WALTER B. SLOAN’S 
. ■: imfboved 
CONDITION POWDER 
I THE GREAT STANDARD MEDICINE 
For Horses and Cattle, 
' * . -r ; ;>7'.v o 
AwM WITH SPlCTAC’.tS 
i - ■■fr t ", 
; M TRUSSES.-. 
MOORE S RURAL NEW-YORKER, 
TS* LABGEST-CnKCCLATING 
AGRICULTURAL, LITERARY AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER 
rs rrBUSHSXi *v*av batcrd* v 
by d. d. t. MOORE, ROCHESTER, N.-J 
eyes, over which she bad a peculiar way of 
blinking her smooth -white eyelids;—and all 
about, the birds, the soft winds, the great green 
common witli its gorgeous furze-blossom blaz¬ 
ing against the low bank of clouds in the hori¬ 
zon. Close at hand a white pony was tranquilly 
cropping the grass, and two little village chil¬ 
dren were standing onteide the railings, gazing 
up open-mouthed at the pretty ladies who lived 
at the cottage, _ 
with tears; bnt she stitched them away and said j 
no more. 
Unfortunately the only money Mr. Barly could 
think of to lay his hands upon was that sum in 
the three per cents upon which they were now 
living; and even if he chose he could not touch 
any of it until Belinda came of age; unless, in¬ 
deed, young Mr. Griffiths would give him per¬ 
mission to do so. 
‘•Go to him, papa,” cried Anna, enthusiast¬ 
ically. “Go to him; entreat, insist upon it, if 
necessary.” 
All that evening Anna and Frances talked 
over their brilliant prospects. “ I should like to 
seethe Ogdens again,” said poor little Fanny. 
“ Perhaps we shall if we go back to Capulet 
Square.” “ Certainly, certainly,” said Anna. 
IN SUMMER TIME 
The jessamines in starry bloom 
Are ever climbing higher, 
Sweet odors fill the morning air 
From roses and sweet briar; 
Upon the purple clover-heads 
A thousand diamonds glisten, 
The robins sing tb.dr morning songs,— 
You cannot choose hut listen. 
The snowy lilies, silver bells, 
My UlieH, bow they blossom 1 
The sweetest saint In Paradise 
Might wear them on her bosom. 
Oh holy Hites, angel-pure, 
Too pnre for my caressing. 
A weary, weary human heart 
Comes unto you for blessing. 
The Saviour's lilies! shed your light 
On this day’s weary duty, 
And breathe into my restless heart 
Your faith, your love and beauty i 
Such whiteness,—see the silver leaves, 
Unstained amid the staining; 
Behold the lilies, how they grow, 
Then wither uncomplaining. 
Oh golden, golden summer months, 
The time of blooming roses, 
And each sweet bud on yonder spray 
Its tender grace discloses, 
So may the summer be a sign 
Of licit fltlr home of ours, 
Where God’s sweet summer ever smiles, 
Where bloom unfading flowers. 
Terms, in Advance: 
Three Dollars a Year— To Clubs and Agents 
follows:—Five copies one year, for 111: Seven, and one 
free to Club Agent, fOT $19; Ten, and one tree, for « 5 , 
and any greater cumber at the same rate—only 1250 pgj 
copy. Club papers directed to Individual* and sent to as 
many different Pcst-Offlee* as desired. As we pre-pay 
American postage on copies sent, abroad. I-^.TO if * he 
lowest Clnb rate for Canada, and |3A0 to Europe, Tie 
beet way to remit Is by Draft on New Tort, (less cost cl 
exchange,!—and all drafts made payable to the order of 
the Publisher, mat bb mailbb at his s:s-r 
jy fne above Terras and Rates most be strictly &d- 
ivyed *0 so long a> published. Those who remit les* 
than specified price lor a club or single copy, will be 
credited only as per rates. 
Remit by Draft. —Club Agente are requested to 
remit by Draft or P. O. Orders, whenever they can he 
obtained, and either can be sent at our risk. 
The clouds which had been gathering all the 
afternoon broke shortly before Mr. Barly reached 
his entertainer’s house. He had tried to get 
there through Kensington Gardens, hut could 
uot make out theway,and went wandering round 
and round in some perplexity under the great 
trees with their creaking hranchcs. The storm 
did not last long and the clouds dispersed at 
sunset. When Mr. Barly rang at the gate of the 
villa in Ca6tle Gardens at la-t that evening he 
was very weary, wet through, and far less tri¬ 
umphant than he bad been when he lefthome in 
the morning. The butler who let him in gave 
the bag which he had been carrying to the foot¬ 
man, and showed him up stab* immediately, to 
the comfortable room which had been made 
ready for him. Upholsters had done the work 
on the whole better than Belle with all her lov¬ 
ing labor. The chairs were softer than her print- 
covered horsehair cushions. The wax lights were 
burning although it w«b broad daylight. Mr. 
Barly went to the bay window. The garden 
outside was a Eight to see. Smooth lavens, 
arches, roses iu profusion and abundance, hang¬ 
ing and climbing and clustering everywhere, a 
old man, began to exclaim at Belinda’s behav¬ 
ior, to irritate him and overwhelm him with 
allusions and reproaches. 
“ Scrubbing and slaving with her owd hands,’’ 
said Anna. “Forgetting herself; bringing us 
down lower indeed than we arc already sunk, 
l’apa, she will not listen to me. You should 
tell,her that you forbid her to put us a)l to 
shame by her behavior.” 
When Belle, panting, weary, triumphant, and 
with a blackened nose and rosy check, opened 
the door of Die room presently and called her 
father exultantly, she did not notice, as she ran 
up stairs before him, how wearily he followed 
her. A flood of light came from the dreary 
little room overhead. It had been transformed 
into a bower of white dimity, bright windows, 
clean muslin blinds. Tbe fusty old carpet was 
gone, and a clean crumb-cloth bad been put 
down, with a comfortable rug before the fire¬ 
place. A nosegay of jasmine stood on the 
chimney, aud at each corner of the four-post 
bed the absurd young decorator had stuck a 
smart bow, made out of some of her own blue 
ribbons, in; place of the terrible plumes and 
tassels which had waved there in dust and dark¬ 
ness before. One of the two arm-choirs which 
blocked up the wall of the dining-room had 
been also covered out of some of Belinda’s 
stores, and stood comfortably near the open 
window. The snn was setting over the great 
common outside, behind the mill and distant 
fringe of elm-trees. Martha, standing all illu¬ 
minated by the sunshine, with her mop in her 
hand, was grinning from ear to car, aud Belle 
A Medical Faculty and approved by Ws- 
Yfer Commissioners. Colts less than 
j Lead Pipe, aud la murli st ronger. R t 
if cent improvements enable us to sup. 
/ ttlv THIS ripe at a I.KSS price per 
foot than common Lead ripe. To for 
nub the cost per loot please state the 
: ot m uter and bore of pipe Pamphlets 
ijjlfcatton. Addre°s THE COLWEUA 
ARD MANUFACTURING COMPANY 
i-gt .New York. 9i<m 
PURE 
WATER. 
head or pressure 
sent FRKr. on an: 
SHAW * Wll-iV 
USE PRATT &. DUTCH Ell’S 
[From the Cornblll Magazine.] 
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST 
CELEBRATED MAGIC OIL, 
Warranted in cases of KhenmMism, Neuralgia, Bruise 
or Puius. 
should not allow it. Anna did not know what 
he meant. 
Belinda was not easy about her father all this 
time. He came and went in an odd, excited 
sort of way, stopping short sometimes as he was 
walking across the room, and standing absorbed 
in thought. One day he went into the city un¬ 
expectedly, about tbe middle of the day, and 
came buck looking quhe odd, pale, with carious 
eyes; something was wrong, she could not tell 
what. In the meantime Wheal Trc Rosa* seem¬ 
ed, spite of Mr. Griffiths’ prophecies, to be 
steadily rising in tbe world. More business 
had been done, the shares were a trifle higher. 
A meeting of directors was convened, and actu¬ 
ally a small dividend was declared at Midsum¬ 
mer. It really seemed as if there was some 
chance, after all, that Anna should be reinstated 
in the barouche, iu Capulet Square, and her 
place in society.. She and Fanny were half wild 
with delight. IWhen we leave,” was the be¬ 
ginning of even,,sentence they uttered. Fanny 
wrote the goad > ews to her friend Miss Ogden, 
and, under those .circumstances, to Fanny’s un¬ 
feigned dcligh,,’ 7 -*mily Ogden thought herself 
justified in driving over to the village one fine 
afternoon and affably partaking of a cracked 
cupful of five-o’clock tea. It was slightly 
smoked, and the milk was turned. Belinda 
had gone out for a walk, and was not there to 
I am afraid she did not quite for- 
BY MISS THACKERAY, 
AUTHOR OF “ THE VILLAGE ON THE CLIFF,” ETC. 
PART I. 
[Continued from pa:e 249, last number.] 
III. 
Belle exclaimed, but it required all her cour¬ 
age aud natural brightness of spirit to go on 
looking at the bright side of things, praising 
the cottage, working in the garden, giving 
secret assistance to the two bewildered maids 
who waited on the. reduced little family, cheer¬ 
ing her father, smiling, and putting the best 
face on t hings, as her sisters used to do at home. 
If it bad been all front stairs in Capulet Square, 
it wob all; hack staircase at the cottage. Rural 
roses,'calm sunsets, long shadows across the 
common arc all very well; hut when puffs of 
smoke come out of the ehimuey and till tbe 
little place; when, if the window Is opened, a 
rublfof wind and dust—worse almost than the 
Bmoko—comes eddying into the room, and 
careers round the four narrow wull6 ; when 
poor little Fanny coughs and shudders, and 
wraps her shawl more closely around her with 
a groan ; when the smell of the kitchen frying- 
The Best and Cheapest Horse and Cattle 
Medicine In the World! 
Used throughout the United State it and Can. 
adds durtnff the last Hit 
For the cure of the various Disease* to which 
Horn-sand Cal 1 le are subject; such as 
Founder, Distemper, Hide Bound, Loss 
of Appetite, Inward Hindus, Yellow 
Wider, Fistula, Poll Evil, Scrat ches or 
Urease, Man trc, I u (lamination of the 
Eyes, and Fatigue from Hard Labor; 
also, Rlieunaataam, (commonly called 
Stiff complain u), which proves latal to so 
many valuable horses in this country. 
out of the cupboard, and block beetles lie strug¬ 
gling in the milk-jugs, and the pump runs dry, 
and spiders crawl out of the tea-caddy, and so 
forth; then, indeed, Belle deserves some credit 
for being cheerful under difficulties. She could 
not pretend to very high Epirlts, but 6lie was 
brisk and willing, and ready to smile at her 
father’s .little occasional puns aud feeble at¬ 
tempts at jocularity. Anna, who had been so 
admirable as a general, broke down under the 
fatigue of the actual labor in the trenches which 
belonged to their new life, A great many peo¬ 
ple can order others about very brilliantly and 
satisfactorily, who fail when they have to do 
the work themselves. 
Some of the neighbors called upon them, hut 
the Ogdens never appeared. Poor little Fanny 
used to. take her lace-work and sit stitching and 
looping her thread at the window which over¬ 
looked the common and its broad roads, cross¬ 
ing aud reeroshing tbe plain ; carriages came 
rolling along, people came walking, children 
ran past the windows of tbe little cottage, hut 
the Ogdens never. Once Fanny thought she 
recognized the barouche,—Lady Ogden and 
Emily sitting in iVont, Matthew Ogden ou the 
hack seat; surely, yes, surely it was him. But 
the carriage rolled off in a cloud of dust, ami 
disappeared behind the wall of the neighboring 
park ; aud Frances finished the loop, and passed 
her nccclle In and out of the muslin, feeling as 
if it was through her poor little heart that she 
was piercing and sticking; she pulled out a 
long thread, and It seemed to her as if the sun¬ 
set stained it red like blood. 
In the meanwhile Belle’s voice had been sing¬ 
ing away overhead, aud Fanny, going up stairs 
presently, found her, with one of the maids, 
clearing out one of the upper rooms. The win¬ 
dow was open, the furniture was piled up in the 
middle. Belle, with her sleeves tucked up aud 
her dress carefully pinned out ot the dust, was 
standing on a chair, hammer in hand, and fixing 
up some dimity curtains against the window. 
Tablecloths, brooms, pails, and brushes were 
lying about, and everything looked in perfect 
confusion. As Fanny stood looking and ex¬ 
claiming, Anna also came to the door from her 
owu room, where she had been taking a melan¬ 
choly nap. 
“ What a mess you are making here,” cried 
the elder sister very angrily. ” How can you 
take up Martha’s time, Belinda? And oh ! how 
can you forget yourself to this degree? Yon 
seem to exult iu your father’s disgrace.” Be¬ 
linda flushed up. 
"Really, Anna, I do not know what you 
mean,” said she, turning round, vexed for a 
minute, and clasping a long curtain in both 
arms. “I could not bear to see xny father's 
room looking so shabby and neglected; there 
ia no disgrace in attending to his comfort. See, 
we have taken down those dusty curtains and 
we are going to put up some others,” £&id the 
girl, springing down from the chair and exhibit¬ 
ing her treasures. 
see to it all 
give Emily the part she had played, and could 
not make up her mind to meet her. 
One morning Anna was much excited by the 
arrival of a letter directed to Mr. Barly in great 
round handwriting, and with a huge seal, all 
over bears and griffins. Her father was forever 
expecting news of his beloved Tre Rosas, and 
he broke the seal with some curiosity. But this 
was only au invitation to diue and sleep at Cas¬ 
tle Gardens from Mr, Griffiths, who said he hud 
au offer to make Mr. Barly, and concluded by 
saying that he hoped Mr. Barly forgave him for 
the ungracious part he had been obliged to play 
the other day, aud that, in like circumstances, 
he would do the same by him. 
“I shan't go,” said Mr. Barly, a little dog¬ 
gedly, putting the letter dowu. 
“Not go, papa! Why, you may be able to 
talk him over if you get him quietly to yourself. 
Certaiuly, you must go, papa,” said Anna. “ O, 
I’m sure he means to relent,—how nice!” said 
Fanny. Even Belinda thought it was a pity he 
should not accept the invitation, and Mr. Barly 
gave way as usual. He asked them if they had 
any commands for him in town. 
“0, thank you, papa,” said Frances. “If 
you are going ehoping, I wish you would bring 
me back a blue alpaca, and a white grenadine, 
and a pink sou-poult, aud a — ” 
“ My dear Fanny, that will be quite sufficient 
for the short time you remain here,” interrupted 
Anna, who went on to give her father several 
commissions of her own,—some writiug-paper 
stamped with Barly Lodge and their crest in one 
corner; a jacket with buttons for the knife-boy 
they had lately engaged upon the strength of 
their coming good fortune; a new umbrella, 
house-agent’s list of mansions in the neighbor¬ 
hood of Capulet Square, the Journal des Modes, 
and the New Court Guide. “Let me see, there 
was something else,” said Anna. 
“Belle,” said Mr. Barly, “how comes it you 
ask for nothing? What can 1 bring you, my 
SLOAN'S CONDITION POWDER 
Hum I tin largest sale of any Horse ami Cattle Medi¬ 
cine iu till- country. It is composed of lioi 1m and root*, 
mid for mildnea*, safety, certainty and thorouelmw. 
sLtmW pre-eminently at the hsad of tbe list of Hunt 
and Catilr. Medicine*. 
It carries off all grc«i humors, prevents horse* from 
bfcomiug stiff' or foundering, purities the blood, looter* 
(lie skin, and give* ii a smooth and glossy appear iimv 
cleanses the water and strengthens every part of the 
body. It is also 11 safe aud certain remedy fur coughs 
and colds,which generate so many fatal diseases. 
The Cow requires to he suppto'd With nn abuml*’ 1 
of food—not to make her fit—this le not desirable, 
hut to keep up au-gulnr secretion or milk, and ail 
owners of cows will find by giving them 
SLOAN’S CONDITION POWDERS 
twice a week, a large iueroflse iti quantity and quality 
of milk and cream. It carries off all fever and impar¬ 
ities of the blood. The effect is seen throughout the 
season by u. rich and abundant flow of milk. 
The farmer is beginning to he aware of the valuabk 
properties of KloiiiFs Uonlllllon J'owtler, in 
promoting the conditionedhia sheep and preventing 
many of the diseases of nil the domesticated animal*. 
summer, with snusmne nooning ana sprcaamg 
over the country. Anna and Fanny were able 
to get out a little now, but they were soon tired, 
aud would 6it down under a tree and remark to 
one another how greatly they raiHsed their ac¬ 
customed drives. Belinda, who had sometimes 
at first disappeared now and then to cry mys¬ 
teriously a little bit by herself over her troubles, 
now discovered that at eighteen, with good 
health and plenty to do, happiness is possible, 
even without a carriage. 
One day Mr. Barly, who still went into the 
city from habit, come home with Borne news 
which had greatly excited him. Wheal Tre 
Rosas, of which he still held a great many 
shares which he had never been able to dispose 
of, had been giving some signs of life. A lresh 
call was to be made: some capitalist, with more 
money than he evidently knew what to do with, 
had been buying up a great deal of the 6tock. 
The works were to be resumed. Mr. Barly had 
always been satisfied that the concern was a 
good one. He would give everything he had, 
he told Anna that evening, to be able to raise 
enough money now to buy up more of the 
shares. His fortune was made if he could do 
so; his children replaced in their proper posi¬ 
tion, and his name restored. Anna was in a 
state, of greater flutter, if possible, than her 
father himself. Belie sighed; she could not 
help feeling doubtful, but she did not like to 
say much on the subject. 
"Papa, this "Wheal has proved a very treach¬ 
erous wheel of fortune to ns,” she hazarded, 
blushing, and bending over her sewing; “we 
are very, very happy as we are.” 
“ Happy ?” said Auua with n soeer. 
“ Really, Belinda, you are too romantic,” said 
Fanny, with a titter; while Mr. Barly cried out, 
in an excited way, “ that she. should be happier 
yet, aud all her goodness and dutifulness should 
be rewarded in time.” A sort of presentiment 
l of evil came over Belinda, and her eyes filled up 
fifty cent package of Rlonn's Uoinlifto 1 * 
Powder plit into a barrel of swill is better tlian 1 
l>UAlirl of earn to fatten a bog. and is a certain preven¬ 
tive of Hog Cholera, Blind Stuggeia, and other diieasr* 
common anions: hogs. 
CAUTION.— To protect ourselves and the public 
from being imposed npon by worthless imitations, ta 
genuine will bear The fac simile signature oi the pro¬ 
prietors on the wrapper. 
PRICE 23 & 60 CTS. PER PACK AGE. 
For sale by Druggists and Merchant* everywhere. 
It was very late. There was nothing else to 
be done. Mr. Barly found a fire lighted in the 
great dining-room, dinner laid, one plate and 
one knife and fork, at the end of the long table. 
The dinner was excellent, so was the wine. The 
butler uncorked a bottle oi ehampaigne, the cook 
sent up chickens and all sorts of good things. 
Mr. Barly almost felt as if he by some strange 
metempsychosis, had been converted into the 
owner of this handsome dwelling, and all that 
belonged to it. At twelve o’clock Mr. Griffiths 
had not yet returned, aud his guest, after a some¬ 
what perplexed and solitary meal, retired to rest. 
— [To be continued, j 
A Nice Distinction.—“I fear,” saidacouutry 
curate to his flock, “ when I explained to you in 
Bole Proprietors, Cbicag 
P. 0. Drawer 5S26. 
General Wliole*aln Agents.—N kwY 
Fraser* Lee. F. C. Wells & Co., W. II. Schteffelin 
Denies Barnes & Co., Hall & Ruck el, McKesson A 
bios. 
a UNCOMFOBjA 
BLE TRUSSES- 
No. 110 Lesfii'-'toVAveaue,corner c 
,yi . 00 , seat by ma 
East £oth Street 
