1 r l i.S AND HOUSEHOLD, Fenttry Notes. o small brroils of fowls are the moi Tench yonr liens to break eggs and f, them by throwing nhella to them iienever opiwrtnuity offers. This is a d way to ilo it. A poultry fancier has found that lice 'U not venture near a sitting hen in iiose neHt two or three tobacco leaves five been placed, A writer in the Poultry World armies hat there is no foundation for the theory that one breed of dbmestio fowl is more tender and Juicy than another; p-ny fowl badly fed or cared for is neoes-j-nnly poor, stingy" and unpalatable, I'nt, other things equal, no difference ean be discovered in the taste of the i.0Bj of the various breeds. An old tnrkey-raisor gives the follow ing experiment: Pour turkeys were con fined in a pen, and fod on moal, boiled potatoes and oats. Four others, of the fame brood, were also at the same time confined iu another pen, and fed daily on the same articles, but with one pint of very finely pulverizod charcoal mixed with their foodmixed meal and boiled potatoes. They had also a plenti 8urfly t broken charcoal in their pen. The eight were killed on the same day, and there was a difference of one and a half pounds each iu favor of the fowls which had been supplied with chnal the7 being much the fattest and the meat greatly superior in point a v wuuuiiicHH amx navor. Hed-IIngs and Ant a. A lady writes to an exchange as fol lows: Thinking perhaps I might add a mite that would be of benefit to Borne of the many readers of. this department, aud wishing for a recipe which would be of great help to me, I have, for the first time, taken up my pen to tell what I know. To those that are troubled with bed-bugs: Remove all your furniture from the room, after cleaning it of all bugs and nits; then plaos a pan of coals m the room and pour a good supply of brimstone on it; then close the room light, and let it smoke; do not open until the smoke has all gone out through the crevices; then take a wet cloth aud wipe off the wood-work, and, before lacing your furniture back, anoint all the cracks with unguentum. I have f i ied this way twice, and have been Jfery lccessful. Also, a good way to get rid f those little red ants that are so troub i some to some. Watoh them, and when ou find out where they travel to, just turn kerosene oil into their nests, and uo not be afraid to use it. I think you - ill soon be rid of them. I got rid of )"min that way, in a house where I ould not keep anything out of their roach, up-stairs and down; they never troubled me afterward. Farmers' Aids and Enemies. Iledgehog lives ou mice, small ro dents, slugs and grubs animals hurtful to agriculture. Don't kill the hedge hog. Toad farm assistant; destroys from twenty to thirty insects an hour. Don't kill the toad. Mole is continually destroying grubs, 1 .irvre, palmer worms and insects injuri ous to agriculture. No trace of vege- ition is ever found in its stomach. : oea more good than harm. Don't kill ie mole. May bug and its larvaa or grub, mortal iomy of agriculture; lays from seventy eighty eggs. Kill the May bug. Birds.--Each department loses sev al millions annually through insects, rds are the only enemies able to con id against them victoriously. They -' the great caterpillar-killer and agri faral assistants. Children, don't turb their nests. Golden Pule. How to Make C'owst.lre IHllk. A writer in the Southei-n Farmer says A his cow gives all the milk that is :,ted in a family of eight, and that m it, after taking all that is required v other purposes, 2G0 pounds of butter re made this year. 'I his is in part his 'mont of the cow: 'If you desire to get a large yield nch milk, jive your cow every day r slightly warm and slightly salt a which bran has been stirred at i ate of one quart to two gallons of r. You will find, if you have not I this daily practice, that your cow 1 give twenty-five per cent, more milk eJiately under the effect of it, and vill become so attached to the diet refuse to drink clear water unless thirsty. But this mess she will 'i almost any time, and ask for more. u mount of this drink necessary is an :ary water pailful at a time, morn- , uouu aud night." To Free Hog from Lice. O. L. B., Ulster county, N. T " Whnt will kill lice on hogs?" l.v: Give the hogs "aalf an ounce phnr daily in their food until they : Wrongly of it through the skin, will be in ten days or thereabout, meantime, prepare a mixture of Tour parts, glycerine, two parts, : i- roseue oil, two parts. Rub this i the brisket, the armpits, and be i the thighs of the animals, and uere else the vermin may be found. t the smell of the sulphur comes -.k the skin, all the lice that have n killed by the grease will leave To prevent their return, keep ; then floor in the pen, or bed the m ith fresh earth Bix inches deep, iug it occasionally, and once a throw over this a tjuart of water in h one ounce of carbolic acid has i dissolved. Cooked Meats for Fowls. ls, as well as dogs, become quar ie if fed on raw meat. Besides, .? makes it more nutritious. When -- is rather harsh and crude, com- with the mild natural diet of aud grubs, which are for the art eof t, and easily dissolved by jionally, for variety, a little meat j given raw. Jftsb. wnen plenty, e conveniently given boiled, be- m that state the fowls easily pick y morsel from the bones, and no ug is required. Chandlers' scraps the advantage of being already 1. and on that account, as well as others, they are excellent. The ' 'J World. i arrested in . New York for t-s and disorderly conduct, ; a proof reader. He should at to the House of "Cor- TIMELY TOriCS. Biarnor Gorki of Vnrntm rioiva ' - - ' - " V. . . . 1 1 1 1 1 VV' discovered powder removing all cx plosivo power from petroleum. The demand for nrmhnl mrila ntnr-n they were first introduced in 1873 has woreaseu tlurty per cent, annually. Juan GonsaleB has been executed at Valparaiso for killing a shopkeeper in his shop in broad dnylight. Though only twenty-three he had been twenty times arrested for murder, robbery and oiuer grave crimes. Thus ar there have boen nearly ten thousand mines recorded in the Black liills, and they are still being discovered at the rate of nlinnr, nnn hrm.lroil a nnnlr. For the year ending Msy 15, 1878, it was esumaiea mat 4,UW,UUU liad been proaucoa oy tho gulch and quartz mmos. Mr. Tuoker, of Fond du Lac, Wis., broke his arm, and the doctors had to cut out four inches of th i bone, including the elbow joint, thoiiRh they left the muscles and ligaments uninjured. A clever surgeon has just fitted him with an artificial elbow joint that works like a charm. In the valley near Bantas, Gal., a field of ripe wheat containing one thousand acres was recently destroyed by Arc. Throe hundred farmers fought the'flames desperately with wet sacks, but nothing seemed to have any eflect until the fire reached a belt of green wheat, there it stopped. The marble quarries of Carrara, Italy, have been worked since the reign of Augustus. They embrace an entire mountain range. 40,000 tons of marble were sent to this country from these quarries year before last. The entire working populace in Carrara finds em ployment in them. David Freshwater, of Carthage, Mo., had a fine farm, but the crops promised to be poor, and the other day one of his hogs died. His cup was full and, seizing a hatchet, he cut several fright ful gashes on his head, then jumped into a lake tool shallow to drown him, and finally, climbing a tree, jumped to the ground to dash his brains out, but caught in the limbs and waa taken home to recover. Once in a while a man is found who distrusts saving banks and safe deposit companies, and institutions that take money on investment; who thrusts his savings into old stockings or trunks, gets it out and connts it before he goes to bed, worries about it by day and dreams about it by night. Such a man Mr. King of Vesey street, New York, seems to be. He had thirty thousand dellars in an old jsatchel which he looked in a small room in the top of his house. The money was fingered over daily to see whether it was all there. Whea it came time to go through with that op eration on a recent Saturday night the satchel was missing. Thieves had crawled through the skylight and had made off with the cash that was to make Mr. King happy in his-old age. An exhibition of the written addresses presented to the German Emperor after the recent attempts on his life has been opened at the Old Palace at Berli. Besides thousands of telegrams, there are more than two hundred addresses, the nnmbor of signatures to Bach ad dress varying between ten and ten thou sand . Many of the addresses are perfect works of art, calligraphically executed and adorned with pen aud ink drawings, water-color paintings and photographs. Most of the bindings are in blue velvet, the favorite color of the emperor, with gold or silver clasps, and alto-relievos in the same metals. Of all the principal, political, municipal and learned corpora tions in Germany are added those from the German residents in Vienna, Pesth, Dublin, Brussels, Antwerp, Revel, Mos cow, St. Petersburg, Switzerland, etc. Nearly all the addresses are in German, but there are several in Latin, Italian, Hebrew and other languages. The get ting up has probably never been sur passed for taste, costliness and art. Fashion Notes. The desire for shaggy goods still con tinues unabated. The small, round turbau is again worn by youDg ladies. Spotted satin and silk sun umbrellaB are quite stylish. Old gold color and pink is a favorite mixture for bows. It is predicted that garnets, so long tabooed by fashion will again be worn this fall and winter. Fall hats are of black straw trimmed with black velvet and enlivened by autumn leaves or poppies. It is the fashion now to line white muslin curtains with a color, and to tie them back with a strip of the same as the lining. Monograms are in favor again, and are embroidered on slippers, collars, hand kerchiefs, mitts and parasols, in the gayest colors. Tho brocaded materials are gradually reviving the stomacher, and in a short time one need not be surprised to see the waists of dresses as short aa in the days of one's grandmothers'. Large round oollars are made of three rows of Valenciennes lace, each an inch wide, laid in knif e-pleatings, and finished at the top by one standing row of the pleated lace and an inner pleating of crimped crepe lisse. Black velvet bracelets are revived to wear with half-long elbow sleeves. They are fastened with square buckles of paste or of diamonds, and are ornamented with the serpent and lizard brooches that are now so popular. These bracelets and rococo buckles are in keeping with the black lace mitts and country toilettes known as Trianon dresses. Satan or velvet bodices, known as Revolution bodices, are woru with white muslin skirts. These are in coat shape, with revers and cape covered with white lace, as, for instance, ruby satin with Venetian point lace or the old Venice cninnra. There is first a wliiha Ut D A " wv U'ltt X tiooat, over which is a white muslin pleated skirt, and a washerwoman over skirt bordered broadlv with rnhv Hariri and white lace. A Virginia Clij Episode. Droll things happen in Nevada. The air out there, as everybody kuows, is full of ozone, and ozone in the atmos phere makes people wonderfully vigor ons and original. A story which comes from Virginia City illuntiatos tho fact pleawutly. It isn't qu to assured tlist the pleanant account renlly conies from that place, but it is credited to it, add, as the story drifts eastward in the vague sort of way stories from the Far West usually do, and is roorely in its bearing a barometrical showing of the condition of tho social atmosphere ill mining towns generally, it may be located in Virgiuia City as well as anywhere else. Tliero came to Virgiuia City a young physician from "tho States," possibly from St. Louis, a talented, nice young fellow, with considerable genius iu mak ing out a diagnosis or a bill, but inherit ing from decent parents a fatal weak ness. He could not overoome a fatal passion for puttiug on occasionally a clean shirt, for taking his pantaloons out of the tops of his boots and in other ways conforming to habits-popular with the super-civilization of the Orient. He forgot he was in the Occident, where ways are different. For a time after his arrival among tho ozone-faood Virginia Cityites he conformed in modesty and decency to their ways. Ho wore a dirty shirt of miners flannel, and tucked his pantaloons inside his boots, and swore with strange oaths, grew beardod like the bard, chewed navy-plug tobncoo and spat wickedly to leeward. He was rapidly acquiring popularity and an im mense practice in his profession, when he yielded to temptation and so fell fell as thousands of bright minds havo fallen in the past. Ihere came upon the young physician a passion for old phantasies. He clung again to tho flesh-pots of his early life, and took a course insulting to all about him and dangerous to himself. As upon the reformed drunkarn comes at timed a horrible thirst for drink, as oomes to the opium-eater who has tried to. save him self an overwhelming passion for the fatal drug, so upon the young physician came fierce longing to wear again a shirt all clean, and washed, and starched to don in. otherwise the crarb of Eastern cities. Of course the infatuated young man knew well enough that he was wronging those about him. He knew that in put ting on a clean shirt he was offering a gratuitous insult to every other man in Virginia City, in the intimation thus ex pressed of his own superiority. Ho knew the risk and took it. lie was infatuated. He knew of the popularity he had gain ed, and relied upon it for protection. The rest is soon told. One morning the young physician came down town with his trowsers worn outsido his boots. His friends noticed it, but said nothing; they thought it merely an oversight on his part. The night passod, and the next morning the yonng man appeared upon the streets wearing a white shirt. He had shown tact enough to put on his adornments gradually, but he did not re alize the full terror of his situation. Still nothing was said. There was a muttering among the populace, and nothing more. Another day came, and with it the appearance of the Eastern man in public, his white shirt still worn, his pantaloons still outside his boots, and upon these boots, not plain Nevada mud, but a polish of blacking. Then tho people gathered in groups, and dis cussed somethiug enrnestly. The blind ed victim of impending fate saw noth ing. He appeared next day, still clean and neat, aud carrying a cane. That night the Vigilance Committee met 1 The next morning proved a clear and pleasant one, which was a lucky circum stance, as it enabled most of tho popula tion of Virginia City to stroll out aud speculate upon a droll object in the suburbs. Suspended from the limb of a tree, swinging gently in the morning breeze, hung the foolish young physi cian from the East. Upon the back of an old envelope piuned to his breast was inscribed the curt legend: " He tuk risks. Hp banked too heavy on his pop'larity." But, as said before, the scene of this interesting episode of tho ozone-bathed mountain regions may not have been Virginia City. Tho story comes irregu larly. St. Louit Republican, Words of Wisdom. Habit is a cable. We weave a thread of it every day, aud at last we cannot break if. A man's own good breeding is tho best security against other people's ill manners. Small service is true service while it lasts. Of friends, however humble, scorn not one. The sickness of the heart is most easily got rid of by complaining and soothing confidence. The heurt is like a musical instrument of many strings, all the chords of which require putting in harmony. If one strives to treat others as he would be treated by them, he will not fail to come near the perfect life. If you would relish your food, labor for it; if you would enjoy the raiment, pay for it before you wear it; if you would sleep soundly, take a clear con science to bed with you. A beautiful smile is to the female countenance what the sunbeam is to the landscape; it embellishes an inferior faoe and redeems an ugly one. Care is the lot of life, and he that aspires to greatness in hopes to get rid of it is like one who throws himself into a furnace to avoid the shivering of an ague. The annual rate of mortality, accord ing to the most recent weekly returns in Calcutta, was thirty-three; Bombay, thirty-six; Madras, forty; Paris, twenty-throe ; Geneva, twenty-one ; Brussels, thirty ; Amsterdam, twenty four ; Rotterdai , twenty-nine ; The Hague, twenty-five ; Copenhagen, twenty-four ; Stockholm, twenty-two; Christiania, nineteen ; St. Petersburg, forty-eight; Berlin, fifty-two; Ham burg, twenty-nine ; Dresden, thirty ; Breslau, thirty -two ; Munich, thirty five ; Vienna, thirty ; Buda-Pesth, thirty-nine ; Rome, twenty-eight : Naples, thirty-nine; Turin, twenty six j Venioe, twenty-one ; Alexandria, fifty-five ; New York, twenty-three ; Brooklyn, eighteen ; Philadelphia, nineteen, end Baltimore, twenty. Sensational Story Sophia Saunders soaiohingly scrutin izod Sarah, scowling severely. Stephen Smith, Surah's suitor, strong, splendidly sinewed, shapely Stephen, slept soundly. Sophia spoke. She said Sarah should sell stale, stinking soles. Stephen entered. Sophia spitefully shook Sarah. Surrendetl " said she. Sarah screamed shrilly. Stephen seeing sweet Sarah's situa tion, stealing stealthily.snddeuly squeez ed Sophia's side, saying, "Stop bucS silly squabbles; such stupid strife; stop striking Sarah." She staggered. "So," snoercd Sophia, "savage Steph en sneakingly supports Sarah! Seek safety skedaddle!" Stephen smiling satirically said: "Sarah shall sell stale solos, sweet So phia, shall she ?" "She shall I" shrieked Sophia, So saying, Sophia Saunders strolled sraward, stalking stiffly, selecting slopy shingle flpots. Slackening speed, she sat. Straightway she sentimental ized. "See star-spanglod sky, see sinking sun, see Bait sea; see Sophia Saunders, spinster, Sarah's sister, spurned, Blight ed, scorned. So Sarah-supposes selling stale soles sinful ! Saore ! she shall see." She stood still some seconds solemnly sea-surveying. Suddenly she said: "See Stephen, so sneaking, so sanctimonious, so supremely stupid; see sister Sarah so sweetly soraphio, sweet Sunday school scholar, sublime sinner, see Sophia swim. Stephen, sister Sarah shall sell sweet soles so shall she starve." Sarah shuddered. Stephen sneezed. Suddenly, Sophia sprang, screaming, splashing salt spray skyward. "Save Sophia, Stephon I boo, she sinks I" screamed Sarah. "Scarcely, sweetheart." Baid Stephen, sullenly. So Sophia Saunders sank. Sophia's suicide saved Sarah selling soles so stale. She systematically sold sweet soles. She survived Sophia sev eral summer seasons. Sometimes she sang sad songs softly, Borrowing Sophia's sad suicide. Still she staid sfhgle, scornfully spurning Stephen Smith 'a Bof t speeches. Boston Courier. A Tyrolcse Almanac. A curious Almanao is described by a recent traveler, in Tyrol. It ignores the alphabet, and goes on the presumption that "reading is an unknown art." The picture of .a saint indicates his holi day, the peasants readily knowing the signs employed. The plow indicates the time to begin farming, thejolover leaf signifies the time for seeding, and wood chopping is prompted by a hatchet. A hand signifies cold ; a mouth, wind ; a Eitcher, rain; and a bat, warm weather, tike the Ober-Ammergan "Passion Play," this almanao is a reminder of the past. Time was when religious instruc tion was conveyed by " books for the poor," which contained only rude en gravings. Specimens of these are not rare, and copies of single pages aro common in works on ecclesiastical an tiquity. Piotures, statues, curious heads, aud other devices in aucient church architecture had a similar purpose in then? Origin. Though to modern eyes they seem grotesque, they ouco had o devout moaning. " Picture-writing," iu this case may bo Baid to huvo survived tho introduction of letter. Philadel phia Ledger. A Joke that was Lost now many really excellent jokes are lost for want of proper appreciation. Here, only a few days ago, when tho Iowa excursion went up to Minneapolis, a young man sat up at the Nicollet half an hour one night after his chum had goue to bed, sewing the legs of the innocent sleeper's together. He trousers sewed them strong, and laughed long and silent ly after he went to bod, as ho pictured tho scene in the morning. When the morn ing dawned, he arose with the glow of anticipation in his face, And as it slowly fadad away he sat down upon the sido of the bed and dejectedly cut open tho bottom of his own carefully sewed trou sers legs, and when his unsuspecting chum asked what he was doing, he sighed and eaid Badly, "Oh, nothing." And he wearily thought how full of meanness was this base, deceiving old worll. Burlimjron Hawkeye. The funniest punctuation mark is the hy-fun, of course. Next. Whitehall Times. The queerest punctuation mark is the peri-odd, to be sure. Next. Borne Sentinel. No, thank you, we are not so bold as-ter-risk making another. N.. Y.,Mail. James Nutthing, of Arkansas, plnnged into a river aud rescued a drowning com panion. Good for Nutthing. A Healthy Body and a Clear Head. II inuigetiUon, oonntiuatiou aud biliousness torment the body, the head cannot be clear. These disorders react upon the brain most hurtfullv, aud produce a cloudiness in the organ of thought not experienced by a healthy man. Happily these brain-oppressing mala dies may be entirely dispelled by that peerless alterative, Hostetter'a Btouiaoh Bitters, which cheers, refreshes and invigorates the brain and nerves, while it regulates the organs of diges tion, assimilation and bilious secretion. It expels the morbid humors whioh poison the system through the bowels and urinary pas sages, aud exerts a powerfully invigorating in fluence as well. Its cathartio action Is never irritating, violent or painful, but even, natural and progressive. As an appatizer aud sleep promoter the Bitters is unrivalled; it mitigates the infirmities of age, relieves the ailments pe culiar to the gentler sex, arrests premature dtoay, and builds up and enfeebled physique. Jfor upwards of thirty years Mrs. WINSLOW'S BOOIHINaBYttUP has been UBed for children with never-failing suooess. It oorrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind colio, regulates the bowels, cures dysentery aud diarrhwa, whether arising from teething or other causes. An old and well-tried remedy. 25 cts. a bottle. We ofTer no apology for frequently calling attention to Johnson's Anodyne Liniment, as it is the most valuable remedy that has ever een produced. It is a sure oure for duurrhwa. dys entery and cholera morbus. To cleanse and whiten the teeth, to sweeten the breath, use Brown's Camphorated Bapooa ceous Deutifrioe. Twenty-five oeuts a bottle. CHEW The Celebrated "Matchless" Wood Tag Plug Tobacco. The Pioneeu Tobacco Company, New York, boston, aud Chicago. lUnllK'iaiit and mibtlo tndood is the polcon of Horofula, and terrible aro its ravages In the systpm. They may, hpwever, be permanently stayed and the deRtmotlve vims exiiellod from tho circulation with Hoovill's Blood and Llvsr Hyrnp, a potent veRotable dutorgent whioU erndicatos all shin diseases, leaving no vestige f them bvbind. White swelling, salt rhenm, totty, abscesses, liver complaint, and crmp tious of evory dosuriptions are iuvariably oon qut'lod by it. DrngKists soil it. I'nlnto and Ntomnrh. ' If you would have your biscuits, broad, rolls, corn-broad, cake in short, all artiolos pre pared from flour, thoroughly enjnyahlo and digestible, use Dooley's Yeast Towdor, which is not only free from adulteration, but whole some, and cakes food very nutritions, This Baking I'owdor is nsed by the most eminent chemists and physicians. Buy it only in can?, never loose or in bulk. A FniKND in Nr.F.n. Orace's Salve Is a friend in drod. Who has not found it such In curing Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Scald, Felons, Boils, and oven the most obstinate old Ulcers, and other Soros? It is a wonderful compound, suited alike to tho shin of the child and of the adult. War, famine and pestilonoe all combined do not produoe the evil oonsoqnonoos to a nation which result from impure blood in our veins. Parsoiis' Burgaiivo Tills make now rich blood and prevout all manner of diseases. IMPORTANT miTICE.-Farmers, Faml ht and Othnrs can purohn no RjtmsdT qnal to Dr. TOBIAS' VENETIAN LINIMENT for tho otiro of UhnlnrA, Dinrrhoift. PrfiAntwry. Uroup, Oolio and Bns-tlckna-B, t-AKrtl inlffrnalljr (it In pftrforitly nihrmiMa ; sm ont.h aooim(nyins eaoh foottli) and !itrnUy fnr dhronio Khnutnnt.mni, tlftariaaiie, Toottiaohit, Sora Throat, Vn t, Bnma, Swtlltnsn, Bruin, MofKjaito Bitnfl. Old Son, IanN In Litnha, Back and Ohnt. Th VKNKTIAN I.INIMKNT waa introduced in 1S47, and no ona who haa ud it hut oontintiaa to do ao. many atatinir, it it wan Tnn Inllara a Botlla thaf would not ha without it. Thouaandn of Ocrtitloataa oan l an at the I)put, flpnakinK of ita wonderful ourativ nropartiea. Hol.l hTthaUrussliUatiOcle.Depot 44 Murray, St. New York. APQPJ1FIE I the Old Reliable Concentrated lye FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. TMraotloni aoeompanrlnf aaoh oan for making Hard, Soft and Toilet Soap quickly. IT IS FULL WKIOHT AND BTRE&QTH. The markat la flooded with (an-aallad) Oonoentrated Lya, whioh is adulterated with aalt and roe in, and won't eioAa eocu). 8AVK MOM ET, AND BUT TBS SaponifIIR MADE BT Tint Pennsylvania Salt Manufg Co., PI!II,AnF.I.PllIA. bhown's HHONoniAk Taoottcs. fnroonahe and onM. ATOM MAKERS Tooln and Matenala. Hand for I'rioe l.iit. . K. MM1T1I A CO., K'n.N.Y. Alt.TlM, Delaware Km It and Oram Farina at low prioen. A. V. URIKFI I'll, SMYRNA, I'rb -is tr tVaa laatrlili rVvaaltl Ma. It reirksllbaj B)4!l , htri . ra iUelr.JBrt U Ua a l.n, m f si r-"t aava If si r-ltt aawl retak la .IbMisa L.L SMITH falls. CO, &t aT S I'sJs lUa AllekM Maatsatast, HKMT KIJKK. rtlMTAHK PAID. Thr rJuiKMTiFin Kki'orter, full of Informal ion of the ntmoat importanoe to Olnra-ymen, l'hyaioiane, Tanohora.and all ola-aea of readora, enpeoialljr Ajcenta and CanTannera. l'KABUDV UO., Publiehera, 2XH Broadwajr, New York. A FARM HOME or YOUR OWN Henir It Now! 4 (, Ml Aorea 8eleod Land In ICaatern Nehraaka, for Bale very cheap and on eaa) terma. Oreat Barsaina in Improved Kiirms Bend for the I SotKurr'j fti, a new book with new niapa, aent free everywhere. O. F. Davis, Latt Land Votn. V.I'.K.JK., 'Wkhbtkb HNTlirn, 15 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. PROF. SCHEM'S Illustrated HISTORY OF The War in the East, or oonfliot between Rrwi a and TnnxKT f the I'm booV fnr ir a7Hf. 11m IU) ootTO pnjtr, 1 enirrnvingfl of RattiJC ftrRNKfi, b'tTtTtmm, OtjnurA.a, eta , nd is the only oomplete work published, lluno rival Sell at fight. Price Jtft3lH Tertnn nnnqualfd. Atfnt H'anC 'J. Add rest H. 8. UOODNPKKI) A (JO., Now York. Paints Ready for Use For Farmers and Manufacturer... They are uniform In ahade, and the color can always be matched. Any one onn paint wit h them. They hava very nnperior ooverinft proptrtina and do not, like the ao-eallnd pttmt paint a, oon tain either water. benEintt or alkali. These painta are in Liijuid Form, and art sold in Uallon Oans and Barrela. They are aUo put up in small cans of one to live pountln. Hnd for ssinplp oard shnwinff d.frrnt shada. K. W, OK VOW A OO., cor, flu. ton and William Kte , Now York Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion. Sour Stomach. Sick Headache. GRACE'S SALVE. Jowkbvixi., Mich., Tea. 87..W7. Vmiti. FowU : aent you 6 eta. for two hoiea of Grace's Halve. I hart bad two aud have used Ihern on an uloer on tnr foot, and it is almost well. Kapeotfu)ly jours, U. J. VAN Naaa. Prioe tiTt oenta a box at all droaainU. or sent by mail on receipt of ft ft cents. Prepared by NKT1I W, mVw tt lii i niiiii rsu narrixun are., Diwwn.miuw HOW TO SET THEM in th tw.t psH or tbstst. ,ooo,ooo sorsi for Te. Vor a copv of tbs "Kansaa PaHfle Hume Stead, addrSM B. J. Ohroors. Land Com t. Hllm, KoM. TON T1ISCMPT. Daily and Weekly, Quarto, The Largest, Cheapest and Beat Family Newspsper in New Knaland. Kuiled with special reference to the varied taaUta and requirements of the home eirolo. AU the foreign aud looI news published promptly. Daily Transcript, J? 1 0 per annum fn advanoe. Weakly 4 " (6 copies to one address,) 7&0 ft aunura in advance. SEND FOR SAMPLE COPY, 1 KKAT IN DUl'KIM KNTH Oflrrrd to Heitler. How a Home enn be Nerurro. TUK hl.OltlltA t,AM VOMPANY (Chartered I7 the Ktate and Kiidoraed bj It Oflloere) Otter the chuioe of UtMMHJO Arm, located on the Transit. K. K., whioh eiUnda from Fernandina to Cedar Kej., for the Vrrv Low Price of us I .v!i per Aora. FOKTY AVUEH Foil ,,U. We aUo ojftr th4 chuict uf 7a Million Arret 0 Stats Land (in every county )tftr the mm Ivw price. Landa high, dry; bust la the HUUi. Olimate aaperb and very healthful. Oures Kbeumatiain, Catarrh, and Lung- diaeaaea. Over 2,(hi Northern settlers have looat. ed. Orange grovea yield a profit of IJtio to $1,(nh) per Acre, ajoordins to ae of treea. Veitetablea, l'rutta, Tobaooo, Uolton, Kioe, eto.,pity larft"lr. Lnrie rtduc. tionenuide in lr,i,.r(ulirm. KRA1NKRD T. SMITH A OO.. 3a Park How, New York, AKRPAIU every soldier disabled In 11ns of duty, by At-ciilMit or otlierwler. A Wttl'KIt of any kind, 18 of MH. liKK.TOK or KVK, Hl l'TI KK, If but slik'lit, or Ilees ofl l Jt.n. JIO ' T V ltlaeluu tie I of Wound, Itijur ls or ttiiplure, a;t va tri:flj Iftoanfy. l.oet tlorsvs. onlcers), Accounts and all H sr t'laims Mttlel. Has. JM ltU CLAIMS) HKUfKlliU, Soud3 renin for t epy of Acta iswtlasiift 11 on PKMfalO', HUUMTY ANlsff .. aVANI CLAIMS. Boud staaup fur i i ill Circular.. I W 1 I w jj. ( i nninuN t co., I J Q. b CLAIM AU TH and PATENT Arr'Yi 1 Itwa. ilHJ, iVakaUiutlou, Sat a- a nay TO aenia sn a iioiiwu-ni Ad.lreaa Itwckryft BITsr Vo-t Marion, Ohio. b A DAT to AntoiTalri for the II reels f f Visiter. 'Terma and On t fit Free. Atdreaa 4aT P.O. VltlKK.HT Aqjrnsta, Mains T ntinilffl retail prloa "llftO only SJOrt. PIANOS 9a. Oreal ilnirton, N. J. 1OKt CHKTKtt (N. V.), JUIMTAHY IINNTITUTK.-O. Wl NTH ROP KT A HR, A. M. Principal. Limited U ! toy.Terina moderata. $10 10 $1000 Inreetert In Wall HI. Ntooka make fnrtnnea every month. Hook Bent free emlainlna ereryfhlna:. AdrtreasnAXTKRAOO,.tankere. 17 Wall HI. W, T. CLOCKS i K. INIIHAIUIH !. Hnpertor la dealsn. Rot eqneled quality, or aa bhibmhiiw., r inn. .leweler for them m Asenoy M Oortlandt Ht., W. Y. CHAPMAN'S CHOLERA SYRUP Onrea Dysentery, Plarrhrea and Bnmmer Oomplalnta ofChlldren Prloe 6O0. (IKOHOR MOORK, Proprla tor, (ireat Falls, N, H. Bold by all Drnnsista. HIMPMC, KAHV, rnOPITABI.K. EVERYBODY HIS OWN PRINTER Send fto. for handsome oataloirna. NaTtORAt. Ttp Oo.( Philadelphia, Pa. Laryeet (mortmonl. Lomft prire: TlfTI 1 rj The ohnloest In the world Importers J2iiVj, prioea ljaraeat Oompany In Anierloa ttaple artlole pleaaea everybody Tradu onntinnally inareaalns Asenta wanted e re ry where beat indiMe- menladon't waeta time send for Olronlar to rIOH'T WKI.I, 43 Vaaey flt., N.Y.. P. O. Bt) IHST. $1 0 e $25 ra..ttA.Tr. Novelties Outfit Free r5Pi,5.ri oa ion to J. II. BUFFORTVH BON ft, Monnfautnrlna: Piibllshsra, 14 1 to 1 47 Franklin hlreet, Boston, Mass. Bstabllshed nearly flfty yeara. Our Alphabet. Whlls ws ballars that oar oomblned lists of News papers offer faollltles of m therooihly snparlor orderto emery elaas of adrartlsers, there ate oartatn articles and Hdss of baslneaa whioh seeni to be especial ly Iu nsed of asrylost suob as ws ars abls to afford. AKTBOBT oto niaka known his hnslness, or tain a world-wide reputation, bj judluioua advertising in oar list of papors. BAXXERS ean Inereaes their eorrespondents and add money to than ooflera by oountry newspaper sdrartlalns. PASRIAGE-HAKERS will find that newspaper Is adrartialns In our Lists will act as a uew wheal I In multiplying toeir outioeas. DRUGGISTS ean And no better or cheaper mediant than oar Lists for sdrsriising soy new medioins or specially. E m BUILDERS can insert a eat of any new envine or Improvement tbroogh our newspaper lists at a trlQiof eoat. wishlns to dispose ofhelr farms eaa I And a parohaaer by tnssrtlDf short advertise Bent la oar Lists. G EOCERS de. Irons of selling off their stock or busi ness eaa Bad parohaaer by advertising la ou Lists. HARDWARE mannfaetnren ean Introdnes every new srtiols to the trade, ohaaply, by sdrertising with oa. IMPQHTERS ean send their sard to Jebbars and dealers throughout tbs West by patronising our Lists. JEWELERS can distribute their "Prioe Lists to the trade by plaoing an advertisement in oar list of oountry papers. ITEROSENE goods, lamp and lantern, ean be ad- IV vertised to the dea.era and consumer In our West- atera Lists. LUMBER DEALERS ean place their business sards before the eyes of both dealera and oouaum sr by our plan of newspaper advertising. TTAKUFACTURERS of any new artlole will Bod our II Lisu to be sxoelhsnt mediums to reach all 000- emmm aumers. H3B0DY who Is sane opon the sa' Jeot of ade tiling can Bad fa. It with our Lists or prices. RGAH, Melndeon and Piant Maker Bad our Jala to pay better than any other lor tuelr Dusl vess. IMP MAKERS oan herald their Invention to every farmer in the Westaru World by advertising in our Liila. DEST10NS re 1 at ire to the oost of an advert UemeoA in either separate or the ooiubined Lis ia, will ra oeivJ our prompt attention. DOOFERS. The Inhabitant under nearly evwrw II roof in the Wust can be reached by aa "ad" la our Lists. SCALES , Safe, Raw and Sewin Machine mannfao turers pnlronice our Lists liberally, aud find it nrtitl '.a.)) lot invHMttuuL t T OoffAe and Hnloe Dealera oan raaoh ovaw S.OOU.UiU oonsumera weekly by an 4?wttaeueo in our Oountry Lista. iTPHOLSTERERS can let their ware be known la Uno better way than by eitensive and Judioiou advertising in our popular Lists. YINEGAR Maker ar regular advertising patrena of our Lasts, and will testify to their lntrlnala merits. WIRE Merchant and Liquor Dealer advertise, their apeoialtia ia our List, and ar happg. V IliUUIUll UlillJ can make s abort out to proepert. A ty by ai hibiting a specimen of tuelr owa work ai hibiting a specimen of their owa la theaelUta. Y EAST and Baking Powder Manufacturer In crease their sales by patronising our pun of adver tising. ZENITH or the highest point of suooess In many enterprisea can only be attained by judioioua eaa liberal Newspaper auvortumg. For further particulars, or satalogus address DEALS & FOSTER, GENEEAL AGENTS, 10 Spruce Street, New York. (JQ a 1y to AnU to im11 a Hnnh"M Artlnls. V 1 f
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers