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InmI-siwI rt sting by the »»•*,
Whein Mi* jr»»n her row to m*.
IXsrl-snd now the gr*MM wsvc,
And Hi* dry Ntm, o'er lier grave,
Rustling In the Anlmnn wind,
Like tin an Md thoughts In ray rnln
Hha wia 11*1,1. and aoon for*«t;
l<»»v«d mi wall and loved nia net.
Ohsngifiit a* thn 4 prll sky—
Homri loirs. m darnaalli Ilia mooi
On rosn-lidro night* of Junc-
Myatlo renin that aha waa naar; ’
Oama I ho thought- through good and III
Him love*, abd aha remembers atlil.
And, alien nine loug yeei* were spent,
On the lull* that from the ita,
Orual thoughts of lava and Iom
Nall my spirit In the cross.
FARM AND GARDEN.
WILL HOIMNO STOCK l»AY ?
At tilo oast, for tho limit twenty-five or
thirty years, the question of Hoiling torn
boon n noted one, and ono which at tho
present time la being shown u praotioul
ono by very many dairy and atook men.
Many farmn are devoted to tho pro
duction of milk for mnrkot to supply
the many citioa and manufacturing vil
lage* of the cant, and aa these milk-
prodnoor* muat have a oonatnnt flow of
milk, Moiling to a greater or lens extent
htut beeome a necessity, and thoao who
are engaged in making gilt-edgetl but
ter find it imiMirtant to feed a little
groen feed in thu barn in timea of
drought. It ia alio found in praotioo
that bora©* and hogs thrive by tlianamo
oourHo. Nearly all practiced and intel
ligent fnrmern Mill admit that where
land in dear and the products of the
herd ok* high, soiling will pay ; and
some will graut that where tho soil by
couHtant cropping has become impover
ished anil manure boootno a ueoossity,
in order to grow paving crops, soiling
abo may pay. Hut the quea ion before
us is not whether soiling in or may be
profitable to other partH of thin great
country, but it !h adapted to Mbsourl
ami to the present. time? In localities
where there is unlimited range of unin
closed land, all k'lids of atook may do
very well on thu natural pnstnro. IJut
If a niece of corn is sown thickly and a
small feed given to ilia JP*h at, night,
it will help very inuoM « keep up the
flow of milk in tiiuo of srveie drought,
nml will also piovc unite an induoeuiout
to the cows to be at homo in good aea-
son. Hut this outside range is fast giv
ing out in many places, and in some
localities huge herds of Texts cattle
are fod, monopolising tho fowl that by
right ought to belong to thoao minding
near. And it swims our lawa admit of
tho leasing of uninohacd lamia for the
purpose of herding cattle, and a great
inquiry now is. an ong thoao who have
considerable stock, what am we going
to do for fowl ? It is just tho time now
to put in crops for soiling for this and
futme seasons. A little rich land sown
from time to time will furnish a great
amount of the heat kind of feed for
miloh cows, and what is good for them
will uot he refused by other stock.
Whore soiling ia necessary some prepa
ration must ho made in the fall, aa much
at least ns to sow thickly a small piooe
of rye, as this is nr*'ally the flrst tiling
that can ho out to advantage. Clover
usuallr comes next, and them ia no bet
tor feed. Cows fed on clover will give
an abundance ef excellent milk. Oats
out while groen make very g.rod feed,
lbit I think there is nothing bettor than
corn sown in drills at tho rate of two
and a half bushels to tho acre—at huuIi
timea ns it is in sensou—nor is it easy to
flu t any other crop that can oqnal it for
"oiling purposes. Data and barley nowu
late can sometimei he used after corn is
killed by frost, and sometimes turnips
can bo grown ns a second crop to good
advAutag". I suppose most farmers
will say too much bother, too much
triable, etc. How can we over get pay
for nil this labor ? While land is cheap
it is no doubt heat to pasture young
cattle. Rut it miiHt lie economy to at
least part soil dairy atook and teams.
In sections whom much gram is rained
anil hut lit lo stock kept, soiling be
comes practical at once for the following
reasons, which are admitted by all who
have tried tho system : It saves much
laud—about throe fourths - while nouio
claim a still greater area is saved. This
is being demonstratidooutinually in tho
older parts of our country. Lands pav
lured do uot yield n- ar as much feed
per acre, ami much of what is produced
is destroyed by the tramping of hoofs
ami fouling of the stock. At one time
iu my experience 1 was milking t we vivo
cows, and, iu time of severe drought 1
was oh igod to fee 1 wholly in the barn.
It required hut four rods*of ground to
keen the twelve cows a day, giving them
all the ooru fodder they eou'd eat, ami
as this corn grow iu a young orchard
with n thrifty tree st each corner, which
must have occupied at least one fourth
of the laud, so that iu point of fact one
square 10:1 furnished fo d for four cows
« ne day. Each one must consider for
himself how fsr the additional labor
will hHlat.eo the saviug of laud Whore
a community of grain growing wilt to
gether Agree to soil nil stock, all farm
fences can he dispensed with. This
will not only save the land occupied by
fences ami hrdgcs, which many time*
grow weed* to seed cultivated fields,
ami also furnish a barlnir or home for
many small nninm’s that are more or
less dost motive to the crops of adjoin
ing fields, but the flrst com of tho fe nce
is saved, and tho uiinual repairs there-
sf»er. It is not necessary for me to os
timato the cost of f: fences. Every
one in tld* new country knows by bitter
expend.. It certainly is a large sum
ou moat well fenced farms. If one
armor alone iu any community chooses,
bo can dispense with all inaido fences.
Eaoh crop oan occupy that portion of
Ida farm boat adapted to its growth, and
of large or small area aooording to the
owner's wish.
Cows kept upon this plan give rannh
morn milk taking tho season through
although for a little time in flush o'
feed they may do hotter in a pasture.
As tho season advances there is a great
gain in favor of soiling. Although
tlmre are several olhnr ail vantages to be
gained by tho system wo advocate, wi
wld for tho present ps*s them over,
only speaking still further of thn great
saving of manure. Provide good com
fortahlo quarters for stock ; use ah
sorbents enough to take up all liquid
manure, and the pile of manure that
will aoenmnlate in one season will he
enormous. Thn liquid is believed to he
as valuable as tho solid excrements,'and
to give tho heat results ought to he
saved nml applied together. 1 am well
awaro that manure is not generally
valued much in this portion of Uncle
Ham's domain. But this feeling ought
to bo overnorao and the motto adopted:
“Hiivo all the manure possible, for
plenty of manure makes the farm rich,
and a rich farm is sure to rnako tin-
owner rich," I fool sure that this is so
from a few fact! that have come to iny
knowledge, one of which I will state
here While doing a littlo business
with a gentleman iu Kingston lie spoke
of a farm he owned near thu town, and
among other good things ho stated thnt
ho obtained from three to four tons of
first-class hay to the aore, and in an ox-
porfenco of thirty years I have novor
reached this highest figure. At onoo 1
asked him how ho did it. In answer ho
said : "I nso all tho maunro I can got,
and all tho ashes and any thing that
makes gross grow." Ho said ho had
two teams around the town pioking up
manure. Ho also said ho could get a
f lood stand of grass on well-manured
and. If the timea are hard, that man
will always mako farming pay. Others
have told me that manure is worth 81
per load. I always pity those who plow,
sow and reap a great breadth of land,
uso manure enough, which if applied on
onn-half the number of acres the same
amount of crops would ho producod.
Ho long hh this waste is allowed so loug
will farmorn complain of hard times
and poverty, l ought to have ox-
p ained more fully tho aineunt of land
necessary to koop stock well soiled.
Tho instance I have noted in my oxpo-
riunoe I have not often reached. Corn
produces more than most other orops
for this purpose, hut doos uot often do
as well as in tho ease mentioned. It is
more safe to calculate one square rod
per day (and if uot well-managed it may
nerd a littlo more) for each animal s'»
kept, if anything is left over it makes
good winter feed,—M, &. A\, in Rural
World.
The Cotton Worm.
I)r. A. It. (lrota advances a somowhnt
novel and at the mime time onoourogiug
theory in rogutd to tiie cotton worm, so
injurious to tho agricultural interests of
tho southern stales. The result of oaro-
fill inquiry into its history has led him
to tho iuforenco that it is iu reality a
uativo of south and central America,
that ita apnearanoo in the Uuitrd Htutes
is the result of immigration from the
south, and that it dies out ovory vesr
with ita food-plant, the eggs whioh it
lava not coming to maturity, being
killed by tho inoleuienny of tbowcuthcr.
He finds testimony that for many years
after the introduction of tho cotton
plant into the southern stubs the cot
ton worm did not appear, and that its
existence iu southern Alabama Imt littlo
preceded tho lab* war. It is, however,
capable of extended flights, ns it lias
been observed in the custom states, i ml
also at Buffalo and Chicago. The sup
ply of the insect is, therefore, main
tained every year by means of flights
from thu south, which are somewhat
capricious, nml may he diverted out of
their oourao by powerful currents of
wind occurrin-- -t the time of their
migration.
The inference drawn from thoao facts
l>y l>r. Groto is that the process of arti
Acini extermination may ho simplified
by limiting tin* period during which it
oan he successfully at tanked, and by
doing away with u certain olasa of pro-
post a remedies. The agent employed
to destroy tho worm must he used
against the 111 at brood, as they appear,
in any given locality, during its pro
gress re*M»ward, and that, to he effect
ual, t Action must tie concerted in
tho application of thu remedial agent..
He strongly recomm ”'i the introduc
tion of the English sparrow, and addi
tional legal protections b) insectivorous
birds, as ahsolutely necessary to tli
agricultural interest.
Condition of tho European Cropu.
The mail accounts from Europe come
down to tlio beginning of this month
amt are full of interest iu view of the
prevailing uncertainty as to the proa
peat of the coining harvest, on which
the generally depress oil trade of tho
world so greatly depends. Up to tho
last week of April the weather in nearly
every important grain-growing country
had been exceptionally unfavorable to
vegetation ; and it was clear that the
continuance a few days longer of cold
winds and uugenial skies would have
mused a general failure of tho cereal
crops. Just at this crisis, however, the
weather on both sides tho Atlantic ap
pears to have taken a milder turn, and
though uot positively favorable to
growth has since boon suftloiently mod
crated to avert injurious effects to the
crops. Iu b ranee, Germany, Anstria
ami Hungary, tho condition of the
wheat crop is generally satisfactory ;
ami in those cooutries where maize is
cultivated, tho prospect of that orop
also appears to he good. Ovor large
arcAs, however, the rjo crop is an utter
failure ; ami rape has also suffered very
severely. On the whole, we must con
clude that, if we have average grain
c ops this year, it oan be only through
very favorable weather between now
ami July and August, and. in auy event,
the harvest oan hardly fa 1 to be a late
one. -A’. } r . Roll, tin'.
Bio ’'onks —Tho dir*
other mammoth skeletoi
on the Erie railroad, and
‘
rery of an
al Otiaville,
the county
of Oraiwe, New Yo»k, i* the seusatiou
I of the hour among tho scientists and
wonder lovers. This i* the sixth skele-
j ton of the madodon tint has been ex
humed fr tho muck-beds of the
j county, ana »a many reapee s the finest
—though uot yet complete. Tin* tusks
have no* vet be* n discovered, but ratty
he expected to reward fur. her exeava
tion. The si so of tho monsttr of which
these hone* are the remains miy be im
agined from tho fact that a lad man may
s a- d within the pelvic arch and with
I armsoutstr* tolled barely touch the sides
at their widest span. The weight of
I this single bone is nearly half a ton, ami
| jany of the parts as have tieen found
weighed 1,760 pounds.
j —The Bible is now pr.^nl iu no f wer
j thru two hundred and teu languages.
| Iu io54 it was printed in only fifty.
HOLYOKE’S HOLOCAUST.
Tli* Human Hum* ortfrlnlf In a Pine
One of tho moat terrible disasters in
the history of Massachusetts ooourrod
on tho 28th, In the burning of the
French Catholic church at South ITol-
yoke, during the evening sorvico, and
involving tho death of sixty-six men,
women and children.
Tho church society was established
about soven years ago,* and Father
Dnfrosno had boon ihn only pastor.
Tho parish inolnded all tho Fronot
Catholics of tho oitv, whose number b
estimated at from 2,000 to 2 fiOO persons
Tho church was erected in 1870,
P.NT1IIKLY OK PINK J
was about one hundred fort by sixty ;
two stories, with gnllorios on tho sides
and nortli eml about twonty-five feet
wide. Thorn were two doors iu the
north end and thn vestibule, from which
two doors opened into the body of the
church. The galleries opened into th»
vestibule. At the rear end was another
door by which a fow persons escaped.
Immediately upon tho breaking out
of tho flames all tho occupants of the
galleries rushed to thn east door, and
falling upon ono another choked up the
doorway with their
ROIHKM PILED IN ALL WAYS
seven or eight deep. Hero most of the
lives were lost. From this mass Ohiel
Mullen rescued oun young woman ufter
having taken off two dead bodies from
above* her. Tho chief and others had
their clothes almost burnt from them,
and wero badly burnt about tho hands,
fn tho renr of tho church was the
priest’s residence, which woh also do
stroyod. The wulla wero pulled down
after tho flro was nearly put out. One
woman jumped from tho highest window
down upon the front stops, breaking
’ rm. A man with
TWO CHILDREN IN HIS ARMS
jumped from a window and escaped.
One poor woman enveloped in flames
shrieked out—“For God’s sake, nave
mo," and she was dragged out.
Till! HERO OP THE DISASTER
waa John Lynch, a bravo fireman, who
was the first to respond to tho alArm.
He describes tho scene when ho reached
tho burning church as appalling.
Wedged tight and Immovable iu tho
doorways wiu* a dense mars of Immunity
from nix to eight feet iu height, nono of
thorn able to ntau.l upright from the
terrible pressure of the crowd behind,
whilo upon and ovor thorn a shoot of
flro rolled like a wavo streaming far out
into tho open air. Without a moment’s
pause to consider thoir danger, Lynch
and chief engineer Million ruahotl into
tin* flames, spurred on by piteous cries-—
“For God's sako como and holp us,"
ami began pulling out bodies. A
moment lutor and a well directed hy
drant stream from Mt. Holyoke struck
tho bravo rescuers and undoubtedly
saved them from being burned alive.
Tho first persons drawn out wore burn
ing, but they passed directly through
the stream of water nml the flames were
extinguished. Homo of tho poor ores
lures fell fainting on the long flight of
wooden stairs lending down to the street
and few wore able to walk.
By tins time tiio entire fire depart
ment huil arrived, and worked with
such energy and will that when the fire
was extinguished tho charred wooden
walla of tin* structure were standing,
and wore pul ed down by tho ho k
nml ladder men iu order that search
for tho bodies might lx* made. Duly
a very few momenta ootnparativoly
elapsed after the water struck tin*
building before the fire was out,
but tho destruction of lifo during
that briof period was terrible. Home
sprung from the gallery windows and
wmo seriously injured, and ono person
appeared at a window,
and after tottering there nil instnnt fell
to the ground deud nml unrecognizable.
Hundreds of men went to the wreck as
soon as opportunity offered, to search
for bodies, urn! u force of police was
organized to keep back tlx* large crowd
which bad gathered. The greater num
ber of bodies were found in tlx* fatal
entry wav burned, some of them to >
crisp. Tho body of one woman was
found iu I he pew she had occupied her
clothing entirely burned off. A fleshy
woman who weighed some 180 pounds,
was drugged screaming from the mass.
Hue was curried u short distance from
tlx* church nml placed ou tho grass,
while tho
of her back. In a moment she full over
dead. The scones last night and to day
in tho BchooldiouHo baaemeut, where
tho IhxIicH of the dead were carried,
wore heart-rending in the extrei
some iustnnoea tlx* features w*
totted an though extreme agony hail
lx en Buffered before death, but many
looked calm as though smothered. All
wore blaeketx'd with smoke,
were burned h. y* n 1 the possibility of
ideutifle ition, Lothicg remaining lmt
tlx* trunk.
Louis Deajornen, 51 yearn old, whose
wife and daughter wero both burned t*
death,
to-day from grief, an I cried continually
iu agonizing tones, “ Oh my Julie ! my
Julie I" Borne were* taken out alive who
wero under other** who were dead, and
owed to this fact their own salvntic
Ono of tuo most protracted oases of
suffering was that ot Mary De»jerne
who, burmd past all recognition ar
blind, some how f.uiud Iter way to
uill north of tho church and wander*
around there about twenty minutes b
fore she was found aud taken to lr
boras, where she died about 11 o’clock
this morning, having lingered fifteen
hours in feariul agon*.
Tlu* fab* of humeuio Mouser and Iter
lover was a touching event of the Hi
She wan organist for tlio ovenirg, in t
absence of tho regular One, and was c
off from escape. Her lover escaped,
but, lludiug she was still within, turned
back and shared her fate.
The latest revised figures give: Dead.
71; fatally burned, 22; other .vise burned
and wounded, 27 Of tho 71 dead, 5
arc female's and 16 males.
A Heavy Man.
A stranger with no guile in his fac
aud no overcoat on his shoulders, vr«i
do red into a clothing store in Newport,
I ho other day, and asked if tie could be
fitted a spring overcoat The proprie
tor promptly answered in the affirma
tive. “You speak very positively,"
replied the strauger. “I am bigger
than you take mo for." The store
keeper waa still confident that he had
coats that would auswer. “I am a
pretty heavy man," said tho strauger.
“ I will bet you live dollars that you
can't guess my weight iuto one hundred
pounds." The man was not particularly
large, and this astounding challenge
entirely diverted the teller of clothing
from the ordinary course of his busi
ness. He took the wager, named his
guess—about 160 pounds—the money
was put up iu the Lauds of a third
party, aud all started off for a pair of
settles, aud the strauger balanced 200
pounds of weights. The store man
looked sad and puzzled. With a smile
that was childlike and bland thn stronger
took his money and walked off without
saying anything more about the over
coat. It has sinco been learned that
man wears a lead jacket, and hn<«
boon making an honest living by playing
ids HCtirvy trick on unsuspecting dealers
in clothing. He came from Connecticut.
New Mode of Ventilation.
valuable account of a mode of ventila
tion adopted by Mr. Tobin, a retired
merchant of Leeds, and which rest* on
tho principle that a narrow stream of
air o<*n ho sent np through lighter air,
like the jet of a fountain through the
ordinary atmosphere, by atmospheric
pressure from outside, and thnt when
it reaches the coiling it will be reflected
off in all directions, just as the water
falls hack in a number of infinitesimal
Us, and so melt away very gradually
in‘o tho less pnro air of tho room, be
fore reaching tho parsons who neod it.
Tlx* modus opsrandi is to introduce
vortical tubes, communicating with tho
outer air, in parts of a largo room or
public building whore people are not
koly to sit or stand, tubes rising, say
>nr or five feet, nbovo tho floor. Di
rectly tlio air in the room begins to be
run fled, the pressure of tiie air outside
nds streams of air up these tubes,
which continue to rise in narrow streams
just liko jets of water, nrd without
lispersiag till they reach tho coiling,
whore they are reflected back in spray,
as it wore, of pure air, spray which
mixes very gradually indeed, ami so os
to avoid nil draft, with tiie ratified air
of tho room, and gradually expels all
tho bad air by way of tlio chimney.
Tlio Hystoin seems to have worked
almost miraculously in the Leeds Bo
rough police court, and also in tho Liv-
er|x*ol police court, whoso stipendiary
agistrato, Mr. Knflles, tins borne tho
ost grabdul testimony to tho results
of the experiment, and Mr. Tobin is
engaged in introducing it into
London.
Tho Louisville Courier-Journal, in
reply to tlio patlietio ques ion of a
woman, “ How shall I keep my hus
band at home in tho evening ? ” says it
bo dono easily enough by open
ing a first class beer garden in the
hack yard.
—▲ countryman iu HavaDah observ
ing a gang of negroos latx»ring on tlio
streets, cash wearing a ball and chain,
asked ono why that hall and chain was
chained to his leg. “ To keep people
from stealing it. Heap of thieves
atxmt Lore."
A Word in Heahon.—Health iH a
blessing, which comparatively few en
joy in uli its fillItioHH. Those endowed
by nature with robust frames and vig
orous constitutions should lx* careful
not to trifle with them.
When wo outer tho seasons of poriixl-
ia fevers, the iuoreused heat of the aun
develop* a miasma which pervades tho
air. The evil is inextiugnishal lo; our
duty to guar-l against it is imperative |
Fortunately for those whoso lot is cast
iu low marshy districts or new clear
ings, nature* provides a cure and pre
ventive. Dr. Walker's California Vino-
gar Bitters are endowed with rare pro
phy(actio or diacatc,-preventin'/ {lowers,
and as “ au ounce of prevention is
worth a pound of our**," should be
taken iu tne full vigor of health, so as
to fortify tho system against the assault
of summer disease, and thus secure* by
their life-giving, strengthening, restor
atives, anil antiseptic virtuei, a defense
against atmospheric poison.
Il l« found*! ou the vorr bee
f *1: ollx*
«1 constant
the prefer
*'ThsWdnon i'/raiuVr gaiui
ion of all parlies that arn a
wing machines, and it has al
“ i flrat-oh
rout rank among the llrst-olaia machines o
•i< country ; aiA it. price, owing P. Ita bain.
rdared through the
it ISO Usual street. N
legaut
MARKET REPORTS.
FLOUR Superfine ...
XXX
Famllr
CORN MKAL
COHN
OATS
WflKAT
HAY - Rest
mi a n
IT. A M TS
HAt’ON Clear Hides.
HAMS Sugar Cured.
LAIU)
BUTTE II
F.OOS
OINBENO
WOOL—Unwashed ...
t is (Mi m r an
f) Kfi Ofi fi 00
6 60 » 6 75
.... rtr 92X
00 (S* ....
. .... ft. 77?
I 25 ft* \ 35
04 00 ft. 27 00
. 22 00 ft* 25 00
1 25
2H ft-
lOH'
It is often remarked by strangers na
iling our Htat® that we allow a larger proper.
Hon of good horses than any other Htate in
the Union. This, we tell thorn, is owing to
two principal reasons: In the Aral place, wo
breed from tho very heat stock ; and In the
-ond place, our people use Rheridan's Caval-
Bfcoud place, our people use Bheridan a Caval
ry Condition Powders, which In our Judgment
e of incalculable advantage.
Johrutnn'x Anodyne Liniment will
give more relief in cases of Chronic lthema-
tlsrn. no matter how severe, than any other
article known to medical men. Uaed Internal
ly and externally.
I»r. T«iIt’s Kxpr
t by.
i OP A THOUSAND.
P*., giving oame -
SILVER
TIPPED
SHOES
l 30
L— unwasiKM
Tub washed
WHISKY-Common 1 00 ft 1 15
Robertson Conntv. .. 1 75 ft* 3 00
I tourism 1 25 ft 3 50
Lincoln County 175 ft 3 60
HIOHW1NEB ... I 15 ft
COTTON 9 ft 10
Ordinary ft 12 h
\ 00
Low Middling
SEEDS-Clover 7
Timothy 8 25 ft* 3 40 1
Orchard Grass 2 40 ft ....
Blue Orass ... 1 15 ft 1 40
WHEAT—Rod and Amber*. *tf 25 ft 180
CORN —Hacked SO ft 82
OATS 73 ft 75
BUTTER-Choice 25 ft SO
HAY—Timothy 10 00 ft 19 00
OINBENO 1 3*1 ft 1 60
FRUIT—Apples. Orson 2 00 ft* 3 60
BACON—Clear Sides..
CHEESE—Choice ....
FLOUR—Superfine...,
F.xtra Family ...
Fancy
WOOL—'Tub washed..
FLOUR
CORN
OATS
LARD
BACON—Cle*
4 00 ft 4 25
6 00 ft 6 00
6 75 ft 7 25
,. 6 00 ft 8 0
8*5 ft ....
.. 7D,ft ....
16b
K mh 18 *®
. f 6 7*5 ft ...
.. 6 25 ft 7 00
opium
'•V-j V. *iOI.I» l»KN« II. FIIKK.
$200 K’.rcMK'
B75A3Bfr rasifirwssjmssgoCg
$10s$25. r .i'v,
$5; $20 cs.'wsiiw^saa ASiisr
S250:g u v::r:v.°. <1 r.il:s.‘;.Y.a-
(hO NAITIPI.K Free in.l Rim Pay *-. Male an,'
ELASTIC JOINT
ROOFING ;W.2«!Sti A’AifaSSfiSI
~p.T< ll.JM .X V, or N.i.il • h.mln,. 1
wanted sv“: n .r.'sjrj
$10 to $50u.
iSSBSSBSB^SSmmMHM IhhiR eapialnlt K everything.
8ENT FREE.
HOW tils
if. to. mmrsriTAM»M
T tmjBZMID
WATER WHEEL
JSggy
ti p 1 PORTABLE -
■“^rSoda Fountains.
tm. *5o, *?». * *ioo.
[ GOOD. DURABLE AND CHEAP.
Mhl|<p<s^Kea<1y for Vm.
LANE &. BODLEY,
•John itnd Water Mis., 4'lnrtnnntl,
MANUFACTURER3 OF
EORTABLE AND STATIONARY STEAM
Vn E2Src3-IIsrES,
JXO. I*. DAI.F.. Ag’t. XHwhvill**.
^jtcTR/c/^ *v ,M v.v\ Hu;, *v H .‘r:
IS LIFE
DO YOUR OWN PRINTING!
N ovelty
PRINTING PRESS.
FLOUR -Extra
XXX
COHN 87 ft ...
OATS 71 ft 73
HAY 27 00 ft 28 00
PORK-Mess 22 (HI ft 22 60
BACON 9Vft ....
HAMS 12i*ft 13
LARD 16‘ift 16
BUG A R—Fair to Erimo... 9y
WHISKY —Louisiana 1 19 ft 1 20
Cincinnati 1 15 ft ....
COTTON -Good Ordinary. HVft 11V
Low —' vr , 15 ^ 16S
FLOUR—Family• • X 5 65 ft 5 75
Wit EAT '. 12* ft 130
CORN 70 ft 74
OATS 68 ft 70
PORK-Mew 20 25 ft ....
HAMS—Sugar cured Wfft 10*
BACON-Clear sides ll.H® UK
Tarrant’* Kffmr*rrnt SfJtzrr Aptrirnt,
SOLD HY ALL DltUGGISTS.
yy II KKLZII A MKLICKjt'O., ^
W*H»M dI*Whe2^nc^MaViLn^mo*
fna*Vnitienia*have'wa^ua?*Aad^(ipplot•*• i .Tf’uie
airo|M*. L^two v»«ir Klattlt
NICHOLS. 8HEPAR0 * CO.'S
"VIBRATOR" THRESHER.
The RRILLf AWT RPOOn*ef thDOrals-
laving, Tline-Navlm TIIHKNHBR, l>
unprere«lenle<l In Uwannalaof Farm Machinery
In a brief period It hae Income widely ha*wa
and FULLY KNTAHLIMHBD, aa *h«
•LKAIinOTIIItKNIlINU HA CHINK.*
t;It AIN RAIBRM9 ItKFl'MK
aavlng (Train.
«*Aeo it
. lathaano ‘'Healers’* ••Pickera,’
or “ Apron,'* that handle* Damp Oraln, l.on,
Hraw, ileaitlnca. Flax. Timothy. Millett and al
•urlidlfflmll grain an.) *e««K with KNTIIII
K.4NR AND KFFKCTIVKNKSf*. (Rear-
to perfection; *aves the farmer lua tbreed h*l
inge**re^olrse^E1S mV 0NE-H*LF° the S**a
to employ ai ' —
prices, whi
THRESHERMEN FIND II highly a
watt for, even nt advance*:
made with 6, 8, 10 and If
norae •• v*minted” Vowen, alao a ape-
for*'ifrBA*1*0\VKIt*, 1 “aud to P maU*V
other Horae PoMrer*.
If Intereated In grain mining, or threshing, writ*
for Ill*i»tr*ted Circular* (imi /*•#*) with full
particular* of site*, style*, prices, term*, «a
NICHOLS, 11IBPARD Ac 00„
BattU Creak, HirAiomm
$20000
GOLD!
To Agrm^in addition to
AN I*L*LUSt’fTat'eD
WEEKLY ^.th /aikijm
&imo ta' SL^^Phl u!
DR. WHITTIER,
No. 617 St Charles StTeet, St. Loois, Me.,
“marriace GUIDE,
1 Geo. P. Rowell & Co.l
OPIUM
112 Joha Street.
MIRPHJttE HA^IT
known and *nre Remedy.
NO CHARGE
til cored. Call on or *dtlm>
DR. J. C. BECK,
Dr. 4. Walker’s California Vlu-
epir Mlltprs arc a purely Vegetoi* »
prepanu ion, mnfie chiefly from tho fv%
tivo licru* found on tho lower range* <
the Sierra Nevada mountains of Caliltn*.
nia, tho medicinal nroperties of whii-r
are extracted therefrom without the r.«w
of Alcohol. Tho question is alii-
dally asked, “ What i« the causo oi “ «
unparalleled bucccw* <*f Vinkgah Hit
TBKsf" Our nnswer is, that they remors
tho cause of disease, and the pat ton* *
covers hia health. They are the
blood purifier and a life-giving prilhJic.e
it perfect Renovator and Invigoreti-i
of the. system. Never before in t»» I
hint«»rr «»f' tho world ho* n raotficinfi fnw
oompeundcil pomu'nwng tho remarks. •
qualities **f Vikkoar JtiTTBRs in hoalii.g :e.i
lick of cvp** disease man is heir to Tl
sr** a gentl* rgativo »h well oh c T..»■'■..
relieving Congeauun or Inflammatit-n
tho Liver and Visceral Orgnim, iu Bitov
Gratcnil Thousands proclaim Vnf
EGAit IllTTKlts tho moat wonderful In-
vignrant that ever sustained tiie sinkinf
systain
No Person can Inko these Dttteil
according to directions, and remain lon|
unwell, provided their bones are not do
stroyod by mineral [*^*son or otboi
means, and vital orgaus wasted beyond
repair.
liilious. Remittent and Inter
niittent rovers, which are so preva
lent In the valloys of our groat rivert
throughout tho United States,especially
thoao of the Mississippi. Ohio, Missouri,
Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan
sas. Fed. Colorado, Brazos, Bio Grande,
Heart, Alabama, Mobilo, Savannah, Ho-
rtnoko, James, and tnanv others, with
their vast tributaries, throughout out
entire country during tho Summer and
Autumn, nnd remarkably so during Sea
sons of unusual heat aud dryness, are
invariably accompanied by extensive do*
•angomento of the stomach and liver,
md other nlxlomlnal viscera. In their
treatment, n purgatiro, exerting a pow
erfui influence upon these various or
gans, is essentially necessary. There
la no cathartic for tlio purpoeo equal to
Dr. J. Walkkr’b Vinegar Bittkrb,
os thov will 8j>cetllly removo tlio dark-
color*!*! viscid mnttor with which the
bowols are loaded, nt tho same time
stimulating tho secretions of tho liver,
nnd generally restoring tho healthy
functions of tlio dlgcstlvo organs.
Fort ify tlio body against disease
by purifying all Its fluids with Vinegar
Bittkrb. N’o epidemic can tako hold
of a systom thus fore-armed.
Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head-
ache, rain in tho Shoulders, Coughs,
Tightness of tho Chest, Dizziness, Nour
Eructations of tlio .Stomach, Bad Tnsto
in tlio Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Pulpita-
tatlon of tlio Heart, Inflammation of the
Lungs, Pain in tho region of tho Kid
neys, and a hundred other pnlnfui symp
toms. are tho offsprings of Dyspepsia.
Ono bottle will prove a better guarantee
of its merits than a lengthy advertise
ment.
Scroftila, or King’s Evil, White
Swelling*, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Nock,
Goitre, Bcrofnlnan Inflammation*. Indolent
Inflammation*, Mercurial Affection*. Old
Sores, Eruptions of tho Skin, Soro Eye*, ate.
IntheHo, m in all other coimtitutimml Dla
oaws Walkkr'h Vinkoah liiTTKiu* have
«hown their groat enratiro power* In toe
uioHt obrttinaU) and Intractsbio caaca.
For Inllainmnlorjr mid Chronic
IllicuninUsni. Gout, Illliann, liemit-
tent nnd Intermittent Fovers, Dtsoases ot
the Blood, Liver, Kidney* and Bliwlder.
these Bitter* have no oqnal. Such Direaset
are canned by Vitiated Blood.
Mechanical Diseases.—Personsen
gaged In Paints nnd Minerals, such as
Plumber*, Type-setter*, Gold.hcatoi*, and
Miner*, a* they advance in life, are imbject
to parnl.riii* of tho Bowel*. To guard
against Uii*. tAke a dono of Walkkb's Vis
fcoAR Bittkrs occoflionally.
ForSWiil Diseases, Eruptions, Tet
ter, Salt-Khonm, Illotche*, Spot*, Pimples
PtoMtnlea, Boil*, CaVbnnclnn, Ring-worms,
Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erynipela*, Itch,
Scarfs. Discoloration* of the Skin, Humor*
and Dieeaso* of tho Skin of whatovor name
or natnru, aro literally dng np and earned
out jf tho Hyntem hi a short timo by the n/w
of there Bitter*.
Pin, Tapo, nml other Worms,
larking ra tho *VKtem of *o many thousand*,
are effectually destroyed and rcmoYed. Ne
ivitem of medicine, no vermifuge*, no an
thelininltic* will free tho system from worm*
like there Bitter*.
For Female Complaints, in yoqns
or old. married nMinglc, at tho dawn of w'
manhood, or thqfcnrn of life, there Tot no
Ritter* display sonecided an inflnenoe thoi
Improvement i* wihn perceptihlo.
Cleanse tho Vitiated Blood when
ever yon find it* imparities homing through
tho skin in Pimples, Eruption*, or Sores!
cleanse it when yon find it obstructed and
ftlnggifth in tho veins; cleanse it when it u>
fool; yoor feeling* will toll you when. Keep
the blood pure, and tho health of the syitei*
will follow.
n. it. McDonald a co.,
ttugRlM* and On. A pu^ San Franc-urno, Cidlfomia
•° d u oo r^ WMhiD r‘* n on<1 L’hwium Si*.. N. Y
Bold bv all Dranliii nnd Dealers.
o
PIUM
Habit Cured
ccrtl flcsle* o f hn nil red
:nred. I claim to havi
riKrr. OBIOIXAI. AX]
orte, Ind.
OPIUM
HAoITXCJRED a
12s
"Vm-VStred t j
FIERCE WELL AUGER
Uk '" tP * ni Pj^D^YOUAR^
D." PIE R C E. Vm 1 and.
ANTEED. s.n-
$25
| day gnsrsutecd n«lnir mir Well
tuaer A Drllle. SIOO s month
naliTto *oo<l Agents. Auger hook
free. JIU Auger Co., 8L Louis, Mo.