ai a v cl li: V C cl W c t I i'. t AM) HOUSEHOLD. reeding- Fowls and Chickens. For old fowls in snmmpr ft mixture of - i half bran nnd one-half Indian meal 'alilod) for brpakfaBt. Buckwheat, n iiorit, oata and corn at night. Corn is 0 pooreKt grain for producing eggs; 1 .pat or buckwheat the beat. Soroenings i of not much value. I keep old mor r, ground oyster sheila, gravel dust, box ilh dry earth and a little flour of sulphur orein. There is nothing your fowls ( light in more than a box of hard coal 4hes. In winter I use chopped chand ore' scraps or boil beef heads all day in a boiler in my poultry house, also add i ipt chopped turnips, potatoes, onions or cnbbage, and at night turn the whole ai to a large iron vat, thicken it suffici- ntly to be as dry as it can be well 'mixed. Cover the vat, and in the morn ing it is just warm enough. Those Looping only a few fowls need not at tempt anything like this, as the scraps of this and that from the table will oauHe your poultry and eggs to cost next to nothing. The drinking vessels should be frequently (every day in summer) rubbed inside and rinsed to prevent the accumulation of green slime, so detri mental to health. Fowls will do best if feed is constantly varied. Feed for Chtoks. In early spring, Indian meal scalded, meat once per day, grass if it can be had, where tkey can gather it for themselves. If too early f or this, raw turnips chopped very fine, cabbage, lettuce, etc. Wlien warm weather comes I discontinue the meat, as it has a tendency to make large eombs; but if your chicks have a good run and they are not too numerous, they will pick up considerable animal food in the shape of bugs, crickets, grasshop pers, etc., which reminds ns that a few thicks can be raised at little or no expense. But when you crowd a large number on a small piece of ground their cost is more. Fresh fish in summer is excellent (boiled) for young chicks. When I go fishing the clucks always get ilioir share. Bone meal is good mixed vith their feed. For their last feed I 1 1 se invariably cracked corn, wheat, or ome other grain they can eat, as soft f on digests, while grain will last nearly :i night. Although corn and corn meal e not rood for the egg producer. I consider it the very best thing for grow : chicks. 1 also provide ground oyster 'iolls in plenty. Do not neglect their ipply of pure water, several times per 7, if necessary, and rub out the water bea every day to clear them from the -eon slime. When you shut them up i night do not let many huddle to- ther, nor shut them so secure that ey will be without plenty of pure air. lut holes in their boxes in different places (for summer) and nail on pieces . wire netting to exclude rats, etc., or bore inch holes with an anger. Separate sexes as soon as they show signs of ma turity, if you desire large, fowls. When the chicks begin to roost see that their roosts are large enough so the chicks will not be deformed. The roost I in variably use for all my yards is a two by four inch joist (four each Bide np)ronnd f d on top. Sweet or sour milk is" excel 'i ct for fowls and chicks, mixed with heir soft feed. Young Asiatics (Brahraas and Cochins) ould be fed all they can eat, at least roe times per day. But do not expect I Asiatics to lay either large, fertile or morons eggs if fat. They should not fed all they can eat. I feed old stock ee per day. A young cockerel needs re food than old hens, and when I od this way I nail a cup or box of u high enough that the cockerel may from it, but too high for the hens. grass run is indispensable for the Ith and comfort of any flock of fowls, more hours per day you give them ' his the better they will do. In win , cabbage hung by a cord in their i is excellent. Instead of this I gen- !y use large raw turnips cut in two 1 run through the half a one-fourth i pointed wire, with the other end y fixed in a board to keep the turnip ys cut side up. O. S. Josselyn'a Jogue. Household Hints. remove mildew, taie equal parts of i juice, salt, starch and soft soap; n thickly, lay on the grass in the in. Renew the application two or times a day. mixture of red lead, Indian meal lolassea will be eagerly eaten by ,and will soon exteiminate them. raen, phosphorus or arsenio are ijos used, but are very dangerous. . to which roaches have a great ; by, will drive them away. uegged boots are oseasionally i with petroleum between the nd upper leather, they will not the soles of boots and shoes are 1 with petroleum they will resist 1 wear well. The pegs, it is said. I affected by dryness after being . uiruteu wiiu me iiqnm. i H'ectual and inexpensive deodori obtained by dissolving half a dram rate ;of lead in a pint of boiling and two drams of common salt in of water; the two solutions are ixed and the sediment allowed to A cloth dipped in the liquid and ..p in the apartment is .all that is cl to purify the most fetid atmos. . It is recommended for its cheaD- a pound of the materials costing t. iweniy-nve cents. oipe for varnish suitable for wal o. : J apan 2 quarts, coach varnish Jarpentine spirits 1 quart. 4 ounces. Shave the wax up it it in the tarpentine in a tin fid place the latter in hot water - .-ton ton to are fused; then add it er ingredients and shake well, should be of the best quali mixture dries without crack ; Las a beautiful, soft appearance; .ble for either inside or outside c a Pancakes. To make French ,f, ia&e i wo eggs, iwo ouncts two ounces sifted sugar, two of flour, half a pint of new milk. 'ie eggs thoroughly, and put them i bain with the butter, which i beaten toa cream; stir in the I flour, and when these ingre m ell mixed, stir in the milk, r and beating the mixture ntes. Serve with a cut and pile tLepancakes t layer of preserve or FOR TOUNtt TEOPLE. A Long- Journey. ".We Mil to-dav," said the captain gay, Ai be stopped on board ths boat that lay So high and dry. " Come now, be spry; We'll land at Jerusalem by and by I" Away they sailed, and each craft they bailed ; While down in the cabin they balled and balled ; For the sea was rough, and they bad to luff And tack, till the captain cried out " Enough I" They stopped at Pern, this Jolly crew, v" And went to Paris snd Tlmbuctoo ; And after a while they found the Nile, And watched the sports of the crocodile. They called on the 8hah, and the mighty Csar, And on all the crowned heads near and far ; Shook hands with the Cld they really did I And lunched on top of the pyramid I To Afrlo's strand or northern land, They steer as the captain gives command ; And fly so fast that the tender mast Goes quivering, shivering In the blast 1 Then on to the ground with s sudden bound, Leaps Jack t was a mercy he wasnt drowned 1 The sail Is furled, the anchor hurled, We've been," cry the children, all round ths world I" By billows toeiifrt, by tempests crossed, Vet never a soul c board was lost I Though the boat be a sieve, I do not grieve, They sail on the ocean of Make-believe.' ' Josephine rollard in St. Sichola. Olaster Munlfiasi. The Emperor Monetezuma was a great man, and historians have recorded much about him, but of his earlier life, when he was plain Master Montezuma, com paratively little is known of this rising young gentleman. Master Montezuma commenced his earthly career as a crying baby, in the year "one cane," which, when properly figured down according to the Gregorian calendar, would be about the year of our Lord 1480. No booner had Master Montezuma reached the fourth day of his existence, than the nurse, under instructions from his anxious mamma, took off what few clothes the poor boy had on, and repair ing to the baptismal font in the yard, sprinkled cold water upon his naked breast and lips, presented his credentials in the shape of offerings to propitiate the gods of war, agriculture, and so on, repeated a prayer in which " the Lord was implored to wash away the sin mat was given mm before the founda tion of the world, so that the child might be born anew," and told the three little boys who sat near by, what Master Montezuma's name was to be. The three little boys left off eating their parched corn and boiled beans, repeated the name, and the little baby was chris tened. Now, if Master Montezuma -had been a girl which he was not the offerings would have been a mat. a spinning machine and a broom, all of which would have been buried under the metate, me stone . where corn was ground. As it was, the offerings were implements of war, articles of metal. pottery, etc, and these were buried, as near as they could guess at the location. where they either hoped or feared there might some day be a battle with their enemies. When Master Montezuma had eaten and slept and kicked and cried for six teen days longer, his parents took him to the priest, and to the teacher, and promised that he should be instructed by these worthy gentlemen in war. poll tics, religion and other branches of gen eral education. They promised that he should be an Alfalqui, or priest, and should also serve in the army as a sol dier. In that little, wiggling babv. that seemed all fists and mouth, it was im possible to foresee the future Emperor of Mexico, whoso name has since become familiar to the civilized world. Young Master Montezuma worried along pretty well, and up to six years of age had done nothing remarkable. At this age he was granted one and one-half rolls at a meal, and commenced doing little errands and picking up scattered beans and corn in the Tianquez, which is what the Mexicans called the market place. The restless spirit of a military chief tain now began to show itself in the embryo warrior, and, by the time he had reached his eighth year, discipline became necessary to curb his growing inclination to despotism. He was faat becoming one of that class of boys who think " it's too bad to be good all the time ;" and, no doubt, life sometimes seemed hard to him, for the hieroglyphic pictures often show him at this period of his life as shedding large tears. Whether Master Montezuma was sorry that he had done wrong, or whether he only feared being pricked with the ter rible thorns of the aloe with which chil dren of that barbarous era were some times punished, or was crying because he was cold, who shall tell ? It is hard, sometimes, to tell what eight-year-old boys are crying for, whether they live in the United States or in Mexico. Master Montezuma may have been better than most boys, and it may be that his father was a better driver than leader for his little ones. Some fathers are. In any event, when Master Monte zuma was ten years old there came another opportunity for weeping and wailing, and Master Montezuma was submitted to the mortification of lying on the damp ground all day while he listened to a parental lecture ; and this, too, after he was twelve years old ! Then Master Montezuma reformeJ, and became an industrious, faithful boy, I have sometimes questioned whether he wasn't hungry, and if he had been better fed whether he would not have done better. At fourteen years of age th3y gave him two rolls at a meal, and he was instructed in the art of fishing with a net. When his fifteenth year came, Master Montezuma found he would have plenty to do. After this, old Mr. Montezuma had no trouble with him. It is curious the more we have to do, the less liable we are to do something we should not, and let us all study on that half an hour, Borne day, and see what we can make of it. &t. Nicholas.. An old lady, upon seeing a placard in a store window announcing " one price for all," was mightily disappointed when she went in and discovered that instead of being able to buy all in the window for one dollar and a half, she must pay one price" for one article. And now you cannot uisauuse ner rain a 01 the idea that some tore-keepers will lie. TIMELY TOriCS. There are over 1,500 persons arrested in New York each week on criminal charges. Over a million acres of land in India are devoted to the growth of the poppy. The demand for opium is increasing al over the world. The late Prof Ilenry, of the Smithso nian Institute, was in early life a watch maker, and ever afterward he was able to make the most delicate instruments with whioh to experiment. This was an advantage to him, for he was not com pelled to rely upon others for his ma chines. Mr. and Mrs. Tyler separated in Hope, Mich., agreeing that each should be entirely free from interference by the other. Mrs. Tyler became a house keeper for a bachelor, and Tylor, in stead of sticking to the compact, wont to her new home with a party of friends and tarred and feathered her. A few days later Tyler was killed. From the returns of the British Board of Trade for the first quarter of 1878 it appears that the exports of breadstuffs from this country to Great Britain wore $17,000,000 in excess of tho amount in the corresponding period of last year, while our exports of cotton decreased $7,500,000 in the same time. The in crease in wheat was $10,000,000; flour, $3,000,000; and corn, $4,000,000. The annual crop of cat stories has been enlarged by the following full grown specimen : A sagaoious &t. Louis cat observed that two of her kittens were invariably saved and the rest of the litter thrown into the Mississippi. Again becoming a happy mother, she hid two of her babies in an outhouse and carried the rest in a different direc tion. Investigation showed that she de liberately took them to the river and threw them in, evidently preferring to select herself the two kittens she wished to rear. The raising, cnlture. spinning and weaving of silk and its preparation and introduction into market as a source of profit to the colored people of the South are among the ambitious objects for which Lowery's Industrial Academy in Uuntsviiie, Ala., lias been founded. Twenty-five acres of land,- with build ings costing originally over $100,000, have been leased, and the owner, ex Governor Reuben Chapman, has offered to give the entire property to the foun ders if they will secure an ' endowment fund by which the academy can be firm ly and permanently established. The difference of longitude between London, Constantinople and St. Peters burg gives rise in these days of telegraphs to singular embarrassments. There are three hours of time between the first and second and third capitals. The lat ter can send telegrams until late in their day and must sit up late at night to re ceive those sent in the afternoon from London. Were San Francisco the seat of negotiations the diplomatists would be obliged to say, for instance, on Tues day: " We have received your Wednes day telegrams," or We "have received to-day your telegrams dated to-morrow. John Votrin was a brakeman on the Iron Mountain Railroad, and lost his left arm at the shoulder by being run over at a switch near Chouteau avenue, St Louis. After opening the switch for the train to pass, he started to run across the track, but his foot was caught in a frog or under the switch-rod, and he fell and narrowly escaped with his life. He sued the company for $20,000 damages, holding that they were responsible for the accident. The case was a hot one, lasting two days. The jury were out but a few minutes, and returned a ver dict for the plaintiff for $10,000 dama ges. A day or two previous, in a case where a man had lost both an arm and a leg from a similar accident, the jury failed to agree. The terrible sufferings of a Tenth Cavalry company on the Staked Plain of Texas, through thirst, are described by Surgeon King. They were four days without water, and the weather was in tensely hot. Their predicament was caused by the death of their guide, leav ing them to wander by themselves until a spring was finally found. Their mouths became so dry that brown sugar would not melt in them. Their voices grew weak and strange, and their sight dim, and when asleep they dreamed of banqueting. A sense of suffocation was extremely painful. They drank water greedily, but it did not quench their thirst which shows, the surgeon thinks, that the sense of thirst resides not in the stomach, bnt in the general system, and in this ca-e 'could not be relieved until the remote tissues were supplied. Watchmakers Abroad and at Home. Watchmakers are a people who as a class do not make much noise in the world. Their occupation is essentially sedentary too much so, if it could be avoided, and requires an exceptional amount of attention. Medical students are known to be extra buoyant, so that they have grown to be too much for even the London musio halls, and most trades and professions are often brought to publio notice as participants in some more or less sooial festivity. Watch makers in this country have very little esprit de corps. It they are German as most of them are they are Germans first of all ; perhaps they are Suabians, or Odd Fellows, but they are only watchmakers in business, and incident ally, and they seldom come together gregariously. The isolated native watch maker most generally has his work done for him vicariously, and has little of the knowledge or traditions of the craft he ostensibly belongs to. The whole brotherhood of watchmakers in Europe, especially on the continent, live on another footing. Every second adult is a watchmaker in Geneva, and the pro portion of time men in Besanoon, Neu chatel, and some other places is so great that the attraction of craft and the jealousy of trade lose their power. In every town in Germany the jewelers have a union for tho transaction of trade, self-protection and social enjoyment. Jeweler, Silversmith and Watchmaker, The Dotc's Mosqne. In the city of Stambonl, the Dove's Mosque, or the Mosque of Bajazet II has a special charm. The court, eutored by pates elaborately decorated in ara borqne, is exceedingly beautiful. In the center is a marble fountain under a canopy and sheltered by a cluster of fine trees. As you enter the court yon hear the roar of wings, and for a moment the air is darkened with the sudden flight of myriads of doves. These birds, the offspring of a pair purchased from a poor woman by Sultan Bajazet and pre sented to the mosque, are as sacred as was the ibis of old. A grave and rev erend fellow with a huge turban sits un der the cloister and sells grain to the faithful and the fickle. The former feed the doves for charity, the latter for fno. While the fountain is knee-deep with swarming birds and the trees clogged with them and all the eaves of the clois ter lined, and even the high galleries of the slender minarets not nnvisited by these feathered dervishes, you throw a handful of wheat into the court, and like a thunder-cloud the whole tribe swoops upon yon with the rush and roar of a storm. They crowd one another and heap themselves together and stand on their heads in their eagerness to get a morsel of grain. In a moment some one enters the court, and the birds take flight, stirring the wind in the cloister and filling the air with soft, floating down. A turbaned greybeard near by sells rosaries and perfnmes, and there is also the fellow at the gate who cries "Sherbet," and clashes his brazen cups till they ring like cymbals, and there are loungers from dawn to dark who drop in to see the doves of Bajazet plunge into the court like an avalanche of dusky, impurpled snow, and wheel out of it again a winged cloud of smoke. At the mosque on Fridays there is a dis tribution of bread to dogs, and the hungry fellows come from all parts of the city to get their portion. A Masical Tramp. A lady residing in the vicinity of the ".ailw T)ara Mina in Hi w ATil X Carfn Nev., while attending to her household duties the other morning, was addressed by a seedy-looking man, who asked for a drink of water, He was evidently a tramp; yet there was an air about him that bespoke gentle breeding. He drank the cup of water banded him, and, looking into the house, saw an opened piano. Apologizing for the lib erty, he asked permission to play on the instrument. His request was granted by the somewhat astonished lady. Seat ing himself at the piano, and removing the music-book from the rack, he opened with the overture of " Tancredi," which he followed with half a dozen gems from grand operas. Without even a pause he changed off into sparkling an s from the " Grand JJuchess, " Gir-ofle-Girofla," and other comio operas, finally winding up with the allegretto of Beethoven's symphony in A. He played for nearly an hour, yet, during that time, the lady of the house, once a musio teacher in this city, sat amazed and, as she says, " entranced." She en deavored to lead him into conversation over his past history and asked him why he did not practice a profession for which he was bo eminently fit, but he refused to speak, and in reply to inqui ries merely said that he was poor and in search of work. After partaking of a good meal, in payment for which he split a few logs of wood in the yard, he continued on his way down the canon. Virginia City Chronicle. Bride and Bridegroom a Century Ago. To begin with the lady : Her looks were strained upwards over an immense cushion that sat like an incubus on her head, and plastered over with ftomatum. and then sprinkled over with a shower of white powder. The height of this tower was somewhat over a foot. One single white rosebud lay on its top like an eagle on a haystack. Over her neck and bosom was folded a lace handker chief, fastened in front by a bosom-pin rather larger than a copper cent, con taining her grandfather's miniature set in virgin gold. Her airy form was braced up in a satin dress, the sleeves as tight as the natural skin of the arm, with a waist formed by a bodice, worn outside, whbnce the sKirt flowed off, and was distended at the top by an ample hoop. Shoes of white kid, with peaked toes, and heels of two or three inches elevation, enclosed her feet, and glitter ed with spangles. Now for the swain : His hair was sleeked back and plenti fully befiowered, while his queue pro jected like the handle of a skillet. His coat was a sky-blue silk, lined with yel low ; his long vest of white satin, em broidered with gold lace ; his breeches of the same material, and tied at the knee with pink ribbon. White silk stockings and pumps with laces, and ties of the same hue, completed the habili ments of his nether limbs. Lace ruffles clustered around his wrist, and a por tentous frill, worked in corresponding style, and bearing the miniature of his beloved, finished his appearanoe. A Mystery of Perfume. No one has yet been able to analyze or demonstrate the essential action of per fume. Gas can be weighed but not scent. The smallest known creatures the very monads of life can be caught by a microscopic lens and made to de liver up the secrets of their organization, but what it is that emanates from the paunch of the musk deer that fills a whole space for years with its penetrat ing odor an odor that an illimitable number of extraneous substances can carry off without diminishing its size aud weight and what it is that the warm summer brings to ns from the flowers, no man has yet .been able to determine. So fine, bo subtle, so imponderable, it has eluded both our delicate weights and measures and our strongest senses. If we come to the essence of each odor we should have made an enormous stride forward, both in hygiene and chemistry, and none would profit more than the medical profession if it could be as con clusively demonstrated that such an odor proceeded from such and such a cause, as we already know of sulphur, sulphureted hydrogen, ammonia and the like. The South Australian government has offered a bonus of $50,000 for the dis- nnvpirv of a nnal fifil.l within (Via limitn nf ' the province. lVhnt an Earthquake Is Like. A correspondent writing to a friend in Montreal from Caracas, Venezuela, gives the following additional interesting de tails of the late earthquake shocks: We had, about 8:40 r. m , as lively a shake as 1 want to experience. I first heard a loud, rumbling noise, and then it seem ed as though a thousnud-ton engine was rushing over the pavements, and then a scream like a hundred engines run mad. and then the house began to shake ana the floor began to rise up, and about that time I was in the open yard. There were a few risings in the floor of the yard, and all was over so far as Caracas was concerned. A few pictures and mirrors fell to the ground in some of the houses ; in the cathedral an image or two fell down and nothing more. But the town of Cua, about twelve miles from here a beautiful and flourishing place was by the same shook entirely destroyed, and from three hundred to four hundred lives lost. Our President has sent money, provisions and troops to the place, and has done everything possible to alleviate the sufferings of the people. His wifo, " Nina Belen," and family rushed into the plaza and bad tents put up, and for many days slept therein. Thousands of people left town that day; in fact, all that could; the rest slept in the rlaza, some in tents and on cots, but the majority on the benches and on the sidewalks, and for a few days the appearapce of the city was really ludi crousevery park, square, wide street, or open place was filled with tents, and the middle of the streets with soldiers under arms. Mosquerias coffee yard the one you visited while here was fill ed with people one hundred to one hundred and fifty sleeping there night ly for a week or more, some on the bare ground and some under tents, and the tents were wonderful to behold, both there and in town. Tents, shanties, gypsy encampments, tents of canvas, white, striped and speckled, of calico, of coffee bags, of old sheets and of paper anything answered. Finally things be came more quiet; we had daily shocks, but light ones; people began to sleep in their houses. Homes icknesi. So commonplace a disorder as home sickness has been made the subject of scientific investigation. Dr. H. Key gives it a high-sounding name, "No stalgia," and regards it as a form of in sanity from which grown men often suf fer severely, and of which they some times die. He gives particnlars of his observations among the French soldiery, where it is of very frequent occurrence, more particularly among the infantry. The cavalryman, he thinks, is less liable to suffer in this way, probably because he has less leisure time on his hands. It is the young foot soldier who is prone to pine for his native place. The young oonsciipt becomes gloomy and taciturn, loses his appetite, is fond of solitude, and often gives Way to tears. He suf fers from incessant headache and is un able to sleep, and after a while, unless he can be aroused and interested in his surroundings and distracted from his dreams of home and friends, gradually becomes the victim of general prostra tion, followed by delirium, and some times by death. Dr. Rey believes that children do not often suffer in this way, nor do very old persons; and women are less liable to it than men. That aged turtle, embellished with initials carved on its shell fifty-five or eighty years ago, now occupies a promi nent place in our country exchanges. Ever since we discovered a turtle, a few years ago, containing the name "C. Colombo, 1492" engraved on its base ment, wo can readily believe these old turtle stories printed by our ootenipo rariesw But Chris, didn't know how to spell Columbus worth a cent. Ex c hange. A devoted husband says that the pho nograph is simply a machine that "talks back," andie has had one of that kind in his house ever since he was married. Mothers! Mothers!! Dlathera!!! Daa'l fail to procure Mrs. Window's Boothlng Hyrup for all diseaset incident to the period of teeth ing in children. It relieves the child from pain, euros wind oalio, regulates the bowels, and, by giving relief and health to the ohild, gives rest to the mother. It is an old and well-tried remedy. I)ooleyn Yeast Powder. There la probably no other baking powder manufactured that has become so niuou of a household word as Dooley's Ysast I'owder. For twenty years it hag stood before the public, and the innumerable testimonials that have been called forth voluntarily, testify fully te its merits. Old Dr. Johnson was a benefactor. Seventy five years ago he invented what is now called Johnson's Anodyne Liniment, the wonderful success of which iu the cure of diseases of the head, throat and lungs is truly astonishing. No family should be without it. Thousands of dollars might be annually saved to farmers if they would give freely of Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders to their horses, cattle, sheep, hogs, and fowl. They prevent disease and promote the growth. We said Sheridan's. Those put up in large packs are utterly worthless. CHEW " The Celebrated ' Matobxxss " Wood Tag Plug TOBAOOO, TBI PlOMEBn TOBAOOO GO MP ART, New York. Boston, and Chioago The Greatest Discovery er ths At is Dt Tobias' eelebratad Venetian Liniment I fears befort he publio, and warranted to oars; ifhajThsa, DrMnUry, Oolio, and spasms, taken intsmallj ; and Oroop, Ohraols Rheumatism, Bore Throats, OoU, Bra 1ms, Old Bores, and Pains in ths Limbs, Bask and Chest, sxUmallv. It has never failed. No family will ever be witaont it after onoe si Tins it a (air trial. Pries 4U eenta. Dr. TOBIAS' VKNKT1AN UOK8K LIN 1M KMT, la Pint ruHties, at One Dollar, Is warranted superior te any other, or NO PAY, for the eon of Oolio, Outs, Braises, Old Sores, .to. Bold by all Drocfista. Depot 1 0 Park Place, New York. ELECTRIC BELTS. A perfect oure (or premature debilit?. Bend (or sir eulr. Da, L. KAKK. fc32 Broadwaj, Now York. ASTHMA. Thousands of ths worst eases of Asthms have been relieved by osing Jobas Whitoomb'S KIM IDT. In as ease of purely Asthmatic eharaoler has it failed to give relief. Cincinnati, January 81, 187S. Messrs. JosarH Bcbnitt A Co., Boston: Gtntltm. I am happj to be able to reoommend to those suffering from the dibtress of Asthma, four valu able relief, Jonas Whitoomb'S Asthma Kxmsdt So fur as I have uied it mf statement eoaours with others with whom 1 am familiar, aa to ths most f .Tor- abls results derived from its use. J. N. DEAN, Student at OuMianaU Law College. B aoww's BaowowTAt. Taoftmts, fnr sows-hs and eeMs nrrWO HKVOI.VKMS). Pries Mat frea. Addrert UUXlCI (Intl WMlm (Inn Work., Plllhnr, rU ORGAHS retail prine f?ttOonr P HA. runos Mll nn SAID onlv lr bersaine. HKATf Y, VVS.hinston, N. A month. Agents wanted. UB beet sell ing artioies In te worM. One sample free Address JAV lUtlimSQM, IMmit, Mioh. $7 A HAY to Antseanv.iitne. (or the Fireside Visitor. Terms end UniHt Free. Addren P. O. VKlRKKY, Anemia, M.h.0, tS AAAAOENTS WAKTFP. III.IJIJIJ I ST" C A T A MM UK rllKKi 9 V WW Jn,hton,Wll.rm AOo.,t;eicn Fish and Fishing. tw4 E!2i 7 , nnnin., nuiiun, - iiii'h, . - - Illus. Price, tOrrnl. Sold by New.dealer. sent paiq ty imnnwnwr, i.,rn m .nr , . blii., vii wiv. O . T?Nrt1r "The lakeside Oook Book;" lOOJrk AUUTk. aearlf l.txm recipe. Koonoml eal, preotioal, palatable. Heavj Manilla Onvers. Prtee. only I O rente. Sold bv Nawnilealers. Bent post paid by HONNKI.I.ky, IAJ u A H , fnhs., mio.go. K. INtlRAII AM Hr CO.'" Superior in design. Not equaled In quality, or as timekeepers. A.k your Jeweler (or them. senoy 8 Oortlandt St., W.Y, AGENTS. READ THIS! We will psy Agents a Hninry o smiu per rri nth and Kxpenaas to ll onr new ana nonimnui inn lions Adrtre HRKRMAN A OO. Memliell Mieh Invea- vriHl nilFH iir r iv ix nw wniw p-y iiroiiyni J snpfmr for two wHklr nwppprii. W column. I N.Y. FALUPIfM, txinwfl Of tn rw poT, nmm f)ti Conklin. ant! th"Mark Twain" of Kntland, William B. Afflnok ; .m ihj Adrocaf ponta Craw. w... .u Pitimmif tU-k t Mr.1 las-rsi PI .a at N. V. FlowerSccds Free. Sample needs and Annual Catalogue for a t-eent stamp to pay postage. tVy oxr F.l, ihry art . nissnra riant v eera o., nuimm. r. i . $10. $20. $50. $100. Inrat1 jntlic.onalv in Rtookt (Options or PHvllaflK U a lura road to rapid fortnna. Foil dataiJand Official H toe . Kichanjro Ho port fro. Addroaa T. JOTI KH WHiHT nuraara, art wan ntrt, nw i on. $ 1 0 S25 WA&nX Novelties Catalogue A Outfit Free application to J. U. BUFKOKD'H RONS, Mannfaoturtnif raMttbOTS Ml to 147 rranaiin rt treat, noabou, moaa. Kttahliahd nearly fifty yaara. No Explosions (or 15 Tears. naeter najpiv tieiifr(Erirrnirniii ivnainre, lla.WH.lne Itlowrr. and Kikau.t Fans. The only flrst-eUee eihaueiers far ths removal of shaving., du.t and (or ventilation made. I,(KK Tfmtlmnnlnle. Medal and diploma awarded at (entennial. Kna for llluitrated eiroulara. KXKTKK MAOlllNB WUHKH, I 4l Congress Street. Boaton, Maaa. TKADR KAKK. DR. DECKER'S CELEBRATED EYE BALSAM IS A SURE CURB for INFLAMED. WEAK EYES STYES snd SURE EYELIDS. SOLD BY ALL DRUUOISTS. DEPOT, ft BUWEKT, N. V. SENT UY MAIL FOR 31, Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Sick Headache. Consumption Can Be Cured Is a eirtatn rtmwfv (oath. CUBS t'ONMI'.tlPTION and all diseaaea i of the l.sagi and Tbroat. It invigoratee the brain, tone, up U ayatera. mesne the weak strong, and is pleasant to laae rnoe line ooiier per Mil. ai vruggieia or sent 07 id. Proprietor on reoeipt ct prioe. A pamphlet oontainioa valuable advloe tn i'nneiiinntlvra. many oertiBoats. of actual no a as, and full direeliona (or using aoooni pamea eaoh bottle, or will be il fM 10 any address. OSCAR U. MOKKH, I H Oortlandt Street. New York. EVERETT BOUSE, Fronting Union Square NEW YORK. Finest Location in the City. Enrcpean Plaa-Restanraal Unsurpassed.:, rucia r$2.B0 to $8,00(0 'SETH THOMAS CLOCKS, k KEEP GOOD TIME. !1T waaowwesmew A -"i 1 MJ?YASAF&SCMECO. 265 BROAD WAY. V. K Homes in Filinnesota. as 'ORTY MILLION bushels ? nrni, making f '. 1 1 . 1 1 T IHII.LION barreUToi Klnar, TIIIHTY-rlVK MILLION bu.heS rn. Rye, Uarly. Huckoueat. and Potatuaa. Of Oata, Corn CreatoLSigCounPro iUCt ft SB 1 World IJre Power af. 8t. Antnon; Kali a I on. Vl v3 ltliLm LOMATlOll IK r-omiDg tiaa avr known. Tweni '.rill i:- l'.h.LIT'1' 1nd "P- witn throng. 3 Ea with throngs of anaa. alao ooniin. "'IKK STATE We InTite the world Into the E.tlt'lUK ntit Million eoree of laud awaiticiisettlemeob 1 n 41 FreeHutiiesJree ScHools.rreeLands. R77 Pamphlet o( tl.hly Pagr. with a Una X U I f 111 sa aw 1 1 1 Ka -we - . .1 g ' . m m w ... V.r...,,K riKTiiWKfT. Tweuiv RiV. z v s "!.- witn anna is ijA'TW.l.-,?f-p'''d't0 ;V'"Y APPI.I. Bec'j r Mtate Board or linuilaraifon, Ht. Paul, iVUnne.ota. Hal aud Beliabi. babtlt:ttr hi Quinine Tho only 25 cent AGUE REMEDY I3X t a aa WOULD aud all illLAUUL llaKA.Sfc.!. Sol ay alt Dra.al.tL Mall. csfS .. r.e.l.,1 . vnx.u. uvst pick a M).:"".".??,'.' J: iTn " 71, Bi 1 1 mruv
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers