FOR THE FAIR SEX, Wouldn't Pay Their Bills THE HAIR. Some Curlous and Interesting Facts, | use twenty earloads of -other poople's | hair. Convents usually furnish large their * little bills" amounts for the French, Spanish and I am told that trade as “church hair.” The prices of | folded shortly. Worth, for instance, though the finest of gowden hair will [a certain noble English iady, whose ounce, In such cases a If hens have plenty of coal ashes to not bo annoyed with lice. In cultivating roses faded checks the tendency to produce seeds and encourages new growth and fresh ities have a peculiar odor in their hair; the Chinese hair has a musky smell, sed the odor of violets has been detected in are or two instances, fect the quaiit Yioy w hether 000 ($100,000), It is said that the books [of that famous eatablishment, if cace. The dealers de- | stories. There was one fair luminary y mainly by the touch, of the second ewpive who died owing h its color 1s dyed or | M. Worth some 230,000, and I do not hed, and whether it comes from | know if he has ever yet been paid in living or dead. As a rule hair | full. But the chief of any one of the ; ors are a degraded race whose { great houses of Paris could tell queer richios consist not in their flocks, but in | tales of that nature if he would. have their own fleeces, which they never pin heard of how there came one day up or comb, but wear in closely-Hitting | to the Compagnie des Indes (the great Caps, Ince and India shawl warehouse of the The enormous strength of the hair is | Rue Richelieu) a certain noble duchess, hardly appreciable. A healthy single | with a set of point-lace flounces that she hair will support four ounces, A single | wished to have altered. The courteous head of hair in an audience of 200 people | salesman took her directions very i ort the entire audience; and quietly, but when they were ended he » of all the puopie in Detroit | remarked : ** Before we alter your lace, port a load which would re | madam, do vou notthink that you had JH locomotives to draw, and | better pay for it? The bill had been of the prone of the globe | standing tor over seven years. But the ianet against the ! liveliest case on record of this nature hh. Samson's hair was that of the wife of a prominent ing embiem of his | official ofthe second empire, who bought ria, a superb set of diamonds on credit, » shape of the hair, looked at as | took them straightway to the Mont de one would look at the end of a stick of | Piete, and forthwith pawned them candy, is an oval in the European and | Naturally, when the bill was presented ig aired races, and in the Semitic she was unable either to pay it or re. 08 more or less angular, The hair | turn the jewels. The affair was on the ellipucal or kidney- point of terminating in a tremendous no central canal, and scandal, when some prominent persons ‘he Eurovean s will not; | age informed the emperor of the whole the negro’s hair, as a matter, and pointed out the terrific N coarse, perhaps on ac- | damage that would be done to the 18 ouriiness, a competent ob- reputation of the imperial official cire eo avers that the individual hairs | were it suffered to become public, That ce are finev than the hairs of | cautious soverign at once paid the jew- an, The eurlin the negro's | eler out of his own pocket, or rather out caused by effect, daring thou- | of the publi) treasury, and the lady's years, of a hot sun, which has | little game in consequence succeeded to { upon it (ike a perpetual crimping. | perfection. at oh an as a rule, penetrate the iy, but at an angle. of the different hairs Summer Fashions in Shoes, Wl When short dresses are fashionable, @ it is possible to give to it | the fit and size ot one's boots is a sub- weeps and curves which we | jeet of serious consideration, says the y sce it take; butif there are by | Boston Transeripd, and this summer Miss ireak of nature misplaced, “ we | Flora McFlimsey will give the shoe beliious ‘frizssle-top’ that | makers no peace until her foot is made bie to the influenceof | to look as small, if not smaller, than d comb.” Many a poor | that of any of her friends. Her 3 hall worried her life out | will be rather dificult. for Flora has n her Johnny's rebellious been wearing Louis Quinze heels so ter ways, believing it was | Jong that her little foot 1s sadly twisted ¥'s perverseness of manners that | and distorted, and all the soaking in | such dilapidated-looking head- | natural water, all the polishing with uit was really none of Joln- | pumice, and all the rubbing with per- ai all, but simply a freak of | fumed oil that an Egyytian beauty acing the radiating cen- | could teach her to lavish upon it would ite covering." Some- | not restore it to the graceful slendeor- fer fro a ocontrariwise | ness that it had in the days when her hers—they run the | sensible grandmother made her wear a anthor's father had | boot that left half an inch space beyond leg-feathers ran up toward | her great toe. She is no worse than those on the body and neck | most other girls, or most other men, ¢ head. This gave her a per- | for that matter, for only about three of sorts” look and she persons out of a hundred wear shoes ly. The erection of the | that are as long as they should be is during anger or of hu-| The pretty three-strap slippers ave fright, is caused by a | still worn, but even with these the ten- skin and the angle at | dency is to the plainest styles, and the enters the head or body. | glittering steel is replaced by jet, and ec reasons why women's | sometimes left off altogether, and slip- * than men's: First, she pers with two bows or one bow are wih on her face, and 80 | preferred. There are a greal many ply of hair-forming | patterns, from the four tightly strapped scalp; second, the! lowps to the little cascade bows tha ¢ hinir being larger, 1tis | uve fice full loops each side of the break; ird, belong | sirsn, and trom the lusteriess silk to the ged in mental labor or | ace und satin butterfly bows that are ¥, se Das a more ¢n- made to wear with black grenadine supply of blood to the | dresscs in Spanish styles, but the favor- tions where the hair ofthe | jte design is like the little cascades y worn short, the Iashion | that are worn for neckties, is almost ol long hair in the male is nosarded as | four inches long, and nesrly covers the a protest against church and state, and instep; when worn with a giove-kid ag inst general customs, taste and | slipper this looks well with almost any thought; in Austria it is made a politi~ | jress. The Neilson buttoned shoe and cal offense to be so attired. | the Newport tie will both appear in The growth of the hair is the most | {he street this summer, as they did last rapid inthe young and middle-aged, | year, but the English fancy for low and in those living an outdoor life. At | shoes stitched with white has not yet the age of eighty, if a man live so long. | been imported, and until our climate and if his hair and beard have been becomes more equable, boots will be close-trimmed, he has cut off six and a | preferrea to shoes for general wear. naif inches of hair annually, or about | Broad-toed boots with the Scotch welt airty feet in ad. : are made for girls who take long coun- ne Lair is the least destructible part | try walks and climb mountains by way the bode. The hair of the ancient of recreation, and tor those who will be ‘Thebians is, alter a lapse of 4,000 years, | foolish is there not the D'Orsay slipper jound to have survived the tombs. The | that has the heel somewhere under the yr ithe sphinx are crumbling | holiow of the foot, and curves up at but some of the wigs of human hair, ex- | the back and down in the center, and sed to the mold and moisture of their | has a toe-piece that curls up to cover entombed riments, are less decayed | the bunch of ill-used muscles crowded than the uments themselves. to the top of the instep? For evening Ther three coloring pigments to | wear black or white satin slippers are he ha w, red and black, and all | most used, the demand for these having produced by the mixture | sprang up within a few months and LATOR COLOrS. In pure gold ye!- | attained almost to the dimensions which © there is only the yellow pig- [it had in the days when no beauty red, the red mixed with yei- | would have dared to dance in any other wrk the black mixed with ved | shoe. Lawn tennis, of course, demands v; in the hair of the negro | its own specis. shoe, and thos® worn in much red pigment as in the | this country are far prettier than the ir, and had not the black been | hideous Queen Anne ankle-ties that sed—perhaps by the action | some English players of the game affect. the hair of all negroes would | The grooved rubber sole makes the bs fic l as the reddest hair of | shoe clumsy in appearance, but by dint un Englishman.— Dr. H. CO. Seward, in | of tying it with bright + threw Free Press. varying the ¢ lorof its kid mountings I it is made becoming. In children's shoes common sense i comes even nearer to being supreme than in those worn by Indies, for it is almost impossible to sell a very high 3 ¥y > LE a 1324848 ww his : vy § AICS GL EE ————— An Easy Death, Dr. Sam Jolinson was a dear lover of tea. and drank it freely sion Lie chanced to be taking tex in pany where was present a woman who not only held the fragant herb in holy horror, »ut who believed it to be poison. She sat near the doetor, and | fuli dress, but their appearance in the id him receive his sixth cup. She | street usually indicates that the small sorne it thus far in silence, but | person whostandsie them has a foo'ish sie saw the good man about to | mother or has no other shoes. Ler cup, after having drank LB em, she felt it her duty to speak, whiel: she di eeli 9 - phatically : she did, feelingly and em They Missed the Boy After All, “My dear Dr. Johnson, do you know =~ Jack was not a bad boy, but he was a what you are doing? Doyou know that | terrible mischievous one, and his pa- you are drinking poison? If you are rents really feit relief at the thought given to that habit, you may be sure it | that he was to start for boarding-school 13 killing you.” the next day. [His father thought of it _ Ths burly doctor looked at her, first | when he found that Jack had used his im amaze and thenquizzieally, with the | razor to whittle a kitc-stick. He thought wailing cap suspepded. With a rev- | so again when he discovered that Jack's erent nod he replied : ball had gone through the parlor win- * Madam, I thank you for your con- dow. Jack's mother thought so when ein in my welfare, but on my account | she found muddy footprints all over the you need not be alarmed. many, many years at this work, and if, on those short-sighted persons who select cheap shoes are iearning that it is better to have those that are low-heeled. White, blue and pink boots are worn in COI I piano leg. ensy death to die, vour exit may be as vi fui and as calmly placid!” And he raised nis cup to his lips. A physician who had been called to attend Fontenelle found the great au- thor sipping coffee, ** My dear sir, do you expect medicine esn cure you wh le you persist in crink- ing the intrusion of that pernicious ber- ry ? Coffee, sir, is a slow poison!” “I should say slow.” replied Fonte- nelle, sipping away at his beverage, “1 ive, within my own ‘remembrance, been drinking it, daily and freely, for vver sixty years.” ’ He livededo be 100 years old. | the evening paper, by getting up a fight between the dog and cat, hie sat down ion his mothcr’s new bonnet she had | just been fixing, and utterly ruined it. | Early the next morning Jack was { packed off. Oh! | noise and trouble it was. His | razors remained undisturbed : no sdund | lor carpet was unstained by mud. But, | somehow, the house didn’t seem cliver- { ful to its occupants. It was a longday, | Ten wns served. There was no whist- | ling and upsetting of dishes to inter- {rupt the conversation, but the Ik An Artist in Ice. | didn’t seem to run sosmoothly after al Scaree as ice is this season, there is in | Philadelphia an artist who devotes his time to the preparation of images in ice, for the adornment of supper tables at large parties, The figure of Atlas in ice is made to support a hollow globe to contain raw oysters, there being an opening at the top to ladle out the bivalves. ‘A large ice swan, the wings carved in the most artistic manner, is placed afloat in a large dish of water. The wings are made almost as thin as glass, and nearly as transparent, though the artist complains that he can get no clear and good ice. He has also made an oyster holder in the shape of camels and elephants, with a Hindoo riding, while hack of him was the cave con- taining the oysters. His trade is so flourishing that hie uses up about 3,500 pounds of ice in a single week. ing paper and fixing up another bonnet, the doz and cat slept serenely on the hearth-rug, and no disturbance inter- rupted the proceedings. | noticed a quivering about her mouth and two big drops on her cheeks, and there was a kind of mistiness about his eyes that bothered him about seeing. “Yes,” she answered; ‘“it—is nice— and— quiet; uh, uh, ou-u-u!” and he ot up and went te the window and ooked out and blew his nose for twelve minutes steadily. The Great Lakes. The latest measurements of the"great fresh water seas nre as follows: The greatest length of Lake Superior is 335 miles; its greatest breadth 1s 160 miles; mean depth 688 feet; elevation, 627 feet; aren, 82,000 squar: miles. The greatest length of Lake Michigan is 300 miles; its greatest breadth, 108 miles; mean depth, 690 feet ; elevation, 506 feet ; area, 23,000 square miles. The greatest length of Lake Huron is 200 miles; its greatest breadth, 169 miles; mean depth, 600 feet; elevation, 274 feey; area, 20,000 square miles. The greatest length of Lake Erieis 250 miles; greatest breadth, 80 miles; mean depth, 84 feet; elevation, 555 feet; + area, 6,000 fquare miles. The greatest length of Lake Ontario is 180 miles; its greatest breadth, 65 miles; mean depth, 500 fect; elevation, 261 feet; area, 6,000 square ma les. The length of all five is 1,265 mil es, covering an area of upward of 136,000 square miles, A Interesting Seientific Faets, In the height of the season a queen hee lays from 2,000 to 3,000 eggs in twenty-four hours. A Berlin inventor has produced a new kind of cloth, consisting principally or entirely of sponge. By means of relays, it is stated that london has frequently been placed in direct communication with Calcutta over 7,000 wiles of wire. To illustrate a recent lecture, M Raoul Pictet coined a medallion weigh- thirty-three pounds from frozen quicksilver. Under the nuspices of the King of the Belgians sa e:tablishment is to be ‘ormed in Eastern Ab ica for thecapture and trainir ¢ of elo; tants, The clematis is oneof the most beau. and hardy climbers we | i i i A FREE PRESS, | Some of Ita Advantages Torsely Stated. | The beautiful ‘dea of getting some. | thing for nothing is nowhere more | readily traceable than in a newspaper | So much has been spoken, writien | rerfeotly hardy, and produce masses of reautiful flowers and foliage. In starting many flower seeds, pure sand is better than soil, Put some in seed. When well sprouted, and large enough to handle, transplant to pots. To keep bugs off melon and squash vines put a tomato plant in each hill This is worthy of trial; if it doea not succeed in saving the melons and squashes we shall have a crop of to- MAtoes, Soot waterfapplied in strong or weak solution, according to the vigor and need of plants, has the effect of dispell. ing all worms from the soil, and of im. parting a deep-green, healthy color to the foliage, In the oultivation of the kitchen gar. den, long, straight rows of vegetables sufficiently far apart to allow the cuiti- vator or horse hoe to be worked be tween them, will greatly lighten the hana work. Many sows have a frenuy for devours ing their young at farrowing, that seems to be caused in part by the previous method of feeding, and can be partially prevented at least by giving them a va- riety of food. All hens which are good setters can be moved, after they have sat on eggs a week, to a small apartment where food and water can ba kept constantly by them, and little trouble will be ocea sioned. A dusting. box should b: added. Te prepare liquid manure to be used upon a flower or vegetable garden, fill a hogshead holding sixty gallons with water, to which add a bushel of horse manure, or half a bushel of hen drop- pings, or the same quantity of soot, or six pounds ot Peruvian guano. Stir the whole two or three times a day for a few days: then allow it to settle and use the clear liquor. The old practice among farmers of annually scraping the trunks of apple trees and afterward applying a coat of whitewash is not so common nowa- days as it used to be. Still the good re- suits following the labor will well repay one, Underneath the dry and dead bark countless numbers of vermin make their home; when the vark is removed and whitewash applied the destruction of all vermin is certain. Hounsehoid ints. Copperas mixed with whitewashjput upon the cellar walls will keep vermin AWAY. To polish stained #ioors rub them thoroughly once a week with beeswax and turpentine, Strong brine may be used to advan- tage in washing bedsteads; hot alum is also good for this purpose. Drain pipes and all places that ure sour or impure may be cleansed with ime water, copperas water or. embolic acid. "Carpets should be thoroughly beaten on the wrong side first, and then on the right, after which spots may be re. moved by the use of ox-gall or ammonia and water. When hard-finished walls are calci- mined, the coats should be washed or scraped before a new one is put on. This is the most disagreeable part of the process. The furniture should be covered, as lime makes spots that remove with difficulty, especially upon black walout. SOL. edd Farniture needs cleaning as much as other woodwork. It may be washed with warm soapsuds, quickly wiped dry and then rubbed with an oily cloth. To polish it, rub it with rotten stone and Clean off the oil and polish it with a chamois skin. For ordinary woodwork use whiting to rub the dirt off and ammonia. Mortar snd paint may be removed from window-glass with hot, sharp vinegar. Grained wood should be washed with cold tea. In washing painted walls it is a good plan to remove from the rcom every- thing that can be injured by steam and then hang sheets wrung from hot water in the room. The vapor, condensing on the walls, softens the dire, which may be wiped off with woolen cloth: wrung from soda-water. Ceilings that have be washed off with soda-water. If the wall about the stove has been smoked by the stove, cover the bhiasck patches strike through paint or calcimine, Paint your plastered walls and they will not absorb odors. You can easily clean them with soda and water. Soap and ‘water spots them. When paper and plaster become saturated with eflluyvia, nothing but entire remo al will clean them. Inscets will not harbor in mine is spplied to walls every erack or cement made of one part water to one mon whiting. quarter of a pound of white glue in cold the morning unti. dissolved, eight pounds of whiting with hot water, add the dissolved glue and gether, adding hot water until about the consistency of thick cream. Uses caleimine brush and finish as you go along. Training Helfers, easier to train them to jump, kick and run. The way to teach them to stand sense altogether too literal, If a man has a sohieme of any kind | germinating he just steps into the edi torial room and details it with the re mark: * I'm not quite ready to advertise yet, but a few words will help meanlong.’ He gets the few words and never gets any to advertise, Two tickets admitting Iady and gent to the “G. R. X. M. T.'s grand ball," are expectea to produce a six-line lo- | onl and n quarter of n column deserip- | tion of the ladies’ toilets after the ball | is over, Church fairs and the like are worse than balls, They never leave tickets, | but demand more space, because **it's | a matter of news and a help to the cause,” Should a boy saw off his finger, Dr. C. O, Plaster dressed the wound with great skill,” would be a gracetul way olf stating it, and besides it is “unprofes sional" to advertise. : The patent rat-trap man brings in one | of his combinations of wire and moldy chicese bait, sticks it under the editor's nose, and explains how they eateh ‘em every time the spring works. “It's | something of interest to the community, | and if you put in a piece save me a dozen | papers,” which he quietly walks off with asthough he had bestowed a favor in allowing editorial eyes to gaze on such a marvel of intricacy An invitation ** to come down and write up our establishment™ is a great | deal more common than a two-sanare | “ad " from the same firm. Newt .pers must be filled up with something or | other, you know. . The lawyer, with strong prejudices against advertising, is fond of seeing his (nses reported in full in the news apers, with an occasional reference to | Ris exceedingly able manner of con. ducting the same. It is cheaper than advertising. In fact everybody, from a to izsard, w ho has an axe to grind, asks the news. papers to turn the crank, and forgets to even say thank you, but will Kindly take a free copy of the paper as part pay for furnishing news. The press being * free” all hands seem bound to get aboard and ride it to death, That is why newspapers are so rich that they can afford to pay double price for white paper, and never ask Congress to aid them by removing the duty on wood pulp.— New Haven Regisier. Whaling in the Pacifle The fact that whales abound in suffi cient numbers immediately outside this harbor--between the Farallones and Golden gate—to warrant the establish ment of a whaling industry of some im- portance is not generally known, the idea generally entertained being that our waters are too far south to become thie resort of schools of whales, and that only an occasional fish, separated from his companions in the north, strays into a Iatitude so far from his suprozed hab. itat—the Northern ocean. Considerable numbers of whales can be found at all seasons of the year in the ocean a cent to this port, and within a distance that oan he easily traverse d ina day Between the nrst of May and of October is the most favorable season for fishing, on account of the calm weather generally prevailing, The va the first in this vicinity are the sulphur bottom, which is abeut 130 feet long, the largest in the world, and weighs in the neigh. borhood of 200 tons, yielding a small quantity of valuable bone, but being rich in oil; the humpback, weighing 120 tons; the California grays, eighty tons and finbacks and biackfish mainder. Sperm whales, which are tity of spermaceti which they yield, are but rarely found in our waters. and prove a valuable addition to a vessel catch. Captain Thomas Whitelaw is now constructing a littie screw steamer, sixty-five feet long, sixteen wide and nine deep, with which he intends auzarate the business of whaling the heads, over, =o that a sea oan go completely over her without causing damage. She is built very strongly, anc ordinary, so that she can be drawn some distance into the water by a whale, to which she may be made fast without danger. The mode of killing whales adopted by this vessel is by the whaling rocket, or bomb-lance, which can be discharged from the vessel, which method possesses considerable advan. tone ntgidp Ouida in a boat and with a hand-lance. The fish will be eaught each month. a whale is dispatched tLe steamer will reduction works, where the carcass will be treated to an improved process by which every portion will be utilized When a whale, is caught at sea the blub- ber is stripped off and the bone re. moved, after which the carcass is set adrift and floatsaround until completely devoured by sharks and birds. Unaoer and without discriminating between blubber, flesh or tones will be placed in ot boiler which will have the effect of completely be completed in about eight hours, when the residue of flesh and bones will be taken out, dried, and from running, and if her fears prompt her to run, she can and will run. The bones are valuable for phate of lime which they will yield, habit is one of the most powerful influ- beast. 1 Never strike her. She must first of all get acquainted with you and learn that vou will not hurt If in winter it is best to milk in the stable, make as little fuss and as few alarming motions ss possible: handle her very gently. Be careful not to pinch the teats. This is the great A cow naturally She stands quietly until some careless milker has kicks and runs. By following such a course a few times the habit will be confirmed. The best way to manage, if you liave no stable, is to have a well feneed yard, and tesch your heifers to or milking in that; or, next to tie them, us‘ng them very No man or boy is fit to handle animals unie:8 he can control them, and control himselt, Look Out for the Moon. The {ivory was advanced some time ago by an English astronomer that, owing to the peculiar sslar and lunar acon, the earth and moon must eventu- ally come into collision. This theory was oppceed by some of the most learned scientific men, who argued that, best, the moon is drawn not exactly in the direction of the earth’s center of gravity, but a little to the east of that center, and that in consequence she is made to recede from the earth, her orbit is en- larged, and her angular motion dimir- ished. The partisans of the collision theory reply that this does not prevent the consumption of the vis viva of the earth's motion around the common center of gravity, although to a certain extent, at least, it must prevent this consumption from diminishing the moon’s distance and increasing her : nguiar motion, As this consumption of vis viva will go on through infinite ages, if the present order of things re- main unchanged, the earth and the moon must ultimately come together, with results which the imagination can only faintly conceive. ns aA. A German physician [claims to have discovered a means of dyeing the eyes of animals in general and of man in particulsr any color he pleases. He is accompanied on bis travels by a dog with a rose-colored eye, a cat with an orange-red eye, a monkey with a chrome-yellow eye, a negro with one black and one blue eye, and a negress with one eye gold colored and the other silver white. The doctor says that his process, instead of injuring, strengthens and improves the sight. —gach capable of containing a ten-foot section of a whale—a large fish can be reduced in about two days. of bone, worth $2.73 a pound by the Chronicle. A Mother's Love. Just before the circus opened yester by her son, a boy about sixteen years of the first at the ticket wagon, window was opened the mother said to the ticket-seller: “I you will be so kind as to let a poor widow woman's Johnny into the cirens he will carry water to the cle. phant.” ** Stand back, madam, stand back!” he eried, as he took the half-dollar over her head. marched to the entrance of the big tent explaining to the man at the door: ' ** My Johnny is going to carry hay to the camels.” “You and your Johnny carry your. emphatic reply. “ Couldn't we both go in for ten cents, | if we sat on the ground?” “No, ma'am! Stand back, now; you are in the way!" They fell back for a consultation. The boy had tears in hiseyes, an‘ the mother looked determined, “* Don’t cry, Johnny, dear —-your | mother loves you and will get you in” | she consolingly remarked, as she led | ing and pushing her way in, she called | out: | *‘ his boy's father was a preacher, | and you ought to let him in free.” | ““ Stand back, madam, stand back! | was the answer she got. “Can't you let us in for ten cents?” “ No, no!” She drew the boy out of the crowd | and took a walk around the tent. There | was a spot where the canvas was raised a little, and as hey halted there she said : ‘““ Johnny, a mother’s love can sur- mouct every obstacly. I'l stand here | and you crawl under the tent.” She spread her skirts as far as possi- ble, and the boy made a dive and disap- peared. In about ten seconds he reap- peared in the shape of a ball, and he didn’t stop rolling until he had gone thirty feet. The mother straightened him out, lifted him up, and inquired what had happened. * [—I—don't exactly know,” said the boy, as he looked back at the tent, ‘‘but I guess I don’t care for any more mother’s love. [I'll take pink lemonade in place of it.” — Delroit Free Press. | | NEWS OF THE WORLD, Eastern and Middie States. | tor homeless boys, BEO On Amsoolate-Justios Charles J, Folger haa viseant by the death of Sanford KE. Churoh, the vacanoy tion, Great exoltement was caused throughoat York by the failure of the Philadelphia and former and practically consolidated with it I'he suspended milroad company is one o the oldest in the United States, and controls and sylvania. Ita stock consists of 410 engines, 834 passenger oars, 3,080 freight oars and 14,753 coal and iron ears. For the last three years the 000,000, Among its assets the Saupe eat. 000 and the real estate at over §7,000,000. A re ceiver has been appointed and the business of the company will be carned on as usual, I'he American marksmen who will go to Ireland to shoot the international mateh against the Irish team confprise W. H. Jacks son, W. M, Farrow, 8. J. Scott, H. F. Clark, J. F. Brown, Homer Fisher, H. T. Rockwell and R. Rathbone The failure of the Headmg Railroad com of Philadelphia brokers, who were swamped by the sudden depreciation in the stock of the corpomuon. owns several furnaces, a large rolling mill, tube works, nail works, foundry, steam forge Prince Leopold, youngest son of Queen Victoria, has arrived at Quebec, When news of the iailure of the Readl poouritios, Garibaldi has been elected a member of the During a disturbance at Christiana, Norway, between some 1,000 workmen and soldiers, several of the tormer and nine of the latter The Panstoa Star and Herald says: “A eomtract has boon made between Mr. A. G. It now awaits only the approval of the legislative congress, which bas been convened for that purpose, to become a | law of the land.” The Porvenir, of Nicar. | agus, asserts that the moving spirits of the | new Ameriean company are P st Hayes, | General Grant, Admiml Ammen snd Mr. A, (i. Menooal, here was a communist demonstration in | Paris on a recent Sunday, and sixtesn arrests | were made. During the day 600 persovs | marched to the wall where the communists | flowers there, On the arrival at Mallow, Irland, of & train | containing emigrants trom Kerry on their | suspended; but the works will continue in For the third time the town ol Edenburg, once the liveliest town in the lower oil flelds of Pennsylvania, has been devastated by fire. hotel, and before they could be controlled had pwe pt BWAY seventy buildings, SOvel ing over five acres in the business center of the town, The aggregate loss is about places burned. no fire de- $300,000 The town contained ponveyed by buckets could be obtained, Frederie Emil Breimann, a dissolute jour. nevman baker of New York, murdered his wile, to whom he had been marded only two ' hs, by cutting ber throat and then disap- j= nred i A party of Boston bieyole riders have sailed (rom New York for Eavope to make a tour of the continent on bioyeles and to con. feud against foreign ni lors LEE pplied with the best quality of barg- tools for the parpose of being able to break into bursing buildings. Franklin HB. Gowen, Edwin M. Lewis and Stephen A. Caldwell have been appointed re. ceivers of the Philadelphia and Reading Rail. road company and the Reading Coal and Iron company. he steamer Mercator left Antwerp on Marck 3 tor New York, and is so long over. due that it Ses. Ung sup las’ cargo at $125,000 more. tempting to stop a street Oght was shot by a man named Wall and died in Afleon minutes Policemen parsued Wall and fired upon him a blow trom the policeman’s club. Another bullets, Western and Southern States. The Illinois Springfield put a full ticket for State officers in the field, bead for re-election. by a justios of the peace near Statesville, N C., and while the magistrate was making out the marriage certificate, the newly.made bride fell down dead. As a train on the South Pacifie railroad was on its way to a picnic at Big Trees two open ms jumped the track on 8 down grade and r passengers were thrown out in a confused heap toward the bank. The ears passed over those persons who were thrown soross the about twenty othars, At Bradyville, Tenn., six members of a family that ate a mess of wild lotioos died within a few hours. From Washington. nse crowd of over 50,000 people { the "ot to Oo the hmniks « ase | Hanan, and springs, N. Y. 30 Lhe Inginre minuqon inke IL was mys boen are ¢ to both niver at 4 the oars. Oo ouno tof ono nee, his plas o es 111 yy. Oa Suni irtney was declared shies al, and it ttney forgs d ahead for but was »o0n passed by ter kept increasing his lend, stopped frequently to bathe | after rowiog a little over two oarsnan gave up the roe inadan to row ly over the course nian made the tes in thinty.six minutos and lorty-nine A nee the aflair was a disap- } ade that had gathered tntion of witnessing on close and ! triners and to row, but issppoint the public. Trickett, au champion, and the only oars with whom Hanlan ed and defeated, hus challenge ! row in Kagland, and the in all ikeliboo! be ao wpted States Senator Gondon, ol Georgia, La I ranitit gio Louriney s mi that ho nas 100 sk wl want to # Anstral de in the world wn fo oligle wii United d his sent, giving ae his principal 1 op weouriness of pub. years and a ire to attend to his private aflaim. Kx. « been appointed ted, proviant noIninslIons were by the President: Horse , of Tennesses, pos-tinaster gooeral; Ling this = ’ ror pe nl er twenty HW vernorJoseph K. Brown h or, and has © MAYER IN other das wt wil minister v; David M. Key to be United States the esstern and middle dis. pi<troot, of Georgia, to bo ' wiriel pudge tor icin of Tannoasee, nominated to be United States minister to Belginm, Forelgn News. Montreal mechanic elaims to have dis. el a new molive power that will be as tam, and as spplicnh eo to all womotion and mill work at one- the cost of fuel. A ne ! state that san bins decided to reeall her chinrge d'al. om Pekin and place her subjects in the protection of the United war between the two irom St. Petersburg es I { an under 8 ntes The means oe, drought provails in Jamaira, West eattio and live stock of all kind I he Indies nd i Lr want of water, wk of food in Hungary is so pressing { 400 persons at thiee places have been i to subsist on grass, nettles and mush. we new Jritish parliament has been wl Ihe gneen’s speech was read by eibarne, lord high ehaneellor. Init she « thot the relations of Great Britain with the other Eatopenn powers are cordial; sre signs of a revival of trade ghout the country: that the provisions ¢ ed by the lad parviinment for the mitiga- 0! the distress in Ireland have boen per. le 10 that end, and that the special at- of parlinment is enlled to bills for 1 more effvetual protection to the oe- « of land sgainst injory fiom ground tor determining on just principles the ties of employers for secidents sustained o Lien, and for the extension of the wh tionghiso in Leland, Lord Beacons. 1 mapecch in the house of lords, thanked th ie jor is support while he was pry mer, Eugene Lamorml, Prince de Ligue, an emi. nent Belgian statesman, is dead at the age of poventy-six, The British troops in Afghan stan are grad. ually to be withdrawn as soon as a ruler has been chosen. Upon the opening of the Buitish {hore arlinment over tho take the oath of office preseribud for members such oath was opposed to the dictates of his conscience, He was refused admittance to the commons ns a member, and put the mutter before his eonstitnonts, who desided that hie should ako the oath. Upon appear- ing betore tha bar of the commons for that purpose he was opposed by a member, who anid his opposition was based upon the fact that Mr. Bradlaugh was anatheist and besides had already intringed the terms of bis oath by his book entitled * Impeachment of the House of Brunswick.” This opposition caused oon- sidereblo uproar, and Mt. Gladstone moved to rater the matter to a select committee. The London Times says that by the failure of the Reading Railroad company the eredit of United States railroad securities in Karope has heen ruined, Clement, Colman & Co., London indigo and seriously injuring some of them. | | The British parliament has desided 10 allow | Mr. Bradlaugh to take the oath as a member, | Queen Vietoria has just eslebrated her sixty. | first birthday. { Fhe United States legation at Constantino. | archbishop of the Syrians declaring that the | from famine are heartrending. * Finding no | cereals at all,” the writer says, ** some people | i i quence.’ i CONGRESSIONAL SUMMARY, i i Nenate, Mr. Butler made a speech in opposition to | the resolutions unseating Mr. Kellogg, i Messrs. Carpenter, Conkling and Kdmunds | opposed Mr. Bayard's bill regulating the pay | wiarshals, and i sever amendments tharotlo were rejected, i I'he Senate passed the bill to authorize a re. list for non-commissioned army officers, having frst rejected Ri the amendments | affect: g the appoistment of ondets to West Point, and adopting one providing for the pro- | motion of non-commissioned officers 10 be | second lieatenants ! Mr. Garland made » speech in vor of un- | seating Mr. Kellogg, and Mr. Kellogg made | i Mr, Bayard's bill regulating the pay and appointment of marshals was taken up. . | Conkling's amendment to make the wall apply | to deputy marshals * appoioted only ” in con. nection with an election was & paily vole, Republicans 10 make the apparent meaning of the bill clear were rejected, and the bill was propriation bill was taken up. The amena. ments of the Senate committee were agreed to and the bill was . i Mr. Sanlsbary adversely on the | bill to change the day for the election of Rep | poned. was passed, after a number of amendments bad been re. jected, by a party vole of 35 yeas to 14 nays, lone. introdnesd biti Mr, Loving Oyisions ol n the iy ol g¢ and the setion , nnd repealing the be tramty of Wash. ction of he former myo ted from my out NG pOoverpiment 874 to enrry owt 1 poling the coll i fiah Cacada, and duecling 1 he fw Rotorred appropriation bil 1 driven from Fortune bay. The ag icaltu: : ni Mr. Wright advocated his bill providing that the government should loan $5600 to any person complyiog with the provisions of the homestead laws Upon motion of Mr. Con. verse the bill was laid aside with unfavorable report. ease of Dully against Mason, thirty-ninth member, was entitled to his seat. A The sundry civil appropriation bill was re ported and ordered printed, Bills were introduced: For the appointment of a special joint commities to visit the town of Hot Springs, Ark., 0 investigate its oon- dition, ete. ; relating to the use of distinctive late war who are totally disable! all money expended by them jor medical and surgical treatment; relative to color blindness in the DAVY. A minority report upon the tariff bill, printed. It recommends as a substitute for The report says that books, the free list, while all the numerous ma. making a direct discrimination against the American manuiacture of type, paper and Agricultural Hints, manure in the hil, Gather melons in the dark of the moon; melons. Cooks have been very demoralizing to the kitchen. sides. The late variety of young men (those M ) should be raised rapidly—out of the Raise boys early—in the morning. ing of peach tree fertilizer will help Teach your boy to love the farm. To | do this don't send him out to drop pota toes, but give him a horse and carriage and a new whip. load of hay and knocked down a tramp | who made fun of her sunbounet, had three offers of marriage within a week, | When you are plowing new ground | and run into a stump, don't swear about | it. Go hire somebody to swear for you | who can do it with wore grace and | dignity. | Premium pumpkins should be weaned | early and brought up on the bottle. | Take them in the house over night, or | your neighbor way get them to the fair | Develop your resources, if you have | any, and if you haven't any, get some, | Don’t depend too much on a bad fence | and your neighbor's pasture field to | bring your cattle through. | Invite your city cousins to get an in- | gight into agriculture by hoeing the po- | tatoes. One hour's brisk exercise with | a hoe will give a city cousin more solid | information about agriculture than | seven books on farming. i ———— Freaks of Fashion, Polka-dotted hose will be worn on | poker-dotied shins. “Coral des Indes” is the new name of | a fabrio. It is of » brick color. ; Linen coliars and cuffs are neither | stylish por neat—when they are dirty. Shaded spots are scen on some of the | new goods— especially on the editor's suit. | The new and expensive ‘‘peasant owns” cause a great rage—when the | rilis come in. Sulphur-co'ored satin is very popular | for evening wear. Match-making is in | progress if the lap is sat in. : Putty colored lady's cloth is much | used for walking costumes; but it is | more appropriate for glaziers’ girls, Monks' hoods are seen on many of the | fashionable street dresses. They should | be worn only by the lady who affects | SCOWIS. i Sweet sandal slippers are made of they are not so effective as the old-fash- ioned shingle. With the exception of a bore hole | put down to the depth of 4,183 feet for the Prussian government, a few years ago, and which took four years to ac- complish, the bore of which we have been giving particulars is, we believe, the deepest yet sunk, and the fact that it was completed in less than six months gpeaks well for the skill and energy with which the work was carried out. —Seientific American. A Tough Story to Swallow, There is sald to bea French babe, aged six months, born at Cherbourg, the nape of whose neck has the singular gift of producing an uninterrupted sucoession of feathers. Twenty-three have already sprouted, reached maturity, and fallen off, to be carefully stored away by the infant's father, a workingman, whose fortune may be considered made if the amassing story turns out correct, The manner in which theso feathers grow ig thus described : A pimple forms on the nape of the neck, quite close to the roots of the hair. At the expiration of a cer. Vegetine. IN POWDER FORM, 50 CENTS A PACKAGE. Dr. W. ROSS WRITES: Serofula, Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, tain time the pimple blossoms into a | feather, the ehild, at the moment when | it appears, seeming to experience a! slight uneasiness. The feather, which in length, When it falls a few drops of | which then heals, leaving no trace of ita existence for awhi pears, inclosing the germ of another feather. A curious circumstance, says the Cherbourg paper, is that the feather remains six days on the infant's neck when fully grown before falling, and that its successor takes as many days to sprout as its predecessor 10 reach ma turity, The father of the phenomenal to ask selence 10 investigate the cause of this freak of nature, ma 0s. ing persons, and Dibutades, the Cor- inthian, is the reputed inventor of those in ciay. His duvgter, known by the appellation of the Corinthian Maid, be- ing about to be separated ney, traced his profile by the shadow on the wall, Her father filled up the outiine with clay, which he afterward ject of her affection, giving rise to an art Hl Shen unknown. This wasabout > i —————————— Feeble and exhausted constitutions restor. ed to health and strength by Malt Bitters, Toughened glass seems 10 be rs have already been tried, railway slee nglish manufacturer pro- and now an water pices, as well as for trans | parent bricks and several] other articles, Mr. J. H. Puordy, Druggist, Monndsville, sale, pleasant and effectual re They used It took many years to bring them to their present state of pertection, and to render them In Powder the reach of all. bottles of the liquid Vegetine, will gladly avail themselves of this oppor. the medicine. Fall directions in every pack. druge ists and general sores, | stamps for one Jrokass, or ove dollar for twe okages, and | will send it by return mail. R. Stevens, Boston, Mass. A Household Need, A bouk on the Liver, its discases and their Including treatises upon Liver Complaints, Torpid Liver, Jausadice, | Biliousness, Headache, Constipation, D : | sip, Malsria, ete. Address Dr. Saxdord, | Broadway, New York city, N. XY. The Voltate Belt Co,, Marshall, Mieh,. Will send their Kiectro-Voltaic Belts to the aMicted upon 30 days trial. See their adver. tisement in this paper beaded, “On 30 Dap Trial™ Lyon's Heel Stiffeners keep boots and shoes straight. Sold by shoe and hardwaredealers A eR fn. C.W, Brsson’s CELERY 3 CHAMNMONILE PILLS : Jrepared expressly 10 core Sick Headache, Nervons ie, Neuraighh, Nervownosy Bleeplessness, Pare i slvsle and Indigest ® ANY PRY Price, 59 § C14 & DOR, Pamsons, ! Bares & Ue Order ot one ACARD. amd Inde «tions of ut ian OF Laan vou, FRR CON pred shires | Ration I+ ww, ahd » all who are suffering Prom the erron He prong weakness, «8rly decoy was, oho, Iw # nda Recipe that will oun GF CRARGE Ths grost felnsdy wal OW EE 6% hh Arete the Lar. JOSKFH Tw Sood a al! Ng T. INNMAN New YViwk €3 Consumption Cured, An old Feician, retired Dron practice, having had ced | his hands by se East Inds missionary fhe ormuuis of a simple vegelubie remedy for the speedy —— Rertanest curs for Comsumplion, HRronchitis Oatarrh, Astana, and all Throat and Long Aff see a positive and radical cure for Neovous Debtity and all Nervous Complaints, after having tested its wonderfal curative powers in ousands of cama. has felt i his duty to make Hi knows to hus suffering fellows, Actuated ¥ this motive and a desire to relieve human sufloring, | will send free of charge to all who desire 1 this tecipe, i German, French, of Eneligh, with full directions for pre paring and using, Sent by mall by addressing with naming Chis ever W. W. SHERAR. 199 So THE MARKETS. EW YORK Beaf Oattieo—Med, Natives, live wt, Oslves—Obolos and Extra... ...... SERRRR en or o cen HEEREE ARERR oe & BRREEE es EREEER. | Boge—Live. ives serene « Ex = 4 . N 1 No. 1 White, .euvenss- 1 Ryo-8tate. SRA B TREE n Barley—Two-Bowed State CaERRee PEORNEBIBEREES xe BEY cavrercsnssnn Western Imitation Le nsess an ane BhimA. oo oessenssnnsss ! And PODB. over inirens SEESSEEECOSNUCRERES2ERE Chesse—Biste “- 1% 133 BUFTALO r--Lifty Ground, No, | Spring... 6 28 @6 7 1% eersses asean 43 3 Mu 43 ARRAN R AER ERR ARERR chara 43 Date Barley Three ar rey TRRERERSL LAR RARER SEREEES RE RER — Wisconsin and Mino. Pat... “ Rl "ean as 00l—Washed Gombing & Delaine., 80 : Unwashed, - “ 40 : Flour—Peun, choice and fancy, Wheat Pennsylvania Red... ..,. Oorn—State Fellow, suees sersuers... Oate—Mixed, sunee... OX connevnnes Factory... coves ». @0Ty seas anaes SERRA RA SERRE Cheese—New ¥ oh 1 Am All Played Out » Is a common complaint. et a package of Kidney-Wort, and take t, and you will at once feel its tonic power. It renews the healthy action of 8, bowels and liver, and thus restores the natural life and strength to the weary body. Get a box and use it at once. My daughters say: “How much better father is since he used Hop Bitters. He is getting well niter his long sufferin from a disease declared incurable, an we are so glad that he used your Bit- ters.” A lady of Rochester, N. Y.— Utica Herald. ON 30 DAT © TRIAL. We will send our Klectro-Voitale Belts and othe Electric Appliances upon trial for 30 days to those aMicted with Nervous Debidity and diseases a Also of the Liver, Kkineys, Rheumatism, Paralysis, de A sure cure oF no pay. Address Voltale Belt t'o., Marshall, Mich. ANTED--Soldiers who did not receive $300 [1 8. Bounty and those who contacted disease ix service to know the new Law, A Pension of $2 will give + { B33 Arrears, Send stomp for paper. Kooxoes: . Washington, D.C. No Pension—No Fee. Rheumatism, Weakness. 1, i, Brevews, Boston: 1 have been practicing medicine for twenty-five Jom, snd a remedy for tam, Weakness, and sli Diseases the Riood, 1 bave never found its equal, 1 bave sold Veeryine jor seven years, aud Lave never one hottie returned, 1 would besrtily recommend 1 10 those in need of a blood purifier, Vegetine. | ONE PACKAGE IN POWDER FORM CURED SCROFULA. | HOW TO REDUCE YOUR DOCTORS’ BILLS, # Bauwss fr, Bast Boston, Mass, Bot. #0, 1879. | Mr, HK Svevess - Dear Sir: My litle daughter Stes has been afflicted a long thine with suffering everything, | employed different phys - | pans in East Bilton, it they ped har yond. bought soite of your Powoes Foam | an 2 ny wife sles it snd gave 1 10 the uid | meoordiog to the direstions, snd we were surprised in 8 fortnight's Yume to soe how the child had gnined {in flesh and strength, Ble is now gaining every i day, sud [ can chesrfully rrrammend your remedy to be the best we have ever (ried. Respectfully yours, 4.7 WEBB —— i | =o Vegetine Is Sold by all Draggists. ALY | UNFERMENTED MALT BITTERS TRADE MARK i T™ PREVENT NIGHT SWEATS, to esse the i cough, and srrest emacistion and decline, no other form of malt or medicine ag pesitly rh | MALT BITTERS., This Nutrient Tonic is rica | iB wourishment and strength, Ii tides the patient over the most critical stages of Consun. | digests and sssimilstes food, enriches and purifies § i MALT AND HOPS the Licod, Prepared from Unfersmented Mail and commended to Copsumptives, Delicate Females, Rickly Children, and the Debilitated, ss the most i reling Humors. Rew'y Krup : tions, Noalp Affections, | Head, Ulcers and DISEASES. rat's cured by the Cove ot beplivg vhparatelad pn | medical bistory, Sond for THustreied Treaties, Onion, Prepared by Waeks KB Polter, Chemists, Boston, Mass, 50d by Druggists ") Hops by the MALT BITIEES COMPARY, snd powerful Restorative io medicine, Bheum, Psoriesis, Beald fores in. ua Bowers, which have performed mirscies of eontsining testimonials from cvery *ri of the rm ————— 1 Important to the Fair Sex! J - Re UNITED STATES Patent Brokers and Inventors’ ASSOCIATION. i tent Rights sold st Private Sale and by Pobilie Ane its obtained abd Searches made ob the Lowest wrrespundence soliciied. Clroulars sent ob jon. WH. CRAWSIHAW, Manager, 639 Arch Street. FPHILADELPRIA. we PENNA SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila. ~ > 1 JOSEPH C. TODD, Engineer and . PATERSON, NK. J, AND 10 BARCLAY ST, R.Y Flax, Hemp, Jute, Rope. and Raggl Machinery | Stemmeengines and Voller of every description; Rolting. { machinery for Mines, fc. Owrer and exciumsive manalss {| turer of the new Patent Baxter Portable Engine. | engines sre & groal Improvement over the syle, and | are admirably adapted for all kinds of agricultural and hui open. Send for Tec Address as above. | JESTEY& CS BRATTLEBORO VE eon CARLETON'S HOUSEHOLD + ENCYCLOP/EDIA. The most valuable ie Book ever A | weaswry of kpowicdge ere Las Bever bees published in ene zouwe, so wuch usclul Information A Whole Library ta Oue Ya ume oe _} Sold suly by subscription; the sasiest TO AGENTS book 10 sel. ever known. Terma, ete. @ W. CAR address TUN & 00. Publishers N.Y. Oy. _ SORE EARS, CATARRH. I Many prop'e are ali 40d with (hese joathsome discos {| but very few ever get well fin | npr per treatment owl, as they ame readily curabie B poperly treated, This is no lie boast bul a fact | have coven over and over aciin Ly my trealment. Send for ny litte Nook, Mw fo all i will 12U you a'l about thes matters aid who fam. My large Book, 308 pages, octave; | PETROLEUM i Grand Madal I st Philadelphia Exposition. t Perils ye clans throughout the world 10 be the best remedy dip onder that every one toay fry it, it Is put up In 18 and 33 cent { price, 89 by mal Asjdrens PR. C.E SIIOLMAKER, Aun! Surgeon, ing, Pa. JELLY Silver Moda! ul Exposition. This wonderfn! substance is acknowledged by ph covered for the cure of Wounds, Burns, Rheumatism, Skin Diseases, Piles. Catarrh, Chilblaing, &¢. In bottles for household nse. Obfain i from your draggist, sand you will find # superior to anything you have ever Toe al fri S———— mm GENTS Wanted for “The Dihle in Pictures” A failing 240 Ensravings by Julive Schnor: von Post i. Tuliwak Is bh y ftorsed by Pros Chad Wiliams College i ons, Albany: Rev, St Louis; Dra. F. L. Patt » W, Thomas, Geo. H. Peete, ail others, Chile pumbers. Address ARTHUR BOTT, Albany, N. Y. TWO CARBONATE MINES 1 Ie to exchange for Eastern Real Estate, Are located ear the best Mines In the Samp, Will exchange at a tion of $2,000 for each claim. For pa ticalars addres REED, iice, Colorado. i $ FUNSIUTS Yee Broan, — how fyi rev fo FR GREAT OFFER New.oueans sas, ASF upward. Warranted Svs. Secon Tand Iustrmments ui Bargains, AGENTS Wanted. lilustiated CATALOGUE Free. HORACE WATS & CO, 596 B'd'y N.Y. TO THE | Ianto memset oo name ang Cate of mar &, give CURIOUS | Soir of coe Sat Besad oad stamps, to W._ FOX, Box 250, Fut. mville, N.Y, YOUNG ME A Learn Telegraphy an nth, Every graduate zaaranteed a gita Wyn Bivona earn $40 O00 RR Valentine, Maracer. Janesviile No pay oP De, J. STEFiLENS, Lebanon, Ohio, Ohfidren's Grab Rag! Every Grab a Prize! Something pew; no deception. One 1 rige for 3 folks with Pag. do prof. Chatterbox Co. 48 Cortnndt Sta RY. $5 Day. ore, $2 Sample Free Address Ageno , $39 Hudson Street, New York. ED fn fo canvass for sale of AN aricty Stock. Address W. & 1. SMITH Geneva Nurseries, Geneva, N. Y. Established 16. WANTED (ior, no to eb Profit goed, Outht free. TEA 00., Box (5, St. Louis, > ut $12 ANEEK. $12a day A YEAR and expense s to agents. OQutiit Free, Address P. 0. VICKERY, Augusta, Maine, Morphine Habit Cured in 10 to 20 days. Ni til free. Adie S31. Maguay & Oo, PorIAnd, Matin Outfit free. Address Rape Boots and Shoes are «made y with double 3 Gian anranred ! wir we of rapt re Xo. po atten of with i ERA CR va « © 40 will be mest by mal. ~ AN OFFER To Consumers of TEA and COFFEE. THE GREAT LONDON TEA TO., sor AE. SREAT LONDON rom, iss. whion we off 7 During the pus four years thal we have bees ed in rosten, we have snl oul OF SEVER oe nd of thes READ OF IT! Note the Following: dollars sere allowed settior realy D. A, MoKINLAY, tesioner, nt, Pant, Minn. 8. W. PAYNE & SONS, CORNING. N.Y, ers can't de o a. All with Au ie Cut-Offs. Send for Circular, where you saw this, This Clalm-ilouss Established 1905, PENSIONS. p= a dain a ». P.O Preven ». Es fete A pig fer tard ents © © or ton THE KORAN OF MOHAMMED. trapdated from he rabic by George Sale. Formerly publ shed ot $2.35; a . besutifal Type, neat, cloth-bound edition; price cents, and @ cents for postage. Catalogue of many works, remarkably Jow jn price, wilh extis tenis 0 cubs, free. Say where you saw this alverihe Amxuicay Boox Kxomangs, Tribune Building, X. ¥. NATRONA %5" TAR PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila Br. Marchis's Uterine i CATHOLIC will positively cure Female Wee kness, suca as. ad ing of the Womb, Whites, Chronle Intiaiama.con » Ulceration of the Womb, Incidental Hemarphsse 0 Flooding, Painful, Supprassed and Irregular Sens truation, &c. An old and reliable remedy. Send pos tal card for a pamphlet, with treatment, cures ane Seftientes from, Pusicians Sh patients, to How arta & Mliard, Utica, N.Y. Sold Ly all Dracguis 81.50 por bottle ¥ Sil. Brugia DANIEL F. BEATTY'S ORGANS 17-STOP ORGANS RIBAS hegedd ipod cu 807.7, sure to see W-summer offer Wustrais free. Address DANTEL B. BEATTY Wot! Nd — LY LI, PENSIONS Allowed under New Law to 5 or their Heirs from date of discharge or death. rR .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers