The Elk County advocate. (Ridgway, Pa.) 1868-1883, July 15, 1875, Image 4

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FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD.
Kitchen Harden.
Every availnblo spot in tho garden
should bo occupied with Bometbing, and
Bueco8sion crops must bo planted, if a
constant mipply of vegetablos is wantod
for market or family uso. Oftentimes
two crops may bo planted on tho same
ground to advantage, as lettuce between
the. rows of cabbngen; the lettuce will bo
oft" iu timo to allow tho cabbage all the
room noedod J or liorseradiHh may
bo put iu among oavly cabbages,
to grow after they ai'o oft. If
enough manuro is Mjpplicd for both
crops, tliis is found to be profitable
practice.
When polo boaus jeach the top of the
poles, they should Ym pinched. BuhIi
sorts may bo planted yet, and produce a
good crop. Ground whero early beans
have been, may bo planted with quick
growing crops.
Thin boets already needing it, and
plant early sorts for Into uso.
Transplant cabbages and cauliflowers
for lato crops, using only tho most
vigorous plants. There are many spots
around every garden whero a few cab
bages can bo grown, and all such places
should bo occupied. If transplanting
must bo dono during dry weather, tho
roots-should bo placed in a thin mud for
a few minutes, until they aro well coated
with it; this requires but little time, and
often saves many plants. Hoo estab
lished plants os often as possible.
Thin carrots as soon as largo enough
to handle, and keep tho rows clear of
weeds nutil tho tops cover tho ground
and prevent working. Tho-o which
throw up a Ho wer-stalk should bo pulled
out.
Celery need not be planted out be
fore tho middle or end of July, and if
the plants become well established, then
they will grow rapidly when the weather
becomes cooler. Market growers always
plant on level ground, and not in
trenches, as the first is much the easier
way. Tho dwarf or smaller growing
kinds uro best for family uso, but tho
larger growing sell best iu most
markets.
Sow a few rows of the early corn this
month, po as to havo some for late pick
ing. As fast os tho early sorts are ex
hausted the stalks should bo cut, and
either fed to cattle fresh, or cured for
winter fodder.
If pickles are needed, plant cucumbers
now iu well manured hills fonr feet apart
each way. Where pickles are raised for
market, they must bo sent in green, as
it is impossible to sell those put down
iu salt to tho pickle dealers, each com
pany having its own way of salting,
which is ke2t secret. Save the earliest
and finest formed for seed; careful selec
tion of seed for a few years will produce
a desirable strain.
Egg plants require a great degree of
heat in order to grow rapidly, and if
liquid manure is given occasionally, it
will be a great help.. Place hay or straw
around tho plants to keep tho fruit from
contact with tho ground.
Sow endivo for a lato crop of salad
now.
Herbs are usually grown on laud which
has already borne 0110 crop during the
season. When a damp day occurs the
young plants may bo transplanted from
tho Bced-bed to a rich spot prepared for
them. Thyme, sweet marjoram, sago,
and Bummer Bavory are the sorts com
monly grown.
Thin out leeks to five or six inches in
tho rows, keep clear of weeds, and
transplant the thinnings to the same dis
tance. Sot out lettuce plants in a cool, shady
spot.
Cultivate the ground for melons os
long as it can bo dono with safety to tho
plonts; afterwards hand-pull the weeds as
they appear above the viuus. Kcmovo
all fruit not likely to ripen.
Onions when sold green in tho market
ore made into neat bunches with the tops
on, and bring a higher price than when
loose aud cut shoit. Keep the lato crop
free from weeds.
As soon as fruit becomes plenty, the
rhubarb plants should havo a rest. Keep
tho llower-stalks cut, and give a dressing
of manuro.
Keep sweet potatoes free from weods,
and move tho vines every week to keep
them from rooting.
Thin and weed the late plantings of
turnips until the tops cover the ground.
Tio up tomato vinos to stakes or trel
lises to koep tho fruit from the ground.
Cut out the weak shoots and pinch back
strong growing ones. Destroy the large
green caterpillar or "worm," as it eats
both plant and young fruit. Agricul
turist. Dipping I lie I.umbs.
We have just been dipping tho lambs,
says "Walks and Talks on the Farm."
We fiuished shearing last week, and as
usual the ticks from the sheared ewes
soon got on to tho lambs. I only dipped
my ewes once last summer. They ap
parently were so free from ticks that we
did not dip them last fall. I suppose
this is the reason why wo had so many
ticks on the young lambs this spring. I
took two gallons of soft soap, about six
pounds of grease, half a pound of white
hellebore, and ono quart of crudo car
bolic acid, and boiled tho whole together
for half au hour in eight pailfuls (say
eighteen gallons) of water, until the
grease was all dissolved and thoroughly
mixed with the water. To thiswe added
six pailfuls of cold water, or sufficient to
reduce the temperature of the dip to
about blood-heat. I have a two-inch
plank watering-trough, ten feet long,
two feet wide, and sixteen inches deep,
with a partition in tho center.
We put the fourteen pailfuls of liquid
into the trough, and raised one end of
the trough until the liquid was within a
few inches of the top at the other end,
and put blocks under to hold it in this
position. I have used tins trough for
dipping lambs aud sheep for some years,
but have always used more liquid, and
never before thought of the plan of lift
ing up one end of the trough. It worked
admirably. We had sixty lambs to dip,
many of them nearly as lurgo as common
Merino sheep. We dipped the largest
first. When we got through there was
only about live pailfuls of the liquid left,
but as the lambs were smaller, there was
nearly enough to cover them, and by
turning them over in the liquid, every
part of the body, except the head, was
immersed.
One man caught the Iambs, and two
dipped them, and I stood by and held
the lamb by the noso, bo as to be sure
that none of tho liquid got into his
mouth or nostrils. It took a little over
one hour to dip tho sixty lambs. Every
tick seemed to be uqost instantly killed.
An hour afterward wWexamined several
of the lambs. We ftVmd hundreds of
dead ticks, but not a siiJg4 live one. I
never hod a dip bo entirely satisfactory
and effectual. None of the lambs show
ed an cmptom ct weknew, and the
next morning they wore f risking olxmt
as happy as before the ewes were sheared.
A Cnre for Sooty Chimneys).
F. 0. R. says : About fifteen years
ago, a dwelling was raised one story
higher, and a chimney had also to be
raised some feet higher; and as tho
chimney was built up, it was plofltorod
on tho inside with salt mortar, to pre
vent tho adhesion of the soot. Tho re
sult is that the part plastered with Bait
mortar is white and clean to this day,
while the other part gets fillod with soot
up to the very lino whero tho salted part
begins, and has to bo cleauod each year,
the chimney being iu almost constant
uso. Tho proportions used were ono
peck of salt, added whilo temporing, to
throo pecks of mortar.
Match Mats.
These can be mode of ordinary Band
paper cut in circular and octagonal
shapes, fastened upon pasteboard and
bound with bright colored braids, a
ring attached to each and tho wholo
hung near tho match-safe for use when
ever a match is lighted. The unsightly
marks that disfigure many walls, may by
this inexpensive and siuiplo arrangement
bo entirely prevented. Thero should bo
ono in every room iu the house.
Rcndjr-Maile Gas Works.
A worthy country parson ouco preach
ed a labored sermon on the beneficence of
Providence iu causing largo rivers to
flow past important towns. Juvenescent
critics professed to see in tho fact which
tho good dominie endeavored to improve,
only an evidence that it was tho shrewd
ness of man that was exemplified iu se
lecting tho banks of navigable rivers an
sites for towns. But wo can hardly look
upon it either as au interposition of
Providence, or as an evidence of the
shrewdness of tho Lake Shore railroad
people, that the latter should have se
lected as a site for their railway shops a
locality where, it seems, they ore to be
provided with fuel and light from tho
spontaneous productions of tho earth.
This can only bo ascribed to sheer luck.
When the Lake Shoro company built
their shops in Olcnville, iu East Cleve
land, they doubtless supposed that they
had secured a good site for their purpose,
but they certainly entertained no hope
of having light and fuel furnished free,
lint a Mr. Bartlett, who happened to bo
digging a cellar there, lately noticed au
escape of gas from cracks iu tho earth,
and utilized his discovery by connecting
an india-rubber tube between tho cracks
in tho cellar and a burner in the house,
when the cellar had been covered by a
dwelling, and the result was light and
cheerfulness iu tho house, without ex
penditure for kerosene or other burning
fluids. This led to other experiments,
and on the farm of Mr. Parks, not many
rod3 distant from the round house of the
railroad company, was found a spot
about forty feet square composed of
mineral oil, decayed vegetable matter,
aud tho like, underneath which was a
stratum of blue clay, full of seams and
fissures, which appears to bo an inex
haustiblo reservoir of burning gas. A
temporary receiver was modo by placing
on inverted tobacco pail over one of tho
cracks. In it a three-eighths of an inch
gas pipe was inserted, and upon applying
a lighted match to the stream of gas issu
ing from the pipe, a flamo eighteen
inches in height appeared, and has con
tinued to burn both day and night.
Further tests havo convinced those in
terested that these natural gas works
will supply fuel and light sufficient for
all the demands of tho railroad works
and tho dwellings of tho village around
them.
A Strange Story,
Louis Walker died at West Liberty,
Iowa, after expressing the earnest desire
that he should bo buried on the farm
where he formerly lived, near Heviug
ton, a station on tho Wiuterset branch
of tho Kock Island railroad, about
eighteen miles from Des Moines. The
stricken wife, filled with love for him,
and with a hoart broken with sorrow ami
grief, sought to fulfill tho wishes of her
dead husband. She procured a burial
case, and started on her sad errand. Sho
arrived nt Bovington, a stranger to every
body. Of tho station agent she inquired
as to the location of the farm, whero her
husband was to be buried. The agent
inquired who it was that was to bo buried,
and, on being told, ho quickly foresaw
a very- unpleasant affair. The widow had
come to bury her husband on the
premises of a man whose daughter, then
at liome, was tho wife of tho deceased.
Tho agent, after some consideration,
deemed it best to inform tho widow of
tho facts. She received tho story with
perfect astonishment, and could scarcely
believe her late husband guilty of such
baseness; but, on being assured it was
so, she became indignant, and left tho
body with citizens to be conveyed to
wife No. 1 (whoso first knowledge for
years of the whereabouts of her husband
was his arrival in a burial casket) to bo
disposed of as sho saw fit. It has just
been discovered that Walker had still
another wife in Missouri.
A Real Romance.
A few afternoons ago a lady called at
a store in Chicago, and carelessly laid
down her pocketbook whilo examining
some goods. Meanwhile another lady
picked it up by mistake aud did not dis
cover it until she had reached the street.
She then hastened back, and, not know
ing exactly whero she had obtained it,
left it in tho hands of a clerk whom she
knew, intrusting him with tho responsi
bility of finding tho owner. Shortly
afterword the loss was discovered, and
the lady openly accused the unfortunate
clerk who waited upon her of having
taken it, and when he, in his surprise,
protested his innocence, she appealed
to one of the shop-walkers, aid insisted
that she had seen the young man snatch
it off the counter and slip it into his
pocket. In vain ho protested. She was
mexorable, and only left the store upon
the promise that everything possible
should be done to recover luu lost prop
erty. The next morning her husband
came down and tackled the unhappy
measurer of dry goods. Another un
pleasant scene followed, and just as the
wretched youth had begun to make up
his mind that the fates were determined
to make a crimiuol of him in spite of
himself, a lady entered the storo with a
note from the holder of the lost treasure,
which explained all. Something ad-
proochuig a scene followed, m which
everybody was as happy if not happier
than one who discovered that xropriety
occasionally requires those who recover
lost property to make very unpleasant
apologies.
Two Reasons. " Here's a boy down
here who wants to lick me I" exclaimed
a bootblack as he approached a police
man on Griswold street.
"He does, eh f What for?"
"Says I called him names, but I
didn't."
" Are you afraid of him ?"
" No, not exactly, but I don't want to
fight. One reason is I promised my dy
ing mother I wouldn't, and the other
rsou ii 'eausa ha bigger'n I am I"
SUMMARY OF NEWS.
Items of Interest from Home nnd Abroad.
The Italian Sonata has passed ft bill for the
suppression of brigandage in Sicily and else
where The Khedive of Egypt formally
opened ft new court of international appeal.
......Further roports from Franco place the
damage by floods at $24,000,000 in tho cities of
Toulouse and Agon alone. Contributions are
pouring In from all parts of France, Switzer
land and Bolglmo The daily reoord of
damages by float and tornado Is Enlarged by a
storm,at Dooorali, la., which destroyed pro
perty to the value of (150,000. Several bridges
were carried off China has made liberal
appropriations for representations at the
riiilttdolphia Centennial A great typhoon
viHited Hong Kong May 81. The steamer
Toyang was wrecked near Macao, and one
hundred and twenty-five lives were lost, oue
hundred and fifty junks wore destroyed and
great damage done to property in Canton,
Hong Kong and Whanipoa The Chineso
authorities 'declare their determination to ex
terminate the Formosan savages and to build
walled towns ou the island John Condon,
of Chicago, 111., drew a revolver at the break
fast tablo aud shot his wife twice, instantly
killing her. Ho then shot himself, inflicting a
wouud which might prove fatal. Ou the
police attempting to arrest him he Qred at
tlmm, but without effect. Jealousy was the
occasion for tho shooting.
A collision occurred between two pHHSongor
trail is on tho Detroit ond Milwaukee railroad
by which fiftoon immigrants, both conductors
and two other train etuplojooa were ii.jnrod
The iutornal rovenuo receipts for one
year up to July first amounted to $150,479, 132.-
20' The Iowa Itopnblicans nominated
Samuol J. Kirkwoud for govoruor. Tho plat
form declares that as specie is the only re
liable legal tender, a onrrency convertible with
coin should therefore be gradually attained ;
a ruvonuo tariff adjusted to eucourago home
indiiHtrios ; that no moro public land should bo
ceded to corporations ; tlmt the patent laws bo
revined to reliovo industry from monopolies ;
opposes a third term and thinks tlio rrosident's
lottor effectually does away with tho subject ;
indorses froo education and tho public schools.
. . . .One week's health roport of Now Ycrk city
showed 117 canes of contagious diseases, as
follows! Diphtheria, seventy-eight ; scarlot
fovcr, fifty-one; smallpox, sovoutoou ; typhoid
fever, one Tho California Democratic
Covenlion nominated Wtn. Irwin for governor.
Tho platform opposes the unconstitutional in-tciforeiK-o
of tho Inderal administration in
tho domestic affairs of tho States, by which
oue portion of the Union is ground with taxa
tion to koep another portion of tho Union in
bankruptcy and eervitudo ; denonncos tho Itc
publicau party for corrupt administration,
for tho enrso of au inconvertible currency and
for the attempt to pass the " Force bill ;" op
poses tho division of tho school fund ; doclares
tho right and duty of tho govorumont to regu
late corporations to prevent them being umJo
monopolies; fnvjiu equal taxation ; aud op
poses all legislation known as "prohibitory."
Tho United States sUoamor Lancaster
has reached Fortress Monroe from liio Janeiro,
having ou board soveral cases of yellow fovcr.
Thero is no diminution iu the frightful mor
tality from measles and typhoid fever in the
Fiji Islands. Medical aid is to bo cent from
Australia. . . .The peasants of Dova and vicinity
in Transylvania, Austria, have revolted against
tho nobles aud defeated a battalion of militia.
Many perrons havo been killed,' iuoluding two
Judges, l'.egular troops have been sont to tho
scone of tho outbreak Tho roport that
the king of LurruaU refuses to allow British
troops to pass through his territory is officially
continued Gou. Cortina has boon arrested
and placed under guard by Col. Manuel Parrat,
of the Mexican regular cavalry. Cortina'a
police have been arrested, disarmed and im
prisoned. Thoro is great excitement in Mata
moras, and trouble is anticipated. . . .Aloxaudcr
Erviu, having charge of the foundry busiuoss
of Henry G. Morris, of Philadelphia, who re
cently failed, has bceu discovered to have em
bezzled sums amounting to $1,200,000, and
extending over sovoral years Col. E. B.
Catling, quartermaster at Fort Saudcrs, Wyo
ming Territory, committed suicide by cutting
bis throat from ear to ear. Financial embar
rassment, complicating his official affairs,
ia assigned as tho causo of his suicide The
new postal arrangement with foroigu countries
weut into effect July first A member of
the Baltimore city council was expelled for
taking a bribe. Ho makes the second man ex
pelled from that body for corruption . .One
hundred Germans, men and women, exiled on
account of the new religions laws of Germany,
have arrived in this country aud were enthusi
astically receivod.
John Hughes was hanged iu the jail yard
at Nowton, N. J., for brutally murdering his
wife in January last. Iu his remarks while
upon the scaffold ho ueithor acknowledged or
denied the crime, although at tho time of his
arrest ho admitted it Tho Philadelphia
revomio officers seized tho large tobacco ware
house of Henry Mold & Co., and took Mr.
Mohl into custody on ft chargo of removmg
snuff from his factory unstamped aud im
properly stamped Paris dispatchos place
tho loss by inundations iu tho southwestern
portion of France at 100,000,000, aud the num
ber of lives lost at threo thousand The
official figures from the Irish-American rile
match show tho Americans won by thirty-nine
points instead of thirty-eight The Swiss
national council has voted $5,000 to defray the
expenses of a proper representation of Swiss'
products and industry at the Philadelphia Cen
tennial The assembly of Cape Colony hag
unanimously adopted rcsolutious in favor of
tho annexation of sundry iudopcudent terri
tories south of Natal, inhabited by oue hun
dred aud fifty thousand Ca fires By the
burning of the stables of the Fast Genesee
street railroad company, at Auburn, N. 1'.,
eighteen horses perished Private advices
from the Black Hills report extensive dis
coveries of gold.
Tho governor's council of Massachusetts
have derided by a vote of five to four aga'ust
a commutation of the death sentence pro
uouueed against Jesse l'omeroy, the buy mur
derer. Tho subject may be yet r considered
by the council before the time appointed for
the execution ; while it is possible that Gov.
Gaston may withhold his signature from the
death warrant A frightfully large doath
and mutilation by accident record was made iu
the Uuited States on the fourth and fifth of
July, the victims being to ft great extent chil
dren.. ..Although the disaster ou the Southern
railroad of Long Island w as of the most dis
astrous that has lately taken place, the only
wonder is that loss of life was so small. Dense
ly crowded trains were running to and from
Rockaway, and one of these trains collided,
telescoping and turning a scene of pleasure
into one of death. Iu one instant, as it were,
and with scarcely ft warning, seven persona
were instautly killed, six fatally and twenty
two seriously injured. One engineer aud fire
man saved their Uvea by boldly leaping from
the locomotive while at full speed. Two of
the men who were killed met their deaths as
they sat by their wives aud children, the
lat er escaping without ft soratch. When
the collision occurred the two locomotives met,
rose aud toppled over ; the tender of the up
train, composed ef four sir, wan lifted up aud
deposited on the top of the smoking car, partly
orushing it in.
Trof. Jenney, tho government geologist at
the Black Hills, reiterates his former opinion
that there is not gold enough in the Black
Hills to pay for mining The famous oVm
running horse, Lexington, Is dead Five
fishermen were drowned off NoVa Scotia by
the npsotting of their boat Two tailors
on an American brigantine have beon arrested
at London for mutiny and wounding the chief
offioer The Americans in London hold ft
banquet In the Crystal Palace on tho fourth of
July Miss Lizzie Ihling, uieoo of Trot.
John Wise, made ft balloon ascension from
Philadelphia, and when about five hundred
feet up the balloon burst, the gas pouring out in
such quantities as to cause the lady to fall into
the basket in an insonsible condition. The
parachute arrangement of the balloon saved
the wreck from falling with great velo
oily, and Miss Ihling was badly injured by her
fall, when the spectators expected her to be
dashed to pieoea Ground wae broken at
Atlanta, Ga, in the presence of an immense
throng for the Atlanta cotton factory
Messrs. Moody and Saukoy are to undertake re
vival meetings in Taris The members of the
diplomatic body and Portuguese d'gnitarios of
high rank waited ou Mr. Mornn, tho United
BtateB Minister to Portugal, and congratulated
him on the anniversary of American indepen
dence. O. G. Griswold, of Tort Jcrvis, N. Y , was
shot an 1 instantly killed by his stepson, Ezra
Huntingdon. Tlioy had a fight, iu which Hun
tingdon, who waa intoxicated, was torribly
beaten aud ojected from tho house. A few
minutes after he returned and deliboratoly
shot Griswold aud thou dolivorod himself up
to the authorities A grand jury impaneled
iu Chicago consists of eight negroes aud six
teen white men Dispatchos from different
parts of Iowa etato that the corn crop will be
poor. The othor crops will be up to tho aver
age Nino persons attempted to cross a
swollen river near Greenfield, 111., iu a wagon,
but were capsized and six of thorn drowned. . . .
There baa been a warm dispute for some timo
botwoen the citizens of Wcstorvillo, O., and a
mau who opened a saloon there recently it
being the only one in the corporation. Finally
some ono discharged a load of gunpowder
under tho building at midnight, doing much
damage. The next day tho saloou keeper got
out warrants for tho arrest of all the ministers
in tho 1own, as woll as othor prominent in
dividuals, ou tho chargo of insulting aud en
couraging an assault upon tho saloon Tho
Catholic church at Binghamtou, N. Y., was
broken into and robbed of tho poor boxos aud
tho socrod vessols from tho altar During
an affray botweou a crowd of negroes and
whito men, at Yicksburg, Miss., two nogroos
were killed aud another fatally shot Lizzie
Schmidt, sovoii years of ago, was outraged and
killed near O'Fallon, 111. Joseph Hogau was
arrostod in East St. Louis ou suspicion of com
mitting the crime.
Uailnnys iu tlio ITiiHoil Stales.
From " Poor's lvitihvay Manuel " for
1875-70 wc loam that tho totitt number
of miles of railroad in operationnt tho
close of 1874 was 72,023, against 7j),fi83
at tho closo of 1873 au increase of TJ10
miles. This is the smallest number of
miles of railroad constructed iu ono year
since 1806. Comparative statements of
roads having a total length of G9,273
miles in 1874, and 60,237 iu 1873, show
the following : Aggregate cost was $4,
221,700,594, ngainst $3,784,543,034 in
1873 ; capital stock 1874, 81,990,997,
480 ; 1873, 81,947,038,084 ; debt, chiefly
funded -1874, 2,230, 700,108; 1873,81,
830,904,450 ; averngo cost per mile, 1874
800,425 ; 1873, 857,134 ; gross earnings
1874, 8520,400,010; 1873, $520,419,
023 ; working expenses 1874, $330,895,
058 ; 1873, 8342,009,373 ; net earnings
1874, 8189,570,958 ; 1873, $183,810,202 ;
amount divided 1874, $07,042,942 ;
1873, $07,120,709. average dividend on
stocks 1874, 3.39 ptrcent.; 1873, 3.45
per cent.
Tho mileage and average cost nnd
earnings per milo for the different sec
tions of the country were as follows :
Cot
prr milf,
l(i'2 41 IS
6t',S29
85,1178
83,9H1
Mirage.
Now KiiRlaud States.... 5,fll7
Middle Slates 12.74
Western Wales 3r,i :il
Southern Slates l:l,5US
per mile
$,!! 3
H,4fi
0,029
3.K70
10.4S4
rucilic States l,o:it)
Tho following is a statement of tho
average results per milo :
1871.
173.
K.7,134
211,402
27.7:12
7,!MH
B.174
2,774
1,013
65.1(1
4.S5
8.15
Capital Invented $fi,44
Stock W.741
Debt ,
(Irons receipts
7,r.i:i
Working expeugi-R.
Net earuini's
4,777
1,'M
DCS
03.58
4.B0
3.29
Average ilivltlmiils
Per cent, of working expense...
Per cent, of net eaiulnijH to cap
ital
Average rate ot divitteml
The "Manuel" makes tho following
summing up: Xlio result, ou uio wnoie,
cannot bo considered au unfavorable
ono. Tho earnings of the roads were
only 85,953,919, or 1.11 per cent, less
than those for 1873. They were 52,224,
901, or ten per cent, greater than those
for 1872. They exceeded by $117,138,
808 tho earnings of 1871. Those facts
show how intimate aro the relations
which the railroad system sustains to
the business of tho country, how potent
its iullnence in tho development of its
resources and tho firm foundation on
which it rests, l'revious to 1874 the
annual percentage of increase of earnings
for many years exceeded ten per cent,
those of tho one immediately previous.
A similar rate of iuereaso for tho past
year would have given an aggregate of
earnings of about $585,000,000. Such a
result would undoubtedly have been
leached but for tho condition of our cur-
renev. That it was not reached is one
of the many proofs of the penalty we
pay for delayuig tlio necessary reioiui.
Danelug (Joins Out.
Somehow London seems to have got
tired of dancing, a correspondent says.
When the Shah was here, no remark ho
made was more relished than bis ques
tion to tha Prince of Wales whilo tho
dance was going on: ' Why do yon not
omiilnv HPivants to do this lor you?
The Dursim inor nrinco could hardly ex
plain, but society genorally..s,eemsdn
cliued to relegato dancing to the chrpi det
ballet. This has bceu esiiicial W ' the
cast thisscaHeu when the new fuskuymble
skirts have gone to au extreme from the
liberation of the bullet. A lady was.re-
ctmtlv heard to sav. with a sigh: " What
with beiuer tied arouud above and tied
around below. I haven't had a good
snnaia sit down for three months,
When a large ball is given there is an
apolotrv for dancing, a few minciug
stens are taken, but presently the com
pauy falls to admiring each other's
dresses, and it all ends in musio and
talk. Dancing Wits lair to ueoomo
survival," as the antiquarians say.
In a recent investigation of the num
ber of missionaries aud converts in Japan
the following was the result : Oreek
church, i missionary, 3,000 converts ;
ltomau Catuouo, forty niinioiian s
20,000 converts ; Protestant, seventy
miBsiouwws, UW.WU converts.
The Canadian Crops.
The Toronto Olobc publishes fonr col
umns of spocial telegrams from all parts of
the provinces of Ontario and Quebec as to
tho condition of this year's crops. Tho
following is n summary of this informa
tion: Fall wheat appears in many places
to be winter-killed, and tho crop will be
considerably below the average. The
failure appears to be worse iu the Lake
Erie counties, while' the Ontttio coun
ties show ' favorable resnlbi. Spring
wheat promises nearly or quite an aver
nge crop. Oats, barley, and peas will,
if the season continues equally favorable,
probably be a little above the average.
Corn, while giving good promiso in
some districts, will hardly come np to
the average yield. Root crops generally
are thriving, and the yield will probably
be more than Usually aDUnUanC. XUO I
potato crop is assailed by tho OolordO J
beetle, but growers do not seem to an-
ticipate so much mischiof from this pest
as in recent years. The hay crop has
been greatly benefited by the recent
rains, but will undoubtedly bo short.
The fruit crop is, in many instances, ro-
Eortod to be doficient, and peaches will
e very scarce.
A. Good Puz.Ip.
Those who aro curious as to mngio
squares will find something to interest
them in Tarton's "Life of lienjamin
Franklin." This great philosopher was
very fond of inventions of this sort.
Here is tho correct answer to tho puzzle:
"In wlmt manner may the odd numbers,
from 1 to 49 inclusive, be arranged so
that4b.e sum of each row of livo figures
shall bo 125?"
33.... 47.... 1....15....29
45.... 9.... 13.... 27.... 31
7.... 11.... 25.... 39.... 43
19.... 23.... 37.... 41.... 5
21.... 35.... 49.... 3.... 17
Tho American Grocer declares that
there is scarcely a single clnss of goods
put up and sold in this country which is
not short of tho weight or measure
claimed for it.
Through all the Ages
of study aud investigation which have
marked tho path of scientific discovery,
ono especially alluring object has tempt
ed tho inquiries and speculations of
philosophers. It is what tho wizards
and witches of olden time, tho jugglers
of India, soothsayers of Arabia, Magi of
Egypt, necromancers of Turkey and the
Orient, and alchemists of civilized
Europe havo sought, but sought in vain
a vegetable non poisonous elixir,
which, by cleansing the blood, removing
from tho system all impurities, strength
ening the nerves, tho muscles, and tho
brain, and vitalizing every fiber of tho
system, should bid defiance tn the cor
roding hand of disease. Dr. Walker, of
California, discovered an herb, the prop
erties of which, if they do not entirely
fulfill all the conditions above mentioned,
have at least proved themselves ellicaci
ous in all of them ; this herb Doctor
Walker Jias mudo ai ingredient iu his
famous Vinegar Bitters, which can be
obtained of any wholesale druggist
throughout tho country.
Her Pets.
Some tlnya ago a lady of Freehold, N,
J., on going out to feed her chickens,
was surprised to lind that an old hen,
which bad for two weeks been persistent
ly sotting on nothing, had appropriated
to herself four kittens, whoso mothor
sho kept away with fierce thrusts of her
beak, nnd over which she was brooding
with all the tenderness of a mother. The
cat to whom they belonged could not get
near tliera, aud tliey nave been fed ever
since by the hen.
The purest article is the cheapest in the
end. Dobbins' Electric Soap (mudo by
Cragin & Co., rhil.) is perfectly pure,
snow-white, aud preserves clothes wash
ed with it. Be sure and try it.
When an editor retires from tho
Loudon Times ho is made a baronet.
When an American editor retires he is
made but who ever beard of one retir
ing f He goes down with the ship.
Tho cathartics used and approved by
the pliYniciaiiB compririing tlio various medical
arwociHtiouB of this Stato aro now compounded
md sold under the mime of J'arsons l'urga-
iee J'illz. Com.
Eminent men of science have dis
covered that electricity and raaguotwrn aro
developed in tho nvHleui from the iron in the
Mood. This account (or the debility, low
spirits and lack of enorpy a person fuels when
tu ib viuil element becomes reuticeJ. luo
Peruvian Kvrnp, a protoxiuo of iron, rtipplies
the blood with its iron clement, and is tnu only
form in which it can enter tho circulation
Cum.
The Market.
HFW YORK .
Beef Cattle-Prime to Extra Bullock! MV.a 13 V
Oorumou to Good Toxaui 00..(o) (7i
Milch Cows 03 (XI (75 oo
HogB Liv 08.V(4 09V
oresaed iiu'.ia) iu
Sheep 0IV4 t'S
Larulia
t' 10
Cotton Middling , ...
IV. I 1S
i'lour Extra Western
0 19 (A 5 60
6 1(1 lit (0
1 36 a 1 8S
1 19 1 21
Bute Extra
Wheat Red Wee tern
No. 2 Spring
Bye State ,
Ilarley Slate
1 OS 1 1 05
1 80
1 45
tit
Ml
66
C4 1 86
(4 1 tO
uarley Malt
Uata Mix- d Western.
Oorr- Mixed Wtn torn ,
(4 MM
8 X
nay, perewt
Straw, per cwt....
m i io
(A 90
ia
oo
60
08
Hopa "lis, 26(335 old
fork Muaa
. . . ao uo
Lard.
Finn Mackerel No. 1, new 11 IK)
($13 110
( 9 50
(4 8 U0
S 40
" No. i. new o no
Dry Ood, per cwt 6 60
Herring. Healed, per hex....
411
Petroleum Orude W.'Oo's
Wool California Fleece
KeOued,
H7
28
86
84
64
80
24
22
14
24
Texas
Australian
2(1
45
W
i
18
Butter Stato
Western Dairy. .....
Western Yellow
Western Ordinary.
18
Pennsylvania Fine... 21
Cheese State Factory ID
12V
" Skimmed 02
Western d'i
I n
12
23
Eggs Stale 28
abVAMX
wtieat
1 80
1 00
14 1 80
14 1 CC
4 f3
m I 82
14 7u
t'V
( 1 H
( 71
(4 fVi
4 1.07
4 1 40
bye State ,
Uora mixea ............ ..
Barloy-r-Wate, .,
Olta State,....
83
1 81
66
'
t W.
J . s . BUFFALO.
Flonr. t m.'.m.Vmm ....
.4tatio i 2 Butuigs-.
orn-Mixed, . ..... .....
liarliy .' ,
BALTIMORE
Cotton Low Middlinge
Flour Extra
Wheat Ked Western ..
Rye
Corn Yellow
Oat Mixed
1 t!7
1 40
15
8 25
1 81
OS
M
69
14 16!.
Vt K
(4 1 82
(4 1 01
(4 el
(4 CO
Petroleum la!t(4
05?
VHILADELVHIA.
Flour Pennsylvania Extra T 8 28
Wheal Western Bed..., 1 88 (4 J 80
Rye 1 OS I 04
Corn YsUow
aiixea. ..,. eo is eo
Oats Mixed to (4 61
VeUoleum Crude 08(a09 Refined, 12
leadiner and loner
' - -
NewYork, wants a good Agent in every town to represent itsinterests.
He need not have experience, but must possess a good character. Terms
unusually favorable and worth looking into.
application. Address LIFE INSURANCE, P.
copy
the following from nn ex-
change, which is Important if true I Chronic
tliarrho a of long standing, aleo dysentory and
all similar complaints common at this season of
the year, can be cured by the use (internally)
of Johnson'i Anmlyne Liniment. We know
whereof we afiirm. Com.
A MAN OF A TIIOIXAM).
A CONSUMPTIVK CURED. -When death wai
hourly expeoted from Cnnnmnmlnn, all remedlea
having failed, aeoldent led to a discovery whereby Dr.
H. Jamks eared his only child with a preparation of
OinfiriM. Mlrn. He now dives recipe free on receipt of
two etsmifl to pay epene. Them in not a single
srmplom of (Jomnmiitlon t'mt It dee net d's.lnnto
NlB'it Swents, Irrltstlon of the Nerves, llltttcnlt Kxp-o.
toration, Hhnrp 1'alns In the Longs, Nsnsea nt the
Sloiiineh, lnnrtlon of the llowels, BtMWasttnK of the
Mtneles. Address ORADIIOUK OO., 14)32 Kaoe
Street, Philadelphia. Pa., IHn name of this paper.
ntY am, ani im.i. no vou ;ooi.
in thebney walks of life yon will find men and women
who are suffering from dyspepsia, liver o-jmplatnt, head,
ache, vertigo, debility of the nervous system, oonstlpa-
Hon, acidity, despondency, and many other maladies
catisod from an Impure stt of the blood. Thl state o
, Iff-,'? ffljfrJjl& l,fi!Ui5rffiS2I
and insure as It were a new Ipnse nf life. Sold hy si
drturnlsts. UKO. O. UOODW1.N 4 CO., Boston
Wholesale Aaeote.
Seme Parents spend their money
for Patent Medicine to cure their
children's colds. Some save their
money and prevent the colds by
buying: SII.VKK TIPI'KII
Shoes, which never wear through
at the tfie.
Monfji Is thrown awnv by all
who do not boy tho CAIil.l
StlllilV WIKU ftened
Shoos. They are 111- easiest, most
pllnblo and penleeiible. Irfwik out
tor Imitations. All genuine goods
bear the Patent Stamp.
N. T. BTJRNHAM'S
Ti'itniNK
Water Wheel
Wan SoliTtpd, 4 swam into, and put
to work in the iatnt Office, Wh
inffton, I). 0., arirl linn provfMl to be
the bfHt. It) sixes mnde. Price
I o wi'P' 1 h an oy othor firat-cluu
Wheel. I'umnhlnt free.
N. K. liUKNHAM. YotiK. Pa.
AChpmirfll FlnWPr rwmtillti.T the Morning
IILIIMUcll riUWCI , oinry. OhnnRnn Into bonn
tlful colors with every chnnjre of the ntmornhert. Kvery
dfKmouf moisi tire ir dryness reprcw-nted by 11 different
color. T'-lls of itormy nnd fair weather. Knot, pott
paid, on receipt of ;. cents. ARt-ntu Wnnted.
A. K. M K H K K I .L, I 7 A rch St nwt, Philadelphia, Pft.
FIITT A The choicest In tho world Importers'
I I JxVVj prices Larfit Company In America
staple article plafM4 evorybody-Trade continually
l'icnnli!fr A Rents wanted everywhere best Indiice
itiHtiift don't waste time send fnr circular to ROBKKT
WKI.I.S, 4.1 Vesey Street. New York. P.O. Box I 2H7.
"HEAVY YOKES
A new thniliOR M'rv by the auttmr of "AKiliist the
World," has just binn in the Boston I.W.'i (li,hn.
.et the whole story by seiidlnp ."() ct. for that live, H
piiKo, htory and news p:p"r, for 3 months, postage free.
Thk (ii.ojiR Pup. Boston.
MOODY & SANKEY.
Y it urn hxirn N. . Just . tsaued. (Joatatns
Sornons by M oody, John Hull and others, witlt
Knif r.ivliiKH of Old Dntrli Kulton Ktreot ) Church
now htlufr pulled down. Price, per 1M, I.I
for 2 iM'iit or 5 for IO rrntw. pjat-paid.
NKW VOHK IM IIjY H ITN KSW. nnblisb.
ed every Morriinir. Ail the Nhwb Only S4 year.
Try 11. one iimiimIi for It.- rctif postage paid.
.IOIIN IHHUAM.,
2 Hprnrr StiMTt, Nrw York.
Thii new truss ts worn
with perfect o otn f o rt
uiKht ftDd day. Adapt
Hs-df to every motion of
the body, retaining Hup
turn under the hardest
exeralse or severest strain
nntit permanently onred.
Sold cheap by the
F-lcstic Truss Co
No. !8:t Hrondwny, .N. Y. VAly,
and sunt hy nistl. flsll or ssnd for CJIx-qlsr. aari cnnA
BTJBB MILLS FOR C0BK, FLOTJB & FEED,
largr eapanltt tmall irfiM
A friee. Mv ipecislt; SO
yarn, (hlii M'daUfut fa
told. 90 mWdU fT
prinrfinir A bolting veeU
' bit. sua mlncml,by hsn4L
hon, wind, ites, r w
ter jower. S&d ivsmp fat
Ueull A prleet.
EDWARD HARRISON, New Uaven, Conn.
BOOK AGENTS
Wnntl to sell Thr
Ir,,nlt''n n m m o n
lpnsr Ifpillrnl Afivlrr." It Is the cheapest book
VRr jmMiflhed ; SS. panes, over 25(1 illiistrntlons,
ticptl to purchase thp hlfrti-prlopd bonks trntttinir of
llomnstlo Mertii-in. Urjlikrj othor hooks soM thronjrli
.-iirent Ibis work i3 thoroughly udv,-rtlspd throughout
North America. This fact. loa,ttiHr with tho Isnro sir.e.
plHgunt appearance, and many new features of the I took,
causes it to se!l more rapidly tban any work ever pub
lisheil in this country. Thoce of my agents who have
had experience iu selling hooks, say that In nil their pre.
vious Cftnvnnaiuft they never met with such success or
tuado so largo wages, ns since commencing the sale ot
my work, tor terms and territory, address (Inclosing
two postage stamps and stating experience).
ft. v. nr,mr,t ai. x..
World's Dispensary. Buffalo, N. Y.
A'ofg. Mark enveloe " Kor Publishing Uen't."
OOK AGENTS WANTED
totelltho
"GLEANINGS
NEW BOOK
FOR THE C11U01S." Por30jt.ri
all Utcrnturt, rt, Hclrnce, history, thcolopy, earth
and heaven, have hern rakod and runeackrrt (ot
the rare and curious tliinpi .owed wy in thin n
markatiit) honk. It in actually overflowing with
nn alnt. heftutifiil. hrilliunt thoutrhti and truths.
emjinaite entiment, inpenimn device, ana trip moil wua
dorfnl facts nnd curinun fancies ever known. Thoncni'lct'ay
'iff diiMi-fi';" Acent snv It's a Hlfi llTiV-niid
tbotc now at m-ork ivpnrt "...-" TO."" ."- 90MordcrB
Week I It reallV OI11M.nI Uii Oiner POOR rnrrr 10 mrc iw
nn, it it in 1W if .' Wc wunt 1 O.OOO more truutT
Afffiits now men or women nnd we will mail Outfit Frve
to those who will canvass. Lome pampnlets with lull pa
liculars, terms, etc., tnt fret t-ntll. AtMrefS
A, J' nuivuujuiu-i wvi
I f - C O H, for iUv. Bond for Chroino Catalogue.
Established 1S58
thasi vauk. fatehteo.
The best and cheapest Paint in the
World for Iron, Tin. or Wood. For wile
liv l;dcra everywhere. TRINCES' METALLIC
I'ATNT CO.. Vnnnft'reni, 9fi Cedar St., New York.
trCAXJTlOM . mrcuasors will please
ece that our name and trade mark are on each and
every package, bona for a Circular.
ATTENTION. OWNF.R9 OP IIORSRS,
akic votir Harness junker ror
lie ZIM 1(11, 1, tit I'ill
They are warranted to cure
'mv sore neck on horse or
inule, or money refunded. If
tinmen niret-iions are rol
lowed. Send 75c. forsuilinle.
Zlno Collar 1'iid Co., Hole
Miiui'fTi-s, Buchanan, Mich.
TUP W PkK I SITN 8 PWS.50 broad columns
lllAJ ll uunu l muiii iioui now io new rear
poit-nald. i.U rentw. Ailrtross ml. MTN. ihw Torn.
SMITH ORGAN GO.
Boston, Mass.
These
Stamlanl Inatruinent
Sold
by Music Dealers Everywhere
Agents Wanted in Every Town.
Sold throiiKhont the United States on the
INMTAI.I..1IKNT PLAN t
That ts, on a System of Monthly Payments.
Purchasers should ask for t he Hmitb Aufbioan OBQAX,
UaUuoKUea ana luupatiioaiais uu ,uii.i.!,ju.
t?, nW
r- s
MERCHANT
We
Pill
1
1
1 MERCHANT'S
sling Deling
JWlMtvjCMIl -.lE--prKSSIS-jrMSlllJ
Ws vfi
Whether for use on mau or beaat, Merchant's Gargling Oil will be found an tnyaluabla Lin mentj aud worth
of nse by every resident iu tbe laud. We know of no proprietary medicine or artlole now used iu the United State
which shares the good will of the people to a greater degree than this. Yellow wrapper for animal and white for
bumaa ileah. N. 1'. JnU-pnJett.
MERCHANT'S GARGLING OIL
It the Standard Unttnant of the UnltM States. RaUblhhed 1833. La,rge site. ftl.OO niedlatn sire, 50
cauls ; mall else. IS eenU. Small siie for family nse, if.) cent. Maonfnrmd at I .eckport, N. VM bj
Meruliant s tiargung un tiumpauy.
established Life Insurance Company, in the city of
Dr. .1. Walker's California Vln
egar Bitters aro a purely Vegetable
preparation, made cbiefly from tho na
tive herbs found on the lower ranges of
the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor
nia, the medicinal properties of which
aro extracted therefrom without tho use
of Alcohol. Tho question is almost
daily asked, " What is the causo of tho
unnarallcled success of Viseoau Bit-
j tersI" Our answer is, that they rcmovo
tno cause ot disease, nna tuo patient re
covers bis health. They aro tlio grant
blood pui fier aud a life-giving principle,
a'pcrfuc Kenovator aud Invigorator
of th3 i stem. Never beforo in tho
history o tlio world has a medicine lierm
coinpouni 3d possessing mo reiiinrnaiiio
qualities f Vinkoar Bitters in lienling the
ick of e cry diseaso man is heir to. They
aro a go tlo Purgativo as well as a Touie,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation ol
tho Livor rud Viscoral Organs iu Bilious
Diseases
Tho tttopertics of Dn. Walker's
Vinkoar 13 ittkrs aro Atioriuut, Dianliorotio.
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,
Sedative Counter-irritant Sudorilic, Altera,
tive. uii': Anti-Bilious.
II. II. JIcUONALD W CO.,
Dmeirlst unit Gon. A eta.. Srin Frunciiioo. CnllMnls.
and oor. of Wafthinirtnn anil Chfu-ltun Su., N. Y.
sola by au UmgglHt snl uralrr.
I. T. N. U.-Ko. 88
NEW YORK TRIBUNE.
The Leading American Newspaper.
THE 1IKST AIVKIfTISlN; iHKIHtMI.
Daily, $10 a year. Semi-Weekly, $3. Weekly, $2.
Votnfir Fee to thm S'thcrilir. Specimen t'npif nnd
Advert iiiiiit HatPS Krco. Wtwklv. In clubs uf H1 ur nmro.
only 1, pontage paid. At'UiBi Thk Tuiiii'Ni:, N. Y.
m
bota la cans Dj UruUta. W ueuu aud uwarOa,
ioe;lla-:f:?.uV
AGENTS WANTED to ..11
THE IMPROVED HOME
SHIITTI E S,nff Mn.,i,
Address Johnson. Clark h Co.. Hostnn. Mul , Nrw York
City 1 1'iltiburgh, Ps. Chicago, 111. i or SL Louis, Mo.
simr T7rrii TTvn trou. ReiistsiKht.
iM JJIVj J Xlli IT Our Ak'Is oolnrnouej.
We have work and money for nil, men or women, hoys or
tflrls, whole or spare time. .Send stump for CHlnloure.
Address FRANK. CiLUCK. New liedford, Mass.
Geo. p. Rowell & Co. I
II SSiSSSSSlSSSMSSlSISSlSIPSSSSSIISIS all
iJiOAA month to prnt rywhHr. Ad-lie
iPfiUU KXOKsiOrt MTO CO.,iinchiman,M.cli
Am SAMPLE Krre and P.lc Pay to Male and
t remaie eTBrywnerft.
Address.
THK UNION PUB. tJO., Newark, N. J.
5
Of till lrrltl't 1'nrfin yon pvrr saw
with ymir nnnm hiindnntiM'ly (Hinted nn
tl.jni, sent, pnat -paid, upon rroHpt f JJO
cents. Ynur friends will nil tvitut tlu-iu
when th'vR vmir. Addps.
W. O. CANXOX, 41 Knp-l.iiid Ktnid. I...r.t.,n, Maw.
$IOe$500?r
lnvpjtod In Wall St r-tt ,
1 lad t- fnrtur.. .A
IINCB ltTMlk PXplillnlllS
BTerythlna:, and copy of th Wnll Sirert Hrvlrw
BTerytmna:, ann copy 01
SENT FREE.
iioiiN mh Ki.iNi, t;o , hankers
A Frukein, 12 lirindwuy, N. Y.
FLORIDA
The Flurhltt A'frtc,4lturl-t.
AVer lily !? a yerir. Send
lOc. fnraDecimpn. l'rncppdfnir l'!orl-1d. Fmit limwi1
AssociiitlD mretin of I S7.j ct. Address Wat,.
TON A CO., jMcksuuville, I' Ju. Kay where yon saw thin.
EVKH V PA iI I
Sold by Agents.
I.Y WANTS IT. Money In If
Address M. N. 1.UVK.M. tirte.l'a.
3 Pounds of Butter from 1 Quart of Milk
Oan be made anywhere, hy any one. No clinrninff ro
qulred. Keeelpt cent for 2l cents. Address,
i-. r. nn I'titiiiiieipnia. ra.
Kclorl nil Violent Piirallven. They ruin tlw
tone of the bowels and weaken the digestion.
Tarrant's ElTcrvescoiit Seltzer Aperient
Is used by rational people as a moans of relieving nil de
rangements of tbe stomach, liver and intestines, ber.nme
t removes obstructions witheutpain and Inip&its Tlor
to the org ads which It purities and regulates.
SOLD BY" AM 1KU(1G1STS.
500,000
or
MICHIGAN
for m
ACRES
LANDS
A Ij E ! !
The IjnndH of tho .liirkHon I.niiH.nK nnd
Hnnlnaw lCnllrnnd C'ouipitny are Now
OFKKKEO I'Olt HAIifc..
They are stto-Hteri alons: Its railroad nnd contain largo
tracts of excellent FARM I NG and PINK Ijinds.
'1'he farmlnK lands include some of tbe mobt fertile
and well watered hardwood lands In the State. TliV
are timhered mainly with hard-nmple and beech ; soil
blnck, sandy loain, and at mnds In springs of purest
water. Michigan Is one of the least Indebte d and numi
prosperous States In the Union, and its farmers have a
K renter variety of crops and resources thau any Vetern
State. While some of tbe p....ie Slates may produce
oorn In great abundance, they have no other resourc,
aod when this i.rop fails destitution follows, as has been
the case the pais' vear In Kansas nnd Ne.hr.iska.
Price from feCtt.uO to S,j.(K per acre. Send for
Illustrated Pamphlet. Address, O. M. II UNKS,
LoiiiiuUMloiit r. JiuiBtiiKi JlirliiHiiiu
AVANTEDi AliKNTS-Kvervwhers for tbe C'en
IT fpiiiiinl iliniory-GtM. pnges. 24tt enrav.
Inn. relllus well.
CO., I Somerset Street, boston,
H. O. HOUGHTON k
Mass.
-)ENNSYLVANIA MILITARY AOADKMY, Che.
A i-er, ra , upens nepi. Hin. l.ocatlon uealtlitul,
f; rounds ample, buildings commodious. Civil Kn
ng, the Classics and Knglihh thoroughly taught
Civil Kngiueer-
Circulars apply to Col. 1
iiKO. 11 Y ATT, f'wWfst.
J. H. W IiinIow (V Co., Shtn
Bruker, P-trtlnuil, Mr., my : ' We
honestly think your Fotim
superior to all other iiukliiK Font
ders."
SiiriuffjithJ, .!(., f'Mr oJ
Foam oo mb lues all tbe qualities
de-ired In a flrst-vlaa tiaklof;
Powder." Try it.
" It is just the thing for Dyppep.
ties and weak iersoiis, and better
still tor the strong and well.1
Many Valuable Cooking recipes
sent free. Send fr Circular to
tiF.o. F. (Iantz it Co., 110 Duane
Street. New York.
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