a-. - jVgT'icnltuval. Peactical Wine Makwo. If you lam rnnMi wina to make, it i best to ' " . use lare casks, as it foments better in from water nas ai lengu, ou u.. laiwr bodies ; but if you have ouly a ! England : . . feV hundred gallons to make. good. I The e m-nts are water e ron clean whisky barrels will do. and -pint. The water is conwrted into Pick your grapes when perfectly ripe, steam, which is paseed through a super only in dry weather, and when the dew' heater, and then through a set of re - . i , ,, will i trt -niititininr coke and iron, toe greeu uernes. it :.t. vl.ttA vino nl ronr Concord grapes, in quantities of a Bteim, produces 132,000 cubic feet ol barrel or so. run your gratia through a gas. and to effect this 2 tons of coke are common hand cider mill, and press ' used in the furnace. The gas thus pro imuiediately, until the mnt begins to j duoed is passed tfarongn condenser color then remove the h If pressed and a washer similar to a Coffey a still, erupt- and put them into an open I and afterwards through a purifier con bar't i and so continue mashing and ! taining oxide of iron. From the pnnner pressing until your cask is full of must. ! it is conducted to the satuator, where IH.a ll.llf rrucauil (fmnM i it mh in the 1 it passes through rectified petroleum m Jn barrel should be covered with, a Kket anl left standing from 2 to 48 hours to ferment, according to the state l.w.uuu leei becomes ioj.vw ieeS of the weather, then they should be cost of which is stated to be forty cents thoroughly pressed and pnt into a sepa-j per thousand cubic feet. In carrying rate cask to make into red wine. ! ont the manufacture of water gas at If large quantities are made into w'jite , Chichester, the gas-works have been wine, tha grapes maybe put undjr a ' only partially altered, so that the manu atrong press, without mashing, and I fncture of coal gas is still carried on; pressed. Many bltwk grapes will muke j the public, in fact, being supplied with white wine if made in this manner. a mixture of the two gases. This, it It would lie better to put some of the ; would apjiear, is the most economical seed or racked stems into the must ; method of applying the water gas, inas v.hen fermenting, to give the wine more much as the coke from the coal gas can tannin, which will make it clear better. 1 be utilized, and the latter gas cau In? If red wine is to be made, run the grapes ; made from cheap coal, as the former is llirrtunli Ihit mill nn.l nut them into foaud to be a very rich gas. Hence tl i i. i ).. ...ii wi.ru uhtr'is ur uukmii-ku?, auu ir iucui firn.,.tMW.nT.larl-.fort,reSsin?. m .11 . i i . Lg. Fill vour casks nearly full and leiihem run over, whi.h will cast off much unnecessary mue.laginous matter, but when this first violent lermentatiou is over, let the balance of the sediment settle in the barrel and not work over, I'nt the bnn in loosely, while it is thus working. As soon as it is done, which you can readily ascertain by placing vn,.r er tn th Imnehole. then drive 'the bung tight, and let it remain until ..i ...n.,.. ... .1..., ,t it nir ' To i roducc a m rfect fermentation. the temperature cf the room should be lommnhn nl tl,. mit in the cask hile it is working, but alter it is done it should be put into a good cellar and kept there. The casks should i. f..ll on.l fi. !,.,. oir lirrl.t It should have a secr.nd racking inMarcb, and it should then lie clear, if everything ... n.u..i. l.m it si.nnhl n..t !e Imttled until the wxt fall; then it will be ready to sell. Hit th "ir tr!.tn..l,t, it i- daime.1 ii.ot" it l. t-.u.i .l..ar n.l ru rf.nt in a few months, and St for bottling. This .....i-1 il,.. lmt ira Un i.nt a.n it tried, and it has not come into rrentral use, however good it may lie. As some may wish to make uufer - tut nted wine, a few directions may not be out of place. Press your grapes and let the must stand alxiut six hours to si-tile some, tliendruvr ot the clearest and put into a boiler ; boat to the boil- iug point, and skim it. Then put it into wine bottles, not as you put up ; rinds that the eggs are laid in the gal-; fpet "lVuK " l""cu,"u? rf1 fruit sn.l hp i.l uir tinht vhilrt h.r an.I 1 bripa tit tl.A Ii.vm an. 1 l.,tw..l in Ken. i with high shoulder seasis. donble- L...... it i.. . , II ,r 'I',, twn l,..ttU from breaking, place a wet cloth several folds thirk on the table, and set the bottles on it while lilliug them with hot wine. Potatoes. The Early Goodrich rieiis quitfi early, and yields largely, but it is so variable in qnal'tr, being sometimes dry and mea'y, and at cthtr times again so watery and touph, that but few people in our parts now raise it. The Harrison is eveii more watery and tough ; bo that the Early Goodrich and the tileasou are for the same reason but little better than the Harrison, while the Garnet Chili, a red-skinned aud white fleshed potato, yields well, and has a solid aud good deal drier flesh than the Early Goodrich, Harrison or Cileasnn but is after all oi lvathir.l rate oieasn, ijuii8aueraiioi.iyatnirarate, or at best onlv a second . .r" .lu :u point of quality. The Early Goodrich, Harrison aud Gleason are white or whitish skinned and vellow"h white fleshed jiotatoen. Tha i.nckT nf ni.i.. id . ,n.i, white-skinned" and white ti'eshed potato. of a better quality than theOaruet Chili, but a poor yielder, and like the Uarnet, ; often so worm-eaten and disfigured in its skin and hesh, when dug np in the fall as to greatly injure marketing. mten S U u lZ nd mealy potato, that is nearly equal m ! ouahty to our famous old Mercer. In j tact, it has taken iUpUce, and now, as! for years paa. commands the very highest price in our cty market. Stckk iv J4PAV-In place of iron 6hthe horses are od suoes, tiie iiorees are snou wan straw ones,whicli scarcely last longer than day and are then thrown away to be j repiaceu oy iresu ones. nerds and flocks are not common in Jupan. This is readily accounted for by the fact that the people live chiefly upon fish and vegetables, and their garments either cotton or silk. In addit.on to cats and dogs the only domestic am- mala possessed by the Japanese are norses ana norned cattle, ine Jiorses jrsesana norned came, ine Jiorses ere originally brought from the Corea, TJ'i were in. if China ; they are docile but timid, ...1 : . . i e i mi laceofrraiu; their hoofs wear away o rapidly that the best horses are us ?89 after their sixth year. In o Z vhole number of hordes in the empire amounted to 350,000, and the number of oxen was reckoned at 600,000 head. The latter are indispensable to the cul- tivation of rice, and are frequently used as pack oxen. Cow's milk is shunned as "white blood, and the Japanese are consequently unacquainted with butter ; or cheese. Asses are rare, and eoats and pigs are only fonn.1 in the seaports Irequented by Europeans. indigestion n A Horse hen the grain fed to a horse passes from him : undigt-sted and he in ronseqnence be- j comes thiu and hide-bound and rough ' and staring-coated, it would be ad vis- i able to give him a change of food. Carrots or boiled potatoes, fed nearly cold, with a handful of salt fnrinkled on them, scalded wheat-I ran, scalded out witu a liandtul ol linseed meal added, and ont hay or oat straw might ' useiuiiy given, in audition, a tea- ipoonfiil of finely powdered copptras. ami unotlier. heaped, of pronnd tri may be given daily in the feed. 1 iMPonTAxrE of AVaum Uennf.eies. It is well known that the fattening pro cess goes on much faster iu September aad October than in the winter months. Tlie reason is that the oil given in the corn, ttc., is more largely used in cold weather to keep the animal warm, being "burned" up in Ihe circulation. From this we can see the importance of warm henneries, prolonging the au tumn weather into the coider months, ap to the time when the pi ices for fat poultry are the highest. The guinea pig is extensively used in Peru as an article of food, not merely by tho higher classes as a delicaev. lmt mainly by the poor, from its cheapness nuu auuuuaiice. it is an entirely uerbi bivorous animal, and a clean fetder, being there chiefly maintained on green lucerne or trefoil, but it would, doubt less, thrive equally well on cabbage or lettuce leaves, and most sorts of green garden stuff; in bhort, on the same food as the rabbit, to which ii has many points of similarity." The oft told story of the infant whose mother bared her bosom to recall him from the edge of " precipice, is first found in Leon i das of Alexandria, nho flourished in the time of Nero. Scientilic. Water Oa. The problem of devising a -) t method for Drodncinff hydrogen I . , 1 " l.l J ., . .i .ii ,.flr ln tl. nice mil III "T" . . . ! spirit, which increases the bulk of the X about t nty-five per cent, so that AnmixiniM will nrnhat.lv find the r- - j I J .1 water cas process nsefnl as a supple- ,.nnt.nn hili. nJ when- ever coal is dear, for it is not intended that it shall supersede the ordinary manufacture. At any rate present ex - perience at Chichester goes to place this beyond a doubt, for thero a briUiant and combined gaa is produced, having an illuminating power of 18.50 candles, The city and environs of C hichester have for some six or seven weeks past been lighted by a mixture of the two : gases in proportions varying from one- I l,ir.J tn twn.ff.ir.1a the nresent nronor- tions beinir enual parts. The stability of the gas has been proved by keeping it for six months, at the end of which tint it is stated no Bonuration or con- densation had taken place. Its travel- . ing capacity is shown by the tact that it has been delivered by itself, and is now dehveretl in eorbination with coal ! gas to lights two and a half miles from the works, and burns freely. Larwe. Sir John Lubbock states'?1; During winter tuev must have : that the form of the larvie of insects : "Rit : they will do well lu a window .inen.U irerr mnh nn their miklfl of where neither frost nor much heat can i ;f.. Tk..i ain ihnu liumt wl. ii-h are internal' parasites, whether in plants : nr in .nimnU lurmUnrm tl. same is the case with those which live . in cells, and depend on their parents ! for food. On the other hand, larva; ; which burrow in wood have strong jaws and generally somewhat weak thoracic legs more developed, but less so thau tho carnivorous species. ; lu the case of the sitans, which is a . parasite on the nnthophora, M. Fabre ta.ni. )tr.lK.r tl.o l-i-t-. remaining t tit a without food until April fol owiug; they then throw off j their lethargy, but instead of devouring the honey, as he expected, they turn away from it and are unable to deal wiD.it inUv.i;n.i. mnw. ,.fni I examination of the matter, he discovered that the males of the onthophora sllit revers. pipings, and cords, and bnt emerge before the females, and as tbey i tocs ot "t1 or I"earI colored to match pass through the galleries the atari's cloJh "aetly, or else with buttons hiiT.-B fasten upon them. From the of Mdized silver lieantifully carved, male the larvie passes to the female lee i The rouKh but tyhsh yak braid is used when the opportunity offers, and as the tor tnm"""B also; sometimes there is latter lays her egg aud fastens it up in wof inoh-wide braid, with two uar a cell with honey, the sitaris larvie at- ; rower olle" 'ove, and in other cases j taches itself to the egg, which floats on 1 the jacket is almost covered with an ln 1 the surface of the honey. Almost at tncate design done in fine yak soutache, once the larvas commences to devour ! Pa.rk blue. bla-k, and irou gray cloth . r . l-i . v . 1 usilrd a o ak ft Vi-kSkn amli-vtianw fittinf tlian ilia ! 1,16 efe'KraI1 on WU1CU It is resting. Un c w . , nn.irnva it. ..,i.... ; the empty shell, and, makiug its an-1 t pearance in a very different form, feeds ontlia honey, this cnnsnme.1 nther transiormaiions tae place, and tne Irfect sitaris finally emerges in August : j 'r''"irr mXagazmr ! Absobption of Watkb bt Dipferent Soils. We do not think that the power of so. In to absorb and hold themo.sture "tP7W - ciated. Many have the impression that unless the water is actually falling in drops, that the soil is receiving no benefit from the moisture. This is in - correct, for at all time, when the sun is i i"?gi - T hen lu air Of course, some soils will not only absorb it mucL fajit bt aIso hola mnch more than oth ' guJ it wm al-! i, fnnn.l that the atmnrl.;nrnnirr , . , - . , ;. " r- -- .un .o lUe pover oi utuuiug , wm icuu cubireijr uu utv auiouufc oi yegeta- bie matter in tne soil. Une thousand pounds of common farm surface soil ; wm if weU dried and elposed to the air for .., bonr8 jHrinVthe nioht ; absorb , t o irom twenty to twenty-hve pounds of water- even snmn nf nr' j Z indy ejuw ' . Vo-i some of the riehaty i : soils will absorb three or four times I this amount j ""ioutds of wat withnL'nv I rnt T' Wlthl't ',y "nZf.l 7 .nh t 87 f01'8 i I tT" a " T VeBtJ PUDj8 m ! ! ! " j The Change of CtniATES. Old peo- : Pe complain that the seasons are either i ! WMmer. or colder, or more rainy than j WDen laeJ were young. Ihcir com- ments are often ridiculed, because most ! persons peiieve that no very marked I changes have occurred, or ever will i place, in a country where stability : i oi nature seems to oe a settled tact that is. it snows in Winter April, and trees have leaves in Spring, Bat atmospheric alteration is certainly going on from ae to age, more strongly evident in some parts of a country than Mina in in others. Here are illustrations: Two thou sand years ago the climate of Italy was far colder than now. The Loire and Rhone, in ancient Gaul, used to freeze over annually. Juvenal says the Tiber frri7.A fln firmlv in K.a Aa-wr iU l..l to be out to get at the water. Horace in the streets of Rome, and Ovid asserts the Black Sea freezes over every year. Br the use of thin leaves of steel in the construction of artificial magnets, M. Janiin has so increased the carrying power of these magnets as to construct one weighing about four and a half pounds, which could carry a weight of ninety-nine pounds. The great advan tage to be expected from this discovery is the reduction in the weight of the magneto-electric machines of all kinds, and especially of those emploved in the production of light The Elastic Eoo. Take good soun 1 egg and soak it in strong vinegar for twelve hours ; it will then become soft and elastic ; now introduce it into a bottle and fill up with lime water. The egg will become quite hard, and create some astonishment as to how it got in. Such is the marvelous ductility of gold that a single ounce of the pare metal may be drawn out into a wire thirty three miles in length. Tiie Neapolitan papers state that, from observations tat en on Mount Vesuvius, new earthquakes are expected. Scientific American. DomeNtic. - - Flowers fob Wistkb. It is only when plants are healthy and prolific "of perfect flowers, continually renewing, that they can fully satisfy the eye of the weary invalid or the storm-staid child. Plants already exhausted by summer blooming can not renew good bloom without many weeks of rest, and ! a growth of new shoots from near the roots of. the main Kleins, vsmy new auu ! enoueh to swell either leaves of flowers ! f 1. t,,ll lioanf. and only healthy roots can collect sup- plies, and only healthy clean leaves can digest them lor use. Roses (teas and dailies) may be pre pared in Augnst by cutting them back to well placed uuas or snoots low uown. This, of course, arrests all further sum mer bloom, or if it does not entirely, the bloom should be nipped off as soon as they begin to appear. As soon as new growth sets in, stimulate with top dress ing, or with a weekly use of dilnted j the bloom should be nipped - they to-Jgg U liquid manure. If any shoot threatens to extend irregularly, its tips should be nipped when it has reached - a point where a bifurcation will be well placed. Blossom buds will show on the tips be fore winter. . - Heliotropes must be prepared sin ilarly by close pruning. The pots of these, as well as roses, are best plunged in the soil in a sunny place, so that the leaves may have full light and the shoots be well matured. But the helio trope must be taken in, in September, ' uiore luej ii me kwu wutu ui nuoi, 11. 1 t -. 1 , 1 . and the roses before it can pinch them at ail severely. been kept rather dry should be repotted j early ,n September It m bestto hom ; all the old earth from -the roots ami ! shorten them pretty dose, as well as the tops, planting them again firmly in fresh good earth before the roots can dry any. Keep shaded and not too wet i for a week or so ; and as soon as growtii ; apira. water aud feed well. This will j soon result in handsome and thrifty plants, which will bloom by Christmas, ' and continue ior months. ! To secure copious bloom of bedding j geraniums next summer it is essential , to have fresh young plants, and to that enu cuttings suouiu oe -se now, nu i mediately. They will root easily, if covered with a paue or two of shaded glasa, to retain moist air aud obstruct . excess oi neat. Alter roois uavo lonneu. ; as indicated by the appear Ance of young ' leaves, the cutting must be potted, and i then returned lor a week to loeir siiel ' reach, them, and they will begin , Woom in April or May. and continue all . summer in surpassing beauty, if well j watered and fed. Country Orntlmmn. Enolhi? Walkino .Iaket. The ! English, walking jacket again appe.ii9 1 in this country, according to a fashion . journal. It is made of warm, rough cloth, nearly half an inch thick, yet as , ' soft as camel's-hair.and ' known as , camel's-hair cloth. It retains its jaunty 1 breasted front, coat collar, aud three back 8eams far aPart at the Wlll8t. w.ltu hippew below the waist, but no position plts. Coat sleeves and pockets with aV complete ion mm, iiuy, auu thal masculine-looking jacket. It is niade of olive, slate, blue ana myrtle B" cloths, trimmed with velr. t or i J ,"7 ordinary EnMish saenne. and mnch loncrer : some are loneer in front than bfburtl, and have an extra basque : Peaed on the back, like a riding-habit i waist Bine gros grain bands with a lighter blue cording on the upper edge trim blue cloth jackets -prettily ; the buttons axe theu blue steel or else oxi dized silver. When single-breasted i jackets are shown, they are usually .l ; i n i :n -r r-u.-i.i i are hown ia preciselT the same shapes - BJ colors just noted. Soft beaver ciotll Jacket, are bordered with beaver r Kkfn f u7 ad I have s 1 ur bo. nndtixentiibdlsh. 1 "Jtn front otlaTO tt. oSSJrSS Xealkln o7 rer fun Small Unffs of cloth are trimmed with fur to ! ' , T SCCE.Take "forty noimds r.f ,7 r'u-T-Ti "A !! iiio nn auu ; uiHi siiaeeze mrougu a ae-isiev, tllt will reUin the seeds and skins. Boil for an hour in order to tret rid of some of the watery portion, and then add half s gallon of best brown vinegar, one and a half pounds salt.two ounces cloves, three ounces allspice, two onnees cayenne pepper, three ,rr fW". loV n .oMl sufficient time ; two hours will usually suffice, but the sauce will not be boiled lLick' and f" the Water7 -PPearanci na" Kn- without straining in perfeot,y "' "nJ tben T whe ". The garlic must pee'tid. bruised, and tied up in a bag; all the spice must be ground ; the quan- tities may be increased or diminished according to taste. We have kept sauce made from this receipt three years. enreu nr lorker Fashion", Hats. Oood styles for the Pn"'l narrow-bnrfimed. lloTd crowned hats of black silk beaver, wit'i only a band of velvet or gros grain lor trimming, a id a bow sur mounted by a dark willow feather and a steel or jet ornament The bonnet of the season, is called the "Sylvia." It is half hat, half bonnet, the low brim descending to the ears, but opening np in front to admit of a trimming of lace or flowers, which forms a becoming irame to a lair lace, xt is a U'gnilied, protective, yet picturesque and very be coming 6tyle, and a welcome change from the bold, brassy shapes which have been lately stuck on the back of the nead in a way which made their wearers look like courtesans escaped from a lunatic asylum. Cocoa Snicp. Two oza. licorice rout, pound raisins, 2 tablespoonfnls flax seed (ground), and liverwort, the more the better ; boil in two gallons rain or river water, until the strength is ont ; then strain and boil down to a quart ; now add i pound white sugar, when the sugar is dissolved take off, and when cool add i pint good cider vinegar. The licorice root should be split np finely, and the raisins divided. This makes a syrup very pleasant to take, having no disagreeable taste about it It will cure coughs, colds, soreness of the lungs, croup, and is said to care consamption in its first stages. To Remove Warts from the Hands. "Simply allow a second person to wet the ringer on the end of the tongue, rub the wart two or three times, taking the finger off with a jerk, and tctVt the wart off at the same time. There must be a trill about it" It is a curious fact that cats cannot survive when kept about a lead pipe manufactory. The experiment has been tried frequently at one of the largest manufactories in New York, and in every instance the cat has gradually lost flesh, and died within three months. Ilnmorotis. 3lT GaAXDMOTHKK'S FBEXrH. An old Jersey woman of our acquaintance had an i Jea that talking very load and mono syllabically converted broken English into; exoeilent French; with the true Parisian accent Never shall we forget the scene it was some fifty years ago, but is even now as vivid as though it had happened yesterday. A Trenton lady who had engaged French lady as governess, all the way from Paris, asked our venerable grandmother, to receive her on her arrival, and until she came to escort her to Trenton. The steamer arrived, and the Parisian mademoiselle was put down at our grandmother's gate in Hoboken, which then contained about one hundred houses. On her arrival she handed in the letter of introduction, and . was immediately shown into my grand mother's sitting-room, the servant hay ing been told that she expected 'an outlandish lady, who was expected that day from Europe.' , I was sitting iu my grandmother's pickling-room for forty years ago every old homestead had a pickling and preserve-room when the servant came in aud handed to my ancient relative the letter of introduction. The old lady inquired: "Where is the polly voo lady ?" '. "In the parlor." "I will soon come down ; let her wait !' After reading the letter, my grand mother rose majestically, just as you can fancy the Queen of Sheba, and descended to the parlor floor. In an other moment she returned, leading with her a very nice-looking lady of twenty-hve. When they bad entered the room, my grandmother, pointing to a chair, bid her foreign guest emphatically to it, and said, in a distinct tone of voice: "YorSO-FBESCHWOMAFJ-TAKE-BEAT !" The fair foreigner did as she was bid, and took a seat, a fact that convinced my grandmother that she perfectly well understood New Jersey French. It being about tea-time, and the kettle boiling on the old-fashioned hob, our venerable relative said : " Take- eujy- tea- do-yon- Sftotl- yoitnyl Frenchwoman, uttering every syllable with- a metallic distinctness. The pnkzled. parley roua shrugged her shoulders, and looked piteonsly at her. "The woman's half a fool, like all foreigners," said grandmother, in a totto voce; "I talked to her as plain as I could speak." At List a bright thought struck her. She resolved, as Hamlet advised, to suit the action to the word, aud seizing the kettle, which hissed and foamed from the spont, advanced to the alarmed Mam' telle Parley You, and shook it in hej face, shouting out : 'Po you good, young French woman!' The unhappy and periled creature rote from her scat, and, retreating in fiiKl.t, cried: "Pitie uiol, viadamc .'" It was a rich scene thero was the evidently terrified demoiselle retreating round the room, while my grandmother pursued her with the kettle, which she, to be more emphatic and intelligible, kept shaking under her cose, the steam gushing in jets into her eyes, and nearly blinding her. . . . . . . Three times did she pursue her vic tim, uttering her disjointed gibberish in a loader, and louder shriek, when the door Aetied, aud our Trenton friend entered. My grandmother restored the kettle to its simmering sMt, and wel comed her old companion. After a few words of French betweeuMias Parley Vous and her employer, the latter amazed my grandmother by telling her that she had nearly frightened her French governess to death, and that the poor creature implored my grand mother to inform her why she was going "to knock her brains out with the teakettle." My Hoboken relative never could make out why people are such fools as not to talk English when it is so easy. It, however, shook her faith in the teakettle, as a pantocaine medium for conveying the French lan guage. : A Sheep Amoko the Beabs. "Fluc tuate ?" said a rural practitioner with the long bow, to the crowd of village lonngers who gathered round him in the Post-Office to hear the story of what he saw in Wall-st, on one of the panicky days during the war "fluctuate ? You just bet she fluctuated. Why I jist went down Wall-st holdin up this ere gold five dollar piece between my thumb and finger so and you could fairly see gold fluctuate every step I took. She went up and down, aud vibrated and swung around and there wa'nt no thin certain about the market till I put the money in my pocket and left the street Fact is there ain't no gold in the eonutry, and it don't take more'n five dollars to upset everything." Mks. A.vthowt's Hejj. When. I Wis a boy of 16, aud lived at home, one of our hens, previously very proper and well-behaved, left off her modest lays, and grew to look exactly like a rooster ; she found voice, and "crowed a shrill clarion," aud, in short and ia fact, became a rooster in every sense of the term. 1 have never speculated much as to what occasioned the change, and whether it was a progressive or a retro grade movement I do not undertake to determine : but an acidulated old bach elor in this neighborhood, who thinks that the women have "rights enough already, dares' to maintain that it is a species of transition worthy the lmita tion of the Agitators. It does us good to see these little traits of love and affection between man and wife. An Ohio woman remarked to her husband, "If vou don't like this dinner you'd better go out and hang yonrieii. And that ontifui husband went right out and shuffled off his mor tal coil with a piece of rope ; from which it is safe to infer that he did not like that dinner. . Herb is something that will interest everybody. We are told that the light produced by lightning bugs is due to the secretion of phosphorous in the form of a substance termed nootelucine. This will surprise those old foggies who always maintained that the bug carried a lantern on his back. " However, we learn something most every day. ' The editor of one of our religions papers says he has made np his mind not to accent anv more artiolmi fmm people who spell Bible with three b's. ihis may be all ntht and although three b's don't hurt the Bible to. any great extent yet it is well enoneb to teach correspondents economy in using the alphabet. The young lady in Brooklyn who sings, "Don't be angry with me darling,' needn't be a bit afraid. - We won't be a bit angry with her. It's her voice that we dislike so. Were she to become dumb or we to get deaf, our love would become a great deal stronger. A Grateiti. Spirit. (Time Saturday afternoon) Jail-bird "Oh, you're ail hard-working men a-waiting Vi be paid, are yer T You do look so Vppy ! They talk a deal about honesty, but thank goodness, I've always been able to do without it !" A new dish is grapevine leaves fried in egg batter ; it is called a French dish. An exchange remarks: "We can't think of anything that would be more delicious than fried grape leaves, unless it is a circus poster on toast" The Louisville Courier Journal rrvh that unrequited love is the toothache of the soul. Yes, and the only way to stop it is to use some gold filling. ""3Iiseell-ny, Westfield, X. bridge. Y.. has a . new iron Whiskey asd the Weed. Intelligent physiologists and pathologists admit that all so-called medicines containing alcohol whether they emanate from the regular pharmacopoeia and are called tincture, or from the Empirical Ram Mills, and are labelled "Tonics" are essentially dangerous aud destruc tive. The only way in which drunken ness can be arrested is by restoring the integrity of the nerves ( especially the nerves of taste and the great sympa thetic nerve;, and purifying the animal fluids ; and these objects are more cer tainly and swiftly accomplished by the use of Da. Waleeb's; Ylskoar Bitters than by any other means. Hence, pro bablythe opinions now so generally expressed, that this pure preparation is a sovereign remedy for the evils re ferred to. Should it "be clearly ascer tained that Vixeoar Bitters is not only a specific for indigestion, liver disease, nervousness, scrofulous ulcers, and eruptions, and a hoBt of other disor ders, but' also for inebriety, thousands will rise nn and call the discoverer blessed. " 10 Tsp Worm I" Tape Worm I Rrmorrd In a fr hour with hsrmlraa VftteUble Medicinal Nu foe sakr I nntll the entire worm, with had.liaiiam. Bcfer tana alHu-tol to rxudenui of PbllAuelpDUi whom 1 have cured, that hail been nn ncreaatuUT treated at the JelTcrnaa Medl.-1 OoUeRC, on Tenth aire ; had taAeu hi vain turpentine, the eocallrd apeclflc, and alt knuwn retuediea. Pr. E. F. knnkel, o. Sorth Ninth atrcet, PhUadr phiA. The iKMnor ha been In btiMinea l'r over twciily-hve Tear, and perfectly reliable. Call and are. Advice iree. Hemoved tape worm front s child ait ;en old measuring 3 feet. At hi office can be aeea pe riineu. mim uf them over 44 feet ia length, which have been remoTed in I than three boon, by takiuK oueduae of hi medicine. Ir. Kunkel'a treatment alrnple. aafe aud perfectly reliable, and no fee until tne w.rm, wun head, paaeee. Ur. K, F. S unkel. a North Ninth afreet, PhUtd' Ipfua, Fa. roneutla Llin br nratl, .nrat uthce free. To CoiiampuTn. The adverttee, tUYTtna; been permanently cured of hat dread dlaaaaa, CtteufUJttoa. by a auuple remedy at enuoua to make known to hia fellow eulterare the mean cure. To ail who deaire rt, be wih eend a cop) .if the preacripuon uaed, (free of char.'e), wilh the direction tor vreuaru and omii the aame , which 117 will rind a avart Ortau tor oovarwa-nua, AjrrHWA, BattNoairl. and all l iiftoar aud LzxQ uX. AcuuMea. - Partkw alaliUui Uie prearrtprlan will nleaae addnaa oriMy . New KDWMaV WIUMMTl, nw Perm Mraet, Wuiiametmnin. M. f . Atlvcrtisemontx. THK NEW DISCOVERY la CUeutiral and 3aUial Scicatca. Dr. H. F. GARVIN'S S0LOTI0H AND COHFGOHD ELIIIR FIRST AND OXT.T FOT.rTToV e-rer made fa tM auxtnr of ALL TH H TW I.LV K aiuabl sours pnncipia ul tne we., known euralir atrant. PlTE TltKIS TAIl. Clf KQC AXLED la OmAl CM. Catarrh. Aatbaia. BroochUis, aad CosuwuiDtjou. CURES - "WITHOUT PAH. A reeent enld In ttire tn t'x ho.irr rnl a!ao. hr It VTrAJ.lZl.NII, l'UKlFYlNOet HT1ML1.ATIN.I Seal upua Utm ffenefai y tam, ia reoiarkaUy ttfaoa oou in all DIlaF.ASEsj CF XII F. BLOOD. Inelsdiaf IVrotala and Kro.pU.ma of tn akia. Dya papaia, lharaaeof the Urer aad kaiser. Heart ilar asso, and lieneral lebilitr. ONE TRIAL CONVINCES , DR. GAUVI.VS VOLATILE SOLUTION cf TAR FOR I MI A I AT I0. kablj valnanle daassry, which post Ursly ' CATARRH. BROXCUITIS, ASTH.HA, amel all Disaes of Hie KOSE, THROAT and IXWGS. THE COHPOtT. l TAB AXDMAXDItA KK PILL, tat ass in sonaestiaw with the ELIXIR TAR. autnbl nation of the TWO moat valuable ALTERA TIVE Madieince knows ia lb ProfsaMoa. and lea der thai Ful without exeapuwe, tne vary east erst BoUtlea lad Componad EUir. J '' !T.Bo' Tar sod atsfulrat fills, Mela psr as. stagnated Inhalation, 5.00 per Packet- Bead far Cbealsr of POIITITK CURES U foor JJragfaM, or t I. F. HYDE & CO.. SOLS PHOPHIKTOBA JUS 8vmth Ave., Ne York. Tht 1ntmmTt r eaperUHy l!!il fur tl.e ;erlect apnlication of DR SACE'S CATARRH rCMESY. It i the o-ilr form of Inurnment Tot ii.rented viih which tiuid meuicine ran bcrarried high vp and ptrfftllf ntplitd to all part U too .fleeted n al wt:n. and tlie chamber or ravitirs rem lauiiicatm;; therewith, in which torn and Hirers f rinenllr Tit, and front whirh the catarrhal di rharse ernerallr proceed. The want of rnccrcs in Irwin Catarrh heretofore r.a arisen largely from the iHiiav.ttilit of applying remedies to three ravitie an1 chamber, br any of the firdi nary method'. TnU obstacle 'io the way of rf-f.-etin? core is entirely overcome bribe iiivemirn of the Dooehe. Ji.n.in?thit lDttnfment. the Fails' II cameo ny iu emit weight, (no tmikne. lorcwg sr puispint bring required. i tip one uurtnl in a full gently dowii. atrvem to the piirhe-t portion of tl.e l paace. paeaes into and ltiorvnrfrvc!ear.e. e- all the tttlie and cham hers connected therewith. and fax Oirtol the opposite nostril. Iiene If l'lean ant, and so ffnule that 'Mid ran nndrrrtar.d it. sun ana explicit aircetlons ac company each instrument. 7heB sard with this lntrnment.Dr. Sa?e" f'atarrU Itctneily core, re cent attacks of "Cold In tlie Head " by a tew application. Hymptomsof Catarrh. Freqnent head ache, diacharge falling Into tbroat. .om. timea pro fiwe, watery, thick mncna, purulent, ..flVBf ire. Jte. In otheraariryne. dry, water, weak or ir.flamcd are, tonpin;np orohMractidn of naval paaaar, riucrinf ia car', limfiiea, bawkine and conching It cbir I'iriat, ulceration., scabs from nicer., troioj altere-l, nasal twan, offeneir breath. Im-pain-sl or Dial denriration of renee of an-.ell ai.rf ti-te, dixziaesa, mental depression. Io. of sppe. i-mi own, eniargva lon.ll. IlCKIlDf ronea, Ac. Only a few of thee srmptctEa are likely to he present In any ease at one time. Ur. Hare's Catarrh Re an e. It. whew bvtI wilh Dr. Pierce's Nasal Dosrhe, and octwiipanied with the ron.titntiunal treat- metit whica is recommended In the pamphlet that wrap each bottle of the Bemedy. i a per fjet .peciBc tar this losthwime riies. and the proprletfir offer. In good vitt. f.'.OO reward for a ne he nn not core. The Rem.lr u mild and pleasant l aee.rTmtaiii inr no trore;orcao$tie nrun-ur i..-iie. i ne iiiirm Kemedr r oid at 50 rent linnrne at 00 cent., by all Drue. lata, or either will be mailed br proprietor oo receipt of 60 cents. R. V. PIEBCE. Id. bole P letor. BUFFALOf. . ; n Kit Cat muriates the mirmer of UHiur ' I lY?! DR. PIERCE'S ) Fountain Xasal Injrclor, rt SiO Breslau Lots. '.' ' ; G.OOO LOTS V X6xVO jeet, or Sal in tkl CITY OF BRESLAU, at f0 pr Zot, 2,000 Garden Plots O IO Lot tack, at fOOjHr Ttot. The City of Breslau la located on the South Bid BaUroaJ of Long Island, aad ia known to be th moat enterprising place in tha State, having three churches, schools, several large manufactories, hotels, stores, etc, etc, and population of several thou sand inhabitant. Every one Enows Breslau, And those who dont, please call foi particulars on TUOS. TSTXWOOD. 15 Willoughby Street, Brooklyn. REMEMBER, $10 PER LOT. Title perfect and wasrantee deed given free of incumbrance, street opened and surveyed free of extra charge. Apply to THOMAS WEIWOOD, 15 Willoughby St., Brooklyn, L !., 4 No. 7 Beekman St, Rooms 56, New Tork City. Or to EDWARD SALOMON, 612 611 Chestnut St, Ml ly Philadelphia, Pa. 8TATIONA!:., ! A CLE AND A(,iwicui;ruuAL STEAM ENGINES. Oeseral ku fur RTtjgELL CO. Massillon Separators HORSE POWERS. mU. II011SE HAKES, HAY CU'lTEHS AND OTHER FIRST-CLASS FARM MACHINERY. HARBERT & RAYMOND. lH.'i5 Market Sfie t. rilll.ai.KLr'Bl a. a. neisiuo.u ' mm KEARNEY'S FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU, la th onlr Known Ifrtm-tiy fr I.rihf Di rftic antl ha tarwi CTry rp f Jialsftr 1c which It Wb fiv-u. IrriTati'in i f tli- Ncr ff the Blsuttltf and !nflammtiie cf tht Hi'lti, rirfimTiiMi uf the Kiiiu4 and lidiirr iirten tin f rrin. Ji-i uf th- I'nite (land, Motif in the 1 Luliler. (iraTrl. Urkk l)ut l-postt, nrt Mimiiii i r MHkT Irihaivr. t;J fr Ed (t-lilrtl auti iit-lii t onitutnuf both xe. altfinifd v. if b trie following vniptoin-: I-om ot INiwtff. Lo- ir 3l-tm.ry, F)iHiiulty of Dreatb hitr. Vfk Ntr. Wakefiilneta. Pain Id the IiM k. Klupiunr of ib Hotly. Kruii.ua oa th Face, i'l.iiMM i'tinlutDre, I-itui-of ttitST-trn, ric. I fKtl bj e4rnuna Ih the dtx-.tne r change of t!f: afif ronflarmeut vr Ubwr paiua, UtU-wH-tiiix io cbiMmi. etc. Iu many aflWtiona ppcnliar f Inilit. the El trai t but ha i untiaak-d hjr any mhe?r irmrijf Am in t'htoro-'tfi or KHention, lnvuiaritT, li ra brsii or Sap pr-tiua of CmU'raju7 Evacaatiana, I iTBtJ or iVhtrrua tate of the I'teniit, Leo rorrhtea nr Whit, tril.ty, and for all com plaint incident to lhs wi Jt i pnrtrrib?d f xttntrHir by the snout eimn-tit rbrmciana and Midwivra for enfrWrd and d4;ca!e constittt riooa of both exe and all at EABXEVS EXTRACT Btllll. Cwrtt JiMasew Atiinq from Impnt'Unea. 12 hit cf lH4 itkm, U., in all their etagf-a, at Uttlr esrMr. little or no chttngt in diet, no tn conrraieuce, and noecpoore. It eauiva a frrv Quent dewire, and (rtvt utrptiL'th to nrinate, thereby remoTing ObtttrarTiiHia. iTerentinif and Curing Strirtnrra nf tlie I rrthra, Allaying Pain aud Inflammation, aofreqnent inlhiarlaM of die eoace, audf xptUinall poiaoooaa nittr. KEAHXEY EX Til ACT BCCnr, $1.00 pr bottle or mx fo4t.t for 5 00, delivered to any addtea, itrrure from ulrvattoii. 9old by drUifOataevervwh-Ts. lvpart-d by KEAftNKY St t o. UH I uanrSt ,X. T. to whom ail toiler for Uifonoauoii anoutd be addrrid. AVOID QUACKS MO IMPOST. So Cfajga for Adrica aad GonMilUtioaX frr.J. it. ItyotK -rAef1J'ffrT$em Mntical CbUsQ. rhtladdphia, author of i-vera) Tainable workrt.can be conaultrd an all diaeaaea of the Sexual or Trinary Ikreaua, (which he haa made an vperil at tidy), either ia male or fnialr. nu nattvr fnna hai cauae orLnnarine. or of bow lung atandine. A practice of ito yeara enahlra him to treat diseases with suorre. rare gusr- snterd. Charges MsooaUe. Those at a dis tance ran forward letter describing syiuptmn, aad enckuslsg stsmp to prepay postage. Bend fur the (Vtnti to yeu.tA. l'r 11 cent. J. a UVlTT. M. D., Physicisn snd borwa, kX Duaae ttuKcw York. TritErl. Ice. HOOSB AND OiriCE lURxm-RB an kind Th. I. . n ,. . - - . . . . k i-, nnu.il I . T " . mm-itw. mw. new ana mecund hand in th (Mi. . lKVVIH Sc IIRfl.. -ls.ly 109, 10H, I will and 10S BIIKih AVE . Phils. THEA-KTCTAR DJ A PUKE IIIACIC TK A.. siththsOreenTeanaeae. War hntMl .n ... i, .il . . i- sale Terywhere. And for sal wholesale onlr by the Great t lantle A Pacific lea Co., ll Fal tna HI., snd 1 k 4 Cboreh at. N. V. P it. Boittut. bend for Thea xiectarcircniar. t-ni WM. H. BONER CO., MUSIC PUBLISHERS, DEALEK3 IN F0EZI09 A5D AMERICAS MUSIC, PIANOS, ORGANS, A MELODEONS. . ! (BUT HUT irurt HHILAriKLPHIA. JOB PRINTING SHOW CASES ! SHOW CASES I AQ tTle. Sll.vr jr.unteoT au,T V.lsut, new aid Mcond hand. Securely i.-ked for atupi'ing CoriTfJtS. BA111. SHKI.VIXO kStmuV a-re Zai ee t n r HsUTLT mOTJTKD AT THIS OITI01, Art ve rt iiiAie ntH. DYSPEPTIC CONSUMPTION Can. Dytprptie Consumption be Cured f H'e answer, YES! rirtC Remova all the aahealih mucous ih.t ealher. atwul Ike alU of loo atoMach ' from indigeatioB. I Heeoad. Produco aa actiTe eoolifioB of Uvor aad KiJaeys withoul Jepltng tho Yftem. Third Supply or aid aaturo ia furniahiag the draia of mim of tho eompoocBl pari thai ccaposo healthy fluida. Wo, from thousaada who h been eured. aasert that a curt caa U performed oa this theory. REHEDIES USED, Apart rrom our Office Practice. F1KST. THE GKKAT AMERICAN DYSPEPSIA PILLS, Remove the fungus mailer from the sto-sach, aad restore it to a healthy conditio. SECOND. THE PINE TREE TAR CORDIAL ! AeU ob tho Liver, heal" the Stomach, and asta on lis Kidneys and Nervous Syeiea. I For further advice, eall or writs j OR. L.Q.C. W188ABT,; 2S2 A'vrtA Seroni Street. i ADMONITION. It is koowa to all readers that siaes Da. L. Q. C. WISHART has followeJ ths cans sad cure of disease, and the great taIqo I TAR as a enratire remely. as directed tf Bishop Berkley aad Bee. John Wesley, that siany hare attempted to make a TAR prs paraUoa for TUROAT AND LCNO DIS EASES. Bo U koowa that Da. L. Q. C WISH ART'S P1HE TREE TAR CQRD14L Is the only remedy, from long experience, used by eur most skillful pbyaioians for Diptheria, Ulcerated Throat, Long, Kidney, Stomach. Asthma, aad General Debility, as veil as for Coughs, ColiU aad Long A (Too tles. inn. l n.c:. wish art. CONSTJLTnTS ECC-i-3 LSS ST022, j No. 32 N. SECOND ST , PHII.4DRI.rUlt. . . - . a . a ..... , . - - " v , Dr.J. Walker's (iilifuruU Vin- Ocar Uitfl'rs arc a imrt'ly VeetuMe prejiTiiiition. niult t-liu-dy fnrni llie Da tive herbs found mi the lower rangrs of tL-e Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, the mcdiriiial proiMirties of which are extracted tln'ietroin without the use of Alcohol. Tlie iiestion i3 almost daily asked. ' What i tint cause of tiie unparallt'icd 8urci'sj of Vinegar Kit teius?" Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, ami the patient re covers hia health They are the preat blood purifier and a lilc-giving principle, a jierfect Kenovator and Invigorator of the Bystem. Never before in the history of tbe wiirl.l ia a mediciue beon compoanihil poswAiine; the remarkable qaalities of Vi.eg IIittkbs in healing the sick of every disea man is beir to. Tbey are a pcutlu l'urzative a well as a Tuuie. rebeviug Congeftioa or Iuflamniation of tha Liver and Vwtral Orgnas, iu Biliooa Diseases. The properties of Dr. Walker's VlMEGAk liiTTKas are Aperient, Diaphorrtic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, biurvtio. Sedative. Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Altera tive, and Anti-Bilious. H. tl. MeUO.UALD eb C.. Drareiar and Gen. Aeta. San Fnwewee. Calir..nla. and oir. of H'aahmeton and ('harimn St N Y sHk all li-WBlt. and Dealers. FOR WHEAT AND GRA USE BARNYARD MANURE, ith a liberal utn.1 as far aa your iCPI"LT will go. THEN nxiSH OUT WITH BAUGH'S icaw-iio'i: Super - Phosphate. IsTlt will pay well em tl present prices uf Prodnee. llHh Year of Constant Use. gDALITT niOHIT I It PRO VKP A Nil err aw I l.l'kU. BAUCH & SONS. Sole Manufacturers. HT0KE8: SOSohIM t'ela fare Are., Vhituda and i OS JSotA Street, 1Saltnore. I ll-ana BLEES SEWING MACHINE the TTtrlil la neiiWUnnial wee. ' (Vllaud jxamias, sad for sgwaeia sad abwaten. Blnam.,ta, . BU1 X0fliTTI Monumental Marble Works, 1. 12 Street, abort Oborj, PHILADELPHIA. cAa. a CAarwirrrm. joanr irett loan. a. caarairraa. joa. ...r asslaaa, Iankasoaoa. Lock auiaal Ci3 Advertisements. EUGEIIE SCIIOEIIHIG'S CELEBRATED OF PERUVIAN BARK. i Tn Beelpo tor tam BUtare wa f oand uui if paper nf iDaaailnti phjatdan. a lnlo man. who loat hia Ufa, whan 104 Tears old, by a fall of hla kora BrrlpUiabBkf a profound aatret bf bis famll7 for mora Uxaa tbre oantarlea. Karmgau tola Umatnar made frequem ua of the Bitter, wafc rsndarwl tAem a atroBic anU lonn liTtne aet of peopla, anjojlnzcalIaiit neaitn. Originally tie aaeroc of prepaxlnf tola Blttar and ita wonderful tTacte,waa notalned br onoftholT kin. while part lei pall ag in kbe aamr ezpadirloae of the Spaniard n America, after a aolama protnlae. narer to dlmlire u btnwtb pr anted principal betr. THIS GENUINE SWEDISH BIT TERS ia B now omCed. Baeemeo rteeomlos Into pesua M .a-ti taoimnda ef aatmilanlea caraaafna. tiesu already f Iran ap by aaany phyatctana. and has prored itself sucn a powerful reetaratlT and prea. Tatl-T f "T. lnmT mnmmn iiaBiiB wimum Ilia TldUAl 1 HOW IT OPERATES. The edect of the Swedlalt Bttsra direct Itself, la the first place, to the taarrsa of tha tligsttlTO orgasa throanrbowi their satlra extent, bnt mainly to the stomach and the rlaoaral tract. Itnnrnnlli their fanctloca. and therrforsvaocordlna to the nature ef zlatlna irregularities or isauoeea ohstractloos and retentions of all kind, or at ops Oiarrhcaa, Oyssntsry, or other aiumoloiis oUaelasrgea and afBaria. By reeu latlajr tho abdominal organa. of which depend the aoorialiment, tlie ooneerrarjoo and the derelupemut of ti,, human body tho Swedish Bitter toTlgorale. th nerre and tlie Tllal powers, sharpen the seoaas ind the rt titTT-.Kih.te'K timi the acidly, tho Darning, s.nses sad pain of tha sta noach. tm proves its digestlrs faculties, and la an .i oellfat rTophjIactlo and remedy galn aenroo Irrv UUiily, natuleixry, Cboiic. Worma, Dropsy. & If taken ta double ana.aopratsssaaoxs aperietu. bat n and palnlaa way. Inoonawqueooaof tbese qualities of do Swedish Buttsetaejifnssnsof the saososiebr.t ad regie diss agaloat ill.ii of lbs eroas enntalned la the alwrrgmi. and of affacdoua lb K bH mankind to loo of said aUassaaw. Tboa the Bwsdisb Blt aa ttnamraaaii rsaosra tut coring Line Complaint of haul at.sdlnfc iaaadace. Dpala. Dlsordsrs of the Spleen, of lbs Fanerssa, of the M,ea ralo aiaoda, and ales dlaorder of the Kidney, of thm Urinary and Sexual-Organa. Besides these the awe dlah Bitter cure tho lnnnmerable nerrooe, or con geaciT atTection and diseases, which originate from said abdomlna disturbances, as:-CoagestloB of tha Longs, tho Heart, and the Brains. Coughs. Asthma, Headache. Neuralgia. In oUtfereot parte of the body. Chlorosis. Internal Usnsorrbolds aad Piles. Gout, Dropsy. Oeneral Debility, Hypochondriasis, ateavn choly, 4c, c Of great benefit too Swediaa Btitars haa also been found in the beginning of Osatnc sad intermittent FaTers. Bnt this is only one aide of Ita inestimable power of amterung those who ase tft regularly againat aU ail asmif4 aad epidemic rlifases The Swedish Bitter, has by long sjpeoeoce la assay tboMind cases maiav talned Ita great renown of being the most f euabte FRZSEBYATTVB AST) PROPHYLACTIC BEUEDT ! AOAKiST Ty hus, OrientalPest, Ship Fever, Yellow-Fever, AND ASIATIC GH0LEHA. The so parlor protsctire sod sanstlrs Ttrtoes of th Iwedlah Bitters afsinat afslarlons rsrera. Dyssnte.7 aad Cbolisa. wars most apparently tested In th late wars by Tiwaca and English physicians, who by pre serlbtnc the ansae so their respectiT troops, soa eseded In rsdnctnit the mortality list uf epidemic ifc asm from at to per cant. DIRECTIONS (rAn persona who hare to perform long and hard iabce. and while dolne It. are often erpod tu andvleu chaniree of temperature, or the draft or air, or obuov tone dnats, smells, or rapora, aooald not (ail to see tho Bwsdisfe Bitters, a a tew drops of It, added w their drtnk. are ufflcienl to preeerre thsm in tnreu mable has Ith and Thror. Those who are erenstoeaed to drink k-e water darlnc the an miner, ahonld noser omit to sdd scans Swedish Bitter to it. r rron rlren to eedentary Ufa ahonld use the Swedish Bitters. It will nautrallia tha bad .ffsct it their want of exercise in open air, and keep thsm in good health and good spirits. Is io the Ladles the Swedish Bitter most ssped. aSy be recommanded. Because tts ase contributes most amen Mally to piwaerre the regnlarlty of teephysjolo. EicaJ function, peculiar to tho delicate female coo stitntion aad .thus prorss sa sfisctoal barrier sgalnst those lnnnmerable Xerrons sad Blood Diseases, whli-b now-o-dsys haee grown so frequent ss to be taken by many for Eve's natural Inheritance) 19 Bat tho Swedish Bitten does not only aeeare good health; It also e sets the full derslopmeat of the female body, and of it beancy by perfect forma and tin eornplsrrtnn and color. Thna the Swediaa Bitters haa bsooms one of the safest and most sfVert COSMETIC AND TOILET ARTICLES 1st farmers and their famClea, who hare trlri Rasdlah Bitten, prefer It to all elmilar article, f or them It proves nsneflclal In vartooe ways. tn Summer, when their calling require) them t j oflea sadurs ths Intana heat of the sua, whils per forming hard work, they are induced to be not eui ndeatly cautious tn atirTlng tnelr burnlnr thrr bj water, or m eating fruit sot yet ripe, to. Thosfanc tag peopa. ars Tery liable to autler from son stroke. Er. Dysentery. Cholera, kc. ke. Th regular ess of tho Swedish Bitters makes those danreroue Intlu snos an harmless. In W!nlr. during the time of rest, many country tawplav trying to Indemnify thsmssires fur past prl. rations are very apt to often orsrlosd their koboscLs and thus impair their dtgestiT orrnsth rooc of thetTse.Tho nseeftho Swedish Bitters preien dlssssss from that sense. As a matter of sourss,m case of sickness, th PS Went should arold food not agreslcg with him or sojeh, ss I known, to b dlfflcalt to digest orassuK. aUs to the itt ws a la question. The rule: -B moderate la a!l yoe cat, drink or do," k strictly to he ehearred. HOW TO TAKE SWEDISH BITTERS Ths 'jwediak Bitter, ahal only be taken in thsab awnce uf inflammatory symntoms, Orown persona tska on Ublsspoonful three time per day, before or after niseis, pore or diluted with water. Persons snder years, two-thirds of that quanUtr " IA - one-half - ens-quarter - " Children from I year, spward. oneaiiihlb of thai quantity. fWaona snmstomed to chew tooseoo. should ab stain from tt a much aapoeelbla. white nalng Swe dish Btttn; they may subtltut eomo mowers of chammomlleor root of calamus, bnt then swallow the emlrta. Instead of ap;uln It away. Iatbeaamewey kafAln. n. -I ... . .... - """'n venj saoaaraiaiy be ptao. Persona afflicted wtttt dyspepsia most not sat hut mad or caksa, or fat or salt meats, bnt shooul take moderate uercl tn free .lr toui n; all audden chan. w of temperatnra, all hitemperanca tn eating snd drinking, and all endue mental excitement, by which they will contribute largely to the effectiveness of the Swedish Bitters. - K a-Should the Swedish Bitters not rait all tastes It may be taken with some eager, or can be diluted Ithsoms sugar-water or ryrnp. Haying sjnired by purchaaa ths recipe and the s ctueiT. right of preparing tbe Only Genuine owediah fcttern. heretofore prepared by Eugene Schosalng. U U. S. Army Surgeon, w hars, in order to free, trats fraud and deception, the name of . Schoanlng burnt into th laaa of each bottle and th enrelope around a marked by X. Bchoenlnii'. and by our own m" stottlm wttlwed thsss nwta ars rlos. DENIEL & CO., Bo. sS Xortn Third Street, Philadelphia. Pries psr atagm Bottle, W cents, nilf i lnisn. II old Whnlasil by Johnston. BoOow-ty Cowdan. em Area si a..i.j-irnlt gar . by all drug- SHUSH Ml 1TI1S,