement, and attempted to jump overboard. When they boarded a tra;n of cars east of the Rockies, and the thing was getting down to thirtv or forty miles an hour, the old chief tried to throw himself out of a window, and during the remainder of the first day of their journey by rail it took two men to prevent bim from breaking his neck. He got used to railroad travel, however, and liked it toward the last; but the more he saw of city life the greater his amazement grew. Moss ami his friend lived at the best New York hotels for a week, faring sumptuously, aud when he got ready to visit Washington and Baltimore they took the train from Jersey City in the evening, engaging berths in a sleeping-car. During the nignt run whenever the train halted at a town Moss made Aratoba get up and look out at the gas lights. The object of this was to make the Indian think he was riding through New York. They arrived in Philadelphia before daybreak and remained there until night, when the journey was resnmed to Baltimore, Moss still practicing his deception on the Indian by waking him up at every town to convince him that they were still riding under the gas light of Now York. The game was played upon the unsuspecting and bewildered aborigiue until the trip ended in Washingtc When they returned to the wilds of Arizona old Aratoba feared to relate his experience, for he kuew that his people would think he was lying,- or that he had been bribed to deceive them. Finally he consented to tell his story, and on a certain day the whole tribe assembled to hear it." When he described his journey by rail, and told about riding two whole nights under the gas lights of one city, the untraveled Mojaves denounced his ! narrative as a monstrous "stiff," and they nearly mobbed the old chief then i.1 a ~:i 1.J .1 . * nuu LUflC. A fUUUWi WHO iiCiU, HUU 11/ was decided to banish Aratoba from the tribe as a chronic old liar, and he was accordingly stripped of his Eastern made clothes and abandoned on an uninhabited island in the Colorado river, from which he was afterward rescued by his old friend Moss. Last fall Moss took up his residence in the Ban Juan country of Colorado. He lived in a county which is nearly as large as the State of Illinois, and which has a population of about two hundred. Moss was elected to the Legislature, and after taking his seat and attending one or two days, went off to San Francisco, where he has remained ever since," leaving his isolated constituents to take care of their own interests. Riding Thirty Miles to Cet .Married. The Gallatin Xorth Missourian says : Reuben Weldon of Harrison township, in company with Miss Melda Groves, the daughter of Samuel Groves, went on horseback to Elder Poster's of Monroe township ta have a marriage ceremony performed.* Mr. Pfister was not at homo, and although the roads, were very bad, the couple went from there to 'Squire Eb. Weldon's house. 'Squire Weldon was also absent from home, but the young I couple, nothing daunted, concluded to go to 'Squire Jackson Bennett's. UnforT - >0- ' T? 11 luuiHeijr, iiuwrvrr, oijuire xifuiifit wus also gone from h >me. Night was fast approaching anil Weldon was still a bach-, elor. But he was not discouraged. He told Miss Groves that he knew a justice four miles south of Breckenriilge, in . Caldwell county, who was always at home. The wearied horses were turned in that direction, but alas! for human hopes. They found that the justice had removed from the neighborhood. But by this time they had become used to , discouragements, and each additional obstacle only added tire to their zeal. , They started for Gomer station, on the Hannibal and St. Joseph railroad, resolved to go to St. Joseph that night to be married. At Gomer they found an obligiug official, who in brief time pro- I nouneed them husband and wife, and although they hail then traveled over thirty miles since twelve o'clock, over : some of the muddiest, roughest and. most disagreeable roads, they roue home, j about six miles, one of the happiest couples in the world. How to Cook Rice. Measure three tablespoonfuls of rice with a light hand and do not heap them. Wash the rice twice in warm water, letting it stand in the water half an hour; then drain off the water, put the rice in a large pudding dish, pour over it a quart of milk, add four tablespoonfuls of white sugar, with butter the size of a walnut, and a saltspoonful of salt. Grate ^utmeg over the top and place in a moderate oven. Now, the excellence of this pudding depends upon the baking, li your oven is right it will take about two ' hours. After the first half hour open the door and stir the pudding. Several times in the course of baking a rich creamy brown crust comes upon the sur- j face and should be broken, allowing the 1 milk to cover it, when another crust will form. The pudding should be quite ' thin when taken from the oven. Let it get very cold by putting it on ice, if you have it. When cold it should be of th e consistency of boiled custard. A pleasant change can be made by adding a large handful of raisins. It will be nece ssary to allow another cup of milk. A Sharp Boy. ere is a newsboy in San Francisco, i Handley by name, who is rapidly e ring a fortune by the sale of paHe is but fourteen years old, yet houses and several building Telegraph Hill. He recently third house there for ?1,800 and to his brother for 8*2,200. The r. also a newsboy, sold it again ,100. Jimmy aspires to a profesand attends the Lincoln school, he stands high in his class, Some of Washington's Notables. A correspondent writing of Washington and its notables, says : A very notable man in those days (1853) was Dr. Louis F. Tasistro,who after a dropsy such as hardly any man had ever recovered from, liad come to the reading room of Willard's Hotel, on one of the ' last days I was in Washington, like one raised from the dead, to seize the first old acquaintance in reach for the twentyfive cents which he mtist pay for his drink of good brandy. This veteran of "" * 1 ? * - 1 . tiie dinner tame 01 Kings ana nooies, 01 Presidents and diplomats, guilty of nothing new but age and consequent incapacity, was the most literal and typical outcome o? a life purely in and of the world that could be imagined. Born of a family of rank in England, with uncommon talents, classical and personal i attainments, taste and culture, he held a commission in the "Guards," a peculiar distinction for a British officer, and married a lady eminent both for beauty and fortune. In person, he approached the colossal, with a most impressive physiognomy; and a figure uniting the powerful and the graceful beyond the most favored men. Yet, poor Tasistro brought hinlself early in life into nothing but a man of fashion with a fashionable wife. Time exposed the folly, wasted the fortune, separated :he family, estranged old associations, and thrust him into a world* of struggle. But for his love of luxury and his voluptuous practices, even yet so magnificent a man might have come to himself; but perhaps it was not to be expected. It was only after he was relatively a fallen man that he came to America, where, indeed, he was welcomed into the homes and into the studies of half the grand and gifted folks on the continent. At Washington he was given a place in the State department, where his life and very nativity in the bcaxi monde, inseparable from diplomacy, made him serviceable to the sometimes unsophisticated secretary. When I first saw him, in 1853, at a dinner party at General Jesup's, he was not a whit less an autocrat than old Sam Johnson used to be at Sir Joshua Reynolds' or Mr. Thrale's. Yet he was already waning, and soon was displaced from the office of translator for the State department by a native American production, only more marvelous in some respects, who, to an utter and perfectly honest contempt for Tasistro, united a special ambition to surpass his predecessor in social prominence. That was Alexander Dimitry, of Louisiana. When Mr. Mar^y was asked to appoint him, and the surprising multitude of lan uages were catalogued that Dimitry cjuld speak, his exclamation was characteristic : " Why, he must have graduated a. tbe tower of Babel." Professor Dimitry, a native of New Orleans, was of Greek descent, as the name (equivalent to Demetrius) indicates, on the father's side, but from the extraordinary darkness of his complexion, felt called on to seize the satire of an enemy on which , to found a suit at law in which to put to rest forever the suspicion of any African mixture, of which, indeed, his whole physiognomy was a striking contradiction. In his boyhood he had been sent to Georgetown College, where his achievements, particularly in Greek literature aud rhetoric, distinguished him all over the country as a prodigy. His spirit was strikingly imperious, his dex teritv in argumentation very like that of Dr. Johnson, and his command "both of i the abundance and the propriety of language, such that I dare ray he has had in those gifts no rival to this day. His social qualities were extremely winning, genial and affectionate, notwithstanding his boisterous Johnsonian arrogance, which, however, he knew how to temper on occasion very well. His wife was a beautiful woman, daughter of Mr. Mills, one of the architects of the Capitol, and his numerous children, all handsome, gifted and brilliant in social life. Professor Dimitrv was appointed United States minister to Nicuragua, in Central America, by Mr. Buchanan, whence, on his return in 1861, he passed through the lines, and cast his lot with the South. A French Lady's Experience. A lady of thirty, a plump and jolly brunette., sees with some anxiety a dark, downy line penciling itself on her superior lip. She does not care to compete with the bearded woman, and consults the advertisements. She finds just what she wants?a depilatory pomade, warranted to remove the most obnoxious mustache woman ever had in five applications. She obtains a box at a price of ten francs, and follows the directions on the label with care. The moustache thrives on the depilatory, and after a while madam yields td the inevitable, and consoles herself by reflecting that it might be worse. Three or four years roll by, and she sees with alarm that her hair is beginning too thin. A trifle of mustache can be borne, but a bald head never, and again she has recourse to the advertisements. She finds the article she needs?a miracle pomade?to increase the th'ckness and beauty of her hair. On vis* ug the shop she is stupefied. It is tl same shop, the same attendant, th< same bottle at the same price, the * me pomade so far as she can judge fro* appearances. Only the label has bee changed. The merchant, on being sc. erely examined, admits that it is the same pomade. It failed so utterly to remove hair that he turned it into a hair invigorator. With great joy the customer buys a pot and applies it? and her hair goes on falling out faster than ever Willing to Verify. A passenger on a street car line gave a driver, noted Dofil lor His politeness ituu shrewdness, a five dollar-bill, and asked for change. The driver, as we are told, gave him $9.90 iu change. The passenger on getting out informed-him that he had made a mistake. The driver answered it was too late to verify; it was not their practice, unless done at the time the change was given. "But," insisted the passenger, ''you must verify this time." "No," replied the driver, "I have had that thing tried before; it is too late." "All right," was the response, "I have $4.90 here which belongs to you. If you won't take it, I will keep it." "Oh! that makes a difference," said the mollified driver. " Thank you." And he verified. Illiterate Reflections. A man who will chaw turbacker will ' drin k Jamaiker rum, and a man that will , drink Jamaiker rum will go to ruin, and a man that will go to ruin is mean enuff ' to do enneything. You call tell just about what a man will du, by hearing him ; tell what ho has did. I am prepared tu say tu seven of the rich men out of every i ten:: "Make the most of your money, for it makes the most of yu." Debt is an eel pot?a big hole where you go in, and a small one where you kum out. ; Man was created a little lower than the I angslls, and he has bin getting a little j lower ever since, Airs Well that Ends Well. The romantic story of pretty Jennie Burdick and her Russian lover, told in the papers, lias had a happy ending. Jennie escaped for the second time from the parental home, and was nlarr ed to Lieut. De Kalands, of the Russian fleet, by a justice of the peace in Solano county, California. Jennie's course is intcrQQ+innr in oororol Trova SllA is nOTV of VDVIU^ i U WV T VA nujwi w | age, and the objections of her parents to ' the marriage seem to have had 110 other foundation than prejudice against the nationality of the Russian who is now her husband. It is to be hoped that the devotion of De Kajands to his California wife will not wane, and that in far-off lands and coming years he will not forget all that she suffered and ventured to become his. Prof. TyndalTs Warning. Iu concluding an address to the students of University college (London),'Prof. Tyndall, who is unquestionably one of the most indefatigable brain workers of'our century, said: "Take care of your health. Imagine Hercules as oarsman in a rotten boat; what can he do there but by the very force of his stroke expedite the ruin of his craft. Take care of the timbers of your boat." The distinguished scientist's advice is equally valuable to all workers. We are apt to devote all our energies to wielding the oars, our strokes fall firm and fast, but few of us examine or even think of the condition of our boats until the broken or rotten timbers suddenly give way and we find ourselves the victims of a calamity which could have been easily avoided by a little forethought. What began ! with a slight fracture, or perhaps even a careless exposure to disorganizing influences, ends in the complete wreck of the lifeboat. The disease which began with a slight headache or an .undue exposure to cold, terminates iu death : unless its progress is checked and the disease j remedied. The first symptoms, the heralds of ; disease, give no indication of the strength of j 11-- ? r? +V,nf IIJC Uil-CUIILJJlg lll't HMU uic tiunn uus? w.uv I liis old alJv. Nature, will exterminate theinva- j dcr. But Disease is an old general and accom- , plishes bis most important movements in the night time, and some bright morning finds him in possession of one of the strongest fortifications ; and when he has .once gained a strong hold in the system. Nature ignonririously turns traitor and secretly delivers the whole* physi- i cal armory to the invader. Like the wily politician, Nature is always on the strongest side, and the only way to insure her support is to ! keep your vital powers in the ascendant. Keep ! your strongest forts?the stomach and liver? well guarded. Do not let the foe enter the arterial highways, for he will steal or destroy your i richest merchandise and impoverish your king- i dam. To repulse the attacks of the foe you can I find no better ammunition than Dr.- Pierce's ; Family Medicines. (Full directions accompany each package.) His Pleasant Purgative Pellets art especially effective in defending the stomach end liver. His Golden Medical Discovery for colds. If you wish to become familiar with tho i most approved system of defense in this war, fare, ana the history of the foe's method of invasion, together with complete instructions for I | purifying tho blood and arresting coughs and keeping your forces in martial order in time of ! peace, you can find no better manual of these : tactics * than "The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser," by It. V. Pierce. M. D., of the I World's Dispensary," Buffalo, N. Y. Sent to any I i address on receipt of $1.50. It contains over i nine hundred pages, illustrated by two hundred j and eighty-two engravings and colored plates, , ! and elegantly bound in cloth and gilt. A Guinea is Scarce Yellower Than the complexion of a person becomes who i omits to regulate his liver when that important Sland grows neglectful of its secretive function. 1 loreover, the stomach under such circum- | . stances becomes disordered, the bowels are constricted. pains in the side and between the shoulder blades are felt, the head aches, and the nervous system shares in the general derangement. This concatenation of evils is, however, easily remediable with that matchless regulating tonic, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which insures the i secretion and flow of healthy bile, acts gently ' but effectually upon the bowels, and removes ! every symptom of nervous or digestive trouble. , ! Tlio rauiilt u thnf rpiif.wWI tnnn is irivon to the i The detailed examination continued without interrup- j tion until the 10th of February. The result* are highly ' gratifying to the friends of the Company and the public | generally. On the 14th instant the Company received ; from Commissioner Rowe a renewal of its authority to do ! business in Michigan, together with his written assurance that he found the Company able to comply fully with the stringent laws of his State. The entire reserve ' is invested in United States bonds and first mortgages. ! On the Hist of December, 1878, it had a grand surplus i above liabilities of $1,418/83.35. Its receipts n 1876 exceeded its disbursements by over $300,000, although it 1 paid in death claims nearly a Quarter of a million dollars, j More perfect security could not be offered to insurers, i It fs almost unnecessary to say that this Company has : nothing to do with the National Capital Life Insurance Company of the District of Columbia. Unlike the latter \ concern, the National Life Insurance Company of the j United States of America is not reinsuring other Companies, and is not responsible in anyway for the liabilities t or policies of the Republio Life Insurance Company or j any other corporation. Agents Wanted In this county. AadmS.i I entire system ; the sallow, haggard appearance of the face to which biliousness gives rise is | superseded by the glow of health, and the frame ' j gains in substance as well as vigor. An Experienced Traveler, Who has tried all the principal first-class hotels in the United States, declares that for comfort J and excellence, combined with low rates, the | Grand Central Hotel, on Broadway, New York, J leads them all. The latest reduction is from | $4.00 to $2.50 and $3.00 per day ; although the ' Grand Central is the largest first-class hotel in New York. One-Fourth of the Jlortality In this country is due to neglected coughs. This is a statistical fact, and it is equally true j that no cough or cold would ever prove fatal if ; the great balsamic remedy, Hate's Honey of llortliound and Tar*' were taken in the early j stages. Reflect on this. Sold by all druggists. 1 Pike's Toothache Drops cure in one minute, j Money in Poultry. j Prof. A.Corl>ett, of No. 7 Warren St.,N. Y., has i received the Centennial and several gold medals, also 12 diplomas, for his new process of hatch- ! ing eggs and raising poultry by means of horse i manure. This valuable discovery will give $500 . yearly profit from 12 hens. Catalogues, circulars and testimonials sent on receipt of postage. ? Important. When you visit or leave New York stop at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central j depot. 350 elegantly furnished rooms. Best i restaurant in the city ; prices moderate. Baggage taken to and from said depot, free. Cars j and stages pass the hotel for all parts of the city. ( Painters and Grainers, send for new j prices of metallic graining tools, for " wiping j out,'' J. J. Callow, Cleveland, Ohio. A positive cure for rheumatism?Du- j rang's Rheumatic Remedy. Send for circular J to Helphenstine & Bentlev, Washington, D. C. | _ ' We have sold Hatch's Universal Cough j Syrup for about four years, and it has steadily j gained in popularity from its first introduction, i We keep all the "cough remedies considered ! "standard" in this section. The sale of the , T"'--*?1 "w.ntas thon onv lv-rhnng ; UUiVCl^U lias uuuuinu ^icavvi luuu t**V9 fv* ( f renter than all others combined. We do not esitate to recommend it. Nichols & Lytle, West bury, Cayuga Co.,N.Y. Rheumatism cured at once by Durang's Rheumatic Remedy. Send for circular to Helphenstine Bentley, Washington, D. C. f For ten cents we will send a scientific ; book of one hundred and sixty choice selections ! from the poetical workR of Byron, Moore and Burns ; also, fifty selected popular songs and other writings. The poetry of these authors is ( ! true to nature and the finest ever written. Des- i mond & Co., 915 Race St., Philadelphia, Pa. t Vegetable Pulmonary Balsam, tho Great New ( England cure for coughs, colds and consump- ! j tion. Cutler Bros. & Co.'a, Boston, only genuina Durang's Rheumatic Remedy never fails to cure rheumatism. Sold by all druggists. The Nntionnl Life Insurance Company of 1 the United States of America. In marked contrast with the unpleasant developments that hare appeared recently concerning certain companies, we are glad to note the results of an official examination of this Company. Although having a charter direct from Congress, it does not attempt to disavow its responsibility to State insurance laws. By mutual agreement, on behalf of the State depart- | ments of New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and I Michigan, the Hon. Samuel A Rowe, of the latter State, commenced on January 8th a rigid examination of the books, assets and liabilities of this Company. Commissioner Rowe was assisted by Prof. Watson, the well i?? .otnan ?nH V H TjOtt. Kso. Medical success in -which every r??r? suffering man, woman and child throughout the land in deeply interested ?Collins' "Voltaic Planters. They are without price, almoRt, aince they cost bnt 25 cents, and always cure. Asthma.?It is useless to describe the tortures of spasmodic asthma. Those who have suffered from its distressing paroxysms know what it is. Jonas Whitcomb's Remedy has never failed to afford iminediale relief. The Markets. new yobk. Beef Cattle-Native 10^3 10,\ ^ /* a iola it&l/ lexas ana uneroaee.... vo*v?? Jlilch Cows <0 00 @60 00 Hogs?Live 05?4@ 05J? Dressed 06 Jt @ 07 V Sheep..... 06ij@ 07V Lambs 06!*@ 08* Cotton?Middling 12 12}? Flour?Western?Good to Choice.... 7 30 @8 60 State?Good to Choice 6 40 @ 6 50 1 "RPH WA?fprn 1 45 1 50 No. 2 Milwaukee 1 '9 @ 1 49 Rye?State 84 @ CO# Barley?Stale 70 <4 70 Barley Malt 12-1 li 1 V5 Oats?Mixed Western 88 (4 52 Corn?Mixed Western 55 <4 57 Hay, percwt 65 (4 '>0 Straw?per cwt 70 (4 to , Hops 76's?11 @17 75's C6 @ 10 Pork?Mess 11 fO @15 00 Lard?City Steam 11#@ 11# : Fish?Mackerel, No. 1, new 18 00 @19 00 " No. 2, new 8 50 @ 9 00 Dry Cod, percwt 6 25 @ 6 50 Herring, Scaled, per box 13 @ 20 Petroleum?Crude 11 @11 Refined, 16# | Wool?California Fleece 20 @ 20 | Texas ? 19 @ 21 . Australian " 88 @ 41 i Butter?State 22 @ 23 Western?Choice 20 @ 22 Western?Good to Prime... 1C @ 17 Western?Firkins 11 @ 14 Cheese?State Factory 13 @ 1 # State Skimmed 05 @ 07 Western 10 @ 15 Eggs?State and Pennsylvania 16#@ 16# j BUFFALO. Flour 7 00 @10 f0 Wheat?No. 1 Milwaukee 1 69 @ 1 59 Cora?Mixed 61 @ 61# , Oats 41 @ ?4i Rye 90 @ 90 ' Barley C9 @ 0 Barley'Malt 100 @110 PHILADELPHIA. Beef C3ttle?Extra 06#@ 00# Sheep 05 @ 07 ^ Hogs?Dressed 08#@ 09# | Flour?Pennsylvania Ext ja 5 75 @ 0 CO Wheat?Red Western 1 <5 @1 45 , Rye...: 77 @ 73 Corn?Yellow 5 #@ 61# Mixed 5t>;@ 5i # Oats?Mixed 37 @ 88 Petroleum?Crude 13#@13# Refined, 16# ! WATERTOWX, MASS. Beef Cattle?Poor to Choice 5 60 @ 8 CO Sheep ; 3 75 @ 6 75 1 Lambs 3 75 @6 75 GLENN'S SULPHUR SOAP, The Most Effective External Remedy Ever Offered to the Public. Glenn's Sulphur Soap cures with wondrous rapidity all Local Diseases j and Irritation of the Skin, remedies and prevents Rheumatism and Gout, removes Dandruff, Prevents the Hail from Falling Out and Turning Gray, and is the best possible protection J against diseases communicated by contact. comtlehonal defects &t8 permanently removed by its use, and it exerts a most beautifying influence upon the face, neck, arms? and, indeed, upon the entire cuticle, which j it endows with remarkable purity, fairness ana softness. This inexpensive and convenient 8pecifh renders unnecessary the outlay ittending Sulphur Batllg. It thoroughly disinfects contami- | nated clothing and linei. PHYSICIANS ADVISE r* ^SE. Prices, 25 and 50 Cents 'er Cake, Per Box, (3 Cakes,) 60c. n 1 $1.20. n.b. By purchasing the large cr <es a t 60 cent? you get trlDie me ruanuiy. "Hill's Hair and ^hiskp? Stye/ Black or Brown, 50c-. fi. N. CUTHMOU Pron'r. 7 Siith h. fli.T. 10 Per Cent. Iowa Farm Mortgages, Bouftbt and Sold and Collection* made in all part* of Iowa. Any information desired triven free on applica- ' tjon. Address ,L A. FITCH PATH I(' K. Nevada. Iowa.. MKS. FAY'S I "IBOSTON RECEIPTS 5 I A NEW COOK BOOK. C j 11 220 Economical Receipt*. ? 9 : PRICE FIFTY CENTS. ? I ii A. lYUMAXS A CO., bookseller*. ~l I * ^iaaBaaaa^^^i^Il^ja^ail^Hai|" | iilouKckecprl* of 20 yearn' A GREAT OFFER ! "? 1 dispose of 1()0 PIANOS & ORGANS, new and | second-hand <f first-class maker, iiicludimt i WATERS' at lower prices for cash or Installments or to let until paid for than ever before i offered. WATERS' GRAM) sqUARF and UPRIGHT PIANOS & ORGANS (inrlndinK their NEW SOEVENIR'nud HOCDOIR) are the REST MADE. LOCAL and TRAVELING AGENTS WANTED, IllustratedCatalogues Mailed. A liberal discount to Trarhert, Miuittert, Churehc?, Srhnolt, Isylou etc. SllCCt .llllfio lit halt price. HORACE WATERS A: SONS, Manu?n/l ilnolnm. Jit PnKt 14tll Street. . j'niou Square, | | (fj?jftj IftKmWjpSStnr My annual Catalogue of Vegetable and Flower Seed for 1877 will be ready by January, and sent free to all who apply. Customers of last season need not write for it. I offer one of the largest collections of Vegetable Seed ever sent out by any seed house in America, a large portion of which were grown on my six seed farms. Printed direction* for cultivation on every package. All Seed sold from my establishment warranted to be both fresh and true to name; so far, that should it prove otherwise I will refill the order gratis. As the original j introducer of the Hubbard and Alarblehead Squashes, the Marblehead Cabbages, and a score of other new | Vegetablas, 1 invite the patronage of all vho are anxiou* to hate their Seed fresh, true, and of the very best strain. New ypgrtiiblrs n Specialty* JAMES J. II. tJRL'fiORY, Mnrblobrnd, MaM?_ j K . ' - ' ' ' inl stir nn<x?ri nil other States. KAXSAS PACIFIC B.W. C'O. offers larpcst body of rooo lanas in KAX8A.S at lowest prices and l>cst terms. Plentv of (iov't lands FREE for Homesteads. For copy of "KAXSAH PACIFIC HOMENTEA1V* address. Land Commissioner, K. P. lite., Salina, Kansas. OCR CEJiERRATED UNION .JACK REVOLVER. a-w/7shot. ft haMifrbrihH. Tm ^ I Teniae 98 rUt* . loade and ejecie ekell USllimSB ~';t A>n rtm -rina eylindte. Finely tSlll'isBB i.' ' " rilled, heavily n;cke)-p!oteii, r??woM IcIIh'mSk Finest 'teei !?rrrl*and cylinder. Tie beet vwktomtbip and finiek liat fierce and meebanitm Vfig8yH|l rfln Peed nee. ?V* farplrtely f 11 tie long-felt rant far reliable etmlree at a t'oermAlt yet re, and erill torn. J art fatarably uith any $8 eeraltte in tie market, W# nsnntee th'i rcrolnr t" he exactlr at represented, or we will refer, d fhe money. Sen: hy m*'!, promptly, cn receipt of $8> If you order It -ent be expre't, we will tend Si rartridwe witb it. FRENCH MANCFACTCRING CO.. Brockton,Mas-, 0 | MI IORBS:! I Send for Catalogue to OF TI1K niirpn ! E. C. BRIDGMAN. I -llm. , PETS. ,?,,^gaai REPUBLIC! d 30,000 Copien Sold in Tiro Months ! MARK TWAIN'S New Hook, " Adventure* of T0111 Sawyer," ! is the book that outsells everything, and amenta rr.ake i ??Anoe nn Tfon't frukl nuf.iv timA on tinll works, hlif " this live book. Send for circulars to AMERICAN PlJB. j CO., Hartford, Conn.; Chicago, 111.; Cincinnati, Ohio. 1 Woodward's Ornamental and Fancy Alphabets. Four parts just published. 50 cents each, post-paid. 1 ^ WOODWARD'S Artistic Drawing Studies, i 11 en <1n, Figure*, Animals, Lnnd?rnpeN. Two parts just published. 50 cents oach, post-paid. ' Woodward's Designs for the Fret Saw. Two parts just published. 50 cents e ach, post-paid. Order free Catalogue by Postal card of Art. Arohite-tural and Rural books. <?KO. F.. WOODWAltl>. J Publisher. 1 3D Chamber* Street, New York. AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE TO SELL THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM H. SEWARD. One Volume S'i'i Pages. Price $4.25. Sold by Subscription only. For further particulars address I). APFLETON A* CO., Publishers, 540 and 551 Broadway, N? Y. BUTTER COLOR. The l?rt Liquid Color ia the world. api the only one awarded Contenuial Prlie Medal. It tcive* to batter a jtoldeu Telle* color likc June trra? batter. producing hotter .ale. and at higher price. be?i<le? improving butter in color nuil flavor ainl keeping I, far kuperior to Annette, carroti or any other color maniilar- 1 tared, and the only fluid-color that will not color hutterr..illt. i. J added to ctoxm before churning. 1 pound will eoi..r I'tOO pound, cf butter. The Ite.t and i hcatied to rce-'olor white butter. I *11' .end. on receipt of money, tree by express, to uuy office Ha>t ol MbfU.ippi Kiver, 1 lit.," S-.'X)2 lb.. $3.23. * Parmer, club together and trv it. Aetot.' Wanted. Cut out and preserve. MRS. B. SMITH, #27 Areh Street. Philadelphia, I'a. t "IT 8KLL.S AT NIGIIT.' FRANK LESLIE'S HISTORICAL REGISTER ?or the? CENTENNIAL EXHIBITION Is the only complete Pictorial History of the Oentenni u published. A mammoth panorama, 1,Q00 large engravings, many of them bain* 14 Stf by QQ)4 inches. Agents I \\ nntea. Address. Agency Department, i i FRANK LESLIE'S PUBLISHING HOUSE. J * 537 Pearl Strejt. New York. PILES! Dr. Brown's Herbal Ointment Suppositories are gusranteed to cure any case of Piles that can he found ia the United States. A sample box of those Suppositories will be sent free by mail to any sufferer on receipt of 20 cents, to prepay postage and packing (tegular price SI. Address Dr. O. PHELPS B tOWN, 21 Grand St., Jersey City, N. J. ?BFAT^TEAM^ COFFEE*, Dealers, families, and consumers j in general of above articles should c call at JOS. STINER t CO.'S fi wholesale warehouse, 178 and 1EC i Chambers street, cor. Washi lgton, C New York, where they will find tho ^ largest and choicest selected stock in the country at lowest possible wholesale prices, in lots to suit 1 . ?i v_ ;l ?;ii , CUSKJIUCIS. VIUCl o uj uian rill meet prompt attention. Send for ' T circular. Address P. O. box 4237. ; ' AGENTS WANTED. * The Best Paper Published * ? Id THE ? I Toledo Blade (Xasfty'H Paper)* Commencing April 6, the Toledo Weekly Rlndc ! will contain each week, an article from one of the following distinguished gentlemen: Hon. Win. AI. Evnrtu, Secretary of State. Hon. John Sherninn. Secretary of the Treasury. Hon. I). .11. Key, Postmaster-General. Hon. Clnrl Schurz, Secretary of ihe Interior. Hon. Jas. N. Tyner, late Postmaster-General. j Hon. O. P. Morton, Senator from Indiana, lion, Jns. A. Blnine, Senator from Maine. ' g Hon. C'hnM. Foster, Representative from Ohio, * and -(.> other Statesmen and Public Men. The Publishers make this announcement by permis- J sion. I Specimen Copies of the Rlude mailed freo to any J address. Send a Postal. I _ Address. "BLADE," Toledo, Olilo. MEW WILLCOX & GIBBS AUTOMATIC t eat Only machine I Invention andiJMTI /if f) inth^orld ! , PrraostU ^Antmnatlc j * Trail* Mark In base every machine. | ? SILENT SEWING JIACfflNE. j Send Postal Card for Illustrated Price LIrt, Ac. 1 Willcox & Gibbs S. M* Co?, ! j (Cor. Bond St.) 658 Broadway. New Y orTc, : VEGETINE V Purifies the Blood, Eenovates I and Invigorates the Whole System. # b ITS MEDICAL JPKOEEJtlTIES AiiiS j ^ Alterative, Tonic, Solvent and Diuretic. Kmm Reliable Evidence. J wrnrritir Mr- h- r- Stevens: * VE6ETINE 1 Vear Sir?l will most cheerfully add tl | my testimony to the great number you i ^ ' hare already received in favor of your i . f grea and good medicine, VEGETINE. i u vEGETINr i {or 1 do not think enough can be said w in its praise, for I was troubled over ' j thirty years with that dreadful disease, I Catarrh, and had such bad coughing t/rnrTILIC spells that it would seem as though! i-Ufciilst, never could breathe any more, and VEGETINE has cured me; and I do I feel to thank God all the time that wr/arTikir" there is so good a medicine as VEGE v tut I IN t . TINE, and I also think it one of the i j be?t medicines for coughs and weak, linking feelings at the stomach, and , _ I ad.-ise eveiybody to take the VEGEVEGETINE I T*NE, for I can assure them it is one , of the best medicines that ever was. ! Mrs. L. GORE, ! Cor. Magazine and Walnut Streets, VEGETINE Cambridge, Mass. \ VEGETINE GIVES , Health, Strength VEGETINE; andAppetiti. : I My daughter has received great beneVEGETINE fitfrom the use of VEGETINE. Her 1 declining health was a source of great anxiety to all her friends. A few bottles _ of VEGETINE restored her health, VEGETI N E stren^h *nd tilden, Insurance and Real Estate Agent, No. 90 Sears' Building, VEGETINE _ I i/cocT.wc Cannot Be Excelled, i VEGETINE; Charlebtown, March, 19,1860, 1 . H. R. Stevens : | ] .Dear Sir?This is to certify that I ' ' oeTiiir . . . . HOI?A r? ti I Vtlit I INC nave usea your mwu I in my family for several years, and ; think that for Scrofula or Cankerous Humors or Rheumatic affections, it I VFRFTINF cannot be excelled: and as a blood ; ?uuui iisu purjfier or spring medicine, it is the ! best thing I have ever used, and I have ' used almost everything. I can cheer. I/CTPCTIWC ! fully recommend it to any oneJn need V FUll I IIIC of such a medicine. Y "M?KtA,,filN'SMORP. jVEGETINE fcM?"tj. i VEGETINEI ReconieDil.lt South Boston, Feb. 7,1870. VFGFTINE Dear Sir?\ have taken several bottles u of your VEGF.TINE, and am convinced 1 it is a valuable remedy for Dyspepsia, Kidney Complaint and general debility ' VFRFTINF of the system. iuUCIIIIu j can heartily recommend it to all suffering from the above complaints. Yours respectfully, ; tirnrTllUC Mrs. M LIN ROE PARKER, i VbbtlllNL 66 Athens Street . ] ( PREPARED BY I ; i H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. Vcgetin? Is Sold hy All Draughts. 1 SOLID STEEL HARROW TEETH St remit b Combined with Mghtneiw. Upon receipt oi a Post-office money order, we will leliver to the express or rnilnwi? lu *vinch luare teeth, Ui>y inches lonjr, for 84?50 4U *?-incb square tooth, li<1^ inchee long, for 3< .6 NICELY 1IOXKD. y WKKTS M'PO CO., STRACC8K, N. Y The Beat Trusa wltnoui A eT, MpUI Springs ever invented S3. Jr.TmTllDa No humbug claim oltcer 5akJjl/F iu?C Uin rmdic*l caw.bottfu*f vR^jSN, antee of a comfortable, se cure and satisfactory appli m ance. We will take back and pay full price for all that do not suit Vce, single, like cut, ?4 : for both sides. SO. Sont bj nail, post-paid, on receipt of price. N. B.?This Trust TLh ct'RK more Ruptures than any of those for which ixtmv'nnt claims are nvide. Ci"c.;lurs free. P')MftUOY Tl.L'SS CO.. 7<<? Broadway. New York. CHEAP, SIMPLE, RELIABLE -HFRUiTJARS.-*^LL GLASS bftjipthahPO^cei^IH LIHED LOSS A*) INCONVENIENCE AVOIDED BY LIDSaNdELAMPSjn one piece FIRSTVREMIUMS a?s=grjg3?' NEW-YORK SF?:d5f AM c.;CA;1 INSTITUTE.f%eZn>\ ApAkNS>A " ':*> 1876? BETTER^ ' ILADA . SIMPIEST'?| U THAN ,f,r ' : UNINSTITU? J gORCELAINj 187+ ? ^HEAPEgj /^THENT. .NNIAL.IL 76 J LP/LTEMT-BAF^EL-CENII T JAFVl JI^_C-0VE:^.W? ^ . ?.l > t"'Jhlj JXid I Ki? -J-HJ: i fffgF RANBALL'S M M mmjjw) Warrior Mower. deservedly conceded to be the Wost Popular, Profitable and Economical Farm Implements in Use. Fully U'anpntrd In Erery Respect. Send for circulars to the WARRIOR .ROWER COMPANY, I/ttlc Fa I la, N. Y. RICH v BEAUTIFUL. FARMERS, FARMERS1 WIVES. IONS and DAUGHTERS, attention! Learn to^beautify_your HOMES and y ??,ja 1110 DU1L tne ujea i' AI>. VANTAGE and most ECONOMICALLY. FINEST and best GUIDES and CATALOGUES in the WOBLD. ^Everyone having a FARM or GARJEN should send a Postal-Card at once or FREE descriptive CIRCULAR; or Oc. for Illustrated Catalogue, 136 pages.' *. 0. Box, B. K. BLISS & SONS, No. 6712. 34 Barclay St. IVaw York. 1R EXTRACT 3ATARRH.? Pond'* Extract is nearly a Spo cilic &>r tuia disuse. It can hardly be excelled. even in old and obstinate cases. The relief is so prompt that no one who has ever tried it will !>e without it. 2HAPPED HANDS AND FACE.-Fond't Extract should be in every family this rough weather. It removes the soreness and roughness, and softens and heals the skin promptly. IHEUMATISM.?During severe and changeable weather, no one subject to Rheumatic Pains should be one day without Pond's Extract, which nlwnyH relieve". *0RE LUNGS, CONSUMPTION, COUGHS, COLDS.?This cold weather trie-, the Lungs sorely. Have Pond's Extract 011 hand always. It relieves the pain aud cures the disease. CHILBLAINS will be promptly relieved and uhimately cured by bathing the afflicted pvvtai wbh Poud'a F.xtrnct. FROSTED LUu'JlS.?Pond's Ext ractiirrnria I bly relieves tho pain and tiually fu res. (ORE THROAT, QUINSY, INFLAMED TONSILS AND AIR PASSAGES are promptly enred by tt?"> use of Poud's Extract. It never fnlN. IISTORY and Uses of Pond's Extract, in naninhlet form. s?nt free on application to ?OND'S EXTRACT CO., Mnldcu Lane, Neav York. Sold by Drimvists. Wis tar's Balsam nf VA Wild Cherry. rom SEYMOUR THATCHER, M. D-, of Hennon, New York. " WISTAR'S BALSAM OF WILD CHERRY gives niversal satisfaction. It seems- to care a Conch |by >osening and cleansing the langs and allaying irritation, imj? rtnioring the eauee instead qf drying up the Cough nd tearing the cause behind. I consider the Balsam the est Cough medicine with which I am acquainted." Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry. From R. FELLOWS, M. D., of Hill, N. H. " I hare made ase of this preparation for several years, ' nd it has proved to be very reliable and efficacious in tie treatment of severe and long-standing Coughs. I now of one patient, now in comfortable health, who has iken this remedy, and who, but for its use, I consider rould not now be living." Wistar's Balsam; of I Wild Cherry. I Tom E T. QUIMBY. A. M., Principal of the New 1 Ipswich (N. H.) Appleton Academy. " For more than fifteen years I have used DR. WIS'AR'S BALSAM OF WILD CHERRY for Coughs, j 'old* and Sore Throat, to which I, in common with the j est of mankind, am subject; and it givs me pleasure to , ay that I consider it the rerg beet remedy with which I ,m acquainted." I Wistar's Balsam nf Wild Cherry. 7rora A. DUNKLEE, Esq., Postmaster at West Brat- j tleboro, Vt " I am subject to tuddtn eold*, followed by hard ough*, lox which I use the BALSAM, and find it the )**t remedy for a cough or sore throat that I erer was icquainted with. My family also are as much in favor >f it as myself. In fact, we always have it in the hoose tnd would as soon think of doing without flour as your ;xcellent BALSAM OF WILD CHERRY." Wistar's Balsam! of Wild Cherry. From Hon. RUFUS K. GOODENOW, of Maine. "I have tried WISTAR'S BALSAM OF WILD JHERRY for an exceedingly troublesome cough. The j fleet was all that could be desired. The use of less than >ne bottle relieved me entirely. Among great varieties >f medicines which I have used, I have found none equal a WISTAR'S. Its curative properties in cases of cough [ regard as invaluable " Prepared by 8ETH W. FOWLE * SONS, 50 Harrison Avenue, Boston, and Sold by Dealers generally. 50 cts. and Si a bottle. t>KINTEBS " Stpon* Slat ? Casoa, mad JL by Vandkkbcbgh,Wells A Co.. 18 Patch Sf.,N.Y, APCIUTC 64 p?*e Illustrated Catalogue Free HulII I O. Boston Novelty Co., Boeton, Mam A A WEEK. Catalogue and Sample r rtfciu. FBLTON A CO., I ifl Nassau St.. Sow York. O $77 A Week to Aiant*. *10 Outfit Free. 9UU b & i I p. p. VICKKKY, Aujruxta. Maine. {a tdfl per day at home. Samples wortn So lU free. ST1NBOX ACQ., Prrland. Maine ^ KCT.Wdm ?nat.lM m Cnl /Vae. B?DLVtFtw^;;..TG^ Woaii, Chioago, Hi. ?6) PZ A IMY to Agents. Sample free. .12 put Z Z'j Catalogue. L PLKTCHKR, 1 ! Day St.N-Y. Sfifi ? wee't r>w ow" town. Terms and S5 outfit WV free. H. HALLETT <t CO.. Portland. Maine. C|1l)a day at home. Acer ta wanted. Outfit u/ r 7-fi. tonn? freo. TRUE I CO., Augusta. M&ine. gPfrmr. But la till Vcrll TimwmkMvtm. taTHHiA0f?tl,lfa? t. EOPHAM it oo..?a.?u8^pma.i^. A STTTM A T^e only euro reme<ly. Trial package A XI III /V frer. |fc SMITUStOHT. Cleveland. O. T? 4 II If is the best psrt of Maryland,at panio 1? J\ At 1TI io prices, Cor catalogue, with map and price list, address Manctia A grnsox, Centre ville, Md. Universal Bowholder S^^iSASKifc trated Circular W. N. Rkid, Ay? , Boa j-Mifl, N Y*, city. SOLID Rubber Typo, Stamp# A Rubber Good#. END FOR CATALOGUF, or auk your Sutioner omething New. H. S. Ixr.EBEQLL, 205 B'way, N.Y A 1\TV SECOND-HAND SCHOOL BOOK Xn.i.1 A mailed, post-paid, u'?on receipt of half published price A. S. CLARK, G4i Nassau St., New York. TJARMERS, buy FISHER'S PATENT SICKLE A GRINDERS, Hay Forks, and Farm Bella. Sold by Dealers. Cirmlart Fret. h. F ISHER, cantos, o. ELECTRIC HEL.TS.-A NEW, CHEAP, PERFECT Cure for premature debility. Send for circularor call on Dr. II. KARR. 832 Broadway,New York. T*nnei?vc* CHEAP MUSIC, FUI A) Jl J5 Catalogue# free by mail. BOOSE Y A COT, 32 East Hth Street, New York. HOW TO MAKE 820 to 840 per Week SELLING TEAS TO FAMILIETC Circulars free. Ad's THE CANTON TEA CO.. I4S Chambers St.,New York. Af AT 17"V Easily mnd^ withourSteac'I and it I VP 1 y JCi X K -y Check Outbt Circulars Free. H. N. Jt Arthi'U Stafford. 1 '>.> Fulton St.. New York. pC|vQ|nN^ n>3tter no r slightly disabled. In. rti.wlung creates now puld. Advice and circular ree. T. McMicha.X. Atty., jt Yt S-.nsom St.. Phi la.. Pa. All WATCHES. A Great Sensation. Sample % 4 Watch and Outfit free to Agents. Better tnan UP V Gold. Address A CGULTKR A CO.. Cnicago. jMlPA A Month.?Agent-'. wanted. 30 best seuA.5ill I ing articled in the world. One sample tree. yUtfU Address JAY BRONMON, Detroit. Mich. dfb Af" Af%a >'car to Agents. Outfit and t. JL M |% 1111 $i? Shot O n jn-t. For terms udIPfcilUUdrete,/. V'onh & Co., St.Louu,Mo. I ^MIIMTPPI?.'*>?.* to jhiI.ch orders for our goods: iuln II I LU prrnianrMt omploymeat; goed \C salary. Traveling ex|H-u*e* pawl l?y Company. " Union Industrie! Work*, Cincinnati, 0. motflQC s day sure made'?yAr?aU wiling oar Cbrorsos, ^iTlZa Crayons, Picture ind Cbromo CarJ?. 1*5 urn, i I,? r'**j worth |5, i?nt p itpaid for M5c. Illo.tr,?d Cttalofn* free. J. H. BCKKOItP' 3 SONS. BOSTO.V, MASS. CHOICE Samples of Choice Garden or Flower MEEDS Seeds sent FREE. Send 3-cont stamp to GIVEN pay return poetsge. NIAGARA PLANT AWAY, asp SEED CO., Bcttalo. N. Y. r 855 a Week net to Agents. The New Woik ML indispensable to F. A. M. Send for Descriptive Nfy CiUUue. REDDING k CO., Pcbushms \ Masonic Works, 731 Broadway, New York. . xi ? CHEAP HOMES! Co South! 2SSSS& 2r'i best locations. Send 10c, for Southern Herald. Add's GAINES k YINGL1NG, No. 0 As tor Home, New York. ; The GmMe & Fate City Nurseries' Floral Calendar. Journal, and 3 Sample rlante, 25 cte. UxhFree. J. GREIYE8,8ec? Box 837. Patereon.lTj WAMTPn MEN to travel and sell to Dealer* our HI* I bU new unbreakable Glass Chimneys and Lamp Goods. No Peddling. Salary liberal, business permanent. Hotel and traveling expenses paid. Monitor Glass Co., 2134 Main St., Cincinnati, o. And Not aEDBBSOBEButZlSSV" Wear Oat. Sold by Watchmakers. By mail, 30c. Circulars free. J. 8. BIRCH k CO.. 38 Doy Street. New York. FIRST PREMIUM U. 8. Centennial Exhibition for HOI.MAN.* pictorial BIBLES 1.800 Illustrations. Address for new circulars, A. J. nOI.MAN & CO.. 93Q ARCH Street, Phi la. , fTlTTI A CJ ?The choicest in the world?Importers* A JCjx\ io prices?Largest Company in Americastaple article?pleases ever} body?Trade continually increasing?Agents wanted svnywhere?best inducements ?don't waste time?send for Circular to ROBERT WELLS. 43 Ves?y St., Ngrr York. P. 0. Box 1387E Prsf. Hall's Marie Compound ^nl is the only preparation, oue package of which W will force toe heard to grow thick and heavy on the *ntoothi>4 face (without injury) in fl diyi in every rase, or money cheerfully rv dNwl fnndrd. 25 einta per nirkage, no.tp.idi 3 fig n&wlK ?rents k. W . JONES. A.hland. Maw. NACMT? Investigate the merits of T^eHlusA lit II I O trated Weekly before detennini*, IWI WW ? Ww upon your work this fall and win* ter. The combination for tills season siwpasees anything heretofore attempted. Terms sent free. Address. OHAS. CHJCAS Jt CO.. 1 Warren t.u. New York. The Morning Hour. a.b?jL?iYp.o. Note rendu far agent*. The great family subscription book bf the year. Meets a daily household want. The author is everywhere known. His other books bare had a great sale, and are in constant demand. This is his crowning work. Exclusive territory. For full particulars, address, J. H EARLE. Boston, Mass. Tonne America Press Co., > 53 Murray St., New York, Bgk - X UtMalkml. tlx mmBy Is tk> f.i.iiiw. mU tlx Awn cheapest and best fauna and iHJAn, self-Inking printing presses. Rnflfwi Ou asw Mir-isbti sra wks?wWH4 lbs bsd o*wr *1*. Ws s?n a esry H/M ? * TWO UOLLAJS. and a UatsrsM.stisgoAc*, wnU pr.ns ty , As. tar FlVJS P0Lf.fi A SPLXNDiO BolTdIt PlO^r. CtoCBlmfrot. gydneaBcakcf gypa, Cst?. to. t? csatg. ACENTSyoRocB NEW GREAT BOOK CENTENNIAL EXHIBITION ILLUSTRATED. Over 400 Fine Engravings, costing 820*000, The only book fslrly showing the fine costly exhibits of the Art Gallery ana Main Building. Wide-awake Agents are quitting all inferior books for this. Get tbe Best, Send for circular, terms and sample engravings. P. W. ZIEGl/BB & CO.* 518 Arch St., Phi la., Pa. Ont AA A YEAR. AGENTS WANTED AVfil II I oil our Grand Combination JdWv/V/V/ Prospectus* representing 150 DISTINCT BOOKS <, wanted everywhere. Tbe biggest tbing ever tried. Sales made from this when all single Books fail. AlSb Agentswanted on our MAGNIFIOENT FAMILY HI B I.KM. Superior to all others. With Invaluable Illuorrsted Aids and Superb Bindings. These Hooks beat the World. Full Particulars free. Address JOHN K. POTTER k CO., Publishers, PHILADELPHIA. CARPET WARP. TO THE CONSUMER. Having improved the quality of our Warp, now being ? u ?-T? *1.. ?* nPL-DT noo it ti.w ?. -K.ll ^ 501U unuwr hi? x ai.niiiiOO nvmov, wo wwm uw?qw?wq? adopt, for the improved quality, the brand WHITE STAR AAA." We 'shall also manufacture a lower quality of Warp which will be sold under the " PEERLESS " brand. Enquire for "WHITE STAR AAA" Carpet Warp of all leading Dry Gooda Dealers. _ "WANTED! MISSOURI COUNTY, TOWNSHIP and TOWN BONDS, INTEREST PAYING AND DEFAULTED. JHO. S. TOM ft CM Wall St, lew Tort, deai.eus pr CITY and RAILROAD BONDS. Mazarine Blue Glass. For curative pnrpoees rnd stimulating the growth of animal and vegetable life. Examined and approved by General Pleaaonton, and bis certificate accompanying each purchase. Glass cut .to exact size, with full direction for nse and arrangement in the sash. For aale, Wholesale and Retail, by Also,at BENJAMIN II. SHOEMAKER, each per mail. Fbench Plate Glass Depot, General Pleasonton's 2<).? to 211 N. Fourth Ht.? Booh onJJLUE and SUN LIGHT. Philadelphia. Tpssp:. LOWEST PRICES. s Send for Psuphl|t of the Reliable Burlington Rati. Address, I:rd Ccrttiijicner.B. & H. E. 2. Its w BURUNSm, 13 W\. ^-<0 IN TtiE UNITED STAt Ly A LUCRATIVE BU8INES8. WT WE WANT 900 MORE FIRST-GLASS SEWING MACHINE ACENTS, AND 800 MEN OF ENERCY AND ABILITYTO LEARN THE BUSINESSOFSELLINC8EWINCMACHINES. COMPENSATION LIBERAL,BUT VARYING ACCORDINC TO ABILITY, CHAR ACTER AND QUALIFICATIONS OF THS ' AGENT. FOR PARTICULARS, ADDRESS flat Sewing Maciie Co, Caicago, S37 t 639 B80ASWAT. Kit ? Iw Orinni U. OAG'TS WANTED FOR HISTORY SI CENTENL EXHIBITION It contains nearly -tOO fine engraving* of buildings and scenes in the Great Exhibition, and is the only authentic and complete history published. It treats of the grand buildings, wonderful exhibits, curiosities, Cat events, etc. Very cheap and sells at sight.' One ent sold 48 copies in one day. Send for our extra terms to Agents and a full description of the work. Address NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Philadelphia, Pa. ft A TTTTAW Unreliable and worthiest books on wA U A it/i,. ?he Exhibition are being circulated. Do not be deceived. See that the book you bay contains 918 pages, and nearly 4QO fine engravings. W. Y. N. P. No 14. TVrnEN WHITING TO ADTBHTlxKit.-*, IT plows* euy tkHt leeiawike Ml In fkla MMr