r ... FAIU HEX. Rales for Lady Trarrtrra, A correspondent of tbo Obicngo TrU t unt, in view of the ilifflonlticB ond dan pars encotijitrrM liv lo.i.o. - :.. riOI,,nSnp'grBts Hiat ,he7 Bhou,J observe 1. Before starting on a journey, famil- !nze yourself with the route and with am m gooa noiels at the various utcro pmg places. 2. Xevnr tmvAl i . , junk numiga kriionej, tut alwnjs carry enough to pro- tin -- -n-j fwiuib emergency. Xhis will save niucb anxietv. V i 1 1 Tl HUH I1RT. i frm ....l.I . - 8. Wear little jewelry and keep the r. V1 j,uur money m some in Blue pocket out nf nirrVt 4. Always look after yourself, and do not allcw a stranger to procure your ... w ut?i:s ior your Dnggage. 5. Avoid, if possible, making changes la oar by night, but, when unavoidable, go with others. Do not become separated C. Take no hacks, but go in an omni bus where there are other people. Those , ytii lecu saie. 7. If in any doubt as to changing cars, cheoking baggage, eta., inquire in ad vance of the conductor. The conductors on our trams are always polite and will ing to be of service, especially to women traveling alone. 8. Do not wait till about to make some change in the train, before inquiring of the conductor, for, ten to one, he will then b hurried, and yon will only half inform yourself. And finally, 9. Under all circumstances endeavor to retain presence of mind. One who can do this will never have any trouble """""Bi n instead or it being unwise fYlM -va-v .i A - 1 . . "r v. .uuicu travel aione, i think it an advantage to them to make trips alone, lor there are few people who are not at times obliged to do so, and experience does away with much of the possible vihuoi m laureling. Faahlon Note. ne socaued snort costumes are of able inconvenient length imagin The taste for black millinery black silk toilets and prevails as much as onort costumes take only eighteen yards of medium-width Btuff for a full uress. i.ne so-called "bonrettes" of this season are not the goods of last fall and nuu epring. endive green is a favorite shade for evening touet. it looks like a greenish The new hosiery is hair-lined horizon iany m Dnght colors on neutral and cream wnire grounds. Feathers in cashmere shades are nov- ernes, xney are grouped together in w luumu casnmere. New satin rihhnnn , uuuumu-inceu the favorite colors being a dark crimson 1T.ll n I1rvV, nl... .1.. t . ujui on nut? ui mauve. Striped velvet, plain and in two oolors, is the first novelty of the season. That with two colors is, of necessity, the most Jfnncy buttons and flat gilt buttons are used profusely on the clan tarfan ami ancy plaid suits so fashionable at the moment. A new style of bracelet is made of deli cate flexible spirals of gold in one con ! muons piece, and so arranged that it mil fit any arm. Many red velvet bonnets edged with ;arnet bead and gold cords, and trimmed with Bhaded red plumes and red roses :re seen among the novelties in milli nery. Close bonnets, with both the front and Ies fitted to the head, and broad crowns i e called princess. They are intended 1 match the gracefully clinging effect of ue princess dress. The old-fashioned moire antique ap I'ars in some of the new dresses. It is Hsd for a trimming, and folded so that ;6B&tia and watered stripes give the 'me effect as if two materials were em ioyed. Bears in .Northern Jie York. I '.ears and squirrels are more plenty ..;s season than they have been for tny years ; and from this fact it is a i i -'d that an early and severe winter is ' jre us. Those who have made ob rvutions in nature say that the near ; roach of those animals to the dwell ,man. ia early fall, is an almost ulible sign. In the neighorhood oi i vvood they are more numerous than v before, says the Register, and al l every farmer in the township of aimer has seen a bear. One followed ruiet who had honey in his buggy j distance, and even approached the - of the house. Watertoivn Des h. :onday afternoon Miss Cora Harder v a black bear crossing a lot near her lier's residence and immediately com uuieated the fact to the household, r father and brother gathered te ther their munitions xl war, consist T of two ehot-guns, and sending Cora tammon the neighbors' assistance, .i soon joined by George and Frank yer, when all gave chase to his bear i. They soon had him treed, and ro.iik blazed away with an old " how--r " and tilled the bear's mouth with ivkabot ; but he merely shook his head - the introduction. He then received a dose from one a the party in the which caused him to seek another v5fey followed him up and kept ring shot into his carcass until he red signs of fatigue, and turning y round to the hunters, as if to ap ijt mercy, he inadvertently lifted a tw. Frank took advantage of the n and planted a broadside from blunderbuss, which brought .la" to grass. They then fell on ud belabored him with clubs antil J. . His weight was one hundred eleven and one-half pounds the ; pound we allow for the lead that 1 lixlged ia his body. This is the r:h bear that has beea seen in thi : ion withia short time, and we may r of other captures ere long. Paris i'cqo county) Mirror. . John McKeeinan of Norristown, : invented a wagon designed to 'oat steam, water or horse- has made application for a i . ltin.iiive Modes r Striking Fire. T i u- , r;ly agCB 'benwild in woods uooie savage ran," compliance with the request, " Will yon give me a light, please? involved, if the camp fires had gone Cut, a spell of unremitting hard wuia, considerable manual dexterity, and an unstinted application of elbow CTense." Th , -- a i.mi to uimie in nirin- mg lire was by rubbing one Weoe of dry utuU Huomer untn lucandesoenoe was induced. A tribe of South Ameri can savages improved upon the dry incnon process, xney discovered that 'they could genen.te showers of sparks by the sharp abrasive contact of a certain kind of pyrites upon siliceous or flinty stone. The sparks directed npon a quantity of dry, readily-inflammable fibrous material obtained a flame, with comparatively little trouble beyond procuring and preparing materials. In the matter of "striking a light," the human family remained in a state of comparative barbarism till a period almost within the recollection of many juniors of the oldest inliAl.if nf " On grandmothers kept the kitchen fire alight all Uicht bv nlacino- a hlrtolr nt ooal upon it, and packing it with small coai or ashes, bo as to allow it to smold er OnlV till tlm mnrnintr Tha fl- trinmuh of "nnnlwxl ' Strikincr a lirrlif. " lav in fha iciAtrA.w iMO uumuiuea cnpBomues or Darned linen. Or tintr flint, nn.l atAM ttrsA uiiui8ioi?e-iippea wood matches, or . J. 1 ' Bpuuks, as they were sometimes Called. The tiudor wm nnnallv a tic production, the tinder-boxes and steels, or " frizzies," were made at Bir minffhara and Wolverlinmnfnn P.nrioT,i where a considerable business was done in tnese articles. The flint was had from where it conld h the manufacturers and vendors of the matches were chiefly poor old women. The steel was of the form of the letter U elongated and reversed, the narrower stalk being the handle ; the broader, which had a serrated outer edge, was used for striking the piece of flint, and producing the sparks that ignited the tinder, which in turn lighted the brimstone-tipped match. The lighted tin der, when it had served its purpose, was extinguished by a close fitting inner cover that was pressed down upon it. The flint and steel were also used for lighting match-paper thick porous paper that had been dipped in a solution of saltpeter and afterward dried. The match-paper was held close to the piece of flint, with its edge at the point of im- pact with the steel. It ignited readily and burned freely, but without flame. Amadou, or German tinder, and 'tnnnh. wood," being woody tissue in a certain 6 i uecay, were sometimes nseu in me same way as match-paper. The methods of initiating fire, as has been Been. were. ut to thin nnint v. rude mechanical fiTnri;fnfa Tt ;a s.ni 1' -. Ma V11IT uuiiug mo iubs nan century tnat science iajr wo emu ho nave Deen applied to tne manafoctare nf mnfohpa Hnn aA earnest novelties was the " instantane -.vH-ua VUV JA Dottle charged with sulohuric acid nn1 fibrous asbestos. The tiDDed match was let into the bottle, and contact with the acid. Tim in match-making, and the origin of the iuuwu luuuuiacture, as a large and im portant indnatrr. mnv ha aa.M in Ai from the introduction of phosphorus as an ingniting agent applied in various ways. Where the Hardware Goes. A OorreSDOndent nf tli a TlriHtili monger has been examining the monthly reports of the United State treasury department, to see what becomes of ex ported hardware. He finds the destina tion Of Some of tliA nrinninal orliVloo l be as follows : Nails are sent cbiefl in firaai n.tair. Germany, France, Danish West Indies! British West Indies, Porto Bico, Cuba, Africii. British GniAnn TTavt; rninK; . , WU1UU1U1., Brazil, Mexico, Australia, New Zealand. Cutlery is sent chiefly to Great Brit ain. Franon. fluha nnn1 i r f w ( i tr, ji i biou LGuiana, Columbia, Brazil, Mexico, Ven- Pumria ATA flpnt nhiflir Ia f i awvi a v Oreat Britain, France, Cuba, Columbia, enezueia, Australia, Mexico, New Zealand, ftandwipli Tulnmlu t. Eist and West Indies, ni.ino .1 QriQ r and many other countries. ' Machinerv ia cpnf. in Ci Germany, France, Cuba. Ilavti. San Domiugo, all the South American States, Mexico. Central Amoi-inn all Europe, Africa, Australia, 'China, Japan uiu ciuuwiiere. Articles classed ah rAni-ol iio,i, go to Great Britain, Norway, Sweden. icii-mw b., trauue. jrermauv. Huain. Italy. 11 issia. British Nortli Am..r;.a West Indies, East Indies, British colol nies in Africa. Britibh Guiana, China, Japan, all the South and fin ntrnl A m can States. Australia. Kav v .many other countries. ' Agricultural implements, clocks and watches, firearms, and many other manufactures, seem to go in greater or less amounts to nearlv the world. ' ' The Mother of Forly-Four Chidron, Marv. wife nt William Anifin ia It ' ' " &uu.u, XAJ Tf t resident of Washington, lina )iq,1 fr.ytxr four children, only eleven of them born i : ci -i i . .i.. uve. oue naa twins tuirteen times, and trioluta six times. TTr niutr ira Carrie Kinney, ased fortv-th had twenty-six children, and her hus band's sister has had fortv-onn ihiM making a total of 111 for three women! itus beems almost incredible, thmioh the fixures are vouched for. Mr. An. tin, a native of South Carolina, and reared in Tennessee, ih th d John G. Klind, a printer. She is a reg ular physioian, and haa practiced for twenty-five years, having been one of the first women doctors in the country. She studied medicine in New Orl Anna under the well-known Dr. Stone. She lost an eye while with the Federal army ia the Vallcv of Virginia. rAiv,l medals for the ahla anil fuurluna rnnnni ia wnicn sne bad discharged her duty, and was granted, likewise, a regular commission. She is fifty-four, of good proportions and appearance, and, as may be inferred, of vigorous constitution. Her husband was also in the Federal army, and bears the marks of a score of serious wounds, which would have killed any man less tough. - THE DOCTORS TUZZLKl). 9trangr Kipcrlrnre of a Aton la Vhni Htoinarh an I'nknowa Animal rCxUtrd far Firicen Yrnri. In a big bottle in his bouse nt W)t Now Market street, snys the Philadel phia Times, Frederick Markoo hns something preserved iu alcohol. A few lava ncrn tllA snmptliimr inafoml r,t lumm !- ll. l -l l.l Vr . .... iu me uig ooiiio, was in i reuerick Ulnr koe, aud the occurrences that led to its change of residence have made the peo ple up in the Bixteeuth ward excited and talkative. Fifteen years ago, during the War. Frederick Mai-krtn trnn in tli a arm ana rougni uurmg tne Jt'eninsula cam paign under McClcllan. Upon several i. . J occasions, when marching through marshes, and when burning with thirst, Markoe ran to the miiililv nrmln nf vnior iuhi, Huuunueu aooui me line or marcu, aud, kneeling at the brink, drank deep It nf the sliniv cnntAtita Afto th. 41.-1 t !. .1 . j . ...,a i iv. vuo nui had eudel and the army had been dis banded. Markoe rAttimoil in liia Tliia. delphia home, and for the fl rst timA in his life experienced symptoms of a chronio disease. At frequent intervals a large luniD would mnho i in the region of his stomach, and in the center or tne uncomfortable mars he could feel something twisting and turn ing. Heretofore he had been a remark ably sound sleeper, but now his family was awakened at night by noises iu his bed-chamber, and upon entering it they would find Markoe flat upon the floor, and, though still asleep, wriggling over the carpet with the aid of nothing but his hands. When awakened he would exDress snmrise that. Iia naa tint. lcni in bed, and could offer no explanation oi nis strange couilnct. Before enter ing the army he at times accomiinniAil in the Delaware wharves on NAtnr.lnv uikuib comDanions wim wis iai tn tuba : i. i . . ...... J dive into the river, lint Iia inn 1,1 nnt swim, and no inducement could prevail npon mm to enter tne water. About the time. hoWAVAr. tlmt tha ntVio etfanvn ojruipicms ueveiopea tnemseives in him. U 1 i . n i . ... ' 1 i . ... . . .o uo wem 10 tne wnan, one Saturday uikui. wim some irien.is. nrni io ara.i that he thought he could swim as well as any of them. He plunged into the i i i i - . . swam vigorously and gracefully about! uuryuoBing an oi mem in raputity and ana commented npon, that he did not use tne ordinary stroke of ordinary peo ple, there beillC a npnilHar vrriarAina . ' I . . &.KK..AJF. motion perceptible in his body. When asiLea wnere ne bad acouired such a peculiar style, Markoe positively de- uiurou iubi never oeioro in ins luo nad he swam, and that he had just felt that he could support himself in the water as well as any one else. No amount of argument or banter ever induced him to depart from his original tale. Another thing peculiar about Markoe at this time was the fact that while his appe tite became really ravenous yet hiB frame became more spare. What he ate seemed to do him but little good. His family became alarmed and sent for a doctor. Markoe told the physician about the lively lump in his stomach, the peculiarities of his appetite and his continued ill-health. He was told that he had a severe attack of dyspepsia, and for this disorder he was treated. Medi cine, however, failed to relieve him of his troubles, and for thirteen years the peculiar symptoms that first made their appearance after the close of the war have continued in their original aggra vated shape, and during that long time the bed-chamber scene has been re-enacted many times, and Markoe displayed a stronsr desire to he in tliA the hope of regaining his health, he went to Cape May with the intention of remaining a week or two. The first day of his visit, while bathing in the surf, a breaker took him nnfiwnrAa tfirAar liim upon his back and forcAl him in nwal. low a quantity of salt water. He in stantly became very sick, vomiting and retchinc SAVProW hnt emm r.1 o -J I " "o v. brandy somewhat restored his stomach's tone. Directly afterward, in speaking to a friend of the occurrence, Markoe said that while sick he had distinctly felt a movement in his throat as though something was trying to crawl up and had dronned hack nt friend suggested that possibly there was nuAV r i . " ... Buuiemuig Jn . marKoe s etomacli tnat should not be there. An,l tlmt it. wnnM be an excellent idea to tnltA draught of salt water and see if he conld A 1. i a ... uuv riu nimseu oi tne foreign matter. Markoe eaid he would follow the advice. That night he did not awaken his bed compHnion by crawling over the floor. The following morning he again went in bathing and purposely swallowed Borne salt water. Again he was taken Bick. He declared that he suffered bo much that he was determined to return home and see his physician. He came back to Philadelphia and sent for Dr. Mor- i ton, who administered medicine to him.- For fifteen hours his sickness, accom panied by very frequent vomiting, con tinned. At the end of thut time a large object left his mouth, aud Markoe said he felt very much better. When the doctor came he carefully examined the object and at once pronounced it to be a large water lizard. It wbb four and three-fourths inches in length and as thick as a man's forefinger. "You Bee," Baid the doctor, "this is a fresh-water lizard, and the salt water killed it. You couldn't expect a fresh water lizard to live in salt water. That's nonsense." " What I want to know," said Markoe, who had been looking at the thing with eyes wide open, " is, how did that thing get into me?" The doctor, in order to reply to this, examined Markoe closely as to all the happenings of years past, and finally came across the drinking of marsh water during the Peninsula campaign. " That's it," said the doctor, triumph antly. " We've hit it, now. You swal lowed that lizard when it was smaller than a pin, in the marsh water. For fifteen years it has been growing inside of you aud fattening upon what you should have fattened on." "And that," Baid Mrs. Markoe, "ex plains your big appetite and the lump in your stomach and your crawling on the floor." " And my swimming so well without a lesson," Baid Markoe ; " but still I don't think that thing is a lizard." "I'll consult high authority," Baid the doctor, and so the thing was placed in a bottle containing alcohol and taken away to the University of Pennsylvania. The professors there said that nothing of the kind had ever been seen or heard of by them before. The savants at the Franklin Institute were also nonplussed, Dd could not give the thing a name, but they all agreed that it was anything but a lizard. So Dr. Morton took it up to New Market street again, intending, howevir, ns soon as possible to have Dr T litllTv 1M1M1 upon its identity. Markoo's neighbors heard of his remarkable experience and were incredulous until they had flocked to his house and gazed upon the bottle's conteuts. As the result, the doctor said, of the dead body lying in Markoe's stomach for the two days after the first drink of salt water, and communicating tho poison arising from decomposition to his blood, he was thrown into a bil ious fever that kept him abed, and from which he is just now recovering. Seen the other day in the big bottle, Markoo's late imDosAihlA nnmnminn .-.... sented truly a remarkablA nioht. if i. suspended in the alcohol with A cord drawn around what might be termed its neck. Its tail, pointed and rounded, was broken oil and was lying on the bottom of the bottle. Tli fn m, (1 "t M. V almost six inches in length. Its bodv J8 ronnd. smooth and nt brown color -apDroAoln nff fl .Inn Thn head ia not clour v tlnfl Tl Ail Hnt AVaa month ond nose can be discerned upou a close examination. It is difficult to describe the appearance of the head, but it can best be compared to a cross be tween that of an imrisli.1nnltiiiT V)i and of a terrier dog. Fset it has none, and iu no respect does it resemble a lizard. It cannot bn pnmnoi'oil In any thing known to ordinary mortals here alwuts. The nneAi-est uni-t nt Dm to be told. The other night, after going with a few friends up the river to Pea snore, mx. Markoo, only after oonsidera bie entreaty on the part nf lii ions, entered the water and found to his amazement tnat ho could not swim. His appetite, however, has resumed its normal condition, the uncomfortable lump uas left his stomach, and he says he has never enjoyed euch good health since before he entered the army, fifteen Last year 308.G65 British vessels en tered at ports of the United Kingdom, 192,003 being sailing vessels aud the re mainder steamers. In point of tonnage two-thirds of this total were under steam. There entered into British ports from Franco 10,922 vessels ; from Rus sia, 4,980; from the United States, 4,490. The extent of the Russian trade with Enclaud will HlirnriBA man T.nn. , , - r j isii- don had 9.253 foreicn enter.! noainof 4,184 at Liverpool. There are over twenty thousand stitehes in a well-made shirt. Au.Wor,d aT W"rnln la t'oanterrrltrra. Tbe wide-spreiul fame of Hosteller' Stomach Bitter causes a necessity on our part to remind, from time to time, nhnm it mav wt.i.. the fact that imitating said article is a puntHh- "c.mo, uu wo uow give una word or cau tion : that we will mnt umimii. , .it persons engaged in refilling our second-hand oouie, soiling by the Kallon or barrel, or in any manner whatsoevfr palming off on the public a snnriuni artinln nnmnriiim k. n - r j...n WW w vua preparation, pnnmiied to the full extent of the law. Penalty for counterfeiting, or dealing in couoterreit trademark goods, as set forth In a I&W recent! v nnnxnil hn iVm (rraas II Vino r l-J w..eioo. CIUO JUUlr exceeding fl,000, or imprisonment not more than two rears, or lmili noh Am. i . " ..... 11U 1U1- prjKonment." We never fail to convict. noTics to Uealeus and riBCHASEUa UOxtOtter'd nitta urn nmar nr.A. . enmstancea, eold in bulk, but alwavg In bottlea, wuh a finely engraved U. 8. Internal Ilevenne (specml proprietary) Stamp covering the cork of each bottle, fastened to both side of the neck of same. All Bittera purporting to be HOHtetter 8. Withnnt thin tUmn . nnt. ' - -" - . U WHUIUI- loll. HmTVTTt-9 Jtr Hwttu Excavation" nt PnrnM'.'.lV. ii,. i 1 , . . . f u . u lilO V1VT IV UVO befn one of the most fashionable and beauti- iui ui ivoman summer resorts, and bnt for the eruution it mitrht h As with Pompeii, go with thousands of people - ijuijr ui luru ana leaiare. I hey might always be admired bnt for the eroption, that makes the face presence of scrofula, virulent blood poison, or' general d ebility. There is but one remedy that positively cures these affections, and that rem edy is Dr. 1'inren'n tflnl4n HXAii n; It ia the best known tonic, alterative and re solvent, it speedily cures pimples, blotches, liver snots anil all A crwhed or impure blood. It also cures dyspep sia, ana regulates tbe liver and bowels, fcnlrl by druggists. The Toob Mas"b Fkie.vd. Doctors' billa are too long for the poor man's pocket, but many of them may be avoided by keeDina- Grane'a Salve in the oupboard. It is the precious pot of ointment," curing burns, cuts, scalds, sprains, chilblains, chapped hands. Ae. Prn. dent hrnsewives will save their husbands' hard- earned money by purchasing a box of thia salve. Experience has connlimi cutaneous eruptions, ouen sores. ltirfin t. foliations and rheumatio complaints, Henry's Carbolic 8alve ia mnra oftinni.n. v,. . . ointment, lotion or embrocation that has ever oeen aeviseu. l'hyaiciaus admit this, and the i . v nun i a 1.1 iic a iuo iiro- feasional dictum, and assigns this salve the fororaoBt place among remedies of its class. Sold by all druggists. CHEW The Celebrated "Matchlehb" Wood Tag Plug Tbe lOBAOOO. Pionekb Tobacco Comi-akt, New York, Boston, and Chicago. For upwards of thirty years Mm. WRiSLOW'B SOOTHING SYIiOP has been used forohUdren with never-failing suocesa. It correota acidity of the stomach, relieves wind colic, regulates the bowels, cures dysentery and diarrhoea, whether arising from Uiethlng or other Cannes. An old and well-tried remedy. 25 ots. a bottle. There i nothing o essential to health and happiness as pure rich blood. It prevents ex haunted vitality, premature dechue, nervous and physical debility, beiiidea untold other miseries. Parsons' Purgative Pills purify and enrioh the blood, and will change the blood iu the entire system in three months. The Grand Central Hotel, of Kew York, ia making great inducements for the fall and winter mouths, with ail modern improvements aud every convenience. Partiea can And a pleasant home at very moderate prices. Early application should be made. Transient rates reduced to 2 50 and 13.00 per day. If you fail to find Pike's Centennial Bait Kheum Salve in your city or village, and will send us the address of your best druggist, we will put him in a way to supply you. J. J. Pike & Co , Chelsea, Mass. There is no pain, no matter how severe nor what the cause, that oanaot be partly or wholly relieved by Johnson's Anodvne Liniment, used internally and externally. It is the most pow erful remedy known to medical men. To cleanse and whiten the teeth, to sweeten the breath, use Brown's Camphorated Sapona ceous Dentifrice. Twenty-ova cents a bottle Modern Advertising?. We admire enterprise, we liko to eeo trade prosper, and we believe in adver tising. We don't enro how many papers a man employs or how many cards and circulars he scatters broadcast through tbe bind, but wo mnst( .express our strong avcrsiou to the nTethods mod by certain partita for giving publicity to mnr wares. For instance, it is not pleasaut to find one's fonces and walls emblazoned with huge, staring capitals announcing the virtues of Cheateru's Iteh Ointment," or an order to use "Catohem's Belly ache Drops," Dotheiti's Cnronlt," " Squibob's Bitters," or some other of the numerous nostrums of the day. This method of advertising is, we protest, a nuisance. Not a place of pub lio resort, nor a depot, in fact, nowhere that people resort, either for business or recreation, but ia hrsnipnrf.il in flu'. outregeous manner ; fences, walls, rjuiiiimgs, public and private, new and old, are afllicted by this mania, and as it is usually done without as much as say ing to the owners, by your leave," the newspapers, the legitimate channels for advertising, are swindled out of what is justly their dues. ' It is high time this thing was stopped: tho evil is becoraiug unbearable, aud if these enterprising people will not pay somo respect to other people's rights, they should bo made to understand that the law provides a remedy therefor. If we mistake not. the ncnnli v tnr riifm;i. property is a severe one. Home Circle. According to the internal revenue r tums, the citizens of tha republic tie drinking less whisky and more beer. nisky that part of it which paid rev enue tax, at least fell from 57,000.000 Kmions. ior tne nscal yar of 1877 to 00,704,000 in 1878 a difference of near ly 6,300,000 gallons. For the same time. me revenue-paying beer increased from f A DA fir I i . - v,ou,uuu narreis to U,U37,UU0 barrels an increase of 457,000 barrels, or 1,371. 000 gallons. . ' A cable disnatoh to tha AHK(mI&tn4 P that Mason A Hamlin bar been awarded the niguesi poia mtdal at the Paris Kxpositlon for their Cabluet Organs. Thirty best makers of tun woua were competitors. I ill POUT AN 1' NDTKIK a( lia and Oibara oan parobata no Remodr aaaal lo Dr TOBIAS; TRNKTIAN LINIMENT for tha anra o! viiuiniviaiiuwi, urniiMn, urnnp, Uolia anil Baa- vn.u i.u7iii, eaca Don in) anil ei'ernal r for I hnifitn Hh.ninaii.i 11... .1.. .y . mminiii; (iiia porrnotij tiarnnaa; aoa u "'"TimS B,a.rn 8";"ll,n,wV, "". Moaqaito , 1 . mJ MO. I imilKEUII. mv. . rjiniimi i.iniiii.ii waa intraonoad In 1k7, and x.... .in. in imua. naoK ana ijbt 'i'h - - , - -1 mmimuw 10 ao ao, man 1 1 tin tf it i, Tn I Wil 1 ... u-.i. .1 i not bo withoot it. Tbonaanda of OartiHcatsa oan ba - -.' Vrr'. apaaiii 01 I Ml woDdarrul oiratlr, nmnArfiua Ii 1.1 ... . I . I I . ... -. A aXTZ W'JT,!D ' n rllla larcvly naed in Milla trc.SJaitviof Belt Hook Up.. 80 l.iltartr St., N. Y uiaiiuiHiiiiiiiii.. i.ioarni loot nit. ninii m I Knalnennder It una in oil. l.'M"lr uij UyUTrt. (i rornmant. alo. no redurrd. Huntoon UoTarnor Uo.. Ijiwroncn. Maaa. nul .arllllnn. Now Ready for Canvassers " . 1 fc. iw inn.- ranuna. uajfnin- oontlr print l and bound hd runiarkabljr obaap. Wold on r byaubaoriptioa. AtiKNTS W ANTKI OTi-rrwhrrn Aonrma tor turmi and lllnatratod oiroular, NKLSON a rmujrn, mm n man war, N V. MASON & HAMLIN CABINET ORGANS. Hrmo'ratrt l,rl bu II1RHKST HONOHS AT ALT WOKLD'8 KXPOSlriONS FOR TWKI.VK VRalll . .. . - - T.r.r-1-n, iijio; n.fli uuil, Id,!,; PaiLAiiKi.i'iiiA, 1k7; Pania, 1878; and(iHwu 8huiku r . t 1 1 , ii i u I 7 . iu-o. u . ananinu niitnaat orocra at anr auoh. Hold lorcmbor ioatillmanta. ll.Ll'a tmatki) OaTALoat;KS and Oireu lara lth naw at'lraand pricaa, rant traa MAKON t wm...f hi.i'i,i m.o. wnij American iirvana arar Ijaii i,i.i uh'hj uu H .lnn. fim York or (Ihicniro PE0F. BCHEM'S lUustrated HIBT0BY 01 The War -in the East, or eonfliot botwaan Rrssu and Trn I it la tba Km look f.ir (Ira o ;n(a. liaa (u ootaro pana,I J5 anirannaa (it Battle Boknes, Kortraaaaa, Uanarala, ato., and ia tba onljr oomplota work puhliibad. Haa no rival. Holla al airht. l'nca WU.M. Tarma nnnnnala I. Auml Wit. I. Addraaa Ii. 8. tiOODSPKKL) A DO.. Naw York. j A r risinir lor the An'tfor NTKKA.MH IIK MOMKV itlaV A tl Anr i tnAtit fiif KaorinF MobtneN. Thmooat nfluful of dotnttio .aiTeotions. Needed by every lady. A pecia. aU icbroent for voh kind of ma hin. Ia ordnrinir tiftme tbe f'r Min ple and price Hat to ti. nt kusk, ptun tiauduif, fJw Vork. "Sweet Little Rose of the Lea." A PERFECT LITTLE GEM. Th nrsat t.i Asit amitr urrit t aei (n mam Amw Tta T. B. KELLEY, a 3 Linooln St real. Jeraay Citj He hU, N. J. aaa- J MWT AAAUAVU VaTaWalA) Sour Stomacn, Sick Headache. GRACE'S SALVE. uai a.AH Li. . S. - a I It,, . i i i .TnHtlWTTt maflta l.a CM u 1... nua, rutI WV uiaa. lin IWU lIIStM UI UlaVOt I nIT0, J HBW9 had two and have Daed tbom oo an aloer on inr foot,atd i w euiiwai weiu rvjepeoiiQiii -our. KJ. J. VAJI HMAf, Prloa eenU a boi at all dra(fiaa, or sent h mall oo rcei KOWJ V wuN HH Harnaoo ATe.(BoaUn,Ma BOSTflfJ TMIC1IP in i. Daily .and Weekly, Quarto, BOSTON, Mas.. . 'Tha Largeat, CAiaapest aod Beat Kamllr Nawapaqat In Naw Hiixland. Kdited with apaoial ralaranoa w tne varied laUa and requiremHuta of tha borne oirola. All tba foreign and looal newt pubiiahad promptl. rTranapript, 9 Ui par annnm Sa adranoa. (ioopine to ona addraaa,) a.7ftOpai annum in adranoa. BEND TOR SAMPLE COPT. NOW Tt GET THEM ia lhabot part f tba 1UM. . 000,006 acrca lor ale. Hm a oopr of Iba "k.u Paeldo Moaaa. atead, m4iTt 8. J. Gllmore, I.LD1I Cfrm r. baaoa, aaOMa. PEKTSIOHS jaaara-ik rl.tlHM at a a beud 5 rrnla for a ( ly or Arts on lKMIO, yi I irv aid I.A. l L-AlHrj. aaudtuuyfur I : c r mmm m&mm. ARK P A I U every soldier dl-abled In Una r or ciuij. ny wa.rciieui or ouitrniiia. a I JI j 1VOOI) uf any kind, lnw of riSf- if 4.1 u, tok or km, nrPTi'HK, f If but sllirht, or llHeau or 1.1 J 'At HOI JiT Irlcrbaige for Wound, Inlur- I vl lea or Kuptiire, si vm II II. Itoumy. J. J lyoat ilorara, llitlrrn1 Arruuntt J ami all mr tialiim nrttla-l. tit.. I ' 9 I lirruian, r. CTSfSIIOf at CO., C. 8. CI.4IM A(iT'S1 PA'IKNT A1TTB, Uva StM, aVakluBavu, I. C. flaowirs BaoncniAt. Tiiocnf t, for conrhi anil lolili Profit tn innl f. ilir Snmpln frwt, "Thn N u bulmht." IIKI. ,JiNHH. Nm-.hu. N. T. UPHAM'S ANTII.1IA Arw failt. Hold bf t i lt It kll ariiKKihU. 60a. ibot, nrkx, I'ltln'.nnt, Y Any to Aont to frll k l!ofhi.M Artial I'llL. 1''ri"n llnphrvr Jl'l in., Muri. n. Olid' ((jPA A (IIIMTll-A Ri'lDII "'inn nrliolxn in yUVU Adilw... JAY 111 sfiila nnlrrt -:( hrmt hn wml.l . nn..m.,l. f,.. KONKON, Dnlroit, Miuh. dig: A V.- With Ktonall Outfit. Whit mhIi4 H.M.SrrNrKit. i I II Vli'n Ht..llonin.MM. alH Mftllll Fltllilll f.ir ff 1 la f-.tattiM M. W A lITtTI. J,,n fl'.r ynr tM"'1' work at Ifflf I unit, r-niiliy fit I r llUNirM'N, ttiMt I'Um. iiMTHIMll Am V inKn'i-nn-ATliOniu. ORGASS roMlprlim MOonlr V.f. riANl r-lil price .ryUt onl 1.1,V (1ml brin. BRATI'Y, WuhiDton, N. J. A DAY to AnU ekDvim-tnir for tb Klrfmlc'S) V lallr. Trm mm OnlUl m. Adilroa P. (. VIOKKItV, Aunn.ln, Mill .' Something New for Agents w7":J! v.nlwl U . - 1 1 1 I n moo ftt 1. " ' " 'nnniiipiiiirr.. UIU I .-.t, nrw IWI, (Q tfl $100(1 ""'n Wall Ht. HUok mii.-a VlW 1U W1UUU iriin- Kvnrr innnin. xK -fD( fl'H-i mpUitiinft nv-rTthinv. Addwn- BA XTKR k lit)., Hiinltwr-, 1 1 WnllHt,., If.T. UtaLltJ hi-hl hnnnm Mntliunhik' ical ' for nqiinr tlr-t uprinhtu in Amxrirft onr la.iKMi in UK-r-milmljr incnrporntni MI'n (). Pianna Mint m trinl- t pn rt-lnu fr. Miindnliwohn Piano V, 31 K. H,lh Hlrwt, N. . -1. trmm UM l. 1Mb. rsr.ilia m X 4 IWila. K t iiA b4l.riaj lp a"-. PfMW--.l.1aa.irMf . L.tTriMrTH OlUh OCD illnaronr kVIn Art w f Q Imp rftf to Aa.nt ai...ii:. law f tlllt O Kff. Outfit FreoX. mail ca lontiOD a. tit BUKKORO'S SONS, Manofantorin Pn'.lialisri 141 to 147 Franklin Htravt. Boatou, Mm, Hut ilmahod noarl ft ft t vnara. Dr. CRAIGS KIDNEY CURE The Great Remedy for All Kidney Diseases! f-e fv tprclal ptrmMnn tt Ka. Dr. J, K Rankin. a,lnn.Un, D. O.5 () T. Ila.uin, M. !.. Naa Inn ittek. Jnl", Hu'-wr, K-q, Norfolk. Va, ; !r. .1. II. Whita, 417 Kourth Are.. Naw York j Or. 6. A. Daan, Obarletlo, N. V.; Hon. t). It. Haiaona, prar- . nt Mayor of Kocbeatar, N. V. Ak yonr droiri-i. fT J"r t"Jl't. na.l n.l.lr,- 1 1 r. I ' If A 144 . 4 K t NIVKRfilT V j'l.Af K.. MiW iilllh." rhfinpowt Toy Iiftntern in Bunt Bteraoptloon CAf ALCK.UH FKU I OUTM 1 S W AN"l an I Oreat Nnedham I TIIEO. J. HAKBACH, Muaioal Marel. HOV Kilbett St., r-lnlada.,!'.. liEVRICH JlLOOD! I'Hraoii'a for.itllvt, I'll), make Naw Huh Hlood, and will oi.mpli.ialy ubantra tha Id d In tl a mitirti ayatam in thr innntha Any paraon arho Mill taka 1 pill eaoh niahl fr.mi I Ui 13 waeka may ba ra.lored lo anund baallh, it anoh a thing ba poaaibla. SolU arerv. WAfre or aenf by mail fur afykf Trttrr mum y,. 1. tt. JU1LNM1N A CO., llangor M.iina. NTIfU " All" DEFOREST S MONTHLY TllIC- I WORLD'S MODEL MAGAZINE A .raarl an.hl-.lln- ,h. ........ li .i . .' and tha hnitiitiliil, Willi tln art Biir.iv ami o l P eturna In eu-h Nit. I'ltll K i . VKAKI.Y93, llh an linaiinalad pratnuun, two aiilelnlid ml ptctuira. Hark f k mmm .n. Mil,.. I il.l.l. au. - ..... a j a innhaa. molllllail oil canviul! traiiaiinrt-i ion Al'. . ailra. bund poalal card fur iu ! nanioniara. A.lrlru.. W. JENNINGS DEMOREST, IT Hl I 4th wtreel Naw York. SIiF Is tha Old Kallabl Coneontrated Lrt FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. loM'Mscin? ,or k,n ut- IT IS TOLL WM10HT AND STRMlrTM. Tka - I. ttjmAmA lk ..II 1 , 1 1 . . mmm . . uwuvu OTIIU 1' V. 11 I , V".l 11 U .11 1T1U Lya, wblob la adaltaratad witb aalt d roalu, aad wtn't ' SA TM MONET, AND BOT TBM OAPONIFlEi?. MAUI BTTBI Pd71t. ia Salt Manuf g Co., MAKE HENS LAY. An Rngliab Veterinary Hnrgann and Obamiat now UaTolHna in tbia oountry, aaya thai uioat of ttia liia-aa aud Uattle Powdara anld hero ara worthleaa traab. Iia aaya tbat Hbaridan'a Condition Fowdera aie aliaolataly pnra and iniraenanly ralualila. Nolbina on aartb will maka bona Ur Ilka hhand.n'a UonUition Fowdara. Ioaa ona taanuonnfnl to ona pint food. aiuru rinyunfi. or Ktnt nu nmll Jnr i,ar letter afoaira, I. tt. JOHNriON A OO., baugur. Main. """ Eitabllshed 18S3. iviai.oi:Nr i'S Gargling Oil Liniment - . ...iow rapner for Animal nd White for ill! unian I'ltih Is good ton. rZ'u, .0"4 l:cMl.. Sprain, and Bruls Scratches ,r Grcaii Chapimd Hands, l-iesli Wounds, External I'ui&ons, Sand C'racki, Galls of all kinds, Sitfaat. H in, l'oot Hot in Sheen lis, 1'ounilt red l tct, llinip in I'irultrv, Crarked Hn, KiiizrM,tic, Lame llatk, Heinorrlioids or Pile Tontharhe, Klieumalism, Spavins, Swtenev, Ustnl.i, Manjje, ' Caked Ure.ii.ts, Sme NipnUs, Curb, Old Sores, Coins, Wlutlowa, Cramns. R;iG Poll Evil, " Mwcllingi, Tumors Garget in Cows, Lrai Kea I eats. Callous, Lameness, Horn Distemper, Crownscab, Quittur, roul fleers, farcv, Abtcss of the Udder, Swelled Legs, Thrush, W'takness o the Joint. w- iiv . ; -viiicu -itiics. I.arte S?V. bTf'VH"- hPO'U a-uu.l UODfiE, Set'r. t4 tvo .'sr; l BP- K T " r I... 2fi0 to lfl,0Oo!V k (KpLoeccs) ) yEr WILL. TTJAS TZIL. J keepcoo JJ m 1 .A i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers