The Cedartown record. (Cedartown, Ga.) 1874-1879, August 15, 1874, Image 4

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UURtOUS AND NCIENTIFir. Tim danger of tiring chloroform to alleviato t)io pain in on so of hoftdAohe , oc toothache, as in often done, in shown bv a sad accident occurring in Lmtis- ▼flip. A Voting girl, suffering from headache, Iwioiitne no affected 1>y oblo- roform ns to bo unable to romovo the bottle, and she wan found dead with tho bottlo 1 jivfr on her breast. A Novicl uno of tho telegraph in noon to bo put into operation in Now York. Tho court-root; a in tho city aro to Y)o telegraphically eonnooted with tlio offices of tho loading lawyers, and by thin monnn tho ntato of tho calendar and the program* of trials can Y>o an- nounccd to tho lawyors, and tho latter summoned when wuntod. Tho tele graph in thin' respect promises to be onlto nn useful ns it is on Mio stock ox- change or in bnriness crolon, • Hoohack Tow ski-.—In tho oonlrnl aoction of tho TTobnao Tunnel tho bench has all boon removed and fifty work- mon discharged, In tho oast-end sco- tion 2,500 foot of twelvo-inoh Hootch drain pipe ban boeu laid and covered. Tho excavation Imn Won mode for thfrty-nfno foot of brick aroh, which In to bo bnilt nt a point nhont a milo from the eastern portal, and tho laying of lir ok will bo oommenoed thin weok. All crons ties neodod botwoon tho oast ond central shaft havo boon deliver d, and It in bolfovod that tho track will ho laid in tho month of Amnmt. Tbjc French Bishop of Canton ban hist nont to tho Jardin d'Aeolimation, nt Paris, a plnnt whoso flower changes color three tirnon a dny. It ia spoken of os another wonderful ovidonco of Ohlnono art in loading nature out of her her onntomary paths. Tt hi not moro romarkable than a floral freak of South ern Australia, a bountiful flower, simi lar to our well-known morning-glorv, with flvo slroaka of color on its bell* shaped oalyx. In tho oarly morning .tho oolor streaks am pale Yfliio. Toward noon tlioy turn to a rich purple tint, whioh changes to n light pink during tho aftornoon. Ah tho day deolinos, tho oolor fsdoa, disappearing entirely after sunset, when tho flower olonos and dies, A oomiRBuoNonNT of Land and Water oalls attention to tho singular preva lence of blindness in salmon itf tho York Rivor, which flows into tlio Oulf of 8t, Lawronoc at G.twpe, tho oxtromo eastward poiht of Canada proper. In Homo iimtaiioos flsli havo hern taken that arc totally blind, both eyos being cov ered with a hard, opnqtio soalo, whilo in others ono oyo only is thus nffootod ; again. Horne havo thoir eyes apparently sloughing away. Ho oomploto is tlio blindness that a man may drop down in a hark oanoo right over tho fish, and chip him out with a gnff. Tho York Diver is n very olonn-bottomod and oloar stream, and it is now a frequent ooour- rnnoo to observe a largo flsh lying in precisely tho samo spot nt tho tail of a pool, seldom in tho strong water, day after day, and novor stirring, though a fly bn pimned over and under Ids nose. The number of these flsli is apparently on tho iuoreaso every year. They aro nil from twenty-two to twenty-eight ponds weight, and havo a dull, white appoaronoo, though in fair ooudltion. Many seem to ho old flsh. That orows and othor species of birds have little fear of man when 1 armod is a familiar fact-, and suggests that they fear him becauno of the weapons ho oarrles. Tu Hootlatid, whore shooting was prohibited on Sunday, mows and rooks wore gentle and fed around buildings without ooQoorn. Hiugularly enough, tho same thing was obsorvod of animals by Dr. Triatrnm when traveling in the wilderness of Moab, where tho sound of tho gun is quito rare. Ho says : “ Wo wore struok with tho sagacity whioh all the wild nni- mniN showed in tho mutter of flro-nrms, little familiar us tlioy onn bo wi h them boro. As it wan Hundn.v, wo strollod or sat down among tt?o ruins without our fowling plooos, and woro oonsoquoutlv objects of inqiflurouoo. A line fox sat and looked at us a dor.on times among tho rttoiiedieaps, and just'walked away, keeping almost within gunshot nil tho afternoon. The Hakkr fuloon sut odmly on his favorite poroli, niul allowed us to rooonnoitcr him ou Buudny, while the eaglo, owls, sand grouse and partridge showed a similar contempt for uunrmod Buroponns.” Good Bbhf Oiikapku Tuan Poon In market quotations of our wtntoni towns, wo And cattle quoted something like this : Good shipping steers, $.'1.50 to $0.50; butchers’ stock, $3.50 to$4 50, Now why is it that, living as wesferr people do, whoro so many oattlo arc bred, they should oat so uiiieli poor hoof V Tt. is 1> 'oausc such quotations as tho above indicate that tlio poor beef is ohoapost. But this is not true. A well- fatted animal, weighing 1,400 to 1,000 lbs., of small bone and flue quality, will givo us more ontahlo meat for the same money at $0.00 por hundred, than a thin, ooarse-bonod old now or steer, weighing from 000 to 1,100 lbs., at, $0.50 to $4.50 per 100. This was illustrated not long siuoo by an investigation made int i t,lio management of ono of our western state prisons. It was ahargod that tlio prisoners had better beef than tho people of the city. This tho super intendent did not deny, for ho said hin purpose had always been to buy the best oattlo in tho market.; and wo un derstand that ho actually demonstrated by tho accounts and figures carefully kept of purchases, the gross and not weights, etc., that he saved money to the stato by the practice—Zriv; Stock Journal. An eminent German nnrgoou, Dr. Knestor, has Wen conducting a series of experiments coucerniug tlio action of but lots used in modern warfare from which he has derived several important results. In tho first plaoo lie 1ms dis proved the commonly accepted medico legal dogma, “that gunshot wounds are more ex*onaive in the living body than iu tho dead, and that this affoids a menus of distinguishing whether tlio injury has been inflicted during life or after death ; ” the character of tho wounds being similar in living and dead animals with all tho arum tried by him, including tho ordinary muzzle-loading rifle, with conical ball, the needle-gun, Ohaasopot, Manser and Henry Martini rifles. Secondly, tlio well-known cir cumstance that m gunshot wounds from tho more powerful modern rifles the aperture of entrance is small while that of the exit is of frightfully largo di- ! mensious is shown to depond not on the I melting of the missile, but on tho fact j that a soft lead ball when discharged from a short distance is brokeu up on entering tho tissues iuto a multitude of Hinall fragments (about ouo-lutlf of its substance being thus subdivided) which ' act like a o large of shot, lacerating tho textures in all directions. Tim oxteut 1 of destruction is “ inverse ratio to the distance and in direct relation with tho initial velocity of tho bullet.” This mechanical subdivision only* oocnrs in soft lead bullets, the hard balls used I Thoy present a curious appearance, ting and clawing at each other, i with the Ifenrr-Martini rifle (made of an amalgam or load and tin) infliotiog a simpler wound with little shattering. This leads Dr, Knot ter to exonerate the I'ronoh from tho chargn sometimes made against them of employing ex plosive bullets dnring the lote cam paign ; whilo he urges tho Geneva con vention to nso evory effort to obtain no international verdict against tho horri- bio jjintohery caused by the uso of soft load m{Mills, which act preoisoly os expldsivo oros would, Tnu process of canning lobsters nt Mount Desert is thus described : “The fsototy nt Houth-west Harbor, Monut Desert, when running at full capaoity, put up 25,000 cans « week, employing about fifty hands. Until within a short timo plenty of lobsters havo boon taken about tlio harbor, but now smacks aro used, whioh cruise around and purchase of various parties. Tho price paid at thUl timo is al>out $1 per hundred lbs. Tho smacks bring in 10,000 or 12,000 pounds at a time. Tho vessels aro built with two decks, with perforated bot toms. so (hat tho flsh aro^prcBervcd alive and fresh in thrif native eloment. Upon tho arrival of tho smacks tho lohstors dumped upon the wharf in bigpiles. i, hi until of w >y aro then dlppi out, hrokon up and tlio moat taken out for canning. Tho big claws and tails aro tho only parts used. The cans con tain ono pound. A liquor is mado of tlio oontonts of tho body of the lobster, strained and prepared with salt andoa.v- onno popper, ana n small portion put in eaoli onn. After soldering tho enns aro boiled two hours and a half, when thoy nro taken out, n little hole mode in tho top to let tho steam ont, then tightly sealed and boiled again. Tho cans aro then varnished, labelled, and boxed for market. Lobsterr* nro not now very plenty, and aro rather small. Tho par ties who sot tho nets on 11 out tho largo ones for Boston and othor mnrkots." Boh,kp OoitH pon Poultry.—In tho brooding of poultry ns in all othor t>«xr- suite, n little care and forethought inva fifthly return an apparently dispropor tionate result. In tho rearing of poul try, whoro tho expenditure of each fowl is small and tho material provided com paratively inexpensive, wo nro opt to overlook tlio small wastes whioh occur in tlio transformation of tho diflorent grains into poultry, but which aggre gate quite a rospootnblosum. Tho opinion that corn is very nourish ing food for fowla is so universal that no further thought is given to the mat ter. If any ono should suggest' that corn would bo easier of digestion if soaked or boiled, ho would very likoly receive tlio answer that corn was not hard to digont for birds that iiwnl- low atones and othor hard substances without detriment. A moment’s thought, however, will convince that tlio mill stone n and the grist are very different things, and feeding hard grain, although not exactly liko fending the mill stones with pebbles, bear* a certain likeness to it. Tho troublo attendant preparation of food, if it is to bo aookod, may iudood Hoorn very disproportionate to the advantage to ho derived from such treatment; but, in reality, littlo timo Hood bo spent, as before going the rounds of tho nest a littlo hot water may bo poured ovor the oorn, a tight eovor put on the kettle, and tlio wliolo planed on tho stovo, where, by tho timo your rounds nro completed, tho corn will havo booomn steamed and mellow and Havo lost none of its good <junlit. Remember that each lien has a certain amount of animal foroo to bo expended overy day in Homo dirootion, and tlio less she Inis to give to digest lior food the more sho will have to givo to ho ox- ponded in egg-producing. The advan tages of warm food iu winter, when much food goon toward producing ani mal heat to withstand the cold, nro two fold—tho diroot notion of tho warmth and the slower notion of tlio food itself, to say nothing of tho fact i hat tlio con tents produo. d by nourishing food will remit in moro eggs, for a hen thor oughly at homo will lay moro eggs than a discontented ouo. Wo have performed this experiment, ourselves, and know that feeding boiled corn dons pay; and it is us a result of experience that offer this plan to our friomla.— change. PrcBorvintr Butter. Only a few families know how to keep fresh butter sweet and finely fla- vorod for any length of time, whether they make or purohaso it. llenco with stioli there is a necessity of speody con sumption, or having to eat nr. inferior article. ARnumiug that tho oroniu wns good, the buttermilk properly worked out of tlio now butter, and pure salt UFod, how is nice fresh butter to bo pre served iu this stare? Ausivcr : By ex cluding the air and keeping it iu a cool place. Pack now butter in sound stouo jars or crocks wet with strong brino ; and bo sure to keep the brine an inch or two over tlio butter to exclude atmos pheric air. If the crook stands in oold spring water, in u spring house or a cool oellar, the butter will not boooiuo rancid in Boverol mouUis, finely Uavorcd butter put up in this manner sells in New York at this timo at from 05 to 75 cents a pound. Tho prnol ioo of having bo much dam aged or iuferior butter ih a groat mis take which ought to ho corroded partly Mlm ' by manufacturers, nud partly by deal ers and consumers. In the flrst place, lows should have plonty of greou fresh feed like grass, clover, green oorn, oow- pens or millet, to yield sweet butter. A at end v supply of rich yellow milk iu wooded. In tho south, corn forago will lie our main dependence, ns wo can raise it ‘nrly and late in tho season by taking pains; aud it makes excellent hay when all the nutriment iu tho grain is re tained in Mm blade or stalk. There are quo thousand milliou pounds of the shape of pork and bacon lard consumed iu the United States evory year, and the teudeuoy is to substitute butter for this hog’s grease. Tlio cow is a better, and a more economical mu* ohiuo to extract oil from plants with her capacious stomach than any swiuo. Houee tho rapid iuoreaso of weil organ- d butter factories and of dairy cows. In loss than three days’time tho oow enables us to truusform a com shuck, R f ftml stalk iuto healthy human blood. No hog can do as much, AGRICULTURAL (JLEAMNMH. Ann grapes which are not suitable for maket or table nse slioald be left on the vino nntil thoroughly ripe before mak ing them into wine. Animate will fatton hotter in company than in isolation. Remember this; if thoy are alone, they will lose not a few pounds of flesh in pining for company. To on nn bloody milk in cows, give ono tablespoonful of sulphur in a little bran once a dny. If a very bad oase, givo twice a day; in dry bran, of course. If now-bom calros aro troubled with bleeding at tho naval, it may generally bo stopped by fastening a string around tho cord which hangs suspen led from it. Let your stable bo light, dry and well ventilated. Dark stables help to bring on blindness. Moisture and bad ventilation onootirago glanders, farcy, and many other diseases. At a great trial of farm implements, the orowd had for a drink in the field buckets of cold water with oat-meal stirred in, whioh wn* found to be both victuals and drink, and exceedingly re freshing. Rfcpoimi from northern Indiana hIjows a very had condition of things. Pears and apples will bo far below tlio aver age. Gropes aro reported jimt fair, being good in quality, although not a very largo orop. • No department of farming in morn plrnnaiit and profltablo than that of raising r>took. Tho farm is constantly growing richer and bettor where stock is kept in largo numbers. In dealing with animals, untimely or unreasonable whipping, angry or bois terous words nro always out of nlaeo— always do moro harm than ‘good. Tho dullest animal appreciates kindness. Tho most celebrated horso-tnmer in this country is said to havo made those words his motto : “ Firmness and kindness,” and ho never friled of suc cess Mn. J. Habbis, of Roolicr, Now York, says, iu tho American Agriculturist, jerks, and pulls herself up tho enor mous trank almost as fast as a man will olimb a ladder. THE RAILROADS. nloKA’N relglK The heat of summer, as well as the sudden changes of temperature Incident to autumn, coupled with tho use of unripe vegetables aud fruits and other unwholesome articles of food, result overt season in producing much suffer ing from dinnim-s, dysentary, cholera morbus, colic and Ollier derangements of the nlnuuch aud bowels. A remedy that will promptly re lievo these sufferings aud restore tone aud normal action to tho relaxed aud debili’ated alimentary canal, is surely a boon to the afflict ed. *Dr. It. V. Pierce, whone Family Medicines havo acquired a world-wide reputation, by long study aud careful chemical experiments baa succeeded in extracting, by a cold process, from ttnart-weed, or wator pepper, that mod est little plant soon in wet grounds by the roadside aud in neglected grounds and pastuie fields, a remedial principal which, when skillful ly combined with the extract of Jamaica ginger and other pleasant modifying agents, in what ho calls his Compound Extract of Hmart-Weed, forms a most reliable specific for all auch do- rangcgisnts and sufferlN " J table BffBOWM&JgW** F ALL kinds, lugs. It is pleasant and take, yet powerful td cure. Its won derful efficacy Is a further confirmation of tl e Doctor's idea that Ood has caused to glow in each cliiftate and region, those medicinal plant Dyudlcale The Kc Tail IT. Tho resolutions and minutes of the recont mooting of railroad men, at Sara toga, have been taken to Indianapolis by tho secretary and a copy is not to be obtained. Tho railroad men state it is not true that the meeting was called for the purpose of oombining. against tho grangers or any other interest. Thoy say that the object was simply tho development of their respective reads and thoir abolition of tho system of under-cutting and litigation which lias proved so expensive to all. The confer ence will soon bo resumed and tho bus iness introduced nt tlio previous meet ing be brought to a oloso. The freight agents report that the notion of the railroad officials has sim plified their work materially. Hereto fore there was such competition to pro cure freights, there was no pretense of preserving nominal rates. By a grad ual process of cutting down, tho rates had been reduced from 20 to 40 per cent., while special rates woro made with largo shippers. The following are the now rates agreed upon. Chicago, $75 for first class, $70 for second class, $00 for third class $45 for fourth class, $35 for fifth class. Indianapolis, 871, $00, $57 $43, $33. Cincioinatti. $70, $01, $55, $41, $12. Ht. Louis, $07, |$01, $70, $01, $40. Louisville, $80, $81, $71, $55,844. Evansville, $88.$80,$08, $51, - . . . tl . , $10. Memphis, $1.15. $108, $04, $72, I JiTt*iV^yrorA"^! $50. New Orleans, $144, $35, $118. planter to Invert In* Wet. r<r«»l.6o bout* •*»!?•} $00, $71. Tlu-so rates it is stated will Bewtr* of £ ^Jltbrook! bo rigidly adhered to except possibly ob«mi«t. a in oases of a few large shippers. No rebates or drawbacks will bo allowed. Passenger rates havo not been changed. those plan for tlio healing of tlio understand thoM) wa have i tor'# Extract of Smart-Weed gists generally. FDDRTB NASHVILLE DiDOSTHIAL EXPOSITION. OPENS SEPT. 16. 1874. Tho Best Opportunity now Offbred for PRODUCER and CON SUMER to Meet and Exchange Views. I nULL KHEIGHT one war on Articles for Exhibition. Excnralon rslea on all JDllrosd* aud 1 onnoctiona entering iho dtr. Ship Artleh ■ for Exhibition now. and aat for Excursion Ilckeis to NaxhvlUe in luxtrlal Kxposition. Exposition will Continue until October 17, 1874. Ugat The Doc- i sold by drug- Qo to Riverside WaJor Ouro, Hamilton, Ill. j Sfol Quite no Pnat, Mr. Jowee!—Abor**w •»ctor In niilailelpbla wax caught changing tba tUbrated Mexican Mustang liniment Into other stUtt, and ualag It aa bU own recipe. Honest? alwara the beet policy. Tbeaa tnadtein* men like • follow up such fallows. It cured tba lams homo 1 tho earn*; but It damaged ti.a Doctor*repute- on, and benefited the proprietor In pmporUon. DON’T BUY Until you bay* CAREFULLY EXAMINED otm 3STBW Manners In Iceland. Manners arc simple in Iceland, as in deed in all the Scandinavian countries ; Hint’wo Inlk nhont rnluinK wlicnt enough ' n ‘| ,lln ,l “l , ' lsr '“> ro 'woamw th fnp tho .vnrhl hut. nnn ..i.ti„ n ■» roally no dmtluotion of rank., I vn pppt is increasing so rapidly that tho time will soon oorao when it will wax our skill to raise wheat enough for our selves. Wo shall do it, of course, but wo shnll havo to farm better than many of us do now. And lie is tho wise man who is getting his laud oloaner and riolior. Mansfield, tho celebrated statisti cian, lias demonstrated that within tho lust twolvo years tho monoy value of tho tlio annual yield of farm products in Ohio has increased fifty millious of dollars, and that t he producing capacity of tlio farms lias iiiurca ed. The infer ence is that the farmers of Ohio havo i probab' 1 mode great progress iu business man- I uuu ‘ kej: body is rich, and hardly anybody ab jectly poor ; everybody has to work for himself, mid works (uxoept to ho sure, a fow storekeepers in Reykjavik, and at ono or two spots on tho coast) with his own bunds. Wealth would not raiso a man above his follows, and there nro indeed no means of employing it except in supplying ii house with what would be thought in Knghuid indispensable comforts. Wealth, therefore, is not greatly coveted (although the Icelander likos a good bargain, especially in horseflesh), and nn air of cheerful con tentment reigns. The farm servant soared * * ~ !v differs from the farmer, aud >ly, if n stendy fellow, ends by HRomct, uml I,we, whileree!i»lnggooil I UeVet™ 11 hl™«Tr'''■The?,!'-’ profit., kept thoir form, np to tho L™.*," L7. . A Pf r fertility. Fatal Absinthe, correspondent say "P t0 th " | ot ronpeot, «nvo Uo'iro^to'thohl.lioponcl __ i Hira to a priest ; not oven such a title i Mf; or Mrs, or Fsqnire. If you go to i call for a lady yon tap at the door nud Tho I ,lMk if or Valerdr othor dav I saw u sad sight on tho 7 0,l i m *° $ lvo * K ‘. r * U R nnmo, Injib- Ohamps Elysoos, and which, with all my Jor , . Tliorvaldsflottir, ‘or Eiriksdotnir, experienoes of Parisian life, I never saw or Djarnardottir (as tho case may he,) in this city before. It wns a party of i f ‘! r U>cro is no title of politeness to np- tlireo porsoiiH, two meu and a woman i Y’v* ^ or nftna ®» moroovor, is her own “ well—nay, oven handsomolv--dreHs. ! nnmo, unohangod from birth to death ; nay, oven lmndRotuoly od, and all three iu a reeling, beastly ! state of intoxication, Tho men wont staggering along, disputing and gestic ulating after tho manner of drunk Th* Lailln* Moroal* Clnh, of N«w York, f*MDlly changed their dlKcuaalons from Woman* •affrage to Hair preparations and Plmpl* Danish- j ers. They declared (hat where nature had not en- j dowed them with beanty, tt wa* their right—ye*, | Utelr duty—to seek It where they oonid. So they all voted that Magnolia Helm overcame Balkpwneee, I Rough Skin and Rlngmarks, and gave th* eomplex- ! ion a most dittingut (Soroatau) aad inarble-llke ap pearance (clarijferoua to men, no doubt); and that Lyon* Rathalr.-m made the hair grow thick, soft and awful pretty, and moreover prevented U^from d'ld^no? eoud the sUters’an"nvoloe, they ere not : The Urnml llevolutlun nr Mxbicji j Tbxatmrnt, which wm commenced In taflO, le still ; in progreee. Nothing can slop It, fo .. t on the principle, now uulvemall ackn that phyelcal vigor Ir the most ^mldable LOW RESERVOIR iM l)p. J. Wulker'8 Culiforniu Via- ‘2311* Hillers are a purely Vegetable j reparation, made chiefly from the na ive herbs found on tlio lower ranges of lie Sierra Nevada mountains of t'alifor- ii i, tlio mbdlrlnal woportic* of which no extracted therefrom without tho i Alcohol. Tho oticstion Is o!n::wt laily askod. “Whit Is tho enuao of tho ■mparalleU'd .success of Vi.vkoak 11m- n:it8 f” Oar answer is, that they reino e* ho cause of dlscoso, and tho patiout re- .•overs his health. They aro the great :flood purifier nml a life-giving principle, v perfect Renovator nml lnvlgorator >f the Uto that Pi.a 1 him Of the 1 rul«‘il in, 1.1 ha. tho SAVE MONEY! I'AINTH. reaily-mlv I 8ASII. DOORS) HUN'lfS, The pi operfies of D :• Irritant, Sudorific. AlU for as there are no suruarnes or fara Iy names among tlio Icelanders, but ; inly Christian iiarpes, there is no ren- ; ion for a wifo nhsnmitig her huahand’H | ;1 she is Thorvaldsdott men generally, now mid then stopping ,M “» h1j ° is Thorvaldsdottir iiftor to hail the passing iinocoupied carriages, J 10 i inurrisgo with (ludmuudr just aa not ono of which would oonsont to stop j “Oforo, whilo her children aro Gud- for th in company, „.„. wutll| . „„ u ., ■ - — — ly at the arm of one of lior companions, 1 J, ' ron,on , |‘ little supprin- anil at other times slopping to address ! U,R *° “ D< * t * ,Ht H * !r ) ’ H any other rc- thom iu words of tipsy remonstrance. ! treated fts nn iuferior, not usually She wits humlsoinoly dressed in a eon* j down to the tablo with the men tmuo of blank silk and oashuiero, trim- | , 0 fftiBily, but wailing on them and mod with jet, while her companions separately. ^Otherwise, _how- woro high liats, brondeloth suits, i kid gloves. F their minds to .. oult font for anybody to attempt t<. couto in tho full pos' ession of their senses, no dense is the throng of pass ing oarringos aud so rapidly nro they driven, but the drunken trio got across somehow, nnd disappeared ninong the crowd of proiueiiaders. Saoh is n spec imen of tho changes wrought by the lapso of it few yours in tho manners and customs of this people. Before the in- trod notion of absinthe, who over saw a drunken person in tho streets of Paris? Now who is it that does not see them ? Not drunkenness iu rags nlouo, but with goodly apparel and ootauV clutching wild- mn, iironaeioMi suits, and I r’«oom snflleiently well off, finally the party made up I "*11 rights of property, aud rid- ) orosn the street, a diffi I ,nR Vll 'oronsly about the country whoi- * * ' over they will; and wo could not hoi r that there was any movement for their mancipation, or indeed for social druukeiin o j miou of ought-to bo rospeota\)ility.” Patrons of Husbandry. Wo give below the number of subor dinate granges iu the different states of the union on the 1st of Juno, as shown by the official records of the national grunge : Oalifurnls.... Connecticut., Maryland.. MlteHRCllUH. Michigan,. . -K’o i: 292 Now Jorsoi Now York. Idaho Montana .. Washingto •luinbi; 65 MlHHIBHinpi Misaouri Nebraska Now Haiupslurc Making in tho aggregate 19,402 sub ordinate granges on tlio first day of Juno. Granges are being organized nt tho average ruto of twonty-flvo per day, which, up to the present, would swell tho number to 20,000. These granges form of any kind, though to bo imperfect Knowledge of tho language restricted our inquiries. Iu ono regurd, tho women of Iceland have obtained it completer equality than their sisters in ooutuieutal Europe.—Thoy receive ex act y tho satno education ns tho men do. There nro no schools in tho island naturally, as families live mostly a dozen miles apart; and instruction is therofore given by tho father to his sons and daughters uliko and together, the priest, whoro there is u priest, some times adding n littlo Latin or Danish, Thus the girl learns all her parents can touch her, nml is ns good an arithme tician, aud as familiar with tho Sagas us her brothers.—OomkiU Magazine. Thk SlcKPricAL Convinced,—Every advance in medicine, every now remedy has encountered an opposition, which is tho test of truth. Galon and Jenner only were believed when thoy had proved , n „ ^ against opposition. But | Maie and 1 omalo College M”S jsja. a;^ a DVFiiTuvitu| tn 1 1 acfv p ituw If. or KitH Cured. A SXA ! vnT Mi”’>4 "1‘ 1 v’f.?. ! M 7 ,L ’ 7'“,“ r a 1 vVn W.H.HID0L8 & CO., WHY! S V('*a”wife'hpmIu a . , ur.?,!iSu*w notIi TEAS Mill,: AGENT You Can Make $150 LOOK Lv„ , .! 1 *aw:r;a,r HERE! KA.IIItllMIM,^ ^ &a we hnve 12 0OOU KKASONS why they wi j do your work QUICK and EASY, CHEAP and CLEAN. ■ ||| Thry are rlirn|i»l la bay. ■■■ They are best to uee. CO They take etenlv ami qalekli. D Their operation Is perfrrl Thry have nlwayi a food ilratL < Thry are matte of the brat material. They road perfeellr. O Thty require but little fuel. They are very low prlted. |U They are taitly maaated. , M Tliey are luilrd to all localillea. Kieryetovefimranleedtoflreuitiifae'c SOLD BY EXCELSIOR MANU'FG GO., i; BECKWITH $20. Portable Family Sewing Machine, TIIB MOST POPULAR of «ny In the market Makes the Moat Donbla BUteh, with Strength, Capacity, aud Speed. Equal to any, regardJeM of coat. Beckwith Rowing Bfachlno Co,- o« • n /r * • 802 BROADWAY, NIW YORK. OOWlllg 1 jVLaCillll6. Arenta wasted everywhere. Bead for Samples ° end Circular a, , AWARDED Tho “Medal for Process,” the remington yyoR Ks THE NEW IMPROVED REMINGTON Buslnoas Collogo, and Telegraph Institute, l.KIIA NON, TKNN. NASHVILLE (B. A S.) Busi noss College, ondiTelegraph ,n8tltuto » ’ VIENNA, IS7U. No 8fwing Machine Received a Higher Medal. A FKW GOOD It K A SONS i McEIBWaSIXI thoir disoovci w rr in8. and benefits aiways ! make believers. No incredulity can ! stand the silent argument of good re- i suits. When Dr. Walke ' ‘ * 1 Aoau' McKENZIE, TENNESSEE. suits. When Dr. Walker proclaimed!'-""- ai. raonir uL that he hail uroduood from the medicinal : j^ou' p^avt r, morlifs h, "paU l to7“beVI’n •I’fJr herbs of California an elixir that would ! *o»*»*» In •'•■ptnni.rr. i hhy a handlk. rege disci shook the Bitters is of till’ elixir that would rate the sinking system and cure • RICH FARMING LANDS tho standard restorative ' ,N nebrahka, world, Tho truth «mid | NOW FOR 8ALE VERY CHEAP. not bo rousted. Under the operation of ! t„.. v n n« i . , n , ,, dy, dyspeptics regained ^ \rnrs Credit, Interest Only Six Ter (enk p** '' ‘.V- 'm Vi 1 *" 1 * ‘ 1 • ltemwly”' ll ° n *' iN * lur ®‘ a """ K r " ftt l “’ d *'>-»! ^ TnrranCs Faffervcsrent Sellier Aperient, Bethel College, JL KU^StCLI. V1I.1.K ^ Send for 11 The Pioneer,” health, upprlito and’ streuglh, tho bil ious niul onnotipated woro rolievi-d of every distressing symptom ; the con sumptive aud rheumatic rapidly recov ered ; intermittent and remittent fevers were broken up ; the taint of scrofula wan eradicated! Who could gainsay .... -v.,»v. v . *uwio KrouRCH facts like those ? Not even the faculty. - Jrag». number fifty voters, ami Skepticism was routed. All doubts its it requires no figuring to show that to- I t( J of the Bitters to tho that day there ore in the United States 1. 06 m first rank of modern modi- 1,000,000 voters who are patrons of bus- ' 01UPS we T e 6 V < * nco ‘l, and this wonderful bandry, preparation is to-day the most popular .. : tomo ' olturative and blood dapuront I For the Next Half Yeai’ Indian Tree-ellmbiug. cver advertised in America. In oom- mon with other journalists, wo aro free In South America evmi tho weakest ! o»»r testimony to this remedy. It may be, not uncommonly, seen pluck- , a dou^st-io medicine, and no house- iug the fruit at tho tree tops. It the Hold should bo without it. bark is so smooth aud slippery that — m__ T ~r7—i 7 a they cannot go i limbing, they use other I ^ llTe formed ft untver means. Thoy make a hoop of wild 1 f, ul ! mnop for ! ho P nr P° 80 of ^‘ling viiuvs, and piiltiug their feet inside t*)” . , tl ;i 1 indiBe , nt they use it us n support in olimbiue, ■ T , , 1 ,^, °'. or V 01 ? P"P ll8 m ll >0 The negro of tho w, ,t comt of \fricn : Adrainople, Smyrna, Bagdad, makes a larger hoe . round the trees ' ina 1,1 Morooco nnd ltl ' 1 S nuil '- aud geU ins,do of it aud j.nks it up thi I TllK ,, Ktst0 o( u, e late ohief Jugtic6 will amount to estate owes J. itly advanced on Judge Chase’s 25 MdVilnE!?wSoVrlu‘,1 vj. E, GOLLADAY’S r-IXTY-SlXTH MONTHLY DRAWING, WILL r.W FOB THE Memphis. Tenn., Aug. 24, 1874 , 20,000 Tickets! 1,500 Frizes! Whole Ticket*, St!; Halves, SI ; Five nr.d a Holf, 810. All orders must bo dressed to J. R. OOLLADAY, Bowling Green, Kentucky. ^ LIST OF PRIZES. ■ pa per. w hi cfTi i o Vn t ell 1 (re?t la tr erolsod . . red long a d deeply d ’ Urd iV.„e' ! i ni ' liv " K ' mwi iu Australia climb the, ua0D 1 ? 1 I ? n T * roes after opossums. Where tho they lSvs to what ho [ bark ia rough they chop holes with a | WATERS’ CONCERTO ORGANS tent LCoBMrt d gumtM t?;,s' Lunin n *Zn “ K ,' L W ATER8' T*ixilVmrmonio, te Ox«chostrai ORGANS - XVATKRS’ New PIANOS *»«s* l»l*noa made?^Tnese*ornn« >< anrf'nl- »noi ore warranted for 6 veers. Prices ex- ti emely low/or cash, or part rash nml bal ance in monthly or ijuarierlv payments. 3 fteS e rn«nliiJ frderfcue* city “orHowl'. 0 A Vw^StoryF/aaiV T»*.ve':'u'n' aitk'-h* d”‘ 3 '° min. A liberal di»i 1.tile ;r«SdT**•?§T A "*-‘" i,h “iMoumtoh o'f'course i „"". d '•“»« ' ‘r “ «*■>»Mary ay/Viiguiit 'iith’, IsT'i. 1 ' vy I Vsvlm'aiw.! p^nt. a?a"aum^ t ^rV 1 eb PUb nd < i ? r w*. "* ‘i no one arose.’’ Of course I against tlio tree and grasping tiio , i her hands, she hitches it up by i iruth,’ Dr. TUTTS HAIR DYE W - G - PRICE ? Agent, No. 47 S. College St., NashviHe, Teaneseee lmd r little lamb, a generally ndmittea u^i^generataNuowibeaibion'i'. irnlli ” e ' hairaresiiers In every large city. Price J1.U0 a box bold everywhere. Offloe.ll Murray at., New York. BUT J. t P. DOITS’ BUCK MEM FOB KIHI8 NAEHINE.