i ynDRED. Mildred with (lie golden hair, Hiiired with the beauty r ra, Mildred, e io your prayer Bemember m& Mildred with the eyes no blue. Dark as Ocean in their hue ; Angel, moat resemble you. In their purity. Mtltred. we may never ment In life's oonver-e soft and sweet. But mar your heart forever beat Still as happily. Mildred! Mildred! lore life's giver ; He will taVe you down I he river. That runs forever and forever To et. rnity. The Discovery of Quinine. The tllst-ovcry of the medical proper ties of cinchona hark is enveloped in srreat obscurity. AH that we know about it for certain is this: Before the year ICO that is to say, 150 years-subsequent to the Jieovcry of America not even the Spaniards were acquainted ith the febrifuge qualities of cinchona bark ; but in this year, or thereabouts, the i 'ountess del (.'iiichon, the wife of the Spanish vi-eroy of rem, was cured of a violent intermittent fever by drink ing an infusion of the hark, and this led to its introduction into Europe. Were the natives themselves acquainted with it ? Humboldt answers this ques tion very ositively in the negative and refers the discovery to the Jesuit mis sionaries, who. iK-ing in the habit of tast ing the bark of every tree they hewed down, at length dUeovered the precious febrifuge. . Oilier authors of repute contend th..t the virtues of cinchona bark were known to the Indians long before the advent of the Spaniards ; but the question again arises how they first lecoiiie acquainted with its properties. To account for this the ridiculous tale has been invented that certain animals while latmring under fever, hapined to gnaw the bark of one of the cinchona trees, and were cured forthwith. Far more probable is it that some cinchona trees having been laid prostrate by the tenijests in a pool of water, and tbe lat ter becoming charged with the medi cinal principal, some jierson laboring under fever drank of this water, was cured, ami published the result. But however this may be, it is certain that the remedy first became popularized iu Euroe through the agency of Count del Cinchon, Viceroy of l'eru, whose wife, as we have said, was cured of m terniittent fever by it administration The new remedy, however, was badly received in France and Italy. The faculty set their faces against it. Thy sicians who dared prescribe its use ere lTecuted, and it was only the patron age of Louis XIV., which ultimately rendered it popular in France. This monarch, suffering from intermittent fever, was cured by an English empiric named Taltiot, by means of a secret reiiiedv. This was no other than cin chona bark. Louis XIV. purehaed the secret for the sum of J.s,inO livres, and ttestowed yearly a pension of 2,000 livres on the Englishman, bei-ides giving him letters of nobilitv. Three vears subse quently the remedy was published. It was a highly concentrated vinous tinc ture of cinchona bark. 1 inchona trees grow in the densest forests of l'eru The ta-kof discovering them, removing their bark, and conveying tbe latter to the place of export, is troublesome difficult and dangerous. In these for ests there are no roads. Frightful precipices intersect the path of tbe casearillcro, or bark gatherer, across hieli it is dilVn tilt to pass, even while unembarrassed bv a load. So soon as tbe treasure of bark has lieeti secured these difficulties and dangers proxr tionately increase, so that the compara tively low price at which cinchona may be procured is in itself a matter of surprise. A Struggle with a Stove Pipe. A Little Story for the rseon. Tutting up a stove is not so difficult in itself. It is the pipe that raises four- fifths of the mi-chief and all the dust You may takedown a stove pipe with all the care in the world, and yet that pipe won't come together again as it was before. You find this out when you are standing on a chair with your arms full of stove pipe and your mouth full of soot. Your wife is standing on the floor in a position that enables her to see you, the pipe and the chair and she gives utterance to those remarks that are calculated to hasten a man into the extremes of insanity. Her dress is pinned over her waist, and her bands rest on her lips. She has got one of your hats on her head, and your linen coat on her back, and a pair of rubbers on her feet. There is about five cents' worth of pot-black on her nose, and a lot of flour on her chin, and altogether she is a spectacle that would inspire a dead man with distrust. And while you are up there trying to circumvent the awful contrariness of the pipe, and tel ling that you know some fool has been mixing it, she stands safely on the floor and bombards you with such domestic mottoes as: "What's the use of swear ing so!" "You know no one has touched that pipe." "You ain't got any more patience than a chili'. ' "Do be careful of that chair." 'And then she goes and reappears with an armful more of pipe, and before you are aware of it she has got that p'pe so horribly mixed up that it does seem no two pipes are alike. You join the ends and work them to and fro, and to and fro again, and then you take them apart and look at them. Then you spread one out and jam the other together, and mount them once more. But it is no go. Tou begin to think the pieces are inspired with life, and ache to kick them through the window. But she doesu't lose her patience. She goes around with that awful exasperating rigging on, with a length of pipe under each arm and a long-handled broom in her hand, and says she don't see how it is that some people never have any trouble in putting up a stove. Then you miss the hammer. You don't see it anywhere. You stare in the piie, along the mantel, and down the stove, and off to the floor. Your wife watches you, and is finally thoughtful enough to inquire what you are looking after; and on learning, pulls the article from her pocket. Then you feel as if you could go out door, and swear a hole twelve feet square through a blotk of brick buildings, but she merely observes: "Why on earth don't you speak when you want anything, and not stare around like a dummy." When tht part of the pipe w hich goes through the wall is up, she keeps it up with the broom while you are making the con nection, and stares at it with an intensity that is entirely uncalled for. All the while your position is becoming more and more interesting. The pipe don't go together, of course. The soot shakes down into your eyes and mouth, the oweat rolls down your face and tickles J your chin as it drops off, and it seems as if your arms were slowly but sureij drawing out of their sockets. Here your wife comes to the rescue by in quiring if you are going to be all day doing nothing, and if you think her arms are made of cast-iron : and then the broom slips off the pipe, and in her endeavor to recover her' hold she jabs you under the chin with the handle, and the pipe comes down on your head with its load of fried soot, and then the chair tilts forward enough to discharge your feet, and you come down on the wrong end of that chair with a force that would bankrupt a pile-driver. Yon don't touch that stove agai n. You leave your wife examining the chair and be moaning its injuries, and go into the kitchen and wash your skinned and bleeding hands with yellow soap. Then you go down the street after a man to do the business, and your wife goes ever to a neighbor's with her chair, and tells them about the injuries, and drains the neighborhood dry with Its sym pathy long before you get home. Dan bury -Yetrf . Bow Marriage are Made. It used to be believed that marriages were made in heaven, but the delight ful principle which too often imputes the results of our own folly, or the in trigues of match-making mammas, to Providence, is, in our practical age, the adopted creed of but a verv limited number of disciples. The old theory lias, however, much in its favor. It is very convenient and very romantic, and what more could be required of a theory which professes to deal with the hearts of young ladies For instance, here is an outline of one of the most ordinary cases of "fall ing in love" charmingly expressive phrase! not "walking iu love," nor yet "goinginto love," but simply "fall ing," and see how far a union for life will be likely to prove productive of real happiness. X'ow, supjKse the hero to rejoice in the euphonious and not very common (?) name of Brown, for Love, like Jus tice, is color blind, and in the elegant words of Curraii, "cares not what color an Indian or African sun may have burnt on his face," or what name lie mar have inherited from the author of his being. Let Brown lie invited on visit Tor a few weeks bv his uncle or his grandmother's cousin, or anybody, in fact, to the country residence of the aforsaid somebody. Let it so hapjien that a certain Miss Green had been in vited to the same houe exactly one month previously, but that as her mam ma was suffering with neuralgii. filial love compelled Miss Green to postpone her visit a few weeks. It so chances then that, on Bron n's arrival, in addi tion to the inevitable "Mr. Brown my daughter" there is added the further instruction "Mr. Brown, Miss Green." Brown sees a pretty little hat bow to him, and a dainty little skirt wrinkle iu a courtsey before him, and Brown feels so pleased. Now it hap pens, as it so often does is it not strange that there are only two sad dle horses, and as it would not be polite on the part of "my daughter" to monop olize one of then. Miss Green and Mr. Brown go out riding together. We will suppose the lady to be good looking and Brown not in this re-pect worse than the ordinary run of Browns in general. They soon attract each other and finally "fall in love." Brown and Green both agree that their parents ought at once to give consent to their Brownv-Green alliance. Andifvou ask either w hy they fell in love w ith the other, they do not know. "Mar riages are made in heaven!" There is no accounting for these things, but they feel as though they can never love any one else. In short, they have both "stumbled into love," without iu the least stopping to consider their fitness for marriage. And, after all, this whole romantic afl'air results from old Mrs Greene's face ache preventing her daughter's visit preceding Mr. Brown's and the old gentleman not being able to afford a third saddle horse, both cir- cumstarces combining most romanti cally to carry out the purposes of heaven. Detroit Free Press. Kuian Proverb. The follow ing translations of current Russian proverbs are published in French by a Paris paer. Some of them very strongly resemble our own ; others show the peculiarities of the Russian people, and all will, at the present junc ture, lie read with interest: When sovereignty is divided it is very soon destroyed. Make presents to your judges, you will gaiu all vou ask. To God glory ; to the priest the candle. When the patriarch is starved he steals like any other man. The trainer remains sound w hile the horse dies. His right arm is often a man's worst enemy. Misfortune engenders misfortune. and vou esca!e the wolf only to be levoured by the hear. The roblT does not always steal, but it is as well to be on the lookout for him The rich man in battle shields ids face, but the poor man takes care of his .Iothes. The old man rcjK'iits of that which the vouug man boasts. If you give a shirt to a beggar, he will complain that the linen is too coarse. Measure ten times and cut once. The smallest needles are the sharpc-t prickers. Do not eat cherries w ith j our supe riors. Ihey will blind vou with stones. The anger of the czar is death to the embassador.. Contentment. Given all the comforts and many of the luxuries of life, how many people are discontented solely from a habit of comparing their lots with those of more fortunate acquaintances! They do not specially object to walking they like exercise but, whenever their next door neighbor's carriage dashes by them, they grow suddenly tired alwut the knees and feel a w eakness in the back with which edestrianism does not agree. Woolen gowns would be perfectly comfortable if silk ones never rustled in front of them. John Smith's brick house is better than he ever ex pected to own, and he would be content enough w ith it if Tom Jones, w ho weut to school with him when he was a boy, had not moved Into a stone-fronted mansion with handsome portico. There is a long and wearisome step between admiration and imitation. Bichter. ACKICCITCBAL. Thk Dairy Interest. The country baa f45H,O00,OU0 in 10,000.000 milch cows whose annual product is worth $275,142,585, while the last cotton crop was worth only 1200,000,000. The enormous sum of this dairy in terest which includes nothing of oxen hides or meat will surprise every one who has paid no attention to It. The fallacy which destroyed the hay argu ment is partially wanting here too. For, while our exportation of hay amounts to nothing, and hardly equals consump tion, there is a great and rapidly grow ing export of butter, cheese, salt and fresh beef and live animals. The sum cannot be accurately computed, and carries the particular valuations into the same classification with cotton. For in all these interests the final apprecia tion does not rest upon the amount, how considerable soever that may be, which is consumed at home and so lost to wealth, but upon the amount beyond consumption, which is exported and enriches the land by its equivalent in eold or other needs and permanent worths. The gross value of cattle for labor, manure, milk, cheese, butter leather ami other ends, is susceptible of a vast addition and must necessarily expand with Western settlement and increase the returns shown in our foreign trade, while sustaining labor at home more abundantly and cheaply, and so en ablingevery industry to flourish in com petition with less favored countries, and greater comforts and luxuries to be enjoyed by all. It will not hold the throne it challenges any more than the hay crop;.provideti the Southern energy which has done so much toward re storing iu early abundance, holds the course it has with the energy it Is now showing. But It may, and apparently must, reach a higher sum than any far mer or any statistician has dreamed; for, recovering its total, it has acquired the best blood of tbe best herds of Eu rope, has given practical attention and study to the manufacture of cheese and butter; has given the leather interest a new power; is conquering Texas, Cali fornia, Oregon and all the new States, and is arousing wonder iu and drawing money from Europe aud Asia at the same time. I'BKSKEVLNG SWEET COBS, It is all very well, perhaps, to advise people to can sweet corn, lor the experience may be valuable in sweetening their tem pers, but tbe corn will sour. If ic is well done, it will loolc beautifully white, and be sweet (if you add sugar enough beforepreparing it tor the table), but requires so much boiling, and to be canned so quickly and so hot, that, ex cept in factories, people are aot to have bad luck with it. The thing to do is to shave and scrape the corn from the cobs daily during the season of surplus sweet corn, to dry this at first on sheets of tin in the sun, then on sheets on which it can be moved and mixed fre quently. In hot, dry weather the corn will dry enough iu the sun, but should the weather come on moist or rainy, it must be brought into the house and dried slowly in the stove oven, the door being open, upon bricks over the stove, or iu any similar safe place. It must not scorch nor lie in masses so that it will ferment. It is no "trick" to do this well, and it is sweeter and Letter, but not so nice looking as the canned. It is on account of the danger of having large masses at once when rainy weather comes on, that w e ad vise drying some daily. When dry, pre-erve it in bags, hung up away from mice. .V. V. Tribune. Early Calving. The commonly ac cepted opinion about Jersey hellers is that it is no injury to them to calve when they are two years of age. While their growth may be somewhat stunted lieir milking qualities are in no wise ntlected. A correspondent of the Cattle Club Register thus gives bis extieneuce with his herd, in w hich he shows that stimulating the secretions is of more importance than age : "I had my young heifers serveu at fourteen to sixteen months old, w ithout regrrd to the season of the year at which they would calve. It has gradu ally dawned upon me, through t lie slow teachings of experience, that it is much more important to have them on good succulent grass for a mouth or longer while making their first bag. that the milk secretion may be stimu lated to the utmost and the udder de veloped as much as possible; and now 1 time the service so as to have them come in in June or early in July; or, skinning the heat and drought of Au gust to calve iu September, the age be ing, if unavoidable, as young as nine teen months or as old as thirty months, II we want fall or winter cows, let us take older ones whose qualities have been already established. If I am right In this it deserves the attention of be ginners." Thoips is Hoos. For this disease, which Is inflammation of the lungs, or of the lining membrane of the cavity of the chest aud lungs, nothing can be done but to give good nursing. Keep the patient warm, give drinks of luke warm gruel, and rub a paste of mustard and water upon the brisket and side of the chest. Chaperoning American Ciirls. Our girls are the boldest of all, part being the boldness of innocence and part the boldness of impudicity; but from w hatever it comes, it does not sit well on a young woman. She is often under the impression that her fast ways, her slang, and her freedom with the man is what he admires; aud this is her mistake, for even the rake feels the charm of a modest woman, and when he selects his life partner she is his choice; in a word, the man passes his time with the fast jtersou for his amuse ment, but when it comes to the serious business of life, such as marriage, r'( une autre paire le munches. The "Be w hat you seem or seem what you be," of the foreigner, addressed to the forward Miss by way of explanation for a natural mistake w hich he made iu regard to her moral status, ought to lie taken as a lesson by all votinir women like her. For the mother to remain in an upper room yawning and talking with other chaperons, while her daughter, w ith a laisser-aller manner of three or four o clock In the morning, is w hilling around in the Boston with a vourir man heated w ith with w ine, can hardly be called serious chaperoning, for if there is any time at w hich the mother should be with her daughter, it is at that time it is then that she assuredly needs her. Ordinarily the mother w ho chaperones, as she calls it, separates from her charge at the ball-room, and does not see her again until the twain depart from the house. In France there aretwo rows of chairs around the sides of the dancing room, the daughters sitting on the front and their respective mothers behind them on the back row. Jhe daughter coes forth to the saltation with the maternal approval, aud at its conclusion she is immediately conducted back to her place before the mother. It would perhaps be too much to expect Ameri can mothers and daughters to comply with such a rigid rule iu their dancing entertainments, but they might at least remain in the same room, where the young would be under the eye of the elders. Galaxy. In West Virginia there is a school population of 191,940, against 184,796 in 1875. scrcrrinc. The Make-up of an Ant Familv. Under ordinary circumstances an ants' nest, like a beehive, consists of three kinds of Individuals; workers, or imperfect females (which constitute tbe great ma jority;, males, and perfect females. There are, however, often several fe males in an ants' nest; while, as we all know, there is never more than one queen in a hive. The qneens have wings, but after a single flight they tear off their own wings, and do not again quit tbe nest. In addition to the ordinary workers there is in some species a sec ond, or rather a third, form of female. In almost any ants' nest we may see that the workers differ more or less in size. The amount of difference, how ever, depends upon the species. In La tius niger, the small brown garden ant, the workers, are, for instance, much more uniform than in the little yellow meadow ant, or in Atta-barbara, where some of them are more than twice as large as others. But in certain ants there are differences still more remark able. Thus, in a Mexican species, be sides the common workers, which have tbe form of ordinary ants, there are certain others in which the abdomen is swollen into an immense subdiaphan ous sphere. These individuals are very inactive, and principally occupied in elaborating a kind of honey. In the genus Pkeidole very common in South ern Europe there are also two distinct forms without any intermediate grada tions: one with heads of the usual pro portion, and a second with an immense heads provided with very large jaws. These latter are generally supposed to act as soldiers, and the size of the head enables the muscles which move the jaws to be of unusual dimensions, though the little ones are also very pug nacious. This differentiation of certain Individuals so as to adapt them to special functions seems to me very remarkable; for it must be remembered that the dif ference is not one of age or sex. Popu lar Science Monthly. Facts Prated by Science. A slight blow is sufficient to smash a whole pane of glass, while a bullet from a gun will only make a round hole in it : because in latter case, the particles of glass that receive the blow are torn away from the remainder with such rapidity that the motion imparted to them has no time to spread further. A door standing open, which would readily yield on Its hinges to a gentle push, is not moved by a cannon-ball passing through it. The ball In passing through overcomes the whole force of cohesion among the atoms of wood ; but its force acts for so short a time; owing to its rapid pas sage, that it is not sufficient to effect the inertia of the door to an extent to pro duce motion. Tbe cohesion of the part of the -wood cut out by the ball would have borne a very great weight laid quietly upon it; but suppose the ball to fly at the rate of twelve hundred feet in a second ; and the door to be one inch thick the cohesion being allowed to act for only the minute fraction of a second, its Influence is not perceived. It is an effect of this same principle that the iron head of a hammer may be driven down on its wooden handle, by striking the opposite end of the handle against any hard substance with force and speed. In this very simple operation, the mo tion propagates so suddenly through the wood of the handle that it is over fore it can reach tbe Iron head, which, therefore, by its own weight, sinks lower on the handle at every blow which drives the handle up. Muscular Contraction and Electricity. Muscular contraction is always accom panied with electrical phenomena. Tbe difference of electric force between tw o points of a muscle undergoes a diminu tion, which, according to Beunstein, precedes the contraction by 1-100 of a second. M. De la Koche has recently examined the electrical power of the human heart. Tho electrodes consisted each of a plate of amalgamated zinc with a pledget of muslin saturated with sulphate ol zinc at the lower extremi ties. These were applied, one with its muslin wad opposite the heart on the left breast, the other on another part of the chest, and connection was made with a capillary electrometer. The mercury column executed a very dis tinct series of periodic pulsations, syn chronic with the pulse. Each pulsa tion marked the double moment of tbe heart. The result obtained corres ponded to 1-1000 of a Daniell element. A Landlord at Trenton Fall. We are at Trenton Falls, and here we meet another dream, or what seems very much like a dream, a landlord who is a connoisseur in art and a lover of science, and who understands bis business. 1'alntings, old and new, adorn the walls. Here is a Durand, there a Boutelle, there, and there, and there, how many paintings by Hicks we do not know. They are on all the walls of the first story of the large house. In the office stands a cabinet of natural history a special branch of it which has cost the landlord ten thousand dol lars. The specimens form the record of a geologic age so remote that no im agination can grasp it. Professor Agas- siz declared that the land reaching from Trenton Falls to Saratoga was the first that appeared above the sea on the cre ation. But here are the trilobites in great variety, all modeled in black marble, so perfectly preserved in form that the multitudinous lenses of their eyes are as apparent under the micro scope as are those of a living fly. Mil Ions of years before man walked the earth these creatures lived their little life, the limestone took on their forms, and here they are ! What is a seven teen-year locust to a ten million year trilobite ? A trader in these curiosities offers us one of the size of a pin, and now we own an antique that deserves the name. What are scarabati and an cient intoglii, or any other engraved or modeled semblance of the old life com pared to this which we hold in our hand? This creature lived, not only, but had become everlasting stone mil lions of years before there was a living man to see It. The old hotel-keeper is enthusiastic over his treasures, and proud of the distinguished visitors who have been attracted by what he has to show them. "In September," he gays. with a touch of pardonable pride, "I shall have Tyndall and Huxley and Darwin here all together, for they have written me that they are coming." May the light that came into the old landlord's eyes as he made this an nouncement last for many years! crit-ner. Shun Affectation. There is nothing more beautiful in the young than simplicity of character. It is honest, frank and attractive. How different is affectation ! The affected are simply unnatural. As for originality. if they ever had it, they have crushed it out and buried it from sight, utterly. Be yourself, then, young friend. To try to be somebody else is worse than folly. It is impossible to attain it. But suppose you could succeed in imitating the greatest man that ever figured in history; would that make you any bet ter? By no means. You would always suffer in comparison with the imitated one, and be thought of as a shadow of a substance, the echo of a real sound, the counterfeit of pure coin. Let the fabric of your character, though ever so hum ble, be at least real. Shun affectation. oirxna Baker's Bread. It Is rather difficult to give specific direction for making baker's bread, as that, like almost everything else, requires experience. The first requisite in making good bread is good yeast, which should be made as follows: Into six quarts of boiling water pour one ounce of good new hops. Have a vessel containing twelve ounces of flour ready, and when the hops have been boiling two or three minutes pour some of tbe boiling bop water through a colander on the flour, making a smooth paste out of it, and then add the rest of the bop water. After this has become quite cool, break up the paste and add a pint of malt. Put then tbe yeast in a place where it can remain undisturbed for forty-eight hours, in which time it will have fermented and is ready for use. In Summer the place must be cool, and warm in Winter. For one pint of yeast take about a gill of water and make a pretty stiff batter; put that away for seven or eight hours, and then add more water, as much as three pints, if necessary, and put enough flour to it to make a stiff dough. Let this rise again for two hours, then mould it into pans, and when sufficiently light, bake In an oven not too hot. The dough must be kept cool or warm, ac cording to the weather, and the vessels containing the yeast must be kept clean and swee', as most sour bread comes from yeast kept in dirty vessels. The above is contributed by a practical and professional baker. Old Bed Qcilts. These must be washed when much soiled, and a wash ing Vnacbine and wringer seem almost indispensable. Plenty of suds should be used, aud a thorough rinsing be given. If they happen to hang through a good pouring rain. It will do no harm. They can be patched up when very badly worn out. more easily than some Imagine. If pieced In large blocks, they can be patched with dark or light, according to the shade of the worn por tions, so as to look almost as good as new. Of course they need not be ironed. Grapk 1'kk.skr vk. pick out the knotty and wormy grapes, take the rest, a few at a time, in a coarse sieve, work ing them around with the hand until the seeds are loosened, when they will drop through, leaving the skins and pulp in the sieve. Drain the juice off the seeds, and to every pound of skin, pulp, and juice allow half a pound of sugar. Put all into a preserving kettle and cook slowly for three quarters of an hour. When done put into hot j irs, cover with brandy paper and seal up. Cobs Cakes. Grate twelve large ears of young sweet corn, scraping off the cob'with a knife all the milk and pulp that may remain; add half a teaspoon ful of salt, a lump of butter the size of a small egg, three eggs, well beaten, and one pint of milk. If this quantity of corn does not make a rather st'ff batter, add enough more to form the proper consistency. Bake in muffin rings on a hot griddle, or as pancakes. Drti.no Vegetable. Corn should be cooked until the milk Is corgealed, and dried in a slow oven. In this way its sweetness is preserved and flies never touch it. It should be kept for future use iu tnick pa)er bags, in a dry cool place. String Beans can be scalded and dried in the sun. They will look like little scraps of peeled bark when dried ; but when soaked over night as sume their natural size and color. Summer Mince Pie. Four crackers, one and one-half cups of sugar, one cup of molasses, one cup of cider, two-thirds of a cup ol butter, one cup of chopped raisins, one-half cup of currants, two eggs well beaten and stirred in, the last thing; spice to the taste. To Prevent Cauco from Fading. Take the dress when it needs washing and dip it in a pail of salt water and dry It before sentVng it to the wash. This should be done before it is washed the first time, and the process need never be related. Perfcme for Glove. Rose leaves, powdered, half an ounce; essence of cloves and mace, each one dram; frankincense, quarter of an ounce. Mix ; put a portion in a drawer with gloves, and they will retain the scent for a considerable time. Ccre fob Ringworm. A simple and harmless application for ringworm Is found by washing with a solution made from the root of the common narrow leafed dock, which belongs to the botanical genus Punier. L'se vinegar for the solvent. Bread Cake. One quart bowl of sponge of your bread, one tablespoon ful of butler one cup of sugar, a little grated nutmeg, one cup of chopped raisins. Mold up very soft aud let It get very light before baking. To Stop Cracks in a Stove. Wood ashes and common salt, made compact with water, will sum the cracks of a stove, and prevent the smoke from es caping. . Soft boiled custard will be found very nice poured over ripe berries or cut peaches. Through Frieotand. Open enough, certainly; ami flat with little beyond the sheep and cow s. the w indmills and fields of grain, to claim attention. But it was something to watch the jieasants reaping and stacking; strong-looking, sunburnt. happy men and women. A chang to have the sua shining. Yesterday we had traveled in great coats; to-day airy garments and windows open to the grateful breezes. The very sheep looked pure and white, w liile yesterday they were a dingy brown. The old Spanish proverb ought to be especially applica ble to Holland ; "Feed a sheep with grass and he repays you in w ool." Xow we passed over a canal upon w hich a barge, with its brow n sails tilling to the wind, was a pleasant object to break in upon the monotony of the landscape. At Grypskerk we waited many minutes apparently for no causes but that the train, slow enough to all conscience was yet before its time. So the guards and officials assembled together in the waiting-room, and over sundry glasses of beer chatted about the change in the weather and the beauty of the cattle we were carrying, and the wonderful patience travelers must exercise in Hol land. The surrounding rosiect was pretty; almost diversified. Rich green fields and dykes, and happy cattle chew ing the cud of reflection, or apearing to do so: small picturesque cottages sur rounded by trees and shrubs and creep ers, each rejoicing in a small garden ami a bit of cultivated land. Trees bounded the horizon, which to-day had taken quite a purple and romantic tone, that really seamed out of place in prac tical Holland. As seen this morning there was nothing dreary or dismal or monotonous in all this w ide tract of land, this sameness of prospect. The sky, w ith its white fleecy clouds, wa in itself a picture. Xot one of the least pleasant features in the landscape was the reflection of the bright blue sky and white clouds in the snrrounding dykes, lighting up the landscape us mirrors do a room. The sun, too, sparkled ujioii the water like so many jewels, bright and dazzling. Here a white patch upon the emerald grass aunounced a brood of ducks, a picture of calm repose after a midday meal. The Argosy. BCXOBOCS. What He Thought. A few days since, says a Michigan paper, a speci men of humanity, chuck full of fash ionable drink, took a seat In the express train at Jackson and quietly awaited the advent of the conductor, who appeared on time and relieved the traveler's hat of his ticket without any remarks. On his return the traveler button-holed him and Inquired: "Conductor, how far to Pleon ?" "Twenty miles." "That's wot I tho't," At the next station the traveler stopped him and again inquired. "Conductor, how far to Mancu'ter?" "Twenty miles." "That's wot I tho't." At Manchester the traveler stopped him the third time and said : "Conductor, how far to Tecumseh ?" "Twenty miles." "That'a wot I tho't." As the train left Tecumseh the traveler exhausted the patience of the con ductor, and the following dialogue ex plains the result: Condnctor, how far to Adri'n?" The conductor threw himself upon his dignity and remarked : "See here, my friend, do you take me for a fool?" The traveler stuck the text and re marked : "That'a wot I tho't." The conductor joined the passengers In a hearty laugh, and concluded to al low his questioner to "tho't" as he pleased. Ax English undergraduate at ex amination, on being told to repeat the paraole of the Good Samaritan, thus did it: "A certain man journeyed from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among thieves." Then he stopped. "Go on, sir," said the examiner. "And .'' ami stopped again. "And what? Go on, sir." "And the thieves sprang up and choked him," triumphantly ended the youth. A distinguished but not wealthy politician received a letter from a farmer, who claimed to be his cousin. "I've found our genealogical tree," said he; "so that I must be right." The politician replied, "if you have found the tree, there must be a mistake about it; for I never owned even (stick in all my life." "Well, and how did yon enjoy your dinner?" asked a passenger ol another on a European steamer, the first day out. "Don't mention it," said the other, feelingly; "don't mention it. It's a good deal like the financial ques tion 4n Congress." "How's that?" "Why It's apt ' to come up at any moment." The good man reclineth at his ease; he covereth his head with a paper; he taketh his rest and his snores are heard in the land. The house-fly is not so, for his heart deviselh evil continually, and when he hath crept under the paper he will tickle the good man's nose. Verily, all this is vanity and vexation of spirit. A professional uian, returning to his office one uay, after a substantial lunch, said complacently to his assistant. "Mr. Peetkin, the world looks different to a man when he has three inches ol rum in him." "Yes," replied the junior, without a moment's hesitation, 'and tie looks ulnerent to the world. Between good friends "Don't you think Mine. S. is growing younger day by day?" "Indeed she is, my dear, why yesterday she hail no teeth, and to-day, not a single one of her full set is missing." A teacher, aiu-r reading to her scholars a story of a generous child, asked them what generosity was. One little boy raised his hand and said : "1 know; its giving to other? what you don't want yourself." "FaIX. there's no crintlemen In this I car. Lit me out. kon.dncther. AH the i impty seats are IliII. I he nixt time I ride iu a car I'll walk, so I will." An old negro cook says, "Sass is nowerfnl iron,! in evervrimr hnr ohil. i n - p. - ..... dren. Ivy needs some odor kind of uresi-in . When my pa wouldn't let me go to the ball," said a merry young ladv, "I just set to and had a bawl at home." An anociiro.mstic pun Adam was married on his wedding Eve. A matter of form Fitting a dress. A Curious OIl Ceremony. A curious annual ceremony has just been perfortied on Dartmoor. It goes by the name of "Ye Fyshinge Feaste" (the spelling is a cardinal point) and was instituted to celebrate Sir Francis Drake's feat of supplying Plymouth with pure water from the river Mew, by means of a leat or watercourse carried across the moor. The Mayor and Corporation and their invited guests meet on the these oc casions at Die Head Weir under Sheep stor, and a silver goblet filled with water from the leat is passed from hand to band, each person drinking, or ap pearing to drink, and repeating, "To the pious memory of Sir Francis Drake." After this, as a measure of prudence, or perhaps as a penance for the sin of water-drinking, another goblet filled with wine is passed round in like manner to the burden of "May the de scendants of him who brought us water never want wine." This is followed by a banquet at which trout, netted in the leat, are served up; and which this year was graced by the presence of the president of the British Association. It is no doubt a goodly custom thus to commemorate the boon conferred on Plymouth by Sir Francis Drake, who, with a singular foresight, was careful to secure the watershed. Iu conse qence of this, when a leat was wanted of Devoiiport, it had to be sought so far that its makers hailed with delight the news of an unfathomable tarn, called Cra-well Pool, which lay right in their way. This was said to have been sounded with miles of bell rope9, and to have seemed absolutely bottomless. "Zo" according to a well-known Devon shire humorist, "zay zet np a zteam englne andp ump un dry in dree hours." London Examiner. Frozen Kindness. This world is full of kindness that never was spoken, and that is not much lietter than no kindness at all. The fuel in the stove makes the room warm but there are great piles of fallen trees lying on the hills where nobody can get them; these do not make anybody warm. You might freeze to death for want of wood in plain sight of all these fallen trees if you had no means of getting the wood home and making a tire with it. Just so in a family; love is just what makes parents and children, and brothers and sisters happy, but if they take care to never say a word aliout it if they keep it a profound secret; as if it were a crime thev will net he much happier than if there was not any love among them; the house will seem cold even in the summer, and if you live there you envy the poor dog when anybody calls hiiu "poor-fellow." The Longs are strained and racked bs. avstent eongh. the general strength was .ad. JiT iT ouoipiaint ortea established thereby. Or. Jarne'a Expectorant is an ef- a-in out Ior tumgns and Co da, and sx erta a beneftoial affect on tbe FolnionarT and Bronchial Organs. All in an F-sf-Siiell. ' A silver egg was once prepared present to a Saxon queen. Open .iis-or hr a secret soring, and there as a the was found a yolk of gold. Find the spring of the gold, aud it flew open, and UI3- the closed a beautiful bird. Press of the bird, and in its breast was found a crown, jeweled and radiant. And even within the crown, upheld Dy . cnrinir like the rest, was a ring of .!!. ,u which fitted the finger of the princess herself. A Valuable Work. The well-know u advertising agents. w - 2 l lArrnri 1 1 A CO.. Ol cUv. tiave jual Issued in handsome and roriu their .ewswp-i Advertisers' Hand-Book" for 18.7. , It a without doubt the most valuable iUrlnn of its and kind irusiwwiuv - . . ..I.I1..I...I i !.! mnntrr. tnu t work which no advertiser or newspaper pub lisher should oe wiuiuui. ,. , than 8,571 newspapers or periodicals ... -i ! . . K. . I u ir anil -m il.Tl Th... 1 HIIOWIIJIC ww are uran " , r - , place of publication, character, pub- r. ..: ..i..inn- In ahnrt. all that usuer, t.-in.ui.w.. , ... , advertiser requires to mow i: ,1.11. huil Resiiies the any uieoium m.... - . ,. , general list there is a list of periodicals by counties, which must be valuable to those who desire to reach any particu lar section of the Continent, and tables or daily and weekly newspapers having . .1 ....i ,.r k nun riea or over, re- a clKUimuu v. -. ' - -1- :..:.. ..i...,linrl and Other Class IIKIVUB, C.' , . organs. Two or three striking portraits of prominent editors are scattered throughout the volume, which, alto- B . 1.1..- At rha gether, gives us a caiiui - -..i.i. rietv of American iournal- isui. and proves the immense connection . . . :ii.;u vtii..k ltd ana great dusiiicsi iihuiuc. pubXshers and compilers must have al their command. -V. X. Scotuk-Amcr Journal. From Swamp and 3fah. v i.n.i lr i.inlMl hr reoedinff floods. and from pool a-iag- ating in iinkon lota on ii.. ..L, -. . ni.u. ritf. a nnnr nreimaxit with disease. IU name ta miaeaia, and it la laden with ibe eeeda or fever and arne, o.noua remittents, and other malarial disorder. How a f., 11- nth thataUh destructive HI w-w aw. uu . " dialadiea ia a problem avjTed morn than a qnarter or a century airo dj mo iu--.' ilnete ter's Htomacb Eaters, which has proved ;-) -n -..i ..ia snaw-itiA for miaMma:ie dis ease in ever? form, its sum rre-rentiTS. and a superD m-ngorant ana ,uem - --- ordered conditions of the system. Imfrai-ibis evidence to prove this fact has keen acrumo lating for Tears and scarcely a day pamss itn..at some rre-tn oorrooorawoo w. ta. aa- . 1 aiftaar S. thnronuh test. l.ronoauced the article i-erfertJr efficacious and abnolutelv pure, and th American people Iodj u(0 adopted at as tueu favouto household remeay. - Schenck's Mandrake Pills. These PJIs are composed exclusively of vet-i-tan e ingredients, and although they en tirely aanerxede tns ass of Mercury, do no leave anv of its ii.junooa effects. They act directly upon the Lier. and are a valuable remedy in all cases of derangement of that organ. Utck Headche, Indirection and all BUious Disorders siacbumu to lbs free use of them. .Ht.ILria.UI arVDTi.BarHiipiMi.t) w uie ma (1 al-CD, .srtia. dwikd". iri-ratic 11 ip . cnrvMit cve Prlco !K.. Dolour fre. S 11 by all Uroggists. umcs, 3D. lus A, luuw St., nsiiuiaore 8osas or Becuh the new Bandar-School SinKing-book price 35 eta. ; SO per hundred. Uix &, wauca, 1113 Lneetnni si, rnuau a. Khennamtlana )nlrkly Cared. Durang's Rhenmatio Remedy." the great Internal Medicine, will ponitivelT cure any rase of rheumatism on the face of the earth. Price tl a bottle, six bottles, ti. Sold by all Irrug uistflL tie rid for circular to Helpheostine A. Kentley, Druggists. Washington. I. C X others, .wslners, Melbeni. Don't fail to procure MRS. WIS8LOWS SOOTHISO SYRUP for all diseases of teeth ing in children. It relieves the child from pain, cores wind colic regulates the bowels, and by giving relief and health to the child, ariven rest to the mother. VEGETINE. For Eilicns, lMltentanilntciiilteal Fever. . Or what Is more commonly termed Fever and Acne, with pains in tbe loins and Ibruugu me I.ck. and iDdescrihabie i bllly sensaliun down tbespiDe. an irresistible dupoeiu-.n to yawn. p..in in the eyes, ahirb Is Increased by moving In. m. a Mue ting- in the skin, aud irrvat llsr-1-ssum apd debiiuy. Vturrut is a safe and eoH.te remedy. It is conipounurd exclu sively iroui me juices of careiully M-lected barks and Uerbs. aud so simncly concentrated that. II one be arextnat eleara ef the losxi l bat isurcan ue pat 1'nr-tiier. Vkhftisi Uu. s nut slop wita breakiuif blllsand fever but II exteuds Us wonderiui niiiuem e inioevtrry p.irtot tbe human system, aud entirely eradi cates every taint uf diea.se. Vbuetine rsias act aa a pusvnul cathartic, or debilitate Ibe bowels and cause I he pai lent to dre.id other serious coniplalnis wblcb must Inevitably fol low; hui it Ktriken at tbe root of dnase by Ctirir. Inclhe blos,resion-!tlilternd l.i e v a to healthy actlnn. rerslalev the nd a.s.Ms aiare m periuniuiia: ai ihe duties that devole upon h r Thousands of Invalids are suffering to-oav fri.in the effects ol poweri'nl aanaiite Mlrant, frichlfal jaatliies r al-- ! dm of araeaUe iieiitier ol uicu ever have, or ever could, reach the true caibe of their cumplaihU VEGETINE. worts In 'he bairan system In perfect harmony w.iB nat are's !, aud woile It is pleasant to the ttoir, geslai 10 ihe stomach, ana mild la its Inlluence on tue bowels. It Is absolute In Us acili.n on disease, and la not a vile, nauseous Bitters, purging the Invalid li.lo fake hope that ihey are being cured. Vumii la a pajrrly Vegetable Mrdlrlnr, compounded upon scleutiuc principles, ii is indorsed by tbe b.st pus:cuns wneie Its virtues have been tested Is recommended aalj where anrdlrlae Is eedetf. and is not a mixture o. cueap wius ke sold under tbe cloak ol Hitlers. Giyes Healtl. StrcDitli ani Ajcstite. My daughter has received great benefit from theitseol Veortinc Her declining healih as a source of great auxte y to all of her friends. A few bottles of the Vegktini restored her health, sireugib. and appetite. N. II. T1LDKN. lusuiauce and Keil Estate Agent. No. sears Build' ng, Boston, Maaa. VEGETINE. Police Testimony. O. R. srar.. Kso, B"ro"' SV- 1S lST5- vor .y.ourlug the past flTe Tears f have had ample opportuuliy to juil,'e oi the merits or iuetins. My wife bas used it for complaints aileudmg a lady of d hcale be.il: h. with more beuen. lai reruns than ai.y tblic ele which she eyer tried. 1 have given it Ui my children unuer almost eveiy circuliisiai.ee ai lending a large famliy, and always with marked benent. I have taken it mysell with such great be u. til that I Canuot flud words to express icy uuuuailned appreclai Ion of tta goodness. while periormu.g my duties as a Police Officer In tbtscily. It haa been my lot tu fail In with a great deal of s:caiis. 1 unhesitatingly recom mend VEiitTiNE. and f never knew of acs.se wnero It old not prove all that was claimed I c IU farucuiarly In cases ol debilitated or Im poverished slat of ihe h'nod, its effects are really wonderful; and. for all complaints aris ing from an impure late of the buud. It appears to work like a caarm : and I do not believe there are any clicuiusiau ei under which Vir.msE can be used w.th Injurious result.-., and It will always afford me p.rasnre to give any further Information as lo wual I know ol VaotriNE. VU1.U Jf u HILL, Police Station . VEGETINE Prepared by H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. Tf eline is Sold by All Dru'-ists. HA. asvsi NITRE. ilktU Ererv familm ,a tL. - i . ....... ' - ,..m, uiirien awl .QD" aiKl inrnUN IU .UfMHTID LfurTaa PasssvTiai.. Tlw price i ' i! i rar, pnttatt pntii. land mmm mf it is "The BEST KI.LIKIOI S PAPER "bli'hed." arjma C"Pr fr r OS K aw ulNN.-riber. we will asaii y. tbs "WASHINGTON CENTENNIAL HEHORIAl" Or for THREE rahncribera. we will mni yoa SMITH'S BIBLE DICTIONARY, aver km . AMm Tm Pidittiiut. UU Chestnut Street, f kaledeltvaia. $10 : $1000 UTestea in Wall Street Stocks, make fortunes very month. Book sent Vaaa Mnlalnlna thin?. AMnm BAXTSS CO, Bankers, II Wail Street. :ew York, Those answering aa Advertisement wu easier a favor apoa the Advertiser and tks Publisher by stating that they saw the advet. Etsement la this toornal (naming the paper INTEP.NA110NAL EXHIBI1I0N, Centennial Grounds, Philadelphia. The Largiet, Kraaalest, aad Mint Complete Ex kibitiua is the Weris. A OHAND DISPLAY OF PLANTS AND FLOWERS, PomoIoEical Frsincts an. TesetaKes WILL Tail FLACK QCTQMEB -" TO 3TII. Lars trweleinss ware-reel, ami .p-ia in.lqc, avnuio klhil.ilr. Iroui all parts ol the coniri Tat Prenuam Lists and further informstiua wMrast CHAS. W. GEZEflLliraiiager, PHILADELPHIA. !v "OUT OF WORK." goes and Chorus, by ALICE HAWTHORNE, Aathorof "Lwtee to tbe Workii.s Binl." "I ll ass fte '.' "what m Hoax wilsoal a JtuiStt? le" "Out nfsrark. wttbnwt a penny, rl'-tMliuc help belur thy a.r. Without lrebue saxics the aasuy Look with pit ua the puwr.' On of tbe aueit toarhin end bean: tf ill bulla. 1. -aar written, will fiTS the sut b. .r s aiot- txit, eusularity 'as" ejiythinE .be aae eer wriuea. Price J? cuw-or. Uluetrsied utTe pe l rts for eel et ell biomc at or-, or wnl be trat poetaaal ee receipt ut arace by Lb- paMiahers, SS receipt oa pa , Ji sTOOUABT CO TO Cbeetaat street. Ptuaelpala. LEATHER V. hit- u..t :: k til trth r-Tn Sirwt. FtiHJe:pri, r aMW y ii f.vaisM Tart.' PTKT I. XXXII r will .iitrlMy- yur r.r i..ire rrmnt "iii-t n i- t-h. 139 North KOI KTH .r-t. rh.lvl-lpli:. G I t( OVLT for Pvntrnarnr Xw,pprr Wr. rlJMr t.ry ami Hirl IWk f .IT vf- ., a tpr. For ml at S" Pwrt. Rw. New I,.rk. -atp.(-ag fnm on receipt of tbe moufj . a syj mm h Thifl fa an jrm of mv1ic.t.tiii eonftnafl in tt- eji)ti to narrow lini'N, Twill? yw. wmmmgm'rHt h ( tlv iU"t W'iv.rfal vUitr t tnauif.ui o known. Tti-rxfr it luii cr crMf.r varit-ty j .I, and a Urt,r pnr" Un f Blienttf.an auo(Iir Htmt. Eikfi.t jiar- .-f Wnpr-rwiK fuil cottdrr-. tit xawacisvttt'D. Tb ubribra ami their f ---a make- kiHwn and .ral.nhis, o ihoiurk th TTtiat rail wlrta.F mf (be 4Maaaiait ?.. it . tir aJ-fM. smii--jI ami cb---.p i r etas' -0 7 in io vorbl Lt mil eoiwv'ii at , dyftawatir, aaxalTtlca.. rcatu), anl all. avail disTCoarasTwl lavaikl. mtnd for oar br 0(iar"f !i -;, wbtciicootainavaar wvivlarf'. bat tnw trial-.. ota and be of tsM'.raonla:. Mi.d ra ii. K. ktaBKbT. A M M ST IKKET P.vUM ti. E. Paxaa. Pk.B. Jt.D. U.S U Irani ft., "W W A AN V ah.l. - IMtTiril.ta A. I wilsiji stwiib matHiif: CO BiMatwjajr. .New lrU . HW Orl4PJ.wa. 4 hii-a,. Blia. mr !ju r naW. 4 a. Vl OXLTfor Pr-tMni-iH'- N-wivpri"7-" e .IMF tory and Hind B. -ok "f Ci poir t qm typv Fur aala al V Park R'w. Sem ok. -ut p.., avg frva un rvcaiyt uf tbe a nrjr . PRIME INJQYItlENT FOR k Lrs taaa 4 Oaia a Uvea. YEAR. Make U me Attractive b iiitr-duc tiff THE SATURDAY EVENING FCST, blv-h fr Mora ttoaaj ."Ml ffan hit bt. am bt kai7. ffcfcrla-I anal ft a anal. faarr --t, turn ufM. ... t.tiikt-iKi(t .r i!- , im, . 1 1 (.run, eta.tr ly ar Dt- d tn k- d paiK-r. Un. h uti tb eti.-t brrt-a avud .kttrb by 1 If beM writer., Dtt an titxusi trav-b, but acU vin othrr ta w..hr to tu br cb ir n n-ad. Th- wh-.l- ton ,4 :l 4 WvntlTiC. It a no CHiLtunt Hi-rric-a. ai d Kiur-vpi. :Vca4 art.la; N-ieulitic. A-fi trull u al aud II ast,,iil i'e-aarttuenf ; Fa-bl- u Articl w-..v , ircnii aii.i u,, f xcetk-d . H umoruua Sota; .tt-raT) it e-a: s Nta ; B'-y aud 4irV Cukiuuna, and irn aisj baarkilnc tiitoriala; at., ate. It in jowt iw h a 01 aa v-frybodj lo-a to read, and tbe prwv only 1 W lOLLAK A YfcAR,ri.il'iaclLit... .rxpl-ci,, taalraa. A4uraa, Ihjl sUI.idat Kvbsi v, rovt. 'OIL itTft f ! pro" rnr.i -f.44.IC IAM1KN M.llrrM, I. J M arty, 1 :tm Si . ft,. - fc Vwaueaca a i encen-f tor jirir.u ior pus :c as., tkf tana' UiNKUAUiED! rncea Ut tOkBi.Mil P 1 Ti rtA V ecv aVa SCMBA.aU AuM, ia ma DIITTCD Aftar fair trial and t-T-re t nil I I r r waa aaanied Ceriteunitl Pri-Mi-lnT AU ' WH ,T I SI HfcRloH T' s J t J XV A LL. lat. U baa no tasta or asiad, tuid I- aa Ii.irtuivsp.( art watr. ftJ- 1 1 ia l-quid. ia mf ta daivlla, and a mned in cream b-tora ct.urfiii:f . ir-L It prudica Colr raaavmblma; Jmpmp rava Unt'-r. 4th. It th only artrcta ttiat wtd el f tha fctiu-r ar.t tha buttermilk. Mb. It Kftlbvra tlv butler V) iter 1 Is, )ncremav tha wijht mora than will pay i-r tha -obr ased. It is tha ew avar kn..o oe i jour ailrrwa on avatal card fr mj receipt book. '-m. It tells bow to BuaLe butter, pack. pr-a-r. -xtract ran citiitv. Mv B Smith, 3-V Arch at.. P. U. bx liia, Pluaadalpuia, Pa, THE "POULTRY WORLD' The lsdfne Ameri can Matru-ntf of tw tLM. An eltfrantly lua rated Monthly. On trial- on. 1 S for 3 mo. li thro nioa In pr-tnt nL 177. 3 eta. 'tra. U r l .3 a year. Aiwara th yrar. with ti-raa h.u- plrrurea. t annual ait-H-ni-rra. f rtal, prrt?ral. on 1 lfi.il and inTTO.-tlTe. tF"Thel-i i hi-omaajarThe) beat terrr Irwued. H. H. STODDARD, Hartford, Ct- ,T . 111 I ONLY for P-tt-neills X-warso-r lir- 1 ,' it P fry n.t llii.l H-oK of T."i p.... .1 ni.e n w. K'.r .al at T! P;rk R-.w.New V.rk. -ut l-t-ae free on recei pt of tbe mouey . This Claim House Established in 1 85. PENSIONS: "rT. ontrcti any uieib. api.t. ,i.-n.e Tti.nHB.i. -n-titi-,1. Msny ti.niirj ti. iarrrayere r .t ei. l -h- uTl ipply inimnl.alely. The alaailaax. akeerla-r. ell :b.eili.lK.norally dtM hsrEnl. Rfll IIUTV ff di.ch.r,..! f, tW Veer VeeV VJ I a woant. Injure or rupf .ir. y..u (vi lull l,..ui.ry. Su cker uulrMeao eselul. semi two etetup. reyly. 1 rer..mmefHi Cspr. Lemon ee en h.n.-reile er.. nrc-lul pri. tiik.urr.' A. llnrll ut. W i' .th "nrt""""' "w-' IHin..i.. It- VliJ. Jsl V a Vile. la wntuic nienti,.n oeaie tit thie paper. Luck Bui s7, WeehinKt. a. . V. lit.oRr.r. Z. ltlll. I )KTTK ...'. Sraapiiprr lrrrery I S11.1 A.lv. rti- r H ui. I lb. k r i- if Pttrnill I'o .. re frk K. w. N V , sn.l ,"I lbel out sitrret, Fbiliaitripi.ie. I'ticif 4. 111 S. M. PETTEK" GILIj & CO., ADVERTISING AGENTS, r Park Ew, N-w Trk.and Chaatnnt Sr.. PhlU delphia. tfr to hnli.--. nrn AdtertUtnic in bet newwptapera in the I'mted Statm and t'an.vlaa, pla. l in tb choK-e-t peHittiona and at the rtieapssr rait All a.iertjT are initd U call.amin tneir -' pHperaaitd their ta'ilitte and uiodaot diuic butrtUMta a-a'a- "aT T.' y Tmte.1 Satin ''ant-, with name k Ph..t.kttrt,it. m1 of Mudy A iSaiikey 10c. Ptiuaetfr at roy. Pa. TUB Fena Mutual Life Insurance Co. Or PHILADELPHIA. PCRiXY MUTUAL. Incorporated In 147. Aewts. 16 Mt' i.W T.. !VMt'KLC. HCBT. Prm.leut. The PKNM is strictly eauliijaj It. Mirsln. I. n- turned to its aiemle?re every year, thus iiu4 thfji neoTsnre at the lowest rates. All its p.4h lee awo furteitiMe for their vsine. SDatoWBaent rolKies Hemeil at Life Rate. Ageula wanted. Apj.ly to H. . "TkPllrNS. Ti.-e Pr-.l-..l I riTUTR Msnafsrtarer of B--1 and l E.L.M I ntn. p r. aud Snoe Fin lino. l-renl su.l prompt attention to or.l-re by null. Oo.xUe.iJ at cseb pric H.J. R.ps. Tanner. Currlel and Importer, UJU M.rket St., rhiUvllpuia. ACitNIS WANItU rUK I lit The ILLUSTRATED HISTORY n GREAT R OTu ."iiiiiD 1 uu av-v-.tiinr iitw rw gn or rr ritfthnrch. Bltim.rr. i hna-o, and other ririe "lecnntrratttrnd d-trncuafn ol arpert? . Thril lin acenea and inrtdenta. ate. ate. Deud for a tu'.l d-rcrition ,.f tha work ai oar axtr tarma W Agrnra. A1'-e-M, jaanoiAL FcSLbsiw Co., PbHadelpbla, Pa. I 'Mrn litafic Hattr Pen Mlr ''h wat r. n iitk rfnirMl ; dtw-. per dt Snt )r- t.-r atrjuplt and catalugu. U. H. IHIIKTKK. 216 FtUtuu it., N T. a si f if lit ITIii XIZu tui a ts 3. S. : a pa Sut woal ks a fcrw. mrc r Sera, TtncoM 7eOa a! aJu lap. Km tw tsy tusuv wJ rrm ra peaaa. Alse Ptcrt tecrvuel ml SX Uzxrn la-, tei bcts u z'zi, u i-jv aistklf aapet far Suttara, 26 cti rur. 1"7 iudiai aim It Ftfl pari.OLiirt itl eircitrt Sva, aims, iwitk ttaBs,i ccl. Baths w. rm- Mlii 1. 1. L data tnnmf. Wuksgtas. B. (J. ay. OYKCS- BEARD ELIXIR f.m A 6- ;t. wa miuL leu it ra NC JaVra I w aaw. awi. awsal rrwsa 1 tm 1 fart f- utgorv taeai; ajjif iksl. lrtaiMiaa af tai . tai 'aav Pa&iUc HA iirsert'aa) p a-OQa. aXTTH a jOH. C- A. A ta fkwum ik ADVERTISING Pone in anv snd all the new4papr. of the rmtvd States and t'ejaeala in the beet manner aud at tbe cltesnnt rstw. s. M. PET TKNOILL a CO . d Fsrk Eur, S. I ..aad 71 ChoMuB iSt., fhila. umzo I I J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers