Jr,sr ‘SnCt b £*£. c i£ C^ld!r , Ld ^«n^rlS^ri; ^
wood, (rrU into tbs ■asms and tnerioes of artioloa Bads of nMtal, and ersn into sartfasswara^that^ ii at at^pOTona^all or atfilo wbiob cattls or'hons. oonld bare aoesaa to, in which the article mar bars been mixed, or from which it had been need, ahonld be oarefnllj act •aide, and nerer again need for any Malignant sores are not nnfraqnently oanaed by aoratohing the akin when itching or irritated from handling the green. ^ It abonld be oonatantly borne
r. ahonld be dn!y te the ntmoat ears in natng it. Aa a remedy for the poison, the fi — — m * -n a beierase ia reoo d hydrated le, harmleae by the'green ahcnld bo well oorerod with it, aa with an ordinary aaire, and a teaapoonfal in a wine glaaa of —‘~ ahonld be taken twice a day in let while working with the green, remedy can ba obtained from any drngof Paria gfeen haa
g the year II •oet-tr oaptnred, by mean, of S.WO dosa, of which nember 744 ralaaoiwd by Ibeir owner. ; 2.S7H killed, aad 88 aold; tU doga wars by prirate iodindnala to be awreifnlly
Pound in New T
rain theBhinelaod
le practice, eo common in that part of Oermany, of letting the Tines bleed profusely by enl ting them late in
of the trine, it mnat anrely in.
the anbaeqnent fruit to withdraw large
of ita natural an Ui tanoe. He • mnohaaonoUterofaai
in the
quantities has obserri
flow from a trt day after it ha i&idSacdhv
eat; i
id bjr oeesa, be found that ft I of potash, lime, a
I and phosphoric acid, with .. fable quantity of organic and
organic mitten, the former of wh— inolnded nitroganoua bodies. To bring
pbnrie and p
— , in forty C n past, nays that, before wearing boot*, giro the bottom, a good coat tug of tallow or ooal-tar, and dry it in; then oil the "nppera" with castor oil, about one tabletpoonfui to each boot; then oil them twice a week with castor'
or ahonld be rainy, or von an compelled to work in water daring the day, wash year at night, hold them by th quite warm.**-— and you will!
der oorn the beat crop then ia to bridge orer a dry Uma with ; fed sixty or t ^ “ rl y "p™g luerally in the next win * or nine month, a good * from ita birth, might i winter, aad well fed all
totally unfit by and the nae of the carbonic acid gaa haa been alio giren up aa not being swift enough in ita dastnetion of life. A smothering-room built of bricks and lined with good cement, 11 feet long, 4 feet 5 inches wide, and 3 feet 11 inches '' ’ 'lai replaced the wooden box, and oons oxide gaa ia oasd instead of rio add gaa. It ia generated by a ml a tore, and a bellows is used to it in Tolnme into the air-tight irtmcnk This oxide is an settee tie noiaon, one per cant in tbs air proring fatal. The number of dogs destroyed never exceeds forty large or eighty small once. Seven minutes ia occupied in Ailing the room with the gaa, and two minutes aad a quarter only to destroy Ufa. The dogs are captured by men employed by the society.
ity-fonr bourn altar being received- The yard * * • — divided—one befog oocupii—• — J aad the other by fomalea. Each animal
.. th : 'Sr.
“ reloaded ” Piatol Again. Margaret W. Smith, aocc panted by her eon, Shermar ” left her residence in Boston pole of visiting her broi Watson, in Washington atr pears that Mr, Watson had reoonUy gnn business at the above place, after inspecting various artielea in store the attention of the lady called by her brother to a new sewingmachine. She procured a pieee of cloth, aad aeon was busily engaged in operating the maehice, paying bat little attention to her aon. In a money drawer •a a loaded piatol, rapth
place from whence he took it, but the boy paid no attention to her request, aad approaching her ia a playful manner pointed it at har heed and .napped a cap into an unloaded chamber. The child, who ia only nine jeers old, t* said, " Why, it ain't loaded, moth and again took aim, and this time - loaded chamber,,the ball c poor woman'a loft breast ..mg her heart The then dying looked at har child, and after
The angniah of ~~ ._ili«in* «h-‘ *■*- ' ' d on earth ean bettor ba imagined described. He thnw himself on — body of his mother, now cold i death, and patting his arms around hi nook kiiaed her, and in frantic tom called upon her to look np and apeak to her “own boy,“'a fond epithet which, ilia said, she usually applied to tha little fellow. The body of Mrs. Smith removed to her late residence,
child, a girl about fire yearn old. I heartrending ■eveama of the lad ‘ ' ’ large throng of people, x ply affoeted by the sod it
The ladlaa Courier*’ Endurance. From a letter from Onster'i headto tha Biomarok (D. T.) 7H-
wonderinl
■eTEJLr:
-..raapUahnMBt they thaw the meet wonderful power of endnranoe. New. la reoelvcd that it ia ’ nportant ahonld go to some distant ibe er Tillage, and one or more Iians prepare for the work. A feast . .
whiW*^ll SSI
eat j they call on their neighbors eat^again,^ind continue dancing abmp^ AdSr •S^ngTlnw'bMn Ihm eat again and ore then ready fog basfThey mount the fleetest pony in nd are ofi, riding day ana nig t, t food, water or rest, for five nmetimes. Arriving at their
they ntato the news,
id of feasting and done
m m mi con, to he followed, perhaps, tramp of 900 miles more in anol direction, with the news' to anol tribe. By these couriers every mt ■sent of Ouster is reported, and 1 before his command reaches the Bl Hills the Sioux will be apprised, only- of bia approach bet of
r of Fiah.
_ . illage in one of the southern de partmenta of Franco haa, says a Paris writer, been greatly agitated by the thougbtlasa behavior of a waterspout, which, not content with terrifying the population of whirling through the fields and garden, swept over a fishpond, sucked np the water, fiah andall,
into the yard of a honae in the neighborhood. The owner of tha pond, the lire stock of which bad . ‘-v moved, hearing ‘ rp 'J*E ch - yard, ha
aide running from tbs oombbrn* to the tail, on the opposite sida a deep black. It bad a vary heavy comb, and a large wattle on Ibe black aide, and a small Pith?. °™
Spray «77i«IO, tha E. T. Barry *70,000. and the Anbarn ta, 300 aahraga for towing Into port tha.aboi
U ba bald September Mb, 101b, IClb end —The vartooe eeeoonta of the atieaipt l of the Chancellor wiu, e^d^bt iolnry
r footing and altpped tbrottgb be
Ui blatrlcs of Iowa, aad K. p. Oates
oeof Odsradoend New Mexieo.eek-
Phlbdetibla. They an
s-vji.'sss."
which was taking piaea during th(__ yean. Her mind was graatlv exercised lest her children ahonld be harmed by —■ “i-i—i. aj,p deemed vitally false
to the reality of impending the diaoloeuro of domestic diatreea, aioknoea, perhapa nnto death, of ' likelihood of separation and the «. taring of a family, every member of which I had tenderly loved. The effect anon me of the disco very of the state of Mr. Tilton's feelings and the < of hie family surpassed in sor excitement anything that I ha< perieaord in my life. That my presence, mfinenec and counsel had brought - beloved family sorrow and aheui gave, in my then state of mind, a poignancy to my suffering wi' ' ' '
ic who ia sensitive to the hop ' »d. re peculiar reasons for alar on other grounds, inasmu. on anbjeet to certain malig-
ahami'less hlouhnnila
and oonnaeis had tended, however nnoonacionsly, to prodnee a social — taatropha, represented aa imminenl gave expression to my feelings in on terries with a mutual friend, not cold and cautions self-defending words, ‘ eagerly taking blame upon myself, pouring out my heart to my friend IC atrongeirt language, overburdened i the exaggerations of impassioned nr. Had I been the evil man that Tilton now represents, I ahonld I been calmer and more prudent. It my horror of the evil imputed that a — -“‘•morbid intensity **- Bocaly, expressions, if oonveved to Mr. Tilton, would soothe wounded feeling, allay anger, and heal the whole trouble. He took down sentenooa and fr what I had been saying, to i a mediator. A full ataten random was made I shall give to the investigating committee. That these apologies wen ample to meet the faoUi of evident, in that they were accepted, that onr intercourse resumed its friendUnees, that Mr. Tilton subsequently ratified it in writing and that he has oontinned for four years si' within two weeks to bve with . ...... Is it oonoeivable, if the original charge had been what is now alleged, that he would have condoned the offence, not only with the mother of his children, but with him whom bo believed to have wronged them? The obtnrdity as well aa the falsity of this slory^ia a^|iareiit when it is considered rind this guilty ae fidelity for six months looked np in his own breast, and that then ha dirnigrd it to me only that there might be a re--I I Mr. Tilton has of langnagejmd to ita, declared his faith‘in his wife'i After tha reooneiliation of Mr. Tiltor iUi me every consideration of pro priety and honor demanded that th» family trouble ahonld be kept in tha! seclusion which domestic affairs have ■ right to claim as a sanotnry, and that to -collision it was determine*' (* ahonld
* confined.
F.very line and word of arj privhto and confidential letters Vhieb ■ have been pnblished ia in harmony with the staiementa which I now make. My i * toTshleldUiohon! propose to analyse
ZX forgive, makes this imperative duty, as calfcd forth by the miiloious atolement of my h ns band, the saddeet act of my thought rf following Yet I nee in this wanton act ao " ' milage from which I reply in detail to the twenty"rSuf
ZMS.
doily of hit life—“the Ae lived to crush oat Mr. Beecher; that the Qod -* *- ” he had alwayt
midnight, saying, 1 Elisabeth, alt letters sml papers concerning my difficulties with Mr. Beeohor sad Mr. Bowtm ore burned, destroyed ; now don't pow betray me, for I have nothing to de-
fend myself with.'"
•• Did yon believe that f said ha. '*1 certainly did, implieitij," ** Well, let me tell yon—they all l
not one ia destroyed.”
If this was said to intimidate me, it had qnito the contrary effect. I had
never been so foalieaa, npr clearly before with whom 11
a of yourself, lore tlie comma
rou will find it
.... U. Yon have years aa von now do.”
Rooted still further by the wickedness hid behind so false a mask, T — plied, “ Theodore, nnderatand this is the lost time yon call mo liely to walk through this filth. My character need." no vindication at this
te honr'roi
myself. Know also that if in thi I see a scrap of paper referring to any human being, however remote, which it seems to mo yon might nse or pervert for your ojrn ends, I will destroy "This means battle on your part,
then,” said he.
“ Jnst so for," I replied. ” —‘Jus because th I oinoe used to _ The next morning I «
brother and told him that now I decided to act in this matter; tl had been treated by my husband nonentity from the beginning, a play-, thing, to be used or let alone at will ; that it-hod always seemed to me I wi a party not • little onneerned. I the
■bowed him a card 11
my park I yielded
pablie prints; bat counseling myself and no other it occurred t that nmoug the brethren of my communion I might be heard. Not knowing of any church com tee, I asked toe privilege of saeL interview in the parlors of those who hed always been onr mutual friends Mr. and Mr*. Orington then Ii the first time that the commit meet that night, and advised fAose gentlemen, as perhaps the goodlioor£nglT did. The reiteration in bia statement that be had " persistently striven t< these so-called facta is utterly ! bis hatred to Mr. Beecher had io many years, and the del to ruin Mr. Beecher hoe been ot of his life. gain,‘the perfidy with which the holiest hr “ “—•**■■■ *•—
well nigh „ .
this, the endeavor, like the fly scandal of Mrs WoodhnII,
ttOB
“Griffith Gaunt.'
j pareUel." 11 ’
IM Mr. TSItan ~ Catharine, he would have see lifted myself beside it—as ne< u —— her character, and not the inof flotion surrounding it, ' which I referred. Here was no tin
or thought.
enfession ” with here I had
Tilton ia tolling of
nd pastor, one year add that, notwithstanding
,. seutations and anguish of soul, 1 owe to mv acquaintance e friendship with Mr. Beecher, os to other human instrumentality, that ■ oouragemebt in my mental life, a that growth toward the Divine natr. _
enable me to walk daily in a live-
1 of the life beyond,
ahamelnaa charges in artlolse ■even, eight, and nine are fearfully false in each and every particular. The letter referred to in Mr. Tilt tenth paragraph was obtained from by importunity, and by repreneDtoti that it wu neeeaaary for him to uae — his then pending difficulties with Mr, To wen. 1 was then sick, nigh nnto Ieath,'having suffered a miscarriage inly four days before. I signed what-
— a import- Th® paper - have never seen, aed do not know what statemantc it contained. * eighteen, a letter of mir j Mr Francis Moulton : quoted to prove, that I never duelled separation or was advised by Mr. ( Mrs Beecher to leave my husband, reply, the letter wsa of Mr. Tilton'eoweoncoeting. which he icduoed mo to copy and sign aa my own— an not which, in my weakness and mistaken thought to help him, I have done too often dnriag these unhappy yean. The implication that the harmony of i was unbroken liU Mr. Beecher it ns a frequent i friend, is a lamentable entire household where he himself, jv... oe- ' oe of Free Love, tsnptoti--* 1 — pbcnwaa not only godleas, but impure for my children. And in this effort and throe of agony, I would fain lift my daughters and » «•- insidious and
sar 1
my has band and my chi! Iren, the result being that their hearts wi and for which he was sow cuff
wpcmUm^toMlaf wUeb fbaartiiy a. EsSSsrcrv he left me to ibow it Ip his frie
he ealled npor friends, Mr. and Mrs Orington, there, with g shocking bravado, b_ 0 a winked tirade, adding with oath and Mrl^&asehes^cd'which^T'now^Bere
I did pan tod i it calmly withont, all night. Reflection npqn this scene at Mr. Orington’i otmvinoed me that, notwithstanding my husband's recent * ■ions to me, his former spirit changed ; that hi* declaration pentauce and affection were only for the purpose of gaining my as to aaoomplish his ends in his open Mr. Beecher. In the L„ _ these conclusions my duty appeared I roee quietly, and having dressed, roosed him only to say. “ Theodore, I
cited, and th»?Lo D( 5iad'beim n sen ted, perhaps—bnt leaving tormined aa before. How to aoconnt for the change which twenty-four houra have been capable of working in his mind, then many years put,I leave for the eternities with their mysteries to reveal. That hi reliable and uni * of truth-loving misfortune in this law, saa noar discover. Euubetii B. Tiutox. July 23, 1874. A Barren Country, The region of eonntiy between tl Becky Mountains and the Sier Nevada", stretching from Oregon to tl Gulf of California, has strange geographical characteristics, uya Major FowelL On the north it is drained by the southern branches of the Golnmbir
down from the mountains find way into the salt lakes, where sands of So desert. Throngh the middle of the country the Wasatch Mountains extend in a northerly and southerly direction, and a number of shorter ranges are found throughout the country, forming what is known u a Cordillera system. In late geological cinio activity—high plstosus carry dead volcanoes on their back, mesas are covered with sheets of black basalt, deeply eroded valleyi are beset with lava beds, and scoria and ashes are scattered over the land. TMT few rivers run in deep gorges, far below the general level of tho county, and the lakes are salt and alkaline, and almost destitute of life. Away from the mountaina the vegetation, beset with spinet and tbonis, is sombre grey—not olothing'the hills and plains, bnt dotted over the country, giving it a carious pepper and salt appear an os. On the mountain ■idea and elevated plateaus there are forests, but the trees are low and gnarled. Moot of the region is high, bold and arid; bnt only a few of the lower valleys are fit for cultivation, and is all the country no acre can be made produotive without ortifloal irrigation, i although this country is u large as that embraced in the New Eagland, Middle and Southern States, Kentucky -i i umber of acres fit
A Suva.—A femalealav* ia still held in Covert, N. Y. She live# in the Tuniaon family, aad ia probably 100 yean old, although he' ——• • not known. It •
EXPERIENCE OF YEARS. HSTaSHsSSsrs&SS
and tenderly cared for in her Dr. Pierre’s Favorite Prescription fa vary streorly F qcoity.^aad tq —
ER^IPFEd' obc
ir children. Try U
coapUzloB a noil SIWIssmc (S<
•vine meadoi ats gleaming
almost cloudless. The landscape, lacking a covering of verdure, without
beautiful grovex and stately forest*, ’ still attractive to the eve of th “ by reason of the wonderful fc rook with varied and brillim ‘ Mountain masaaa with erayaa__
athwmrt the country, and towering canon walla that overhang the streams r—>
rapid rivers that roll and plunge at aooareibto depths below the gene surface, give the country groat see
Light Without Matches.
iblong pul tn it a piece of phosphorus about the •toe of a pea, upon which pour some olive oil, healed to.the boiling point, filling the phial about one-third full and then seal the phial hermetically.
it obtained will be equal to that m as the light grows weak he increased by opening
. — In winter it is ~ necessary to heat the phial i the bsnda to increase the fluidity _e nth Thus prepared, the phial may be used for six months. The trivanoe ia now used by the watch of Paris in all magaiinea where explosive and inflammable matoriala an used.
Just Token HI* Bitters.
We heard a nedy-Iookiog individual with an alarmingly red nose remarf- *- a brother soaker that be had •' tart ' ' bitters, but he did not mind taking -* 1 -er nip.” “ -
a it. .
train of reflection. ' ' ourseivea. that the [town to bo a >y y, rum, and c
fonts, to which it
diseriminately. Bitter.. , suggested the idea of a healthful tonic,
notot a poisonous stimulant;
invigorating to the system, not
bolic irritant, full of fusel oll^ producing
, idiocy, or premature death. Ivor, our idea of bitters was totally nailable with “gin cocktail",
r*re^re'infOT»ed7are T metoned with sugar and rendered doubly ini—i—j wiifc weneo. colored by means
oerel poison. This ws* blttorwith a vengeance. We mentioned
r roWem to a friend. Be solved it by exclaiming : “ Why, don’t you know that most of Iheen bitters advertised aa
War win Tea as
AGENTS
an ssz
I“m
E'ssssa
Agents Make SISO &
THE HEW IMPROVED REMINGTON Sewing Machine. The “Medal for Progress,"
WATERS' CONCERTO ORGAN SgEpSSp&H'SS ggp&v&wtsnSkmi si
“EAT TO LIVE.’ ^ r. K. ailTH A oo.’*
CRUSHED
WHITE WHEAT. $5 £ sao KIT CARSON, f jw;.
'MjmrMxkk
SiKsrKSvtu-iTti; llvaifc." I’rrv lif.r.1
uul.oott-krorenmg-ot
properties of Dm WiLmt-e "Nrrrsas are Aperient, Dtanhorstie, Uro, N utritluus. Laxauva Worsen Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sndreific. AltareUvu and Antl-BlUaua (irafollil Thousands proclaim Vi*
>o Person can tako (hew Bitters a.ronling to directions, and remain long unwelL provided their houea are not doPreyed by uiinertl [lolaon or other, meana, and vital organs wasted' beyond .
BomlttPiit and Internittont Ferers, which are ao preva- — •*- ” ' — grea* tl— Mtatopipproimvffi , llliuoia, Tennessee, Cumberhind.Arkan saa. Red, Colorado, Brarce, Klo Grande, Peart, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro anoke, James, and many others, wltk their vast tributaries,. throughout car entire country during tbn Summer ami Autumn, and remarkably torturing aeainrariahly lecomBoalod by extensive derangement* of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In theii treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow. erful influence upon these various or guns, la reatintially neeeaaary. Then ia no cathartic for tho pnrpoae equal ») Dr. J. Walker’s Vixrqar Bittkrs. aa they will speedily remove the da: L colored viscid matter with which the
and generaily raatoring the healthy function* of tbe digeeure organs. ” the fRioj l aliist disensi
Dyspepsia or IndigNition, Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs. Tightness of tbe C'leal, Dimness, Soul Eructotiona of tho Stomach, Bud Taste in tho Mouth, BIBoon Attacks, Palnito tail on of the Hear-, lnli.uum-v.imi of Lungs, Pain in tuo regioc of tho Kidneys, and a bundi eii other painful symptoms, are tlic ofiqirinua o/ Dyspepsia. One bottle will pto ’c utxittcr guarantee of lie merits thati a leng'liy advertieoScrofula, or King s Evil, White Swelling", Ulcer*. Rryslpela*. Swelled Keck
..'liutennluolitFevers,Dianas.*ut the IU-ioJ. Liter, Kidnej-. sud^ jl.|*d,ler. are'cauned by vlhiS^lllbssi.. Mprlianlrnl Dlseasos.-Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setter", Gold-heator", and Miner*, a" they advance In life, are inbjeot to purely"!" of the Bowel". To guard
Scald-bead, Sore Eye*. Ko'wpela*. Iteb. Scurf", IJincoloration" of the Skin. Humnni and Disease" of the Skin M whatever
Pin, Tape, uid other Worms,
lurking in tbe stem of ~> ir J.y thoualkU. system of nitdieins, no rem. Juge*, no onthelmlnltloiarifi free the system from worms -
For Female Comp!nlntu. In young
or old. married or alnglo, at the dawn of womanhood. or the turn of life, there Tonis Bitters display re decided an Influaoce that
improvement Is "ooo peroenUblo. Cleanse the Vitiated Flood wl
* yon tim rein in
■largish in'tht reh»: clean.- itfiini: your feel inga will ’.eU you w] the blood para, and tho ’HiOth of:
Colorajo t Mis ajfl Tort.
m\%£r&3&iS2m H 0 Tl H btets
RICH FAMIHG LANDS S NEBRASKA, SALE VLRY CHEAP.
Send for “The Pioneer," a CAEN78 WAITED FOB hTeUJfJMl Cl?3S“S!52s=s3S
HOI FOR COLORADO! SS-T: Maiggasssagr

