DR. CLARKE Indian Blood Syrup, LABORATORY, 77 W.3d St.,NewYorkCil laii or jaaux mrr. iff Iflfl , 0 a fTBAD HXSrf I ntfgpepntr. Livet v&ftue Itheuma- ww m n.. ' JJUioumess, JTereoua IebUUy,ttc, ThoEostEElIEDx E1T0OT to Man ! 70,000 10 E. NTS II ATE SOLD SIIfCK 1870 9.000000 Bottles. Syrup Possesses Varied Properties. It tlrm.lntes the) PvtTflllne In the Bullrn, Which ronverta the stnrrh and sagar af the road Into glucose. A deftcteocT In Pytynllne eacaes Wind nnd Roaring of tan food In lb Btomnrli. If the medicine la taken Imrnerii. atcly after eatiag the fermentation) ( la4 la prevented. It arts npnn Ihe IMver. It acta upon ihs Kidney' It KeRalntes the HoTreU It Pnrlnes the Blood. It Quieta the "Vei-Toos Systftna. It Promotes Digestion. It Nourle.hr-., HtrrnRthena and firrtgoratM. It carries off the Old Blood nnd mnkrs new It opens the pores ef tbe skin and Induces Healthy Perspiration. It neutralize the hereditary taint, or poison In the blood, which peneratea Scrofula. Erysipe Ina, and all manner of akin diseases and Internal bumora. Ttiere arts no spirits employed in lta mannfacinra, and it can be taken by the most deliuate babe, or by the aged anil feeble, tart only tang rtoairtd in at tentien to direction. PEICE OP LARGS BOTTLES, . $1.00 rmcs or shall bottles, . - 50 Road tha VOLUNTARY TESTIMONIALS of Persons who hava been CURED by thi use of the BLOOD PURIFIER. LIVEU COMPLAINT. South Ubthleuem, Northampton Co. Dear Sir I wus lor a long time afflicted with Liver Complaint, and alter the doctors failed to relieve me 1 began the use of your reliable Indian Blood Syrup, which entirely cured me. Mrs. Fked. Vookl. DYSPETSIA AND INDIGESTION. Ghees Park, Perry Co., Pa. Dear Sir I was troubled with Dyspepsia lor a numher ol years, nnd alter a loir trial ol your valuable Indian Blood Syrup, it bas per fectly cured me. Jacob B. Burketpill. ALL THAT IT IS RECOMMENDED TO BE. Grieb's Point, Perry Co., Pa. Dear Sir I have used your excellent In dian Blood Syrup lor Pains in the Shoulders, with very Ik nellcinl results. It is just us recommended. Elizauetii Smek. LIVEK COMPLAINT AND DYSPEPSIA. Lebanon, Lebanon Co., Pa. Dear Sir This is to certify that your valu able Indian Blood Syrup lias completely cured nie ot Liver Complaint aud Dyspepsia. Mas. Gi.sert. LIVER COMPLAINT. Sharos, Mercer Co., Pa. Dear Sir This is to certify that your In dian blood Syrup has greatly relieved inn ol Chronic Livor Complaint, ol lour years' standing. I do not hesitate to recommend it. William Yilks. LIVER COMPLAINT AND DYSPEPSIA. Sharon, Mercer Co., Pa. Dear Sir I have used your excolK-nt In dian Blood Syrup lor Livor Complaint, and Dyspepsia, ana have "derived niueli Iwncnt theieuom. AVilliam McGim. CONSUMPTION CURED. Clintonville, Venango Co., I'a. Dear Sir I have been aiiius; lor over fiiteei. ywiiin with something like Consumption. 1 tried u number ol doctor and medicine, but never received any permanent benefit until I used your Indian Bluod Syrup, which cured me. I have had better health this winter than for several years past. Mary Ann Kelly. RECOMMENDS H TO ALL. South Oil City, Venango Co., Pa. Dear Sir I was in poor health tor some time, and by the use ot your most valuable Indian Blood Syrup I 1 ave boen greatly bene fited. I now enjoy hotter health than I have lor five years, and do not hesitat-i to recom mend your medicine to all who are afflicted. Mrs. E. Fiend. D7SPEPSIA CURED. Salisbury, Lancaster Co., Pa. Dear Sir I his is to certify thai your In dian Blood Syrup hai cured me ol Dyspepsia and other compluinu, ot twenty years otand "!' David Stekleu DYSPEPSIA AND INDIGESTION. Allensville, Mifflin Co., Ta. Dear Sir This is lo certify that your In dian Blood Syrup has entirely cured my wile ol Dyspepsia aud Pain in the Stomach. Samuel L. Btler. UNANIMOUS RECOMMENDATION. The following persons have used the Indian Blood Syrup, and add their testimony in its Moses Strome, ol Lebanon, says : " It entirely cured cue ol Rheumatism and Head ache." Joseph Biner, ol Cornwall, says: "For years I suffered with Pleurisy and Liver Complaint, and a short trial ol the Syrup cured me." Mrs. Reuben Eckerd, ol Lebanon, cured ol Dyspepsia in its worst form. Henry Smith, of Lebanon, says: " My wife and child have been entirely cured ol Scrofula by the use ol the Blood Syrup." Wm. Donley, ol Bisinarlt. says: "It cured my son of Rheumatism." Mia. Levi Young, ol Maiiheim, reliet&d ol J J ?tu I Disease, after tbe doctors failed, minro adds : ." We can't guess her, but will never give hor up no, never." Mrs. Marietta K. IVnehley, widow o Henry W. Henchley, wliowns lieutenant governor of Massachusetts, sliortlv he tore the war, died recently in New York and willed her brain to Dr. Ix7,ier, and her skeleton, after difsretion, to the, woman's medical college. A lady of Kvansville, Ind., who had been grossly insulted several times in the streets of that place, finally drew rt hatchet and sunk it in the cheek of the insulter, cutting through to the brne. This is one way to bury the hatchet, and it was a pretty good one. Marie Louise, the second wife of the great Napoleon, was in the habit of amusing tlie ladies of her court at their private soirees by turning her ears almost completely round, and in a man ner closing them up. She did this by a peculiar motion of tne jaw, nnd she is said to have prided herself on the ex ploit not a little. A pretty miss of eighteen, who belongs to'a good family in Utiea City, Ind., and htvs been well educated, has recently been released from jail, where she was awaiting trial lor kleptomania. The most influential people in the country united in an appeal for the dismissal of thi. indictment, and the court gladly ac quiesced in a nolle prosequi. The enormous quantity of so-called kid gloves is greatly in excess ot the amount of leather afforded by the skins of all the young goats annually killed to supply the demand. There has long been quite a trade carried on in Paris by the gamins in rat skins, who have much profitable sport in catching them at the mouths of the great drains ot the city. Heal kid skins come from Switzerland and Tuscany. An Avalanche of Teat. When the brief statement first ap peared, a few months aeo, that a town in the Falkland Islands had narrowly escaped destruction by a flood of peat, the story seemed incredible. Authen-lio-details,howevcr, have lately reached England which leave no doubt ol the fact. The phenomenon is believed to be unprecedented, and has served to at tract the attention of men of science once more to the archipelago of treeless islands which Darwin explored nearly half a century ago, and which consti tute Gre;.t Britain's southernmost colo nial possessions. Tlie Falkland group is situated some three hundred miles from the eastern coast of South America, opposite the entrance to the strait of Magellan. Two islands known as East and West Falkland, are much larger than the rest, and upon the east side of the for mer is Stanlay, the chief town. There seems to be some influence in the climate peculiarly favorable to the production of peat, for, says Mr. Dawin, " almost every kind-oi plant, even the coarse grass which covers the whole surface of the land, becomes converted into this substance ; scarcely any situation checks its growth; some ot the beds are as muih as twelve feet thick, and the lower part becomes so solid when dry that it will hardly burn." Thus, it will be un derstood, a peaty soil is characteristic of the whole country. Just back of the town of Stanley, and about 3,000 feet inland, rises a range ol heights which are surmounted by a plateau, upon which rests a deep bog of peat. Curiously enough, the thickest deposits of peat in the Falklands occur on the hillsides or hilltops. In other places the peat seldom exceeds a few feet in depth. The subsoil is a dense yellow clay impenetrable by water, and in the Stanley bog already mentioned this is between twenty-four and thirty feet below the surface. - On Nov. 26, 1878, a southeasterly storm of wind and rain set in at Stanley, and the rainfall from that time until mid night of the 30th is estimated to have been two inches. Then the peat bog on the heights above the settlement gave way. "The black oozy mud," writes a naval oflicer to the royal geo graphical society, "rolled down the hill with a momentum which neither the iron stanchions around the reservoir nor the barrriers by the seacould withstand. It broke through the backs of wooden houses, inundated therooms.and obliged the inhabitants, rudely awakened from sleep, to flee for safety ; a few pigs and calves were swallowed upin the irresist ible stream, but fortunately no human lives were lost." The velocity of the stream was not noted at first, but in ihe morning, after its force was almost ex pended, it was still moving into the sea at the rate of about half a mile an hour. Dr. John Mulvany. staff surgeon in the British navy, was an eye-witness of the phenomenon, and attributes it to the action of the heavy fall of rain upon the peat. He estimates that over 500,000 gallons of water fell into the bog on the Four days preceding the avalanche. The impermeable yellow clay under neath would not permit it to sink through, aud finally this enormous quan tity of water, mingling with the peat, burst the weakest side of the bog and rolled down the seaward slope of the heights above the town in the remark able torrent we have described. History of Billiards. A New York paper says : Billiards are played so much in this country that the game is not unfrequently mentioned as American, although its origin is either French or Italian it is uncertain which. The game, however, was im ported into Britain from Fiance, nnd was known to Englishmen by name as early as the sixteenth century, since Shakespeare speaks of it he seems to have been little less than omniscient in several of his dramas. He even portrays Cleopatra as amusing herself with bu liards, but this is unquestionably one of tlie palpable anachronisms to which he appears to have been indifferent, and which he scattered throughout his plays. The game itself was. in all like lihood, medieval, but as played nowa days is comparatively modern. For two centuries it was played with only two (white) balls, and when the third (red) ball was imported into Britain, tlie red winning hazard, or holing of the red bail, was well-nigh the sole ob ject of the players. The billiard-Uble ol tue present is as diflerent as it well can be from the billiard-table of two hundred years ago, as persons know who have noticed their evolution as represented by tlie tables of divers eras. The greatest billiardiats are the Rus sians, bpaniards, French and Amen cans, who now play far more than anv other nation. The popularity of the game has increased greatly here within the last twenty years. It is said that mere are six times as many tables in tne country as ttiere were at the beein ning of the civil war. Europeans sup- poHtttuaiau Americans play billiards, fiti-bpiciive oi sex, age of position. FARM, GARDES AND HOUSEHOLD. Farm IVotea. Dark stables aro injurious to the eyes of horses. . ' No other nnimals should be tolerated In a yard with sheep, for it will only re sult in vexation and loss. A bag of hops as large as the two fists, placed in a bin or store of grain, will, it is said, kill or eradicate all grubs and in sects from the grain. The dead ones enn be removed by fanning. Shelter is one of the first obiects in wintering sheep successfully. Farmers often condemn barns and sheds ns un healthy places for sheep, when it is a want of ventilation that does the injury. Milk paint for fences or barns is made by mixing water lime with skim milk to a proper consistency to apply with a brush. It will adhere well to wood Whether smooth or rough, to brick, ntbr tar or stone, where oil has been previ ously used. A farmer in Bangor, Me., observing tht wheat was being picked from the seeds of standing grain, and seeing at the same time flocks of yellow birds flying about, shot some ol them. On opening their crops he found only three grains of wheat, and by actual count 350 weevils, Particular care should be used in cleaning milk pans and cans. Many cases are on record of diseases in fami lies from using milk infected with nox ious germs from foul milk cans. Milk men upon again receiving the cans should cleanse them with boiling ho water. Cattle like a change of diet occasion ally, as men do. Keeping cattle on hay or straw alone is a little like living on bread or potatoes, or meat alone, with nothing except that one dish. Therefore feed some roots, ns well ns hay and mcnl or shorts. If you haven't the roots on hand, be sure and have a supply next winter. Cabbago has a superior value for feed ing purposes. English cattle feeders as sert that their beasts progress faster on cabbage, mixed with plenty of fine-cut wheat straw and cotton cake, than with any other vegetable. Cabbage contains one part flesh-forming substance to three of heat producing, while in potatoes, the flesh-forming is only one to twenty. Cabbage is also rich in mineral matter lllontehold Illnta. Soft soap should be kept in a dry place in a cellar, and shou a not be used for three months after it is made. A French chemist asserts that if tea be ground like coffee immediately be fore hot water is poured upon it, it will yield nearly double the amount of its exhilarating qualities. To preserve the aroma of coffee. add the white of one egg to everv nound of coffee just before it is quite cold. Stir it thoroughly into the mass, eo that every berry will be wet with it. To clean lamn chimnevs. hold them over the nose oi the teakettle when the kettle is boiling furiously. Ono or two repetitions of this process will make them beautifully clear. Of course they must be wiped upon a clean cloth. Table cloths should be butsliehtlv starched, and folded lengthwise, alter ironing quite dry on the right side, first down the middle, then putting each sel vage cage to tne center, pressing thein down on the right side; next placing the two double parts, thus folded, to gether, and then doubling the other way in the same manner. To wash a black and white cotton dress, have a tub partly filled with hot water, add one large tablespoonful of powdered borax ; wet only one part of the dress at a time, the basque first; use very little soap, and only on the most soiled places; wash quickly, rinse in warm water containing a tablespoonful of table salt; sCiirch on the wrong side, wring very dry. shake out well, hang where it will dry quickly; next wash the overskirt and then the under-skirt in the same way. Health Illnta. Glycerine is excellent to rub on chafes burns or chapped hands or sun scalds. Olive or sweet oil mixed with warm milk and water, and drank plentiful un til it acts as an emetic, is an antidote to poisons in general. Lawi of Life says simple remedies are frequently the beat lor headache. A cup of sour mi'k spread upon a thin ck.th and applied to the head will many times give relief. Or, a mild mustard plaster on the back of the neck will often ease th. pain, or drinking a cup of hct water. Temporary relief from a painful sore corn may, says an exchange, readily be obtained by applying strong carbolic acid. Take the cork out of a small bot tle of carbolic and apply it (the cork) to the corn. Relief will come at once, and jou will be able to walk witli compara tive comfort till you can find time to remove the corn with a knife. now to Make Coin Ulve Milk. If you desire to get a large yield of rich milk, give your cow every d iy water slightly warmed and slightly salted in which bran has been stirred at the rate of one quar.t to two gallons of water. You will find if you have not tried this practice that your cow will give twenty live per cent, more milk immediately under the effects of it; and she will be come so attached to the diet as to refuse to drink clear water unless very thirsty. But this mess she will drink almost any time, and ask for more. The amount ot this drink necessary is an ordinary water pailful at a time, morning, noon and night. A Female Bandit. The district of Saranzaro, in Souther Italy, has recently been overrun by horde of bandits, under the leadership of a lovely damsel, Maria Croci. Thi adventuress, whose personal attractions are reported to be little short of soul subduing by those who have been for tunate enough to escape from her clutches, was formerly tlie bride of a mountaineer, who occupied a distin guished position in the band at present commanded by her. This fellow met with his death by the rifle of a carabin iere, whereupon liis afflicted betrothed picked up his gun, raised it toward heaven, and vowed to avenge his cruel fate. Elected captain of the association by her departed's comrades, she has be come the terror of the whole district, where she has earned a reputation for ubiquitousneBS, by the rapidity of her movements. She burns a farmhouse one day, plunders a church the same night, and carries a nunnery by assault before she retires to her well-earned re pose. Troops are out after her in half a dozen directions, but she has hitherto managed to eyaqe tbeni. John Milton and Ills Dnnghtera. And surely it is his slmnlicitv alono that ran excuse his conduct to his daughters. Milton's Oriental views of the function of woman led him not onlv to neglect, but to positively prevent, the education of ids daughters. They were sent to no school at ail, but were handed over to a schoolmistress in the house. lie would not allow them to learn any language, saying, with a sneer, that " for a woman one tongue was enough." The Nemesis, howevtr. that follows selfish sar-riflee of others la so sure of stroke that there needs no future world of pun ishment to adiust the balance. The time came when Milton would have given worlds that his daughters had learned the tongues, lie Was blind, and could ohly get at his precious books could only give expression to his pre cious verses through the eyes and hands of others. ' Whose hands and whose eyes so proper for this as his daughters'? He proceeded to train them to read to him, parrot-like, in five or six languages, which he (the schoolmaster) could at ono time have easily taught them, but of which they could'not now understand a word. He turned his daughters into reading machines. It is appalling to think of such a task. That Mary should revolt, and at last, after repeated contests with her taskmaster, learn to hate her father that she should, when some one spoke in her presence of her father's approaching marriage, make the dreadful speech that "it was no news to hear oi his wedding, but if she could hear of his death, that were some thing" is unutterably painful, but not surprising. Alhcnfrvm. The Denver (Col.) Herald says tha mines of Colorado last year yielded $25, 335,483, and that the estimate for 1878, adopted by the mint authorities in Washington, placed the State's gold nnd silver product for tho year at $8,751,344, to which Superintendent Herman Silver, of the Denver mint, added $500,000, as the valueof shipments sent JCast through private sources, thus placing the highest reliable estimate of that year's product at J9.251.344. A subscriber in the Norristown Herald asks: " Will tlie last shoe be made on a shoe lastP" The Herald says we must re fer himtorroctor. He is the only person in the country we believe he is still in this country who knows what is going to happen 100,000,000,000,000,000,000,(X)0 years hence. . . . Iron holts in wooden utriir-tttrna nmv be kept from rueting by coating tlie holes in the wood with zinc filings and grease. Tho iron is thus galvanizod, and is preserved from oxidation. Selentlete may IMflTer About the pathology ol rheumatism, ita origin and whether it be hereditary, but irrefragablt testimony proves that when a tendency to it develops itself, Uoetetter's Stomach Bitters is a reliable means ot subduing that tendency. Some of the prescribed romodios for the dw en.e are decidedly objectionable from tlie dan ger attending their use, others are utterly in effectual, the best, the safost check is the Bit ters. This very obstinate malady, tho more effectually to overcome it, should be grappled with at the outset. Every one knows what teriible, what ceaseless pain it can inflict. Why then, should this atrocious, often luttil complaint be allowed to gain headway through indifference to its earliest symptoms, when a safo, long tested and strongly recommended medicine presents itself. In addition to sug gesting this a means ot relief it seems not in appr'jpi iate to caution the rheumatic ngainsl exposure. The Beat itubbrr Boot. There is nothing better lor a farmer or out door man than a good rubber boot, and nothing so exasperating as a bad one. Competition among manufacturers baa led to such a cheap ening of quality Unit until lately it was u hard thing to find a rubber boot really worth tho money asked for it. The Cumlee R.ibber Co. ol New Haven, Ct., however, bus lately put on the market a boot designed to meet tht call for a real good, substiintiiil article, nnd to denote its freedom fromiululterative mixtures it is called the " 95 Per Cent. Sterling Boot." It is made, on honor, as pure as can be made, and is warranted three months. By an inge nious contrivance a space is provided at the top ol the leg for recording tho date ol the sale, by punching holes in the spaces pro vided like a railroad tic) et so that there may be no trouble aboiiu 1 hn warrant. The upper and leg of the "05" Boots are doubled, and the soles are one-linll inch thick, ol solid rubber iront lot. to heel. Ordinary rubber boots are barely ouartnr inch thick in tho thickosl part, and only one-eighth at the shank. A descriptive viieular can be ob tained by sending a postal direct to the com pany; or the "95" Boots can be lound at most ot the stores. Vkgktinb. When the blood becomes life less and stagnant, either lrom change ol weather or ot climate, want of exorcise, irreg ular diet, or lrom any other cause, the Vkgk tinb will renew tho blood, carry oil the putrid humors, cleanse the stomach, regulate tlie bowels, and impart a tone ol vigor to the whole body. Dr. C. K. Shoemaker, ol Rending, Pa., is the nly am al surgeon in the United States who levotws all his time to the troutment of deal ness and diseases ot the ear and catarrh; es pecially running ear. Nearly twenty years ex perience. ThousaniU testify to his skill. Con sult him by mail or otherwise. Pauiphletyi et. For oxe cent purchase a postal car and send your address to Dr. Santora, 162 Broad wsy, New York, and receive pamphlets by return mail, from which you ran learn whether yoar liver is out of order, and if out ot order, or is any way diseased, what is the best thing in the world to take lor it, Wanted . 8herman A Co., Marshall, Mich., want an agent in this county at once, at a salary ol ,100 per month and expenses paid.' For full particulars address as above. Correct your nanus ol crooked walking by jsing Lyon's Patent Metallio Heel Stitfeners. Why is good advice like Piso's Cure lor Con . sumption T Because everybody ought to take it. C. Gilbert's Pat. Gloss Stirch lor laces, etc. Iaataiera, Wl,ei and Motneia. Dm. MAKIJHIBI'S I TKKJMSCA lliOUCON will pol tlvely cure Female WeakneM, tuch a FaUIdr oi tbe Womb, Whites, Chronic luttuiiimation or lHcernn f the Wouih, liiciilt-nul Hemorrhage or Floodlug, Painful, 8iijprfnel antl Irregular Mtnljuallon, kc. ad old aud reliable remeiiy. bend polal cunl for a pamphlet, with Ueatruent, cureg and i-i-rnMcM-. from pbyniciarifl an'l tatit-uu. to IIOWAKTH 4 BALLARD, Lrita. N. Y. old by all DruxKltta SI. AO per buttl. Father Is Getting Well. My daughters say "How much better father is since he used Hop Bitters." He is getting well after his long suffering from a disease declared incurable, and we are so glad that he used your bitters". A lidy ol Rochester, N. Y. Uliea Herald. " I am all Played Oat" Is a common complaint. If you feel so. get a package of Kidney-Wort, and take it and you will at once feel its tonic power. It renews the healthy action of the Kidneys, Bowels and Eiver, and thus restores the natural liie and strength to the weary body. Get a box and ue jtal once. Whn n Itfrt Innnrnnnrt n I mavmam t. and tells you that only Injtt week a man Inantnr1 AVvm OMUi rwf J 1,4 innuK u vYiiiii nun jiii mill m.ii one premium, and to-day ho I dead nnd ai in wi.ij 1 1 ijr una hit? jiivur jr. it tiiH'nil l 1 1 1 n I; li a nn v mnrn unvSnna in. tnativn though it may bo a convincing argu- i r.. .I. 1 i : ..r . i. .. .... Illl-llb 111 IIIYUI VII M1U Ui'IlUtll'S 111 LIIC S- tem. Bofton Post. A submarine diver was in the Grant procession at Philadelphia He stot d on a platform wagon, wearing his huge brass helmet, rubber suit and heavy leaden plates. Tho weight was very burdensome in tho air, though just the thing for water, nnd he has since died from tho effects of it. Screlulu, Scrofulous Humor, Ca' cor, Canoer tns Humor, Krj sipilns, Canker, Salt Rheum Pimples or Humor in the Face, Coughs nnd Colds, Ulcers, Bronchitis, Neninlgin, Dys pepsia, Rheumatism, Pains in the Side, Constipation, Costiveness, Piles, Di..ine s, Headache, Nef v ousness, Psins in the Back, Faint ness at the Momach, Kidney Complaints, Female Weakness and General Debility. This preparation is scientifically and ohoini cally oomliiued, nnd so strongly ooncontratid from roots, horlis and barks, that its good el fects are realized immediately after commenc ing to hike it. There is no disease ot the hu man sy.-tem lor which tho Vkoktinb cannot bo usod with terfkct safety, as it docs not cnninin any metallio compound. For eradi cating tho system oi all iinpiir.tiel ol the blood it has no equal. It hits never failed to effect a one, giving tone and strength to the system dcbihtaWid by disease. Its wondorlnl effects noon the complaints named are surprising lo nil. Many have been cured by the Vkoktinr t' Bt have tried many other remedies. It can well bo called The Great Blood Purifier. Dr. W. ROSS Writes. Scrofula, IJrer Votnvlaint, Dpititcp. Ufa, Ithewitnttlnm, Weaknrsa. H. R. Stevens, Boston: I have boen practicing modicine for 25 years, and as n remedy lor ScrtJ'ula, Liver Com plaint, Dyspepnia, Rheumatism, Heakneu and all diseases of the blood, 1 have never found its eouul. I have sold Vkoktink tor seven years, and have never had one bottle returned. 1 would heartily recommend it to those in need ol a blood purifier. Dr. W. ROSS, Druggist. Sept. 18, 1873. Wilton, Iowa. Vegetlne la Bold ljr all nrnsslats. l'-An-f-ii-wifi-i f.otlR'.w ;.i4,1 m-tmii&i'm APONIFIE It the 0-d Reliable Concentrated Lye, FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. Dlreitlons accompany rnch Can for making Bard, Soft, and Totii t Soup ojutcaly. IT IS FULL H'KHMT AND STRENGTH. The marki-t la flooded with (an-oallrd Conntratl I.ya, which u adultcruted with salt and rosin, and uws'l maM DUO. SATE MO.VEr. AND BUT TIIK . W'PWr; vjm v.dii s ' J . mm pibbbv M AUK 11 Y TIIK Pennsylvania Salt Manor? Co., PIIII.AUKI.PIIIA. i REWARD SVKsSS lUind, Itcbmn, or tJliwratt-q I ill-, that lclilngi llU'im'riyfnilstociirn. Givnt iiuiiirtdtat iv)itf, ctuto Cauwt of lutifi eUndihg in I wek. nnd nrdiunrr cajms in S dnya. r.flllTinN i: vrut'ixrA'U ,ri.i Dr. J. I'. Milfrr't tiysUdruKKiita. Propr., S. W. cor. ltd on it in bhfk a I'll, qt' S HM4 ami ti'tmitnr, fhil'4. H 1 a bottle. Sold (Sent hy mail hy J. I'. Mu.l.m.M. It., , Touth an J Aruh Bta., l'Julada.. I'a, PETROLEUM Orand Medal at Philadelphia Kxpositlun. JELLY Silver afedal at Paris Ex position- This wonderful snbstance Is acknowledged by physi cians throughout the world to be the best remedy dis covered for the: cure of Wounds, Hums, Hbauraatlsn Skin Diseases, Piles, Catarrh, Chilblains, 4c. In ordi that every one may try it. It Is put up In 1 a and lit. cent bottles for houselield use. Obtain It from you! drugclst. and you will ttnd It auperlor to anything yon have ever used. OH 30 DAYS' TRIAL. We will send onr FJectro-VolUlc Belt and oth K tec trie Apulittiiceii uiu trial for SO dys to thoat afflicted with AVriAfu DebQtty and duae etf a pfrtmta nature. Alao of the Liver.KiifneystHheuiuatlsm.i'aTaly BtB, kc. A Hire cure ywiraitiettt vr no pay, Addrpfia Voltnkc He It Co., MarahnJJ, Mltl. STRIKE OIL Sn l tn three cent it (Mint ft if our brief II flu.. lory of ttieoii HiiNlitra. from Unit to lust, show iiiK' 0i rise am I pronn m, (t ia' I ) tow Urge numoeni of mn liavi' m:nlti an U.tn in.ikt' vast fortniu-a, with little or iui capital, hy oHTittiii; Mini by hh ulatlnx In l-anda, Leaava, and also In (Ml by mumim, puts, ml is and struddlea. jiiafliora. fa. ThE CHEAPEST BOOK IN THE WORLD! Tie New American Dictionary. rontainlng OO.OOO Woids, IOUblCCUalB Pataeat " Illustrated with 2A0 tntcritit. Orthog ruiiiy, I'roiiMiic-tat.oit, and Jfteti.il ttona c rthiisT lo tint i..-t liiKlinh and AmerUan LriU'orrrupht l'k, i-ry handaonicly boUMtl ia 4'lotBi nd Oilt,. htjiu J-' ret; to every reader of ihim ndvcrtitwinsul upon nut-ipt of Jit 7 Out to v po.taga and otber eijnst-s. Thi. jrrwai ottVr u jttioil fur AO day a only, snit la made aoUly for tin purpose of iiumdin u,.u. But two IutiuiAri will tie -tit lo out- addrt'fta for Fifty Onli, Ordar uow. Enrloaa 4'ents. in rurreut or pottage a Urn pa, and miDtiun th paper, iud addrcaa AVH,li:n cic .. Art, Nt.t lloiton, Maaft 3 Cactus Roots, $1.25. colored, bloomiiiK hardy plants, mailed and reKMtitered, with directions how to grow; beautiful Flowers, rare new spei i.-s an I el.-Rant. Send In your orders early. Address W. lsttl4" Ai. O., Cci bat, MiiIisyc u ,Arloi,imuie tin. paper.) CI Ane protlUi on 3n days' nvestmiiiit7oX C 1 iWi WLtZtt in Krle K. H., October 1H. P1UU Proportional returns every week on Stock Options of o. - ., . sioo. - aekHi. OSlclai U-ports and (Circulars free. Address JT. PTjlTKH WIGHT 4 CO., lluukers.yia Wall8t.,N.T. rtTTTD IUvolTrr. fata'ocue free. Addrea J( Jiy J (neat Western Gun Works, Puuburt!, Pa, NAWRL'S REMEDYrV TEGBTIHl&J Ji'Ht CmT Btooa Pumrira,, B ' m " ViIkfec7ed 'BUTTER COLOR filves Butter the trilt-eilirea rolor the year roiinil. - he lartre.t llntter Hnvers recor mend Ita nu. Tliousannaot Jialrymcn any IT IM t'tCIt KKt'T. 1'ied by all the b. M I re:.:nci ic-. i ..r.'. d ih It i, ? national I'lpii.nia atN. V. I miry I air. Atk vmir 7r ; rr n-- - : f - M , - v :; ,. . , ,. is . 1 1 tiusia, tiV l. M'.TB to a?-t lb HULC, J:I 'UA'al'SO.N A f i rj.rUiorr, liuriin;lu, l J LUifG 21 'mmm .mm SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS NIKI Mo 4 SAWiSiQ THE 10Q. THF CREST SUCCESS i WOlTDLTtrUL IKTEOVTC) V. :rvw ijvr,..rHavlnaIA!M'rniIHHJSlAWMAm,r?rR Is fully flMnnimriiteil lv the nnmWi r In ux" and tns frMMnt dumnnd for them. Itaws Iks of nny sit, tne man run anw lniir liiKSorrnrd vikk! lo one lny and easier than two mon run the o'.il way. It will SHr a two foot log In three mlmiti's. I'.verr Farmer nmli one. Townnhln amenta Wuuleu. bind lur Illnstruteil t:irmilr nod Terms. Address W. W. IIOHTWK H A CO.. . 178 Klu Mt Cincinnati, TT3TT' nc w-w- GiI". ''" w- w- J.'1'' firnouly of St. Lonii,'Mo.nilvertiea that ha li nn infringement suit ni;;unst in, which ifale. We hopa t. kooii hriiifj this roving Ciles nVx tilz, to juxtice bend for particular. F RAZE FAXLFB TR E : AS : E . FOIl SALE 11V AM. DEAUKS. Jwardtd tlit M KI)A L OF HOXOH at tin Cindl Ofi'f i'rttff Krjwfiliovt. Chicago. FRAiXR LUBRICATOR CO.. New York. BARGAIN. IN TEXAS ! Ono 1.1 Acre place, Jmt hm U of Lunatic Asylum and Kalr (iroiinda. In Au.tiii, dp Ml of the Ntnle, conlnln Iiik one 7U foot Well, m or mon- Improved variety (irape Vines, one small Frame lloiiw, urn rounded hy nice Shade Trw and a few I'each Tree. AlMione HI Acre Outlet, 'alween Knlr Uroiin la and business iirt or tlie City, cor :. .! w.lh Kliudr Tree, miitnlile for lleer (iurden. The uwner t In p il'.lc him nesH and tins no nan for them, and LI aell out i heap. 'I lie (,'ity coiiliilns alniut 17,Ki luhabi tanta. A'ldrrat r'KANK KA I N KY, Austin, Texas. Moiled Free for 85 Ctf $10,000. SAFEtY LAMP. In.r for 81. (fO.oiMi will ! i In anr il!inur I'alKN I Kl S.tPKlY AT. TAI'IIMKNT. Mitv iim any limp nr burner. rievii!ii(lilijiltiK .ml li'.ttinc. Si ml inrnKiiiei.., wllti .liv.lcoll.f I rtftith of yfnrlnnin. . S. Newton's safety Lamp Co., 13 Wi-.l IhihKlw.t. N.w York Faotory and Office, Binghamton, N, Y. This Clalm-IIouae Eatabllalied 1SOS. PENSIONS. nfear Uw, Ttionannds of Soldiers and heirs entitled Pensions date hack to discharge or death. Time lumTed Address, with stamp, IJKOltUK E, l,KM(l!T, P. O. Drawer a J ft, Wsahlnirlon, J. O. mm J fr.- .Vw lr::iaia 1 :S atoii. tCrl H(ilf(i Ton cur (dt tU. s kmr iiirila, Aitlnut fiiicw nritt'd l rrHr, 1 no k i a " f Nrw IInoKtu4il, fuvrr si l to (wV!lV. ft (srt ru tiuy It aiif (n m r'to lit". l!titrnlril NfWpprr arnt I-rro atlrlrfN. INtiXK. IiRATTV UaHhlnstuu, N-f 4 r- . ENCYCLOPEDIA. The most valuable slnul. Hook aver printed, - A treasury of knowledKe. There has never before bees pubiiMi d In i ue vo.uine, o much ua-ful Informatios on vr in Jed. Iti uiitiriilly illus'.raled, pries SJ.ftO. A Whole l.ihtary In due Vomliie. , 1 Sold oi ly by subscriptions Ihe easiest 10 AGENTS fhook to teli ever known. Tsrms,ete. W. CAKI.k'on'a'cO., Publishers, N.T. City. agents Wanted jta-ft cuinpluto and authentic history of tlie great tour of Deacrlhea Kecal Kntertninmenta, Koyal Palaces, Rani Ourtosttica, Wenlth an t Wonders Bf the Indies, China, japan, etc If" A million ieople want It. This is tin best cham-e of vmir lite bi make money. Ileware e catch-penny " hu lutlons. ( iver 1MIU patji-a Prke onlj S:l. Send for cii. ulats coiitninlng full description of Ihs work and oureNt'a terms toacnt. KaiioN.iL 1'uni.inHmg Oo., Philadelphia, Pa. RAILROAD Stocks and Bonds ADI'HKSS XI, B. TAVI.OH Sl CO., Members of the New York Stock Exchange, Ns, a Wall Mreet. IVety York. for eo 'e will send hy Kxpret to i ie-n llnii us a Keeoiiunen- Itei nn I 'A to ikiv exnenM-a .JO Wi.rtti ol ,ir i;onU. .'ut.'lii-4. Ji-h elr v . Gnus. 'let olrers,eU-.,nt fio per cent, ii.tn oant, and Kive OO days hi the reuiulniiij .sen. I moin y in iieitisterrd i-eiier. t.ldreas TltQIt.V K 6l jjUn. ltluley. O. TRUTH IS 6?!t1T.Y.I bm.. Km.iii tit. ncmiii,M mai a "-.1 ...I v. ..tar. I. W. I a,t i ala of aM tl Wa wal Im -ill Bia, mi a, ..u af aw aa4J,Ma.P.u. MAi.TIN KZ..1 V r... M ...11 ..... Maaa raa M .. fcrtal All V f.llTISKIlit by addreasluv tJl-.O. P. KOVVICI.L A. t'U.'M Newspaper Advertlsms: Bureau, HI Spruce St., New York, can learn tueexact cost of any proposed Hue of AiiVKKTISlIx'ul In Ameri cas Newspapers. . rlni-iane Psmphlet. Idc.fl mm m m a I l, l J,e.l's I'lUlik Full Of Kuifc ' All I" I J FsJ I the last Stories, Jokes, etc 54 paiies, s -iat i as a cMic Kn-raln;s, lfic CatnloKua free J. 1,. PATTE.N A (oTJhirchiy St., New York. YOI'lt'l.ANT III .nee to Ket l acres of choice Texas I.hh I for 1 0. Pamphlet with lni free. Address It. K. I.OWKlt, land Commissioner, Western Land Co., Seymour, bay lor Co., Texas. VOUNG i MEfJ ..WKi month. Kverv staduau auarauteed a paving situs tloa Address K. Vsleptipe. Manager. Jam svllle, wis. IkAajjrri ll A.nl. ..r.hr I. Mil Tm. CSn, Bktti V All LLI Puwda.,l.oiiiif S.trKU.tt.,bj Mmpl.,u. UwilMS. -roNi rul- Outfit (.... ftOI'Lt's TfcA CO.. Hot tous, St. I.iwlt. Ho. Ill 1 SJTr Tl nrtl,rnt Mrs to Mil th.'-Cj.'lor-xli. a Thins, WurUi VvAPl I K.U Km..lil," bj ,nbacnit.oB. T.rm, r.ry lib.r.1 Outftk im. l.NTLS.NATloNAl. ri'H. CO.. S bridf. Kntr.aM. Si. Louis, Mo. 4. f n 49fi P'1 Iiy at home. Samples worth a. free. PJ 10 pt.J AdatepsSTiNsoa A Co., Portland, Mains 0PIUA1 nnhliie llnl.lt 4'ure.l In IS Iw iao tlu.v-t. Moins.t till l ured, lJH. J. fcM fa.eH KNS jebanou, Ohio. .FIFirf A Yi.AR aiu exji n ,o abenla. Oulllt free.' IT 4 4 4 AdhcM P. Q. VICKKIIY, Auul. Mtlne. (LCC a week In your wn biwn. Terms and (A outfit, UVJ free. Address II. IIallxtt A Co.. Portland. Mama 877 A Muutn ana exuetises euarauteed lo AaeLt llntatfree. HIIAW 4 CO.. Aosuhta. Malls C72 AWKKK. 12 a day at home easily made. Costly tuUt free. Address Taua A Co , Augusla. Maine. a Acre larin for Sale. ElbziHe loiation. Price low. ja-vrt-S terms a conimoaatiug. j.uu erms a commodatiiig A yf v t miens vou A THAT IS JUJT 1 I imuiouu I WHAT I SMALL I I mZERSAKtf I x I I oo arte tun 1;. GREA.SEy U M M uid, savannah, N ,Y
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers