S AMI HOUSEHOLD J1tfiMI sf (hlrkrna. Chickens reqnire neither fool nor drink on the tiny on which they aro liatohrx,. ,. Both are injurious, m they interfere with tho natural digestion of he yolk, which is absorbed into the bowels at the pericxl of hatching, and constitutes the first food. If grits, oat meal, and the like are spread before the hon on the twenty-first day, she is in dtveed to loare the nest, the Inst-hatched cliickens are nnable to follow, and, be ing weakly, frequently perish. If un disturbed, the hen seldom leaves the nest on the twenty-first day, while on the twenty-second day the chickens will be fonnd strong enough to follow her. The plan of cramming pepper-corns or grains of barley down the throats of newly-hatched chickens is exceedingly injurious. The best food for them is "sweet, course oatmeal, mixed into a crumbly paste with milk, and a certain proportion of custard made by beating together an egg with two tablespoonfuls of milk, and " setting " it by a gentle heat. Custard so made is eaten with avidity, and the chickens make rapid progress upon it. 8uch a preparation is far superior to the hard-boiled egg so often employed, and which it not rel ished by the chicken. The young birds are also very fond of a little cold oat meal porridge; milk is frequently used to mix the barley or oatmeal, but it should be remembered that it soon be comes sour in summer, and is decidedly injurious if employed in that state. Ne more food, therefore, should be mixed with milk than can be eaten in a few hours. Sopped bread is by no means desirable, since it does not appear to afford the necessary resistance to the natural grinding of the gizzard, and, consequently, the chickens soon become weakly and affected with diarrhoea from its use. In order to satisfy the hunger of the hen, which is usually very great when she leaves the nest, it is quite de sirable to give her as much grain as she can consume. Then, having satiated her own appetite and quenched her , thirst, which at this time is considerable, she will brood over her unfledged young, and keep them at rest while they are digesting the yolk that has been ab sorben just before hatching. After the first few days some whole grain, such as small-tail wheat or some barley, may be given to the young brood, and it will be found to be greatly relished, and doubt less affords a wholesome exercise for the extraordinary grinding power of the giz zard, utuckens should either have a constant supply of food or be fed at very short intervals. The first food should be given at daybreak. With re gard to animal food, there is none equal to the natural supply of worms and in sects ootainea Dy tne nen when she is at large; small worms or a shovelful of mould containing an ants' nest, may be given, u chickens are in a confined situ - ation, and will be found far superior to boiled egg, chopped meat, or any mere artificial substitute. Cooping, which is frequently employed to prevent the wandering of hens with chickens, is not desirable, and though in many cases it is a necessary evil, yet not the less an eviL American Cultivator. Household Hints. A Good Dust Brush. A very good dust brush may be made by cutting a crosswise strip of bed-tisking into fringe and tacking it around a wooden handle, Moths in Carpets. The best way to kill moths in carpet is to Jay a cloth, wet with hot water, on the place where t he pest is supposed to be, and press it w ith a very not iron. To make a paste for cleansing metals take one part of oxalic acid and six of rotton-stone and mix with equal parts of train oil and spirits of turpentine to a paste. The oxalio acid is poisonous, Exchange. Boil sweet or common potatoes till veil done, then mash or strain. To cr.ch one and a half pints add one pint nud a half of milk, a little melted but ter, two eggs with sugar, salt, and nut- i iOg or L mon to flavor. Washing Glassware. It is a mistake ; i wash glass tumblers, goblets, and the ke in hot water; if cold be used a ' lighter and clearer, appearance is left when the glass is wiped dry. If the class is particularly soiled, a pinch of oaa in me water win cieanee it easily, The following wash will renovate gilt .im s: Take sufficient flour of suphur give a golden tinge to about a pint id a half of water, aud in this boil four r five bruised onions, or garlic; strain r the liquid, and with it, when cold, "h with a soft brush any gilding ! ich requires restoring. Po Preserve the Aroma op Coffee, , : y mixing twenty-five per centum of ..'I dried bread crumbs with coffee, .' a griuding, a German chemist claims the delicate aroma ol tho fresh und coffee will be retained for an in v unite period, which otherwise soon apes. I a washing delicate, colored muslins , i linens several essential points must observed if we intend preserving :r original freshness and beauty. t, they should never be soaped or .od. If not too soiled, wash tin al ,-,t cold water; make a lather of good r aoap white is best and in it dis Iveasmall piece of alum. Use this .solved soap in the water, and rub a goods with the hands, as far as pos '.'ie. Put through two waters, and ise in two more. A handful of salt or spoonful of vinegar in the rinsing ter helps to brighten and hold the r. Wash only one article at a time, mat very quickly, IUats ts Wool Growers. L Never place unwashed tags in ieeoe, while it is better still to leave Lign out. i. Exercise care in washing your n. and see that the ends of the wool .4 free from dirt. 3d. Take the proper means to get the t..lkw oat of their fleeces. Ita presence ii one OI tne moot nenuug nuuiw vm ! ) the manufacturer, ith. Do not allow gravel to cling to wool, and do not place it in the wool nke it weigh more. , Tie your fleecei with a string ' only once around it. Dealers raciurers do not care to pay s ior nop iwuio.-ini.it TIMELY TOriCS. There are 67,000 exhibitors at the Paris Exposition. The following poem appeared in our columns some months ago and has been delivered bv the author at Steinway Ilall and elsewhere. It is now repro duced by special request. Aooording to official statistics, forty seven person died in England and Wales of hydrophobia in 1875, and fifty- three in 1870. The total in tho eleven years, 18G6-7C, was 887. Washington Territory is represented by her newspapers as anxious to become a State, but her population still falls short of 124,000, the number on which representation in Congress is based. . There were in this country, in 1877, 166,000 liquor dealers licensed by the United States government. The amount of money annually expended for liquor in the United States by consumers is $600,000,000. In Warsaw, Russia, certain ladies of high rank have organized an Economi cal Dress Club. Among other rules adopted is one discountenancing the constant changes recommeded by dress makers, and modistes, when these lack artistio value. Mr. Bryant was probably the wealth iest poet this country has produoed.and. perhaps, with the exceptions of Samuel ltogers and Liord Byron, the wealthiest. or among the wealthiest, of the Old World. His estate is said to be worth five hundred thousand dollars. Small-pox and diphtheria have been very prevalent and fatal lately in Loudon. Since New Year's there have 1,134 fatal cases of small-pox within fifteen miles of Charing Cross, while there were but eight deaths of that disease in the same period in nineteen provincial towns of Jnglang having an aggregate popula tion about equal to the metropolis. A laborer named Mistlebrook. a mem ber of the sect called Peoulier People, who do not believe in medicines, was tried in Ltondon for killing his infant son, who died from whooping cough. The prisoner had neglected to call in medical aid, and had he done so the child's life might have been saved. The evidence was not sufficient to sus tain the charge. Dr. D'Unger, the Minneapolis phy sician whose cinchona recipe for the cure of drunkards recently attracted at tention, is out with this one for con sumption: One-half pound finely cut up beefsteak (irosh); one dranchm pul verized charcoal, four ounces pulverized sugar; four ounces rye whiskey; one pint Douing water, mix all together. let it stand in a cool place over night. and give from one to two teaspoonfuls liquid and meat before each meal. As an instance of the great ingenuity of ants, and the enormous amount of work they can accomplish, may be men tioned an incident that recently occurred near I'ans, ikj., in a rural cemetery. where some ants, by diligently working for several weeks, undermined a coffin in a vault, dug a tunnel, and carried the skeleton which the coffin contained through the tunnel to a place seventeen leet away from where it was originally It is probable that the ants were assisted by the looseness of the earth and the catacombs made by field-mice and moles. Mr. Johannes Eckart,.of Munich, an nounces that he has discovered a method of keeping fish perfectly fresh for many days after capture, his plan of proced ure consisting in impregnating them by means of hydraulic pressure with a weak solution of salicylio acid, packing them in casks or cases, and pouring gelatine over them. The latter serves to prevent their becoming stiff and dry. Prepared and packed in the above manner, they may. it is said, remain ten or fifteen days, and even longer, during transport without detriment to tneir flavor of ap pearance. FOR THE CAUE OF CHILDKEK. rinla nnd Hlssr-le Roles lo be Observe by Mothers Darin the Hot Heoson, The New York Board of Health has published the following rules for the care of children during the hot season. They will be found useful in any locality. NTJRSINflr OF INFANTS. Over-feeding does more harm than ant thing else; nurse an infant a month or two old every two or three hours. Nurse an infant or six months and over five times in twenty-four hours, and no more. If an infant is thirsty, give it pure water or barley water; no sugar. On the hottest days a few drops of whiskey may be added to either water or food; the whiskey not to exceed a tea spoonful in twenty-four hours. FEEDING OF INFANTS. Boil a teaspoonful of powdered barley (ground in coffee grinder) and a gill of water, with a little salt, for fifteen min utes; strain, then mix it with half as much boiled milk, add a lump of white sugar, size of a walnut, and give it luke warm from a nursing bottle. Keep, bot tle and mouthpiece in a bowl of water when not in use, to which a little soda may be added. For infants five or six months old, give halt barley water and hail boiled milk, with salt and a lump of sugar. For older infants give more milk than barley water. For infants very costive, give oat meal instead of barley. Cook and strain as before. When your breast milk is only half enough, change off between breast milk and this prepared food. In hot weather, if blue litmus paper. applied to the food, turns red, the food is too acid, and you must make a fresh mess, or add a small pinch of baking soda. Infants of six months may have beef tea or beef soup once a day, by itself, or mixed with other food; and when ten or twelve months old, a crust of brtad and a piece of rare beef to suck. No child under two years ought to eat at your table. Give no candies, in fact, nothing that is not contained in these rules, without a doctor 8 orders. SUMMER COMPLAINT. It comes from overfeeding, and hot and foul air. Keep doors and windows open. Wash your well children with cold water twice a day, and of tener in the hot season. Never neglect looseness of the bowels in an infant; consult the family or dis pensary physician at once, and he will give you rules about what it should take and how it should be nursed. Keep your rooms as cool as possible, have them well ventilated, and do not allow any smell to come from sinks, privies, garbage boxes, or gutters about the house where you live. See that your apartments are right. Where an infant is cross and irritable in the hot weather, a trip on the water will do it a great deal of good (ferryboat or steamboat), and may prevent cholera infantum. The Song of the Thrasher. The brown thrush, alia the thrasher, is a favorite, moBt dooidodly, of the birds that live in the groves of the West. In his bright shining suit of sienua, with coat tails smooth and long, like those our tall, lank grandfathers wore, he is the very picture of a polished and ele gant gentleman; and how spontaneously and vehemently he sings ! He throws his whole life into his little throat, whence comes a perfect flood of melody, every note distinct, and with a measure and a method the artistio completeness of which neither Patti, nor Gary, nor Kellogg can excel. He belongs to the family of mocking birds, and, when the whim takes him, amuses himself by imi tations of the songs of other birds, or of the whistles and cries of man and beast. But he has one peculiar air, whioh is all his own. It is long, animated, and full of variety, being a medley of whistles, gurgles, trills, quavers, and cadences, mingling as harmoniously as do the scherzos and adagios of the sonatas and the sy phonies of the great composers, ne is among the earliest to welcome the dawn of the morning, and one of the last to hush his voice with the thicken ing twilight of the evening. A writer in the Chicago Journal, being in anjmagi native mood one morning, thus inter preted his theme: The Urenteat IHsroTerr of tbo Aao Is Dt robins' csltbratad Venatian Mnlmont I 10 years bofort hs pnblio, and warranted to onra; Diarrhea, Dreentery, Oollo, and papma, taken Internally and Oronp, Unroots Rhanmatlam, Sora Throats, Onto, Brnleea, Old Boras, and Palm In tha l.lml'i. Back and Oh art, externally. It hss never tailed. No family will STerbe witbont II attar onos sHrlne: It a lair trial. Prtos 40 cants. Dr. TOBIAS' VtfNKTIAN. HORSE I.INlMKNT. In Pint Bottles, at One Dollar, it warranted superior to an) other, or NO PAV, for the onra of Oollo, Uuta, BrniMii, Old Soraa, ato. Sold by all Druggists. DenotIO Park "laee. New York. " Bnoww'i Hnowmmi, TaocffKS. for eonsha and soldi TIM) MKK MONKV, t olronlara Day tiro's .l IftlO Aiitoiniil lo Inrnhnlor, Baltimore. Md. flTTWSt KKVOI.VKHN. Pr1oel.lstfree.Artr1reai U U a O Qraat Wmih Gun Worka, Plttebarg.Pa. retail prloe Mt only ). PIANOS r.'t.il prioet.)IO only H ill. Oreat bararaiiia. KNATTY, YV aahmaton, N. J. Geo. P. Rowell & Co., 10 Spruce St., New York. ORGANS $7 A DAY to Asants (lanraaoitis for tha Klreald Visitor. Tarnn and OnlfH Kras. Addrasi V, O. VICKKHY, Augnata, Mah.a, The Object of Our Establishment. Our Nowapanar Adrartialng Bnraan, No. 10 Hprnoo Strat, Now York, la an aatabhahmant Intanrtad to faoilitnte tha oonTaniant and .ratmnatts placing of ad rartirainanta In nawapanera. It la condncUd upon Ins prinoiplpa whioh wa oonoaiva to hs tha right onaa for aacming tha baat raaults to tha adrnrtiaar. Wa uudartaka to rjapwuwnt Amarioan nawapapara. not nnlr t ha nawanaoara of tha oity of Naw York, and of all othar Amarioan oitlas, Kxligiona, Agricultural, and othar olaaa nawapapara, hut alto ina arnan ooon try lournnla. Wo reoaira ragnlarlr and kaap on fllat ha daiir ana wanKiy nawapapars oi srerj uaavnimvu throughout the land. Mend !2.f0 for Ileal KI.Ol It TH lr.lt rvcr nm dr. HTHAITH Mill Co., Vi N '1 !NN ATI, W. CLOCKS K. INtlli AIIAM iV (lO.'al Hupormr in daaign. Not aqualad In iiualitr, or aa timakaapara. Ak your .lawalar for tharo Agnnoj S (iortlandt Ht , N.Y, Hard times I Is that it? Oh, pshaw I You're Joking ! Why, look you ! Bee I Bee me t Me, me, me I Hard times? You're dreaming! No rraoh thing ? No eir-ee 1 II ee, ree, ree 1 Oo to work ! Make something, And sell it Cash, cash, cash ! Jingles ? Ah, ha, ha 1 You're lazy, Or Crazy, You drone I Git, git, git! Work, work ! Earn a living ? D'K. dig, dig, Or grab; Yen, Anything To be a man, And not A sick kitton, Mewing For gome milk ! Milk, milk, milk! Go to work I nay ! He, he, ho, he ! Bee th.6 bee, The little bee, And me 1 We do Pretty fairly: Don't we though? Aye I You bet ! CHAPMAN'S CHOLERA SYRUP OnrM PientM?, P-arrhnp and HnmmwOfmitlftlnti ofOhiliirnn Prion V1. UKOIUIK MOORK, Proprie tor, Itreat FrIIb, N. H. Bold by all OrnjCffmU. DYKES' BEARD rUXI V w',Mlatrul Dsea., rot,. fcaYk -. llaor4s..aaMin,4h)WlnNoiT "aJ da, a. TWm -'its aa frvMH tho arirnsl. ' ft taasill foasM fttitn Itaawn, It srotkalikomasi (WW a Ul injur o tHasia, ooatfy snlMal tat rartalw m rt-t, faf loO-poM Jrta..1 for VI ra. L. L.fMlTa1 VU. aM At to, i'aiMUM, I lb All Mlatn anstw ft. Confined Strictly to Newspaper Adver tising and to American Newspapers. VP- .n.Nn, tranaantiona to nawanaoara. and do M o iinrl.rliL. tha manaaamant of othar olaaara of adrartiaing, anoh as books, aigu boaida, poso ara, or Job printing. , , H arlharing to ono branota ol adrertialng ws mass ouraalraa maatar of it. Wa alao raatriot our aaaimga to nawapapara pun liahad within tha gaographical limits of tha United State, and Dominion of Canada. rnir A 2 Tha oholoaat in tha world Importer. .IjJik!a nrioaa l.arga-tUompanjr in Amarioa atapla artiolo ploaaaa araryhodT Trada continually in oraaaing Aganta wantad art-rrwhara boat Indnos manta don't waate lima aand for Dironlar to KOBT WKM.8. 4!I Vaaay St.. N. V., P. O. Bog law. $10. $20. $50. $100. ia a aura road torauid fortune. Full dalail. and Otflolal Rtook Krohange Kaporta fraa. Addraaa T. lt I I KH WIOHT tH)., Bar.kara, Wall Htraat, N awVork. par day to Aganta JwrItiVC Here an old robin, that had perched on the next tree, undertook to out sing him; he couldn't stand that, and " went for him " quick as lightning. For about five minutes there was a noise amid tne foliage like that of a barber's clipping shears, followed by a small shower of little feathers. Thrasher came out the conflict first best. It u the universal opinion of those who know him, that the brown thrush is not only tne most gay and festive of singers, but a genuine philosopher and a brave and right ele gant little gentleman. 9IUH .oiling oar Pine A Oatelogua A Outfit Freo apphoation t. J. H. BlTFKORn'S RONS, Manufacturing TuMiahsr. 141 to 1-17 Franklin Mraat, Boston, maas. Eatahliahad naarly Ally yaara. GRACE'S SALVE. JoitKflviT.I.Ic, Mich., D. 27, 1H77. ,Vmt. JVHffi.: 1 nt jrou 60 oU. (or two Inum of Urc' ISIt. 1 amfm had two and hnve um. them on an ulcwr on m foot.tind it it a 1 moat well. Kespeuttuiiy joura, u. j. va om Prlntm j& nnU ft hrt at. all (Irnvvinta. or Bfnt b? mM Pranarad lit a. liT 1 1 V. MIV1,KV "',N. Sl Hnrriaon Aa.,Boaton,Maaa. The Nature of the Service which it is Our Business to Render to the Advertiser. Wa nndartaka to maintain an astablished sredij rith .ararr newapanar. and hare at hand a aohadula of chargaa for adrartiaing apaoa in its oolnmoa; to be able nilni. h him an ajtvarf.iaar who wiahae ors or aararal, and to proonre tba prompt inaartion of tha anremaamsnc wnitoai an? aura viiarav . - randarad; whioh aarrios eonaiats of quoting tba prioa, printing or writing as many duplicates of tha sdrarllas mant aa may be required, forwarding tha oopy for inaartion at oor own exponas for poataga or meaaengar eerrtoe; sxamininglha papers to ass that tba sdrer BaU1fflfrjejta SDD ought to; cheeking each aubaaqnant iaaoe ot tha adrar- tlaamant. in eaon palter, in s duos sapi ior tna pur. poea, and at all times antijaot to tha inspection of lbs adrertiiar, and marking plainly in aaob paper tha ad- ; ao luetwnenme aaramaer rt -rv T 1 : Li ure b uyspepsiu, AuuiKeisnuiit Sour Stomach, Sick Headache. vartiaamant aa it amtaara: oomea (or send.) for the porpoaa of baring tha Alee ex amined, tha Hf mil lishl promptly upon nn annoanoe- mant, without tha labor of searching s whola paper or A wonderful circumstance occurred in Watsonville, Gal., lately, according to a local paper, which savs: To betrin witu, a gentleman well known in tnis section owns a lot of henB. One of them a few days ago commenced laying in a wood-pile, her nest being situated between two sticks of wood, fnr enough apart so that as fast as the eggs were laid they would drop upon the ground, at least two feet below. After laying twelve or fifteen easts, the hen com menced setting on the hole between those sticks of wood, the eggs being on the crround below, two feet distant, Three weeks passed by and eleven of those eggs hatched successfully. Will some scientist explain the phenomenon ? A Fl-herman's Pathetic Story. Five dank bodies lay on the sands of Knott En 1, on the Euglish coast, a few weeks ago, and a child's face and curls were hidden somewhere under the waves, when Fisherman John wiped his eyes and with a husky voice told what had happened. " We were cross ing to Sunderland on the Lune," he said, "and I had charge of the sails. All went well for about two miles, and the boat had not taken a drop of water, We were just lighting our pipes when a mighty sea came, such as I have never seen in my life before, and it swamped the boat. L got bold of an oar and a mast to hold myself up. The rest all Beemed to go from the boat except my sister Harriet, who threw her arms around my neck. She said, 'Oh, brother, don't cast me off I' I said, ' I never will.' She held on for some little time, and kissed me, aud said her prayers ; but in time we became ex hauutei, and then she let go her hold and sank. I could not recover her, and I could not strike out or swim to the shore while she held me by.i.U0 neck. We should be quite twenty nuuutes on the mast and about a mile from the shore. No one came to our rescue. I saw the others sink very shortly after the boat Lad swamped. My brother and Gowell were both good swimmers. I saw my little boy, six years old, floating on his back, and I think he must have gone out to sea. Alter my sister had let go I swam ashore." A Bull Fight ia Cuba The Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle has the following extract from a private letter, written from Uuba: " Mr. Springer called for me last Sat urday afternoon at three o'clock, in the consul s carriage, aud insisted that 1 should drive with them, to the hrge amphitheater known as ' 1'olar Una Men dos,' for bull-fighting. I went, but I do assure you it is my last time. At four o'clock a horseman, well mounted, rode into the arena and saluted the governor. who tossed him tha keys to open the gates; after which eight or ten teasers with red flags marched into the ring, followed by two men on horseback, with long spoars. It was not long before the bull himself, already greatly infuriated, cavorted before us, dashing about from side to side after the hery ensigns and plunging at the nearest horseman. The story is one long and sickening; so, in summing up the affair, I have only to say that one man was killed. I didn't care a fig for the man nor his relations and friends; my sympathies were with the horses and bulls. Two steeds were killed by the first and third bulls, and one so lacerated by the fifth animal that it bad to be driven from toe ring, almost torn open. Then I was wrought up. I was mad with the governor, Spam, the Spaniards, and oven Christopher Colum bus did not escape my ill wishes. Weak though I was, I wanted to fight about three Spaniards, although I was still weak from malarial fever. Seven bulls were tortured to desperation and then butchered. After the horsemen were through with worrying them, two angling Spaniards on foot, with barbed reeds, gayly decorated and brightly polished. would dance aronud the enrasred bull. stick him in the tender parts of the shoulders, inflicting horrible agony into the poor beast's exhausted body. But the diabolical sport did not end until an other relay of hends wonld dunce around and thrust into the quivering, dying animal sharp darts loaded with a torpedo at the end, which would explode directly under the sain, causing the most excru ciating agony. The poor bulls, now nn able to defend themselves against every form of attack which ingenuity could devise or human wicaedness employ, would dash themselves wildly against the wall, endeavoring to wreck their miserable existences, or, failing in this, would run around tho ring, looking pite ously in the faoes of the multitudes above them, appealing, in their mute misery, tor the stony-hearted spectators. It was simply terrible. By the time the bloody sport was over I was nearly dead myself, and, although the day was very warm, drops of cold perspiration beaded upon my brow and chilled my forehead. Many women and ministers of religion would first cheer the men and then the bull, and each unfortunate rider, as he was dethroned by the bull, would be frichtfullv hissed bv tho spectators. haven't eaten a beefsteak since my visit to the bull-right.-' Anecdote of Professor Henry. We find this anecdote of the late secre tary of tho Smithsonian Institute in Harper a Magazine: "i met him, " writes a Boston friend, " but once at Montreal. I noticed that this fine-looking man, when he arrived at the hotel m Montreal, was placed at the head of our table, but did not know who he was. He came home by the same route and at the same time with us, and was very kind and courteous to my traveling com panions aa well as myself. What I re member more distinctly than anything else was a 'happening' at house's Point while we were waiting for the steamer. The professor was talkative aud communicative in his quiet way, and was full of incidents of travel ami adventure. Soon the steamer appeared in sight, and while she was approaching us the professor sat upon tho wharf looking dreamily at her. Presently he aroused himself, and said : ' I see a peculiar sparkle of tho waves near the side of the steamer, where the sun shines upon her' (it was almost sunset). 'I wonder what the cause of it is ? 1 have seen phosphorescent light before, but never exactly like this. And see I there it is also upon the other, the darker side of the steamer. Well, certainly, that is very curious. ' We looked, and indeed seemed remarkable, x irst upon the bright side of the steamer, and then upon the dark side, would appear these curious flashes of light, and disappear almost instantly. Tbey seemed to come at regular intervals, and it was beautiful as well as strange. Our reveries were rudely disturbed, however, by one of the customs inspectors approaching. ! ' 'Looking at them flashes ? ' 'Yes,' said the professor. 'I won der what they are ?' " 4Oh. them s hot ashes they are throwing out of the ash pits.' "The professor was nonplussed ior a moment. Then saying, quietly, 'Well, well, live and learn live and learn,' he lapsed into silence." HP WW JflrR lie. If iifTora or emiiaiom occur, tt t our dot? toDotif pQhliHhr, at our own iididm fnr labor, pcwUxtt) rofWMinRsr, ina 10 vo it inu ta puouinnr oi-ti papiM- ftotuaiiv doea iwnner trie ipooiDea aemca ior wbich tha advartiaor oontraoled. HOW TO OCT THEM lo th tm; -. pm : f th.u. jiOff,oo aari fur sale b or r copr of thfl Knnn Pad He llame tend. atldrwt 8. J. Ollmora.LanJJ. oiu r, lsSriK VV SlfaTlMMl A Suit) and lteliuble bubatlluto for 4ulllll The enly 25 cent AGUE REMEDY in tub won CUBES Our Promise. Wa nromlae those sdvertlaers who sntraat their ad. rertising Datronaga to our management that wa williiK allow them to be obarnad, in any Inatanoe, anr mors ban Iba puliliabara' schedule rates ; that wa will pro. oure for tnam the aoeeptanos of any advantageous offer ilxtimtal, made to tbam hi anr nawapapar puhiiata ir, adrartiaing agent, or eanraaaer of re-ponaibilitr. Ws ara unwilling to do work without g profit, and rarer offi-r to do ao, ret n conformity with tba promise mirte abora, ws sometimes find It sdviseabls. The System of Arrangement for News paper Files. ran inn! MM ,,,d all MAliAKlAL lilSKASKS. Jb all Or-iaila-l. Mallril FR! " rrralpt 01 pne. 1 jJffwFH i tr i i Yobk. for tiitr tin cM Umk, i till pt.pr FREEun ipiiUoi. W oustki HTaaar. Na ta.!K. to Ui rattlcra LLANS FLY BRICK J?tt bat Ciant FVKUUr. Plain material mar be trimmed with that which is figured, or the style may be reversed. The former is more fash ionable. Floral garnitures for bridal toilets are composed of white hawthorn and orange bloosoms and myrtle leaves. KILLS all FLIES i room in TWO HOURS, xoc. worth will kill more flies than $10 worth of Fly Paper. No dirt, no trouble. Sold by DSUCGISTS EVIRY- WHgag. Botanic Medicine Co mxm WthiNi MrfMUd inUra for fllina nwMpera,ft separata ipaoa batng aoonrded to ojiofa. and la) I lad aooomodaLa. A fttraogar can placa bis bund upon any paper ha wtabe. to eiamlna with tha earns rsadi e witb which ha would tlnd a word in a dictionary, s nam in s directory, or a book in a library catalogue. , Buffalo.N. Y FOR $750 How many poor, even in this beauti ful world, with the warm sun and fresh air about us, that alone are sufficient to make us glad, would be life, if we could not make the happiness of others. For upwards of thirty veara Mm. WfKSLOW'S SOOTHING SYHUP has been used for children with uever-f ailius sucoesB. It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind colic, regulates the bowels, cures dysentery and diarrhoea, whether arising from teething or other causes. An old .and well-tried remedy. 25 eta. a bottle. TTT t - 1 : . . . .1 1 1 i ii e uave a ut oi a muunauu country wetut-v lies, in which we can insert a one-inch adver titement one year for two dollars and a quarter a paper, or for the same price we can inxert fifty-two reading notices (a new one every week), averaging seven lines each. For list of papers and other particulars, address Beals A Foster, 10 (Spruce titreet, New York. Hooter's Yeast Powder. This truly unrivaled baking powder stands on its merits alone; and because of its perfeot pu rity and excellence, aDd from the fact that every package is striotly full weight, the peo- Ele have adopted it in their households, and ave the utmost confidence in it. It always does the work effectually, goes much further lu use, and makes better and more wholesome and nutritious bisouits, bread, rolls, multius, cakes and pasty than any other powder in the country. Wobthv a Place in Eveby Famil?. Grace's Salve is now firmly established as the best rem edy in use for the immediate relief of Cuts, Burns, Sprains, Wounds, Felons, TJloers, Ao It should be kept in every bouse. , We know of no way that we can benefit our readers more than by calling attention to John son's Anodyne Liniment It is the oldest and most valuable patent medicine in the world. Everybody should keep it in the house. It will check diarrhea and dysentery iu one hour. If the fountain is pure the streams will be pure also. Ho with the blood. If that be pure the health is established. Parsons' Purgative l'illt nibke new rih blood, and taken one a night will change the blood la the entire sys tew in three months. We will insert a one inub adrert'aemsnt, thirteen times, in one thousand American weekly nawapapara. Advertisement may appear three months amry week, or every other week six months. I The Amount of Money to be Expended-- Peranna who hava had Httla aiDarianoa aa advartiaara of tan hara a prattyolaar under tnd in of what they I would iiaa to do, out ara amuai moorauioi pr- oania ooai. Wa hava mada oat for tach Draon a plan of advar- t sinn eallina for aa in Teat mant of 13,000, and on ub mi tli nc it tor approval found our euttomar diemayad at tba maf nttuda of tha axpanaa, ha not having eoniam piataa an axprnauura aioaeaing jnt or in oo a oaa labor would have been eavad, if at tha com men cement of tbo negotiation tha qu eat ion had bean , aitkad : ' Aow much money ara you prepared to da vol to thla advartutDB T" I1ATK INCH FOUR MNI'X... TIIUKi: JUNES. ...FOR 11425 a. .FOR W'siHO ...FOR For cash payment entirely in advance, five pereant. discount. No extra charge for making and aendlng outs. Far catalogue of papers and other information address DEALS & FOSTER, 10 Spruce Street, New York. Who Vants Machinery? Ws have for aaleover l,20 new and second-hand machines at prices fur bulon th-ir true value, oompris. mi HAU'.IHII.I. and li KNKK Al, WOOD. WOUKINU tflAC'llINISUV ol avary doaoription, Porlitble nnd Ntntlonury NTEA.1I tMJINKI nnd IKMI.EKM from 1.2 to OU h. p., WATHK WIIKKI.M, ;KIT illl.I. niACHINKKY, AIAl'lllMMTH' and It l.A C KM Al 1 T II H' TOOLS ol every variety. I'l HI'.", HKK ArrA. KATr.1,'TTON UDd WOOI.K.N IIAl IIIN KUV, IJtl.TINl;, CIRCULAR HAHN, MIArf I 'MJ, 1'1'l.I.KVS, etc., etc., all fully daaoribei our printed l.iet No. 17, witb prioea annex ed, which we Ulniuil to the address ot any party desir ing machinery uln receipt of .Uuip. Ktate plainly )uat what machine or machines yon ara in wunl (if, ana don't buy until you have otrefully read our iiat of t lie STKaUBt liarguina .n,r olfored in the way of nt-w una noo- uil-l:aua niitciuuaa. i,u, Mpciai ireitciii. aKS otitaintid fur our tillsloiui'ra to any aoctioo of tba Uu. ted State, or Canada. Addrxaa S. F. FORSAITH & CO., Machinists and Gcnsral Machine Dealers, MANCHESTER, N. H. B. Village and Town tire Knginesa, Hoaa Oar d, ludtiur Ti u:k unU Fire KquitJiueuU a aiciaity. (or tire Fnniiiu ciroulmra. tfuerednoed prices new Co., lifi Warren bt-.N.Y. The Confidence of Our Patrons a Matter of Prime Importance. It is a matter of prima importance to as, for tba rurpoee or maintaining our miiuenoe wita punikatitvs. bat it shall oorue to be unfiersiiod among them lht our atatamenta about the advertising to be dona, or not to ta dona, ara to De reiien upon, ana to tuu eaa our dealing with our advertising patrons must be upon a baaia of mutual ooundanoa and good faiths to Our Best for any Our Customers Entitled Services. Whenever we are doing tne advertising Individual, or firm, wa consider then entitled to our best eervioee. If they suitgeat using a paper which we know to be not the best for the purpose, a a sy so and five the reasons. Wa often expend a good deal of una for very small advertisers, much more than tha profits on their patronage would warrant; but wa era content, aa they entrust to us what they have to dis f erae, and influence in our direction the patronage of heir friends and acquaintance. Zxtraet from l'r liithed their ' Timet," Junt 14. 187S. vertiMnc scene in New York (Jitv, ears aco I hey absorbed tha buumebs conducted Five by Mr. N. riiix Kui AliK.NTN -Shii.1 tor caiaU suck, Uoiitinttiital i'tirouio Ten years ago Measra. Geo. P. Rowell k Co., estab- adva VAAra to I n John lioooer. who was tie first to ao into this kind of enterprise. Now they have the satisfaction of control, ling tba moat extensive and complete advertising con nection which hse ever been scoured, and one wnioh would hardly be possible In any mher country tut this. They eava succeeded in working down a complex busi ness into so thoroughly a systematic method that no change in the newspaper system of America can esoape notice, while the widest information upn all to pica inUireating to advertisers ia placed readily at the die poaai of the public Geo. P. Rowell & Co., 10 Spruce St., New York. N Y.N U 30 V;
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers