- .«r. ..#.v * r -s*»j« ?**.. ^ ? • ; '• ^"v*- <~ • < ^r ~*lP 1 I + . • ». ; T < ? •> iSti •&&!». *1 jf •' 'v,<i» -s-^..;;-J • '.. ., . .J* . A . -fcfeA., . - -A Ml Mfe AttBICULTURAL AND DOMESTIC. Araarad the Farm. I^ABXiT all sick animals become to by improper feeding in the first place. Nine cases out of ten the digestion is wrong. Charcoal is the most efficient and rapid corrective. It will cure a ma jority of cases, if properly administered^ --Rural New Yorker. THE importance of means of saying liquid manure is apparent from tbe fact that in every 100 pounds of cow's urine there are 65 pounds of water, 5 pounds of urea, 5 pounds of phosphate of lime, 12 pounds of sal-ammoniac and muriate of potash, and 10 pounds of carbonate of potash and ammonia. While the solid excrements from one cow, during the year, will manure half an acre, the uquict matter, properly applied, would fertilise three times that amount. THE carrot crop is rendered useless in many gardens by grubs eating into the roots. This takes place in many well- managed gardens. The best remedy that I have tried was to scatter a quantity of soot »nd lime over the surface of the ground before forking it over for the car rots. This works it into the ground, and keeps the soil free from all sorts of grubs for the whole season. The nest best way is to sow the lime and soot between the rows and hoe it into the ground.-- Cottage Gardener. A CONTEMPORARY says: "Western cheese, like Western butter, is being made with audi close care and attention as to command respect on its merits alone, and it is rapidly wiping out preju dices against the geographical position of the points of production." This is true. The tub butter of Ohio--that is, creamy extra--is equal to the best of that description that comes to market. The cheese also is as good as the best New York factory, and will be so ac knowledged soon. HAND-PICKING THE POTATO BUG.--I have about two acres of potatoes, and, after trying many ways of destroying the bugs, hit on the following plan. It is cheaper, better, and less work than to use poison. Take a large tin pan, say twenty inches wide by eight inches deep, and arrange a handle so that a man can walk upright and push the pan before him, close to the vines, and held in such a position as will b§st catch the bugs ; then with a thin piece of board about three feet long, shaped like a paddle, give the yines a gentle slap toward the pan, and you will knock most of the bugs into it.--Correspondence Boston Herald. To PREVENT saddle-galls, the saddle should be lined with some smooth, hard substance. Flannel or woolen cloth is bad. A hard, finished, smooth rawhide lining, similar to those of the military saddles, is preferable. Then, if the saddle is properly fitted to the horse's back, there will be no galls unless the horse is very hardly used. Galls should be washed with soap and water, and then with a solution of three grains of cop peras or blue vitriol to one table-spoon ful of water, which will harden the sur face and help to restore the growth of the skin. White hairs growing upon galled spots cannot be prevented.--Ne braska Farmer. I wiLZi suppose the gate, when shut, to hang on the west side of the post, opening southward; dig the post hole at least three feet deep, flatten the east and west sides oi' the post (the part in the ground), then nail a short board, say 10x12 inches, on the east side even with the bottom of the post; now put in the post, placing it where you want it; fill in the dirt and beat it down thoroughly till within sixteen inches of the top; then take a two-inch board, 16x24 inches, nail it on the west side of the upper edge even with the top of the ground, and one like it on the south side, sixteen inches long; then fill up and pack the dirt well, and my experience is that your post will not sag.--Indiana Farmer. Atxmt the House. A HOLE on the face may be removed by. repeated applications of colorless iodine. A TABIVE- SPOONFUL of ground horse radish, added to every quart of catsup or pickles, will keep the mold from the top. FOB OGEAM CAKB.--One «up of crc«m, one cup of sugar, two cups of flour, two «g£S, a teaspooi'ful Oi soda, flavor with lemon. A SOFT HOME-MADE DISHCLOTH. -- A nice, soft dishcloth can be made of candlewieking loosely knit or crocheted oil large afghan needles. To TEI<I< GOOD EGOS.--Put them in water; if the butts turn up, they are not fresh. This is an infallible rule to dis tinguish a g«od egg from a bad one. LARD or butter to be used for pastry should be as hard as possible. If left on the ioe for a while before using the pastry will be lighter and better. It needs only to be cut through the flour with a chopping knife, not rubbed. A BOUGH towel or a piece of flannel is better to wash the face with than a sponge. The roughness cleanses the pores of the skin, and if a little soap be applied will remove those little black specks, which trouble many people. VARNISH FOB WHITE WOODS. --Dissolve three pounds of bleached shellac in one gallon of spirits of wine; strain, and add one and a half more gallons of spirits. If the shellac is pure and white, this will make a beautiful, clear oovering for white wooden articles. TAKE out the steels of a corset before washing; use one teaspoonful of borax to a pailful of hot water. Spread the corset on the washboard, and scrub with a clean brush and a very little soap. Bleach in the sun if yellow, but do not boil. Rub in staroh, and when dry sprinkle thoroughly and iron while damp. EQUIVALENTS OF WEIGHT AND MEAS URE.--Wheat flour, one pound is one quart. Indian meal, one pound two ounces is one quart. Butter, when soft, one pound is one quart White sugar powdered, one pound one ounce is one quart. Best brown sugar, one pound two ounces is one quart. I/iquids.-- Sixteen large table-spoonfuls are half a pint. Eight large table-spoonfuls are one gill. Four large table-spoonfuls are half a gill or one glass. Twenty-five drops are equal to one teaspoonful. A common wineglass to half a gill. A common tumbler to half a pint. HEBE is a recipe for a pudding, which may be made while preparing breakfast: Grumble four or five biscuits into three pints of new milk, add one cup of brown sugar, a pinchrof salt, a spoonful of but ter, and yelks of four eggs ; a little nut meg when dime; •pread the whites of the four eggs beaten to a foam with three spoonfuls of sugar and a little essence of lemon on top of the pudding; set it in the oven till brown, which will be in two minutes. Hake sauce with one cup sugar, half cup butter, scant spoonful of flour, pint and a half water; season with lemon. It will be delicious either hot or cold. - The Ravages of Mice* The mischief of the little field mice, remarks St. Nicholas, is done so very quietly and adroitly that few are ever caught in it, and much of the blame is put on the moles, squirrels, and wood- chucks, that have enough sins of their own to answer for. The meadow-mouse of Europe, which is very like our own, forty or fifty years ago came near caus ing a famine in parts of England, ruin ing the crops before they could get fairly started, and killing almost all the young trees in the orchards and woods. More than 30.000 of the little rascals were trapped in one month in a single piece of forest, besides all those killed by ani mals. About a year ago, too, a similar disaster was threatened in Scotland, where millions of mice appeared, and gnawed off the voung grass at the root just when it should have been in prime condition for the sheep; and when that was all gone th% attacked tlie garden vegetables. The people lost vast num bers of sheep and lambs from starvation, and thousands of dollars' worth of grow ing food; but, finally, by all together, waging war upon them, the pests were partially killed off. Tlie mice did not in either case oome suddenly, but had been increasing steadily for years pre vious, because the gamekeepers had killed so many of the "vermin" (as owls, hawks, weasels, snakes, etc., are wrongly called), which are the natural enemies of the mice, and keep their numbers down. Farmers are slow to learn that it does not pay to kill the birds or rob their nests; but the boys and girls ought to understand this tnlth and remember it. In this country, the greatest mischief done by the field mice is the gnawing of bark from the fruit trees, so that in some of the Western States this is tho most serious difficulty the orchardist has to contend with. Whole rows of young trees in nurseries are stripped of their bark, and, of course, die; and when apple seeds are planted, the mice are sure to dig half of them up to eat the kernels. This mischief is mainly done in the winter, when tlve trees are packed away from the frost; or if they are growing, because then the mice can move about concealed under the snow, and nibble all the bark away up to the surfaoe. Babbits get much of the credit of this naughty work, for they do a good deal of it on their own ac count. The gardener has the same trouble, often finding, when he uncovers a rare and costly plant in the spring, that the mice have enjoyed good winter quarters in his straw oovering, and have been gnawing to death his choioe roses. Millions of dollars, perhaps, would not pay for all the damage these small creat ures thus accomplish each year in the United States, and I fear they will be come more and more of a plague if we continue to kill off the harmless hawks, owls, butcher-birds and snakes, which are the policemen appointed by nature to lo k after the mice and protect us against them. Death of a Child from Hydrophobia. A singular case of death from hydro phobia was reported at police headquar ters to-day. The victim was Martin Lo- renza, a child 4 years and 7 months old, the son ot German parents. About ten weeks ago a number of children selected as a victim of their boyish pranks a small setter dog, and began chasing the animal about the street. The scared animal ran into the hallway of the building where Lorenza resides. The boy was standing in the hallway, and the dog bit him in seven or eight places, inflicting a very severe wound in the ealf of his left leg. The dog was shot by a policeman, and Martin was taken to a drug store nearby and the bites were thoroughly cauter ized. The wounds heal«d rapiilly, and no further attention was given the mat ter until last Thursday, when the boy appeared to be unwell and evinced pecul iar symptoms. The pupils of the eyes were dilated, and the boy stared about him in a frightened manner. On Friday he refused to drink, and his apparent fright at the sight of common ob jects increased. His physician, be ing unaware of the nature of the ailment, applied a thermometer to the body of the child to ascertain its temperature. The glass was somewhat sweated, and to cleanse it properly a basin of water was brought and laid on the bed. The child did not see the water, but its eyes were fixed on the bulb of the thermometer, and every time the quicksilver moved the body of the boy shook and trembled. The physician, suspecting what was the difficulty, then splashed the water in the basin with his finger. Immediately the boy begun frothing at the moutu, and was seized with convulsions. As soon as he recov ered the doctor managed to give him a dose of hydrate of chloral, after which the little fellow asked for water, but ev ery time water was brought became con vulsed. An injectiou of hydrate of chloral was then given, and, overpowered by the strength of the drug, the boy fell into a narcotized state. The patient, under the iniluenoe of the narcotic, still kept up a continual spitting and bark ing, and clutched nervously at his throat, as though wishing more air. Several eminent physicians who called to examine the case agreed that it was a genuine case of hydrophobia. At 9 p. in. on Sunday the child died. This af ternoon Dr. McWhinney, Deputy Coro ner, made a post-mortem examination, and, besides a slight affection of the spiual cord, found no disease of the in ternal organs.--New York Herald. An Unwonted Invitation. The Rt. Rev. Abbot, of the Commu nity of Trappists, at Gethsemane, Ky., has extended to President and ^Mrs. Hayes an invitation to visit the monas tery under his charge during their pro posed visit to Louisville. By the rules of this rigorous order no woman is al lowed within the walls of their monas teries unless she be " the wife of the ruler of an empire, kingdom, or repub- >*!*- • mT' lie;" and, should Mrs. Hayes accept the invitation, it is said that she will be the first American woman who has ever seen the inside of such an establishment. The monastery at Gethsemane is one of the two Trappist communities in this country, the other being near Dubuque, Iowa. It was founded in 1848 by monks from the parent institution at Citeaux, France. The spacious buildings are in the form of a quadrangle, the interior space being occupied by a garden of rare flowers, and within the walls are un derstood to be many paintings of great value brought from the mother country. As is known, the monks of the order are bound by the strictest vows to the hard est manual labor, to unusual abstinence in food and water, and to perpetual si lence. COST OF THE STRIKE. The Lowes of Property by the Railroad Rlota. (From the Milwaukee News.] The losses to the railroads by the re cent strikes and riots foot up an enor mous amount. They cannot be detailed witli accuracy, and ne&rlyall the figures given are estimates. These losses in clude the following items: Track, rolling stock, depots and other property destroyed. Perishable artielea of freight, which became valueless during the blockade. Live stock rendered unfit for market, some starved to death, by stoppage of cattle trains. Destruction of oil on the Pennsyl vania road by wrack of trains. Contracts annulled and claims of freighters for losses for non-performanoe of contract. Other items of losses and destruction of property of all classes and variety not enumerated in the above schedule will greatly increase the aggregate, but these details of losses by the various roads are appalling in magnitude : Baltimore and Ohio t 3,390,000 Pennsylvania Ceutral 5,000,000 Pittsburgh, Ft. Wajne and Chicago..... 1,200,000 New York Central 1,(KM,000 Erie railroad 2,000,000 Lake Shore railroad 2,( 00,000 Michigan Central. 1,000,000 Canada Southern 700,000 Delaware, Lackawanna and Wee tern..... a, 00^,000 Delaware and Hudson 1,900,000 Jersey Central 900.000 Chicago !-nd Rock Island 1,600,000 Total destruction and loss of railroad property $31,750,000 The railroads have lost $21,750,000 by property destroyed and damages, which they have been or will be compelled to pay on contracts. But beyond "these items the losses are immense. Business men in the disturbed States are losers to the amount of $6,000,000. Tax-payers in the cities and States which by law make municipal corporations responsible for property destroyed by mob violenoe, will be called on to pay in taxes $10, • 000,000 to $12,000,000. In addition to this the News has heretofore estimated, and the estimate is doubtless a correct one in the main, that 1,000,000 employes of railroads, manufactories, mines, etc., earning on an average $1.75 a day, were thrown out of employment for ten days, making a loss to each man of $17.50, or $17,500,000 as the total to the employes for lost time and wages by the strike. This makes the entire loss by destruc tion of property and annihilation of wages by the strike foot up the enor mous sum of $57,250,000. This was the ten days work of the strikers and their allies. The railroad men did not do all this. The strike originated with them. But they did not intend that it should reach such vast proportions. Tbe greater amount of the damage was dene by tramps and the desperate and criminal classes who have no sympathy with labor, or its sufferings, or its inherit ance of sorrow, but who are mere vaga bonds, brigands and highwaymen, whose hands are against every man, and who would rob at every opportunity the la borer of the lost cent he had in his pocket as the wages of toil. The destruction of property has made the country so much poorer, and the losses of every laboring man will be some part of this amount. Mr. Horter's Mistake. A man named Horter lived out in Colo rado a few years ago, but, as his health was bad, he was ordered to spend a year or two nt the seashore. He was born in the far West and lm<l never seen «n oyster in its shell. He bought •» cottage dowa | at Atlantic City, and went there to livc early last spring. A few days after Ma arrival he saw a man going by with a cart-load of oysters, which Horter mis took for stones. Stones arj mighty scarce at Atlantic, and, as Horter wanted some to make borders for hiB flower-beds, he asked the man what he would take for his load. It struck Horter that the price was high, but he bought the lot and had them dumped down by his gate. The next day he stuck 800 of them in the sand in the garden, around the beds, and, when the job was done, he thought it looked uncommonly handsome. A week afterward there were three or four warm days, and Horter remarked that the sea-breeze smelled very strongly; and he told Mrs. Horter that he thought there must be a dead whale lying some where down on the beach. The next day the smell became more offensive, and Mrs. Horter said that it was an out rage that the authorities didn't clean up the streets and remove the garbage that poisoned the air. On the following day the weather was extremely hot, and the stench became perfectly terrific. Mr. Horter said there must be a dead rat somewhere in the weather-boarding, and he got the carpeuter to come and remove some of it. But he found nothing, and upon going away he remarked to Horter that the sauerkraut they were cooking for dinner was the leadliest sauerkraut lor smell that he ever encountered. The stench grew strongei all that night, and on the next morning a com mittee of neighbors waited upon Mr. Horter to say that if he would Kill that polecat he would confer a personal favor upon them and upon the people of tbe country generally. Then Horter told them how perplexed he was about the matter, and said he would only be too glad to have the cause of the trouble de tected. So the committee made a tour of inspection, holding their noses. When they got into the garden they perceived the oysters all gaping wide open, and evolving an awful smell, absolutely in fumes. One of the committeemen, grasping the fact that Horter planted these oysters, imagined that he was crazy* suddenly climbed over the fence and went home. The others remained :ed Horter what on earth he meant ying those oysters around in the that manner. ters!" said Horter. " Oysters! Youl don't mean to say those are oysters! Well, well; that beats all! I was wonder ing what made aU those stones split even down the midd^. I couldn't ac count for it. And so those are oyatejrs ? Why, I thought oysters always came in cans." That afternoon he buried the shell-fish deep in tbe sand, and the smell ceased. Then he sold out his cottage and moved to Long Branch. He told Brown, his next-door neighbor, that he knew they were oysters all the time, and he did it for a joke ; but he moved because the people aeeaaed to see too awful much fun in it.--Philadelphia Bulletin. " Mountain Observatories. It is quite commonly supposed thai: high mountains possess" one advantage over lower levels for astronomical ob servations in a dryer and less tremulous air. But Prof. Henry Draper has tested this question in the Wahsatoh and Rocky mountains, and finds that the popular supposition is unfounded. Instead of the air being better in those regions it is probably not so good as at his ob servatory on the Hudson river. Out off fifteen nights in the best season of the year only two were exceptionally fine. As a rule the transparency of the atmos phere was greater and the steadiness perhaps a little less than in New York. The Lick Observatory, which the en- dower intended to place on a mountain top, might after all do better on the plain. Nevertheless, it is possible that in the extremely dry regions of the southern part of our central area, say in New Mexico, the atmospheric conditions may be favorable. There precipitation is extremely small at heights under 6,000 feet, and the seven months of winter, which would make observatory work impossible on the mountains, would not be encountered. MR. HENRY MEIGGS, the bonanza king of Peru, is draining the water from an old silver mine that has been disused for two centuries. For the purpose of clearing it he has caused a tunnel to be dug through a mountain. It is predicted the Peruvian bonanza will prove to be richer than the one in Nevada. Don't Poison Tour With such hurtful drugs as quinine, calomel, or blue pills, but take instead that Bafe,prompt and agreeable substitute, Hcmtottor'a Stomach Bittern, which, whether it is used to remedy or prevent malarial fevers, overcome general de bility, or to correct torpidity of the liver and bowels, will in every caws be found fully ade quate to the want* of the sick and feeble. It entirely removes dyspeptic symptoms, and, by stimulating the flow of gastric juice, facilitate* digestion and insures the couverson of food into blood, whereby the system is efficiently nourished and regains its lost vigor. This great vegetable restorative baa received the indorsement of men of scienw, the pretut has repeatedly borne voluntary testimony to iU exoellenoe, and the public has long since given it the preference to every medicine of its What Is Dooley*a Yeast Powder Do you ask, my friend ? It is made from the purest and stronpest elements. Among them, cream-tartar made from grape acid expressly for these manufacturers. The result in that the biscuit, rolls, wattles, cake, bread and pastry produced are beyond comparison. THIRTY years' experience proves the Graefenberg Vegetable Pills to be the mildest and most effective modicine ever known for the complete cure of headache, biliousness, liver complaints, nervousness, fevers, and diseases of digestion. Sold everywhere; price 25 cents tier box. Send for almanacs. Oraefenberg Co., New Yon.. CHEW The Celebrated '• MATCHLKRS" Wood Tag Plug TOBACCO. TU PIOXEEB TOBACCO COMPANY, New York, Boston and Chicago, POND'S EXTRACT, for Varicose Veins, Hemorrhages or any Pain. Physicians--allo pathic, homeopathic and eclectio--reoommend it Aik of them. AT Oberlin College an unpopular stu dent has been seized by six of his fellows and tarred and feathered. Hofmann's Hop Pills cure the Ague at. onw. ILLS no' BOUQUET TOILET ,S0 A#* Lty hand exceptional strength of its per fume are the pecu- lliar fascinations of I this luxurious ar ticle, which has ac quired popularity | hitherto unequaled I by any Toilet Soap I of home or foreign 1 manufacture. W I L H O F T ' S A wtfpPeriocUot OR FEVER AND AGUE The Northern-Indiana N J R INDIANA. VALPARAISO, School tb« aatir* year k KntlMI or B1?ner wf»nded. snasf .T sristew?: Ajwomt. 28th ; Winter term. No? 18th; m jig * ; SumnMsr term. April 16th.< MrM ill NITED STATEi INSURANCE COMPANY, IK THE CITY OF NEW YORK, 261, 262, 263 Broadway. «--9SGAXl2K» 1MI • ASSETS, $4,^27,176.52 SURPLUS, $820,000 EVERY APPROVED FORM OS* POLICY ISSUED ON MOST FAVORABLE TERMS ML ENDOWMENT POIIGIES AXD APPROVED CX1AZBK8 MATURING IN 1877 WILL BE mm AT 7 f OX PRESENTATION. JAMBS BUBlil*, . - PRESIDENT. Tf fee! rtull. drowsy, have fnqaant DMMAchf, mouth •«(•!«>* badly, poor nppptUte, MldtongM eoated, yon are Miftpitn* from torpM HV»t or "bUtooa- new," «uid nothing will cure yon spwilily and perma- neatly M to take Smxoss' llivui Bksyj-tXOB or MMO-s PURELY VECETABLK, TJwChonpest.Pnrflst«nd Best Family Medicine in th«> World! As F.F KECTRXI. SPE CIFIC for all diseases of the l.iver. Stomach and Spleen. Rwulato th* Llrn and prevent CHI LI 18 AND FEVER. MALARIOUS FR-VKHS. KOWKI. COM. PLAINTS, KKSTLKSS- BAD BREATH t Nothing Its so untilen =nnt, nothing no common aa bad breath, arv! in nearly even- care it come* from the stomach, nr.d fjtn lie go «"isily corrected If you will take SIMMONT>' LIVER RKRVLATOR. DO not. neglect BO sure a ibiuudy for thifc repuUivu It will alKoiuiMova jour appetite, Complexion an<l (icner&l Health. CONSTIPATION! KHOUI.O not be regarded aa a trifling niiinet.t -in fact, niton demand* the utuuxt ivsularft^aC the bowel*, and any deviation from this demand paves the way often to t-erion* dangor. It is quite an necessary to remove impure ««• cumulations from tho bowel* »• It to to eat or sleep, KIH! no health mn be expected where a ooettvw hnblt of body prevail#. SICK HE4DACHEI This diKtrewinir affliction necnran)o«t frequently. Ae dtMurtiar.ee of the Moinacb, nrixinK from the imperfectly digested content®, ranges a severe |>nin in the head, ac companied with I'iiiin ' • r >1 'r 11 i iiir. mini tliliniiiiiiiHtiit-- what is popularly known M Sick Headache; for the re- He f of which, TAKR SI MM ON «" LITKB RKUCLATOB OH MEHK'INK. MANUFACTURED ONI.* BT J. H. ZEIliN A CO.4 PHILADELPHIA. W W. Said toy at) Oruggista. THE GOOD OLD STAND-BY. MEXICAN MU8TANB LINIMENT. FOR MAN AND BBA8T. Iter AS (.IBRD 35 Y KAliS. Aiwa fie ores .tlwan ready. Always handy. Ha» never yet failed. ffttr% mill/ont kar* ttttrrt it. The whole world approve* the jfloriotti old Mu*t«ng--ttie Beat and OhsafcMt liniment In exiatence. It oents a bottle. Mtutanc Liniment cur?» when nothin* else wllL SOLD BY ALL MRD1CINK VKNDKRS. CLOVE-FITTI NO CORSETS. , TlnFHandcof this kUNRIVAUlDCORSCrl 1 at* ww miinbwadky I J .MILLIONS. 'meagre much noue ftr All DlAetmrM Cammed by Malarial PblnoHitiff of Utr itlood. A Warranted Cure! G-. B. FINLAY & CO., JVrtr ifrlfttHM, Piif/Su. rr-FOB SALK BY ALL DRUG«1ST8. niirr \ i :y &1I0LMES ORGANS. Th* Finest Toned and Most Durable Jtads.- New Ntvle». New Hole Ktopa. Warranted Kive Years. Bend for Prioe-Ltate. miTNEr A HOLMES 0H6AM CO.. QUIMCV, ILL. $1.00 i $1.00 Osgood's Heliotype Engravings. The choicest household ornam^ntt. PH«* One Dollar each. Send for catalogue. JAMES R. OSGOOD & CO. BOSTON. mASat. $1.00 $1.00 XT EEP't* 8HIRTf»--oruT one «juailgr--Tte Best jV. Kmw Patent Partly-M*de Dreee Shirt* Can finished *e aur u iiomniilc a The very beat, MX for &7.00. Kxt p's Custom Shirts--made 10 miiniia The very beat, tlx for An eletrant aet ot genuine Cioid-Piai* dollar and SLeore Button* itfveti with each half doc. Keep'a Shitta Keep'* Shirt* are deliver«d KRK K sa receipt of price In anr part of the Utsfon--no eiprfwa charges to pay. Sample*, with fnll dlr^ottons for neH-metsnrement. Se.it free to any addreu. N»> atimp required. Deal directly with the Manufacturer and get Bottom Price*. £>eep Uanufactsriog Co.. Stereer St. N.Y, 5 Genu Inland an of rnitt?t«oti». MKALIO rOR THOMSON'S UNKRIAKAStE STE1U.P Hie betl good* made. | Sea that the nam* of . THOMSON and the . TradeMarkj CnowN.art tampcrf on mryComttStwi. ONLY FIVE DOLLARS , FOR AN ACRE! Of the But Land In AMERICA, near the Great Union P.v :nc RAILIIOAD. A FARM FOR $200, la «mt Payments, artth low rate* of Interest. 8KCUH13 IT >OW! Fall tafonaatldi sent free. Addre** O. F. PAVlSf ' Lan4 A cent. 17. P. R. R.. Ilmnhiw HEADACHE. Pit. V. \V. IIKNMON'HC'KIJERY AM)CIIAM-jUULK l'll.l> aro preiiwrd Mprtwlr te cure ("SICK .11K AI» A tH £ >KJt V « jfH IIKA I> - At llE, BVSPEPTK! HliAfiAClIE, NK1-KAMUA, NKUrotNNLf^H, The Burnt Trusa without Metal Spripff* ever In eated. No humbug claim of a certain radical cure, bet a guarantee of a comfortably secure and satisfactory apaaanoa. We will take back and pay FVIol j ICK for *11 that do net nib Price, ainjrle, Hke cut, 141 for both aide*. §0. Bent by mail, port-paid, on receipt of price. N. B.--This Truss WILL. CUBE more Rapture* than tuw of thoee for which ex travagant claim* are made. Circular* free. P0MER0Y TRUSS CO.. 7*0 Braadway, Mm Yerit. $88 *5 1 MtfHi, Port l;tnri. BQWroMAJCEIT. S dN A AWFCK. . FELTOH & CO. 1 Week to Agent*. Bin P. O. VICKKRT* WA»TA.. Ciralo<ruf an.1 enmnle llt» iVasKau Kt,, Ne ftft i9(l i"1' «3sy nome. Sample* wv w T W iiw. Hxtsaox «t Co.. I'yyrtiaw. $12 tenMten"' ^RUJt a4*55* QptMr wanted ̂ gjanae- w yes® If Addrew Qu.en BBQgBOfC.D^MW MS {Seven-abut revolver. , Dtthfaraearr" 1 *qqrae* j. gown « Stm.188 A188 Wood-afc. PHteha $593? Ma* to by I? Apents lc Jan. f? tr'Ma SUV !*•*. »*?*** •ftfclxJ.x". f^ui> - Im Address t\ M* Linington* CkicmfOi DIPLOMAS I get them. Sead ataatp to tLi | 1 B. I.KAViTTg.Cincinnfctl.O J- Circular. WORhWICK M'FG CO.. CkveiaoA,, Ohfe. fin THE ARTof*AKl»6MOSiRVPJLKATY",. * Ml I and other circular*. Mat ftr *' Addr-- G. L. STOKE, 171 Madison street, Chicago, PENSIONS Procured.or_ jri) FAT.'fht aoeidentaUytnjaraderdlaeaa w. KiTiqitRAlP. P. •. |r- - « WANTtD--^, Afl«HM*OMi uSfSfL! rilfcltHI'lWV FOK B»A1JC."-TY___ A Improved Boeom Stretcher and Ironing ™ be manufactured by any (tint MJes-kodB and town piopeiiy taken in sxo^iun. drees HARI>¥ * Co., Agte. for th«> IT. fe„ Ahta«^t,IU7 I"»R HV.lt"> iou> a. CAR§ Dr ^"ription and and (K>tl ing. Ilo ">• ««wa R. H. l^nd l «. Cli nret-clt«i, and adapted to grain, <VSl2 and ^ MJONTSS T'OR LK.O£OCmCK»tCQ ALBANY $IOto$25 A BAY SRITE in»4»tor AGENTASEUBIRONRCUMMS; Crayons, Pict mo Cards. 1 wortli_$5. sent, postpaid, . , , ... for Cents. HiuftntM Catalogue free. .1. II. H L'FFtSitlFSr Bmuw. (Kutobllshed ItSSl).] * ' i-!l JAGSSON'S BEST SWEET NSVY 03SWIH8 TOBS00»*» M at C»ntt>nniei , the eiuellrnce and Ixsttad ... and flavorhiK. If p<>6'*aiB best tolmcoo evor tmtd \ Hsk jrtmr apooer U'- : ti*,aal tliatpacb plug bonre ottr lilnMlnf tffdfrAi.:A,«B|'l"t six Jnvkcon'B Best on it Sold wuolesale hy nil ' was awarded the highest prUe for iu fine ehewtas .jnalitie*. the ascallfaee and las' chuvaojerof it**w«e'«ning »nd flaviUftiR. If n<£'\ tb^ b<>st toll SM> wurds Jnvkcoii'e'llcst on it. Sold wholesale .tu: Ihth. S,n.d !..r«.mple to A. .IA(~KM«tiK to; C nilUlllloetUM l e. I'vUikkMIHt ' is not, MUOI.V E.I RAWT in UIEVI KUM> K, v bat. it can ht* inm?o it! thtw irtontlil * by any on«. of either , iwrtof the ooun'ry. "• lo trorir stcadil} that we fumi«h. your own town, •tway frrm home over r'uht-. Vnn osi Y»a fU) Mil yimr tinu# t.i 1wit, ui only > >u' t4v*«a--iita. agento W!K> me trnklivt ovc.- 8^.> nees. All wh«: engsgt: «t *. «. ... uu '.O JU. ncy *i»L the present ti«m ic"-r" c--,^t«t bo tnsdr so e.'Mly rapinly at ai.y otbi: !>iv u.oss. T. ^ ... nothing t«? tif bu<iii.<-s». T<~ •-$5 C<"iit freo. Ad dree*, at lULlul'l' I CO.. MMHK TURKEY FEATHERS WO jpny Oa<«rllt XXll»«Rerr J1AKKBT1 for AL1< tha Tail Feathers ol tha Vulu. ahurt; also, tbe wing leather* ol fiiat joint from the I DIRECTIOKB.--Pick dry, keep clean, lay ateaight, | tight, and ship by freight la light bo*ga. -OireutJKi « Jssioa. Ife ar«_ rc#o«4(MA 4>li "•* Bplit TuSey Feather Duster*,Til SOKUIll'M EYAl'OEiTUK. $15. $20. $25,' Cheap and putfablo Send for Clrcalam. B « Address the only Maaafrctureia v mnniM.tgg HimmniiBiEns \ - * Mi POUCHKEEPSIK, N. Y., OTIS BISBEE, A. M.t Principal PnpricAar, Number* ita alumni by haadrads in all the ban walk* of life. Pupils range from twelve to twenty in age. Next tension open* Sept. 13th. The** to enter should make an early applloaUoa. "The Best Bolish in tin ftvjb i FIHTOT WIIJBT WAftalle W« ««( §iu WM im U* H»0BNPI. r tfur** m WorSttn UQH >t its cost to every Sam pi. box, containing 9 nkM of € oai. dmI OB rtceipt of tft cents. Addrt*! Toilet and th« Path. . jr* Tin* P d*c*t>tiv« otlon m mm. A(tR|*y«fiv-: Ik'; " * cas T" oftvl . . ' "t« t »**•* THE SUN. 1S77. raw TOBX. fk*,f > -1 • *tt» ' • !•»' » • • t »*.-!• • - • '>***••» THE Scr continue* to be the itremiou* »dv..ca(a«Mf> •worm and retrenctunent, and of the laWtit-utMO oi* r for ^tiitesuianahij., wisdum and Im Sinitttclhty MIUI frand in the otT.iini. It funtsind* f«r the government _ t b-.:. pt'onle and for the people, as ntiniinliu *0^11 niniaiVi b;. frtiud* In tue ImUot-uoa ani la thaooaatiaaiaf toMa enforced by military fl andaavorw toaniaJy reader*--a body now tu t far from a miUkoi of *oals-- iin* most careful. uoNltwofihy acoountai ourreni events, MKI ontpkiva for and carefully «tun of mi •nt*. Iu rt- ' - -- - - ' aocurate,}!!. _ Mive and enjoy 4. • •*'<? * ; life*:;' MA' fn.ua WMbi^WaapaeiaUr, anfaBt. v*"! 't doubUM* o**>tmi»«s to da» . . - ;njoy the hatred of tboaa «tbq thrive by aim* Awing tbe i reasunrur by aMwnlhc what the 2awdo«wa3» * *,, jrfva them. whiie Hend^vor* to martt the confideaMofe ^ ~ * "-- price of tha DaUy SUM if aS oenta a moart. ar wO O a year'* VK*>P*^ • "*• Sun<hty editiM^ towtH. a Sund*y 'ediUoa aloaa, eight page*. 81.SO a The Human Ii*cM«tlv* should ba aaiafMli engineered, otherwise it may run oft t he tr.iea ot Ma at any moment. To keep its delicrit« internal machinery In perfect trim, or to put it ia good working condltioa when out of order, is the peculiar province of Tarrant-; ffferveseeiit Seltzer ifrarient* The thoroughness with which it cleanses without irri tating the bowels; the tone snd vigor which it imnart* <0 the stomuch; it* appetising effects; its cooling, ra- : rashing operation in fever; the relief it afford* in head ache ; ita antibiliou* properties, and it* superior mertta aa 11 general corrective, justify the assertion that it I*. beyond all comparison, tha 1 oiae of tho age. moat valuable family niedi- 0186 brô •ohw SPECIAL NOTICE.--la order to iptrodn^ MB BHb iter* widely to the public, aa Will Mad THK WnKUf; •ditlan for the remainder of tha rar, la portp^d, fw Half a DoUar. Try It. Add.es* TI1K SUN. N. Y. City. >»Wr» SANDAL-WOOD rr •.t. >* ' -1 »»»** 1'W fM! ' »aj| m m ' n<,|«l.. I. • im# A JKMU .'... v jdy for all dl***I a;. &§ lis* ttlndtler and I'rlnary Orcaaat also, «ao« «a jDropaioal t'auipinlnta. It never produce* stab- aea*. I* oertatn and speedy la tts action. It li (Mb *# superseding ail other remedtaa MUr e*p*ul*a cum •it or eigbt day*. No other medicine oaa 40 thia Beware af Imitatlaaa. h •ucce**, many have been oCarad; gerou*, causing pfl**, Aa DUN DAS DICK. St CO.'S «mm<M V tmlm, cvntmining Oil if 3ba<*ii»ej< mU at mil ft 1^ Mors*. AAftr cfrcalar, *r mmd fmt «u (* I s*4 9 Wootttr orMt, JViM* TMk . A. i > >1 X r3 mm year to Agents. Ont/lt ami m S Shot Gun frrt. For terms ad« tires::, Co., Ss.Loui»,Mo. (J. w. U. w*. 8^ TpffiW WRITKHG TO ADVERTISKJUU ft please say you saw tib* advngtiaeawMr' la thli paper. -A