Ag ri c ultnral . Tea Ccxtcbk nc Georgia. A corre pondeut of the Enrol Kew Yorker says: When the United State Government introduced the Chinese te plant (Thea Hohra) into thi eonntry, and distri buted thea by the aid of its Senators into various sections of the land, my father had fifty plants sent to him. They arrived in good order, growing in Pennine Chinese soil, and were from three to fonr inches high. We pnt them at once in larger pots, with fresh, rich soil around them, bat were very caref ol not to Jistnrb the bull of f-arth which unrronmU-d their roots. During the first summer, they were kept in partial rhade and watered freely whenever nece.sarv. They grew off beautifully, and by the next wiuter were from eigh teen tor twenty-four inches high, and looked very healthy. In the month of of January we planted them out in onr vegetal 4 gnrden, five feet apart each way. They grew remarkably well, not one dym", and stood both the cold of winter, nd the heat of summer as well ns onr rfiitjve plants. When three yesrs old, made onr first gathering of leaves. We had'the directions for the prepara tion of "tea, and were . particular in fol lowing tlit ra closely. We had none of the couveitiunces which are used in China, but trixl to- imitate them as nearly jw iNtssible. We plucked the leaves in tuo afternoon, and spread them ont on a table, nnlil next morning, then rubbed them in onr hands, and dried them in a common llutch oven, tii'ring all the time with the hands to prevent scorching the leaves. Each turn was dried five minutes, then taken out and rolled again. This process of rolling and drying was coutiuned nntil they appeared perfectly dry. It was then put in glass jars aud kept well se cured from the air. In about three Month's time we bepan using it, and were delistited with onr snncess. Of coarse all onr friends mnst have a draw ing and each one pronounced it most excellent. Since that time we have made onr own tea every spring, and consider it so far superior to the imported tea, that we find no pleasure iu drinking the latter. ; . . ' ; We niade quite a mistake in placing our tea plants five feet apart, for they have frown so large that it is impossible to walk between them, aud they are almnt ten feet high. These bushes j .rod nee seed every season in great abundance. From these seeds we now have between fifteen and twenty thous and plants of vanons sizes, and we con tinue to plant the seeds out every fall, as soon as they ripen. Many of them fall to the gronnd, and come up thickly under the parent tree. We have quite a crove set out. ten feet apart, and from these we are now collecting the most of onr leaves. The climate in this latitude suits them perfectly, and there is no more trouble in cultivating them than there is with the apple or peach. When a plantation is cnee established it lasts a life time, and after the bnshes are three rears old. they require only the weeds to be kept out of them for they shade around their roots so perfectly as to kill ont the grass. I f our Government would again lecome interested in making tea one of our staple productions, we would in a few years be quite independent of China production. Record op T11EF.S and rr.AJ.rs. It is suggested to onr horticultural friends the advantage of keeping an accurate record of every tree or plant on the grounds. A blank book of sufficient tiira to permit of the mapping of the different plantations and orchards as well as the lieds of roses and other hardy flowers, forms an invaluable reminder, liven where several varieties of fruits are grafted on one tree for testing the quality of each, the whole may bo kept traok of by simply indicating the gen eral direction of the various branches, and appending the names. A simple record of this sort will strengthen the desirable habit of accuracy, enable one to avoid vexations mistakes, and thus more than pay its slight cost of labor to say nothing of the satisfaction of knowing the name of the fruit tar.ted or the flower seen. Meat Tircix. In four gallons of water tit tonnds of coarse salt, one pound of brown sugar or one quart of biigar-honse syrup, aud fonr ounces of saltjsptrr are dissolved. The solution is to be boiled for half an honr, skimmed and strained. When qmte cold it is fionred over the meat, already packed iu a barrel or tub, having been pre viously rubbed over with a few handfuls of the nined and powdered ingredients. dry. As the meat is nsed out of the pickle other meat may be immersed in it. Having oeen previously rubbed as lefore mentioned. The longer the pickle is nsed the lietter it becomes, but it tnnst be boiled skimmed, and strained at least once rear, and be replenished with more salt, sugar, and saltpeter in the proper proportions. Fall Top JIressino. The Massachu setts J'lvughman savs: "Before the winter sets in for good it will be best to get ont all the manure that can be spared for this purpose and spread it freely on the mowing lots as top dres sing. If the land is not too hilly and uneven there is no danger of waste. while a good covering protects the roots of grass, mellows the surface and pro motes the growth of the crop next year. A top drestiing-mav be applied to advan- tage late in the fall, or immediately alter the crop is taken off, or in the spring, just after the grass starts. In the latter case, the rapid growth of the grass covers and protects it from the nun. But there is little or no loss by evaporation through the winter. IIosev Vrs-EGAR. The best of Vinegar can be easily and quickly made from houey. To twenty gallons of rain-water add live pounds of honey and two gal lons of eider vinegar. If the weather is warm, or it be kept in a warm room or cellar, it will be tit for use in a few weeks. More vinegar added wonld hasten the process. Every family that Keeps Dees should be aiue to have good vinegar all the time. After a barrel is once made, honey and water may be added as the vinegar is nsed, so as to always keep it nearly fulL The barrel should never be entirely full. Willow CrrrctGS. The best time for planting willow cuttings, either large or small, is very early in Spring. Ko kind of cuttings will endure being set in water ; and notwithstanding the wil low loves moisture, it will rot off as quickly as do other species of trees in the prematnre cntting state. Flant the cnttings or trees well np on the higher and dryer portions of the bank ; never fear bnt what the roots will find the water as soon as needed, consequently protecting the bank alluded to. A newspaper correspondent calls at tention to the great convenience that wonld follow if the farmers would gen erally have their names painted on the gates at the entrance to their premises. Strangers often have much difficulty in finding the residence of persons of whom they are in search, which wonld be obviated by this course. The name may be neatly prints on a slip of tin six or eight inches wide, which could be easily tacked on the gate. Salt as a Febttlizer. The office of silt as an agent in the culture of the soil is to make the earth moist and cooL Hence its effect is more clearly seen on light sandy soils. On wet, heavy clays, and in a damp season it will do no perceptible good. The pro portion to apply is abont one pound per rod, or one hundred and sixty-four pounds per acre. Scientific. A Mm. Alum earth, a mineral deposit in the brown coal formation. The alum slate is a dull earthly black slaty mineral, of specific gravity 2 4; it contains some bituminous matter and fossil remains, and is found in England, the Netherlands, and Prussia. - The alnm stone, called alunite, of obtnse rhombic form and white color. It has a vitreous and pearly luster, yielding : alumina 14 per cent, sul phuric acid 23 per cent, silica 24 per cent, potash 4 per cent, water 2 per cent ; total, 100. In 18GG, I found it between the gneiss and granite, in an efflorescent state, at First avenne and 51st street. New York. The mineral is fonnd in lava and trachytic rocks at Talfa near Rome, in Hungary, and in Auvergne, France. This material was used 1,000 years ago for producing the alnm, and is called the Roman alum. The alaminite, fonnd abundantly in Prnssia at Ilalle, and at Epernay in France, is also called websterite, and eontaiua alumina 30 per cent, sulphuric acid 21 per cent, water 40 per cent. It is white and opsone : it adheres to the tonirue. and has a specifia gravity of 20. It is rather abundant in the locali ties named. The many applications of alnm in the arts are due to the alumina having great affinity for many coloring and other vegetable matters, for gelatin, etc ; and in the preparation of lakes, it forms an insoluble precipitate of alumina with vegetable colors. It is also nsed in preparing white leather by its action on gelatin, for clarifying water, as an ad dition to paste nsed by bookbinders, for preventing the depredations of in sects, in fireproof safes as a filling, etc. Alnm has been descrilted by authors as early ss I'liny and Dioscoridea. IJoer haave gives a very extensive description of it, and says : Alnm is a real fossil, proenred either from a hard flaky stone, fonnd deep in the ground, and so pregnant with sul phur and bitumen as easily to take fire or form bituminous and combustible earth, which yields a noxious flame and a snlphnrons stench. If exposed for a montk in the open air, it crumbles into powder, and thus becomes disposed for the generation of alnm, which before it was not. If dissolved in water, it may be precipitated by adding a hied or volatile alkali ; and it then prodnces new salt, which is the alkali and the fossil matter together. In England. Italy, and Flanders, alnm is principally Eroduced. lie also says "that alnm as a sharp, rough, styptic taste. Its crystals are octagonal, fonr of the sides being hexagonal, and the other fonr triangular, surfaces. In Italy (at Ui vita ecchia and at Solfatara, near Patella), the alnm is manufactured from the na tural substance in snmmer time. Let me add a few words more about alum and its physical and medicinal properties. Alum ia a white, slightly efflorescent salt, it crystalizes easily in octahedrons, but may be made to crys talize in cubes, if an excess of ammonia is added to the solution, which must be carefully evaporated ; it dissolves in warm water, say in three fourths of its weight of boiling water. It is insoluble in alcohol, and has a specific gravity of 1'71; it reddens litmus, and changes the tints of the bine petals of plants to green ; it assumes an aqueous fusion when heated to 212 Fah. Exposed to red hent, it gives off oxygen with snl phnrons acid. It forms pyrophorous when calcined with fine charcoal, and spontaneously forms an inflammable substance. There are several varieties known in commerce, among others, the lioche alnm, which originally came from Rocca in Syria, of a pale rose color ; and the Roman alnm, which has always been considered as the purest. Five thousand tnns are still annually manu factured. Alum is incompatible with the alka lies and their carbonates, lime and lime water, magnesia and its carbonate, tar trate of potash, and acetate of lead. It is an astringent and antispasmodic ; in large doses, it is purgative and emetic. In cases of hemorrhage, sweats, dia betes, chronic dysentery and diarrho a, it is nsed as an astringent. It is nsed as a purgative in the painters' and ner vous colics. Alnm is also sometimes used for the adulteration of bread, with a view to increase the whiteness, but in very small doses. It may be stated, in conclusion, that a great many minerals, known by min eralogists as oxygen compounds, the nnisiQcates, hydro-silicates, and some bisilicates, contain the oxide of alumi num or alumina as one of the component parts. 1 he family known as zeolites, such as lanmonite. natroute. analcite. mesolite, scolecite, thorn peonite. gmel- inite, phillipsite, harmotome, stilbite and many more of this class each con tain from 20 to 30 per cent of alumina, pachnolite 25 per cent, and stanrolite 50 per cent. Kyanito contains CI per cent. Several mineral springs in the United States, in Virginia, contain the alum in solution from 20 to 70 per cent, and are nsed in medicine. I may say that alumina exists in the most common as well as the most pre cious minerals. White clay or kaolin is found in many localities iu the United States to a very large extent. I have visited many deposits in Vermont, near lirandon, in Massachusetts, in 1 eunsyf vania, at Jacksonville, Ala., and in South Carolina. At Bath I saw large deposits of a fine quality, and 10,000 tnns are annually brought to this city tor papermakers use. At Aiken, . U. large deposits are yet undeveloped. At Perth Amboy, various qualities have been dug out for the last 50 years from strata 20 feet thick. It is found in the coal, tertiary, metamorphic and older formations, b tour bridge clay, so in dispensable for glass pots, is principally brought from England. Alum is a very importantbranch of commerce. England prodnces annually 10,000 tuns, and Ger many 10,000 : and in the United States about 5,000 tuns are manufactured. Scientific American. A simple method for iliustratincr the production of cold ty evaporation is described as follows : The neck of a bottle filled with liquid bisulphide of carbon is closed with cork, throngh the center of which a small hole is pierced. Into this hole roll of blotting-paper is inserted, so that the upper end shall project above the cork, while the lower enters the inclosed liquid. Owing to the porosity of the paper, the liqnid ascends ; bnt, as it is of an ex tremely volatile character, it no sooner enters the atmosphere than rapid eva poration takes place, and the moisture contained in the surrounding air is at once precipitated in the form of hoar frost upon the sides of the bottle and the exposed slip. If the snpply of bisulphide is kept np, it will result in the formation upon the summit of the bottle of a pccnliarly-shaped mushroom like mound of fret. If the bottle be inclosed in the sides of a glass or other vessel, there will be formed noon the floor of the vessel series of cone-like mounds, similar to cave stalagmites. Water-Telesoopks. The fishermen of Norway carry in their fishing-boats a water-telescope or tube three or four feet in length. They immerse one end in the water, and then, looking intently through the glass, they are enabled to perceive objects ten or fifteen fathoms deep as distinctly as if they weie within a few feet of the surface. Hence, when they discover plenty of fish, they sur round them with their large draught nets, and often catch them in hundreds at a haul which, were it not for these telescopes, would frequently prove pre carious and unprofitable fishing. This instrumebt is not only used by the fishermen, but it ia also found in the navy and coasting vessels. Domestic. Htackths ei th Hocse. A very small pot will answer for the hyacinth. Some prefer to plant three or fonr in large pots and this will make's very pretty ornament. Cover only the lower half of the bnlbs with soil, press them down nntil they are nearly covered, then water nntil the soil is moistened thoroughly and set the pots in a cool, dark cellar. The roots will there form, with but little growth of top. Here they may remain for several weeks, and a pot or two at a time can be token into a warm, light room, for flowering, a a week or ten days apart and a succes sion of flowers obtained during the winter. When hyacinths are planted in the garden, and well covered, the roots get a good start in the fall and winter ; and it is very important in llowering them in the honse that the growth of roots shonld be first encouraged in the way recommended. When placed in glasses of water for flowering, the base of the bnlb shonld not quite touch the water. Fill the glasses with well wateT, and as soon as the flower buds appear, Rprinkle the plaut freqnehily with rain water. Set them away for about two weeks in a cool, dark room, until roots are formed ; then remove to a light moder ately warm room, and give plenty of light and air. Keep hyacinths in the coolest room yon have, anything above freezing will answer, and near the light. Flowers of the hyacinth are often ruined by bringing them into a very hot, dry, nnventilated room. Our plan is to keep a stand containing onr stock of hyacinths in the parlor or hall, which is kept most the time bnt a few degrees above freezing! From this room they are taken as needed one or two of each color to the sittingroom or the dining room for special occasions, but always returned te their cool quarters for the night By this method they not only flower well, bnt keep in bloom a long time. Change the water occasionally, if it becomes discolored. A New Floral Orsaitext. A writer in Las Monde suggests a new idea for floral decoration, which, it seems, may be readily put in practice. An ordinary earthenware flower pot is filled with water, the hole in the loltom being closed, and allowed to stand until its porous sides are completely soaked. The watei is then thrown ont, and the pot is repeatedly dipped nntil it will absorb no more, and its outside becomes thoroughly wet On the outer surface fine seed is thickly sprinkled and al lowed to remain sticking thereto. The pot is then refilled with water, and set in the shade nnder a bell glass. In a short time the seeds will germinate and throw out shoots, so that, to prevent their falling from the sides of the pot, some thread or wires must be repeatedly wound aronnd the exterior of the latter. Eventually the entire vessel will become a mass of living vegetation, which is nourished by the percolationif the water contained within throngh 'the porous sides. A non-porons recoptaclo may also be nsed, but some thick cloth must be wound abont its exterior and the seed sprinkled thereon. This cloth is kept continnaiiy moist uy repeated appiica tions of fresh water. The Decoration of Carpets. A car pet shonld convey the thought of flow ers, for ,-t is pleasant to associate flow ers with the floor on which we tread ; barrenness and fertility strangely con trast, and the verdant or flowery path is that which we like to tread. Bnt a floor is a flat surface, and, while the thought of flowers is pleasant, no one with a rightly-constitnted mind would like to walk throngh flower-beds or over the well-arranged parterre. Hence, while the decoration of a carpet should awaken the thonght of -flowers in the beholder, it should not imitate a plant or any combination of plants, bnt shonld be a consistent floor decoration, so skil fully arranged as to be truly and simply what it pretends to be, and yet sncli as will call np the greatest number of plea sant memories. Beef Tea forhig Sn-k. Take a new tin fruit can. with a tight fitting lid, Put in it three pounds of thick, juicy. round steck, carefully trimmed of all fat, and cut in pieces tho size of a hazelnut, without any water, and place the lid on tight, pnt it in a hot oven, let it remain three-quarters of an hour, or until it tastes cooked. If the oven is very hot it will burn on the bottom before the juice conies ont, if not hot enoutrb. the meat will all shnvel up. When baked enough, take a spoon and press every bit of juice out of the meat, while it is in the tin fruit can, throw meat away and set jmce aside to cool, then skim it of all grease, heat as much as is required on top of the stove, and season with salt Reai-tv and Economy. It is not only money that is wanted to secure beauty for our surroundings. Ingcnnity and taste will do wonders, as it did lately with some wooden bowls, bought for few pence at the village shop, and painted black, which being deftly covered with colored pictures, filled np empty spaces, and showed to advantage as a background to old china on an oak cabinet Virgin cork is one of the most inex pensive as well as one of the prettiest decorations forconservatorieaorwindo boxes. Fifty cents' worth will convert an old lox into a very presentable re ceptacle for flowers. Recipe for Good Black Ink. Aleppo galls (well bruised. 4 ounces, clean soft water 1 quart ; macerate in a clean corked bottle ten days or two weeks, with frequent agitation. Then add gum arabic (dissolve in a wineglass full of water) 1 ounces, lump sugar I ounces. mix well and afterwards further add snlphateof iron (green copperas) crushed fine, 1 ounces ; agitate occasionally for two or three days ; then decant for use, bnt it is better to let the whole digest together two or three weeks. Product one quart, pale at first bnt soon turning intensely black. Maccaront is a very snitab'o Winter dish, and is prepared as follows ; lireak into pieces an inch long the best Italian ma-caroni ; stew till it ia soft, then lay in a dish with alternate layers of butter and cheese cut into small pieces. Add pepper and salt to taste, a cup of milk, and bake in a moderate oven till it is well browned. Good Corn Dodgers. Two eggs, one quart of buttermilk, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of soda, one teaspoon ful of salt, one enp of graham flonr, Indian meal enongh to make a stiff batter, so it can be lifted out in spoonfuls and dropped upon buttered tius, and will stand np like bnscnit A Trot editor took his wife to Xew York on Friday. The condnctor, when he came along, recognized onr Troy brother as entitled to free passage, but, not knowing the lady, whispered to him, "Is this lady a friend of yours ?" ".No, no," said the Troy editor, in haste, Nice Spice Cars. One cup of mo lasses, one cup of sugar, oue enp of butter, one enp of sour milk, one ege. one teaspoon! ul of soda, one teaspoon fnl cinnamon, one-half teaspoon ful of cloves half a nutmeg, and fruit if yon choose. To M 4KB Hard Water Soft. One ounce of fresh quick-lime dissolved in water, will soften two barrels of ordi nary hard water, and render it fit for washing purposes. Humorous. The Weather. I shall not say any thing here about the importance of this subject We all know how unbearable society would be without it how tame and commonplace would become Leaven as J earth in its absence. I merely wish to call the attention of the reader to the care that has been taken in selecting the weather for this book. Being warned by last season, I have put in plenty of rain, which will be found to arrive jnst in the nick of time. I have dealt lightly in thunder storms I find they are not popular and I have such an antipathy to lightning-rod men that I lose no opportunity to injure them. I have lcen rather liberal with Pnow, for the sake of the yonng and livery stables, nd have put in some extra ordinary hail, for the encouragement of the oldest inhabitant, ami a little frost, to stir np the amateur in tobacco aud other varieties of cabbage. But accuracy is the btrong point of the volume, hen it says, "liook ont for rain," then is the time for yon to "hnmp yonrseir for the house. And when it eavs "Frost." any delay in getting your wife's father's coat over the tomatoes and dahlias will prove emi nently disastrous to those articles, i es, I have aimed to be acenrato, looking more to the personal comfort and gene ral information of my patrons than to the plaudits of a wicked world an J gold, which perish in a day, I am told. I have not lost sight of the fact that I have a formidable and unscrupulous opposition at Washington. Bnt trusting to an honest purpose, a discriminating public, and eight years of promiscuous trusting as the editor of a country news paper, I shall press steadily on and hurt that Washington chap. Danbury Jcws. Some gentlemen were talking about meanness, when one said he knew a man on Lexington Avenne who was the meanest man in Aew lork. "How mean is that ?" asked a friend. "Why, so mean that he keeps a live-cent piece with a string tied to it to give to beggars. and, when their backs are tnmed, he jerks it ont of their pockets. Why, this man is so mean," continued the gentle man, "that he gave his children ten cents a piece the night before the Fourth of July ; bnt during the night, when they were asleep, he went npstairs, took the money ont of their clothes, and then whipped them in the morning for losing it 1" "Does he do anything else ?" "les ; the other day I dined with mm. and I noticed the poor little'servant girl whistled all the way np-stairs with the dessert, and when 1 asked my generous friend what made her whistle so happily. he said, "Why, I keep her whistling bo she can t eat the raisina out of the c:iic ! A gentlem an built a wing to his house consisting of a cellar, a library on the gronnd floor, and a bedroom above. He asked the opinion of a fnend about it. who replied: "My dear fellow, I am sorry to see yon have lost your senses." "How ?" exclaimed the other. "Why a bon vivant and a literary man, as you are, to read over your wine and to sleep over your books. Jfrsic nvrn Charms. Old Gentleman "I knew I was getting deaf as I could not hear the hnniming of the mosqui toes trnest conld. Yonng Lady "Then lhey conld only bite yon, but they would sing to liirrt, and bite him to a pretty tune." Old Gentlemen "Ah! maybe he was fond of mnsic ! In Switzerland there is a law which compels every newly married conple to plant six trees immediately ofter the ceremony, and two on the birth of every child, lhey are planted on commons. and near the road, and being mostly fruit trees, are both usefnl and orna mental. The nnmler planted amounts to ton thousand annual I v. "Unless yon give mo aid," said a bogcar to a benevolent lady, "I am afraid I will have to resort to something which I greatly dislike to do." The lady handed him a dollar, and compas sionately asked, " hat is it, poor man, that I have saved yon from j" "Work," was the mournful answer. A nooo l.iuv wln on the death of her first husband married his brother, has a portrait of the former hanging in her dining-room. One day a visitor, re marking the painting, asked, "Is that a member of your family ?" "Oil ! that's my poor brother-iu law," was the iuge- neous reply. A tows in Massachusetts is the proud possessor of a cat that picks np pins and puts them iuto a paper, whenever she tinds one. After getting a hundred, she exchanges them for meat at the butcher's. The likelihood of this tale is its chief beauty. One can't help be lieving it Delicacies of ttte Season. Lady (to Jeames, who has brought np a note) "Did yon ask the young person to take a seat?" Jeames "Beg pard'in, m'lady, she'd hevidently been eatin' o' onions ; so I as'd her to be s'good as to wait ontside!" Co nsol ation. Honsemaid "I'm soriy to hear yon've lost your nncle, Mary." Mary "Yes, it was quite sudden. P t aiu't it a real comfort as I got that black dress, instead of tho green one yon wanted me to buy 1" CoMTLniENTART. ne "Don't you think, now, these are vewy dweawy par tics, where the only pawties one meets are pawties one never knows." She "Xot more dweawy than other pawties, where the only ones one knows are no-ones. "Does the train start this evening nt thirty-five minntes past six, as usual ?" asked an elderly lady of a railroad em ploye. 2so, it leaves at twenty-five minntes to seven," was the reply. "Dear me, dear me, how they do change these trains 1" "Sru, said the astonished landlady to a traveler who had sent his enp for ward for the seventh time, "you mnst be very fond of coffee ?" "Yes, madam, I am," he replied, "or I should never have drank so much water to get a little." - A vert dull person once succeeded in raising a laugh after the following fash ion : When a witty neighbor set the table in a roar, he exclaimed, as the laughter subsided, "By Jupiter, I would have said that myself, if I had only thonght of it" Two Qtaker girls were ironing on the same table. One asked the other what she would take, the right or the left T She answered promptly, "It will be right for me to take the left, and then it will be left for thee to take the right" The poet Saxe sent this sentiment to a friend the other day : I Too have heard ef th enak In the ft," my vy 01 hip t--rnw iiaKr ui tie mw ; l:ut now yon nitwt kuuw, .Mtr.!enif fix- I 1" m nliak ol diflrt-ent rl.iM Alma! 'lis Um; vtuomoiw eli&kt'iii ltie fil.As ! 1 A rmiENOLOoisT told a man that h- had Combativeness largely develoiied. ".No. said the other. "1 have not : nm! if yon say that again, I'll knock you down I" Tms man most likely to make his mark in the world one who can not write his own name, 3xiscellanj-. 9Irs. Brownins. "Mrs. Browning and her writings claim affectionate commemoration on the part of those who knew her person ally, and consider the hifrh place she mast ever hold among tue reengnizt?d poetesses of this country. Ia the first class only five can le namd Joanna Bailiia and Miss Mitfonl, in right of their tragedies (the former, too, one of (treat Britain's most exquisite lyrists) ; Mrs. Hemans, themnsical, high-hearted and impassioned; and herself less complete in execution, it may be, than the three women of genius already named, bnt bolder in imagination and deeper in learning, with a wider (and wilder) flow of insr-imtion than any of those with whom she is hero classed. She has a place of her own rare.noble, daring, and pnre beyond reproach in the Golden Book of gifted women. There has been only one since, Adelaide Anne Proctor, less ambitions, perhaps, than her predecessors, but, as a lyrist, more complete, more delicate not less original, therefore, than any among them, whose verses have a beauty and a finish that owe nothing to any model. "It mnst Iks at least thirty years ago that 1 was startled by a new pleasure a published ballad, signed, I think, with only initials in TheXetn Munthln Mwjazinr. 'The Romannt of Margret' I got it by heart ; if I copied it oueo, I copied it ten times, and must have made myself a nuisance, ns immature enthusiasts are apt to do, by talking of it, in season and out of season, as an appearance of a strange, seizing, origi nal genins. I was doubted and put aside accordingly, iu obedience to Eng lish law and usage, which (as it were) make us set our teeth and lean our backs against the door whenever the same is to be opened to a real novelty. The chance, however, that brought me to the knowledge of that munificent man and indulgent friend, John Ken yon, Miss Barrett's relative, brought wo also the privilege of writing to one whom I so sinccrsly admired, and of being on the list of those to whom ehe was willing to write. "Iu those days, no other interconrse was possible ; for she was an invalid thought to bo a helpless one as such, not to be intruded ou ( were the candi dates as persevering, gifted, and charm iug as the American 'interviewers') save by a very few old friends. "Her letters ought to be published. In power, versatility, liveliness, and Jim isr, iu perfect originality of glance, anu vigor 01 grasp at every topic of the honr ; in their enthusiastic preferences, prejudices, and inconsistencies, I have never met with any, written by men or by women, more brilliant, spontaneous, and characteristic. This was it form of conversation. I have never done a duty more against tho grain than in re storing those addressed to me to their rightful possessor the true poet whom 6he married, after an intimacy suspected by none save a very few, nnder circum stances of no ordinary romance, and in marrying whom she seenred for the residue of her life an emancipation from prison and on amount of happiness de lightful to think of, as falling to the lot of one who, from a darkened chamber, had still exercised such a power of de lighting others. It was more like a fairy tale than any thing in real life 1 have ever known, to read, one morning, in the papers, of her marriage with the author of 'Paracelsus,' and to learn, in the course of tho day, that not only was she married, bnt that she was absolutely on her way to Italy. Tho energy and resolution implied were amazing on the part of ono who had long, as her own poems tell ns, resigned herself to lie down and die. I cannot recollect when I hsve been more moved and excited by any surprise, beyond a circle of my im mediate hopes aud fears. "EveTy letter of hers from Fl-ircnce told me of one prospect after another brightening, of one hope after another fulfilled told with a piquant originality and prejudice not to be over-stated nor under-praised. "I never me.t Mrs. Browning face to face till after her return to England. The time is too recent for me to tell lutw we met ns correspondents who had become friends. And her indul gent friendship never failed me to the last, in Fpite of serions differences of opinion concerning a matter which she took terribly to heart the strange, weird qnestion of mesmerism, including tlairroianrc. To the marvels of these two phenomena (admitting both as in complete discoveries) she lent an car as crednlous as her trust was sincere and her heart high-minded. But with wo men fur more experienced in falsity than ono so noblo and one who had been so secluded from the world as herself, after they hnve once crossed the threshold, there is seldom chance of after-retreat Only they leconie Iks wildercd by their tenacions notions of loyalty. It is over these very best and most generous of their sex that impos tors have the most power. They are no matches, as men are, far those misera ble creatures who creep abont with in sinuating manners, and would pass off leger demain, the tricks of cup aud ball, for real, portentous discoveries. "I have never seen one more nobly simple, more entirely guiltless of the feminine propensity of talking foreffect, more earnest in assertion, more gentle, yet pertinacious in difference, than she was. Like all whoso early nurture has chiefly been from books, she had a child's curiosity regarding the life be yond her books, co-existing with opin ions accepted as certainties concerning things of which (even with the intuition of genins) she could know little. She was at once forbearing and dogmatic, willing to accept differences, resolute to admit no argument ; without any more practical knowledge of social life than a nun might have, when, after long years, she emerged from her clois ter and her shroud. How she nsed her experiences as a great poetess, is to le felt andis evinced in her 'Aurora Leigh," after every allowance has been made for an ex'reme fearlessness in certain passages of the story and forms of ex pression, and that want of finish in exe cution with which almost all her efforts are chargeable." Memoirs of Ihnry Fothcryill L'horlcy. In answer to a complaint of the price of eg, a grocer took occasion to ex plain that it was on account of their scarcity because of the panic, and upon the customer protesting that she could not see the connection between the two. he further explained that owing to the general depression tho hens were run ning on tail time, bue took the eggs. Pimples, Ernptions, Rongb Skin. The svsem being put under the in fluence of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for a few weeks, the skin be comes smooth, clear, soft, and velvety, and being illuminated with the glow of perfect health from within, true beauty stands forth in all in its glory. Nothing ever presented to the public as a bcan tifier of the complexion ever gave such satisfaction for this pnrpose ss this Discovery. The effects of all medicines which operate npon the system throngh the medium of the blood are necessarily somewhat slow, no matter how good the remedy employed. While one to three bottles clear the skin of pimples, blotches, ernptions, yellow spots, come dones, or "grabs," a dozen may possi bly be required to cure some cases where the system is rotten with scrofu lons or virulent blood poisons. The cure of all these diseases, however, from the common pimple to the worat scrofula is, with the nse of this most potent agent, only matter of time. Sold by all Druggists. COVEEED WITH ERUPTIONS. CTREIX Claverack, Columbia Co., X. Y. Dr. B, V. Pierce, Bnffilo, X. Y.: Dear Sir I am sixty years of age, and have been afflicted with Salt Eheum in the worst form for a irreat many years, until, accident ly, I saw. one of your books, which described my ease exactly. 1 bought your tiolden medical Discovery and took two bottles and a half, nnd was entirely cured. From my shoulders to my hands I was entirely covered with ernptions, alo on face and body. I was likewise atllicted with Bhcumatism, so that I walked wiih great difficulty, and that is entirely cured. May God spare yon a long li fc to remain a blessing to mankind. With untold gratitnd, 7 Mns. A. W. WiLLTtus. YlNTOAR BlTTEItS. D. J. WaLKTR, 3 regular practicing physician of Califor nia, has conferred a priceless boon upon mankind, by the introduction of a "Bitters" compounded from herbs ex clusively, which may be truly said to be superseding all others, and is becom ing a bitter dose indeed for the charla tans and quacks, on account of its im mense sale and- universal popularity. Xot only are these Vinroar Bitters, as he calls them, an invaluable tonic aud alterative, bnt they are acknowledged as a standard Medioine, and the aston ishing rapidity with which they enre diseases hitherto declared incurable, seems almost incredible. After having been carefully tested, they are kept on hand in thousands of households, and nsed for any and every form of disease, many relying npon them in preference to the most celebrated physicians. They have become a recognized ''Family Bcmedy," and properly so. ' . 25 i Important to Sufferers. The great est benefactor is one who relieves pain and cures disease. Dr. Silsbek has accomplished both by his miraculous discovery of Anaeesis, an absolutely easy, rapid and infallible cure fur I'lLES iu all stages. All Din-tors en dorse it, and 20,000 enred sufferers tes tify to iU virtues. It is a simple sup pository acting as an instrument sooth ing poultice and medicine. The relief is instant and enre certain. Price S1.00. Sold by Druggists everywhere, and sent free by mail from DerK)t, 40 Walker St, Xew York. 2 It is now generally admitted by hon est physicians, that when once the con sumption is fairly fastened npon the lungs, no human power can save the patient from death. They also say that abont fifty par cent of those who die from this disease can tra-e the cause to a neglected cough or cold, which might have been enred by a small bottle of Liquid Opodeldoc, or what is the same thing, Jolmson't Anodyne Liniment. Cut this notice out and bring it with yon. We are authorized to refnnd the cash to any person or persons who shall buy and use 1'arsons' L'uryalive L'ills, and fail of relief and satisfaction. 2 The noblest aim of science is to re lieve human snffering. Its highest tri nmpb. is fonnd in Du. Hickman's Ehec matio Elixir, a remedy of the highest character and standing. Acute or chronic Eheumalim, O'out, and all aches and pains which are csused by the above diseases, rive way before its beneficent power. For sale by all re spectable Druggists. Price $1. If your Druggist has not got it, take no other, bnt send $1 direct to the Side Proprietor and Manufacturer, Dr. Wu. n. Hick uan, :nJ South Second St, Philadel phia, Pa. Also Manufacturer of Dr. Hickman's Eleitrio FtnD for Xcural yia, Lfi adwhe and Tootharhc. Tape Worm ! Tape Worm I removed In T"w honr with harmtra V.-?etalte Mi.ilt'liiiv No f.- axkfl nntil tti rDttr worm, with h.-ail. K-ft-r t!aw atll i-t-il Ut rt)iliit f l uilaii'-lplna wliorn I liave riin-l. that had Im-uon-urrf-luliy trt-atM at tln Jt tl.-rjn Atp-uVml r.il-ee. ni T-itth Htrtt't : Ua.t t&k.-u in vaiu tnnMttuit, the mi-i!W T!n"-. nl all known rrtiH-lis. Ir. K. F. Kimk.-l, i"- North Ninth trNt. I-tii!a.!el.lua. '1'h liot-tor hne he-n in Iusiimh 1-T over Iwenty-flve yam, anil v irtWtly re!iM fall ami Alvi-e Vr.- Kt'iuovr.1 t,ii worm front a rbil-l six 7ara ol 1 measuring fi-et. At hm onVe ran -n riiiit-ii.. m- of Iht-in ovrr f--t in k-tifftn, whi.-h have l-.-n remove! iu lew than throhAnrx hv takinif one fto of his nieiln-inf. lr. Klinkel'a treatment m nintotr. tut aii'l iMrfectly reliable, ami no fee until the worm. W'th he nl.,aen. lir. K. Kunbet, North Ninth ctrt--t. I'miatlelnuia, i'a. Cuusult tioa uv mail, or at o!!k-e. lre Advertisements. OOO Or Sagrar-Cnated, Coneentrnlril, Root and Herbal Juirr, Anti r.illon Crannies. TITF. "I.1TTI.K CIA'TTATIIART1C or Maltum in Parvo Pbynic. Trio noTf-lty of modern Jfediral. rVmifal and rhirtuareiitiral Scit-ncR. No ue id any uti;er taking the lar-jc. repulsive and nauteotm inK eomiad of cheap, crude, and bnlky iin-edinit. wli'-n we cut hy a careful application ol chemical fcience. extract ail ttm cataariic and oOmt mii cinl prorertit from ibe m.Kt valuable roof ami heru-i, and conorntraU! ihem into a niinnte i .jku nie. ncarrtiir larirr than a mamard Meed, llMt can be readily awailowed by thoveui the needion-itivn Momach and failidionP ta;d. tacii little Pnrcative lcllrt reprrvratr. iu i mo-a conceit tnu-d lono, a- ninctt cathartic power as i-4 embodied in any of the lari pill fonnd fcr lle in tile dnl-j shops. From their wonderful ca thartic power, in proiortion to their Mz. peopla who have not tried tficra are apt to nppoee Uiut they are trir-h or drastic ia effect, but each ) not at all the ce. the Jincrent active tne-jicwal prin-ci;t-- of vrhich Hi -V are com ; lowed If ifif ao tiar-luomz-'d and mo i'aed, one hy th others, aa tn produce it nmt ftcarrhlntr and t h or on .-t nt-u.Iraud kindly operating cathartic $500 lie ward! 1 herc'iy off-Ted hythc pro prietor of these rclletet to any chemist who, ujion analy-is. will find in them any Calomel or other fonua ol mercury or any vther numeral pji-n. Rclnz entlrciv vesMaMe. no pirttcnlar care is required while otn them. Tliey ope rate without dirtnrtMince to the contitntion. diet, ornccupation. r'or Janudicr, Headache, Conatipntion. Impure f'lniid, lain ill the Miouldcr, TicVTliteim of the t'heot, Vizziiiraa, Sonr I.ructationa of tho Mo marti, Had tattle In month, Hilton nttarka. Pain In rc-siou of Klduefk,lulerual Fever, Rlualcd feeling about Momaelt, Knoll of Illood to Head. II lib Col. ored I rlne, 1 tor iubiiily and liloomy forobodln, take Or. Pirrre'o Plraant Pnrwallve IVllet. In explanation of th remedial puwer of ny I'nr eative I'e'Jets over o treat a variety of disease, I wi-h to say that their anion npon the animal economy l uni veraal, not a ClauJ or titKUO car-aping- their an na tive Imprefr. A -re does not imair them; their u 'ar-cnatir. and bein? enclosed in irlaa bottle preserve their virtnea unimpaired lor any lenirth of time, in any climate, eo that they are al wavs fren and reliable, which ia not the ras with the pill fonnd in the droit stores, pnt np in chHT wtod or pate-board boxes Recollect that frail discves wbfre a Laxative, Altera, live or Purrntlve la Kidicated. these- little I'eil't will Kiietuemoet peifoct MtuCactii-a to all who nsetucm. They are aold hy all enterprising DrngeiM at i cruu a buttle. To not s!ow any nrntrris to ladnee vtj to take aiiyTtn.r e'-e that l.e T.ij y is just as COo! as nT petl' T hecan- he Bia&r a I iTre pro'it on t'-at wui he reemnmende. If im:t dm: M cannot sen;Uy them, er-close S5 Ci-n's and retehe them tit r-'-rnm inil from M. '. i'Ji:ct:, Jl. It , rnp'r, BUFFALO, . T. THEA -NECTAR - IS A PUBf TlIAC'K tka, wit la the Green Ta Savor. War. ranted to suit all lajtfes. .ir ale everywhere And fv.r sale wholesale only bvlh-Oreat At lantic A Pacini Tea Co.. 1M Pul ton ht. and 14 Church ht.. N. V. P (. BoiiiM. brtldlorThea Keetar circular. I tu SHOW CASES ! SHOW CASES I All ttfvle. Silver TTomite-I and Walnnt, new and ee.m'l haii'L i-cnriv trw-ked for stupping. COUN'XEllA BAK-. UKLVINU. broKE PIX TrKKS.. e. Horse and ofi:h rruNiTruK all Mart. The Unrest and bent aeaurted stock, new aud eeoudaar.d in the City. LKWIM tic TITJO., -l-ly 1021. UBS. tea and lull B.11KJE AVtL.HiladUnia -Ir ANTED, AGENTS MALE OR FEM ALE, FOR f f the most money makint; Noveltaea in the mar ket. For particular. ad'lr-e. I'uQLaiiku-hia novixtt MFO. CO.. II ZM M i ai.VaJOK St., Philadelphia, Pa. mm till Advertisements. DYSPEPTIC CONSUMPTION. Can Dyrprptic CtrnMemprtmi 6 frirrdf We answer, YFSf Tint. Remove all th) ankealthy ir.ncon that ptlhers nbont tht wall or the slomicb from tndirtioa- Second. Preduew aa active eonlition of Liver and Kidnfjt wIUioul depleting the system. rv: r a.M aatnre !a furnishiag the drain of torn of lie ompoacnt parU thai compose feemltaj sniua. w. av.M-a wK have been enred. in hivw.-.. - assert that a euro aa be performed theory. RE15EDISS USED, Apart from our 0C.ce Practice. THE GREAT AMERICAN DYSPEPSIA PILLS, Remove the funrus matter from the stomach, aad restore it te a healthy eondiiit-a. , SECOXD. THE PINE TltEE TAR GORDIALI Aet oa the Liver, heals the Btomaeh, an acts on the Kidneys and Nervous FysJem. For further sslvice, call or write DB U Q C WISHABT, 232 Xorth Second Street. ADMONITION. It is knows to U reader that sine Dm. LQ.C. WISHART baa followed the causa and core of diseases, and the great vain a TAR as a curative remedy, aa directed By Bmhon Berkley and Rev. John Wesley, tks many have attempted ta make a TAR pre- paratic for THROAT AJNil 1.USU VI EASES. Be it known that Da. L. Q. WISUART'8 PI TREE TAR COBDIll Is the only remedy, from long experience, need by ear most skillful physicians for Diptheria, Ulcerated Throat, Lung, Kidney, Stomach, Asthma, and General PebiKty, as well as for Coughs, Co'.Js and Lung Affec tions. DR. L. Q. C. WISHART, CONSTTLTHw E00Y3 AND STQ2S, No. 232 N. SECOND ST., PHIMDEI.PI1II. $10 Breslau Lots. 5,000 LOTS Of 25xt00 feet, for Sate in the CITY OF BRESLAU, S0 per Ia1, 2,000 Garden Plots Of LO Lots each, at f00 per Ttol. Tho City of Breslau la located on the) South Bide Kailroati of Long Island, ami ia known to b tht mot;t cntorr-risioa; plat ia tho State, Laving three) churches, schools, several Urge m&nafactorirw, hoULs, stores, etc., ete., and a population of several thou sand inhabitants. Every ens Knows Breslau, And those who don't, please call for particulars ou TH03. WELWOOD, 15 WiDoughby Street, Brooklyn. REMEMBER, $10 PER LOT. Title perfect and warrantee deedi given free of inenmbranoe, streets opened and surveyed free of extra charge. Apply to THOMAS WEtWOQD, 15 Wllloughby St., Brooklyn, L I., 4 Ho. 7 Beekman SL, Rooms 5 4 8. Hw York City. Or U EDWARD SALOSrOJT, A 614 Chestnnt St, 1-11-ly Philadelphia. Pa. Dr. J. U alLT r-llilor-ni-. li. esrar Hitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made chielly from the na tive hcrba found on tho lower raiipra uf tl:e Sierm Kevntl.i nmnntntn ,.f t -.i;r... nia, the medicinal properties of w hich are extracted therefrom without the n:;o of Alcohol. Tho question is almost daily asked. "What U the cause of the ...... . n .. 1 . .1 . r uiiii.iut:ii.-ij nuccess Ol IXEGAE 151T- teiisP Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and :he patient re 'overs his health. They are the great blood pnrifior and a life-givin;? principle, a lieifect Innovator nml inv irrf iri r. of the pratcm. Nerrr Isr-fl-rAin nM. hiiti-rr of tho vnrl.l hi .,.i i - uw tm Ma, u.t. mo urw-i comjiomiili-,1 possessine; tbe rentarkal.Ia Tianttr-j Vinkcar 1:i ttem in h-.ilin th sick of every dUea.- man i.-j heir to. They are a penile rurfr.uive a. a a Tonic, reherinir Conirr-stiun r Inflammation of ine uver ana tsctral Organs, iu liilionn l)tes. The proportips of Pr. Wji.ker's .arniinative. Nutrition, Ijtiatire. liiun-tic, r-miuve, t on mer-i muni, MMionuc, Altera tive, and Anti-bilious. ft. II BT.llfiaif r. m. - - - - - . .... Oentf hihIm n.Ul.w . u c ; ... and oir nf sj.hincl.si and Charltnn St . N. y. " ursKMt sae Dealers. Advertisements. QGEHE SCHQEHIHG'S CELEBRATED OT PERUVIAN BARK. As BsetM for that Btrisrs was fooa4 saMS tbe apart af aBwsadish phrshiisa, a singla mam. wha lost hH Ufa. wtMa 1M rra old, by a (all of his horw SaM rsdp. thsa ha4 ba kt a profound ssrrst br kai famllj for saors thaa tAr osntarlea. Purine all tbsi Haw they suds frequent ase of lbs Bitters. wbJca rsodsrsd thsca s stroll- and loo; llrtof set f peopl. enjoying esxsfleat health. Originally the men af prepenoc that Btttsrs and Its wonderful effsvta, was sltHlnirt by eoe af taatr kta. while partlcrpatins ta the sarUsst srpsdrdosai ef the SpanUnts ha Amsnra. aCtsv a sotaaaa prooalas, aersr to StruKs B hat ts the rasamed prlaolpal hstr. THIS QENUIXE SWEDISH BIT TERS Mil IsaowaslUd. has sines ttsomltc tat par.lt. ass, sffactsd thousands ef astonlshliui eares of pe Osots already ftrsaap by msay pbysMaaa. and has ii Mtf met fit! natoratiT. and preser ratlr Ktnedy. that tndaed a aela n. rartnr nutt- eldoal rstaaamsmdatloaseri HOW IT 0PE1UTE3. The sffart ef the BvtxiUh Bitters lists Itself . ta Fhearatplsoa,htheaarrse afthe eUgaatrra organs thraoghoot then entire extant, has mainly to the stoanaeh and the vlsoral tract. It a allies their fffss "A amumtlng tn the nature of existing trrsgolarltlae or ismoiu. ohatrartione sad retentions of all kind, or stops Dlarrhna. Dysentery, as other anamolona discharges and afflnTla. Byregw lattng the abdominal ergana, af which depend the Bourlalimant, tha oonssrratloo and tn. dwrelopsment af tbe human body the Swedish Blttara taTlgorslse the asms end the vital powers, sharpens the senses and the tntellset, remorse the trembling of tbe limbs Ills SLhtlj. list lmi nliig. aaiaisa anil jalrst nf tht " such, bnnrores Be dlgsstlTe faculties, and at an a- osUent lrophylactlo and ramsdy against nerrou Irri tability, flatulency. Chotto. Worms, Dropsy, as. if taken in doable doses. SI operates see enre aperient, Bt la a mild and painless way. la oocswiusnce of these qualltlsa of the Swedlah Blttsrs at has besoms one of the most eslsbratsd rem dies against dissasss ef the organs contained ta the alpiemtn, and of affactloiia that befall mankind In soneeqnance of said disessas. Thus the Swedish Bit- tare has an nnetarpeeasd renown so enrmg urar Ccenplalnte ef tang standing. Jaundice. Dyspepsia. Dleordere of tbe Spleen, of the Psnereae, of the hteaa. rale Glands, snd also disorders of the Kidneys, of ths Urinary and Ssxual-Organa. Besides these the Swe dlah Ulttsrs ourss tnos. lnnuroerabta nsrrous, or eon gaeUTe affections end disuse as. which original from said ehdomlna disturbances, a: Congestion of the Lungs, the Heart, snd the Brains. Coughs, Asthma. Headache, Nearslgla, in different partoef the body. Chlorosis, Internal Hemorrhoids and Piles, Goat, Dropsy. General Debility, Hyrjochondrlssls. Melan choly, ax., ho. Of greet benefit the Swedish Bitters has also been found la ths beginning of Qastnc and Intermittent revere. Bat thle hi only one side of its Inestimable power of protecting those who ass it regularly against all nil ssmatie and epidemic diseases. Ths Swedish Bitters has hy long experience In many thousand esses main tained Its great teuuea of being tbe most reliable rSXSXXTATTTX AJTO rROPmXACmO R VVKPT Aaxrsirr Typhus, OrientalPest, Ship Fever, Yellc77-Feverf AND ASIATIC CHOLERA. The super for prntectfre and eenstiTe Ttrtnee of tht wedtah Blttara against K slarlaus Ferer, Pysentsry and Cholera, were meet apparently tasted In ths Uto ware by Franoh end English physlrxane. who by pre eertblng tbe name to their rsspectlre troops, sue. ess lid ta reducing the mortality fist of ertdeeile die aa from te t per east, DIEECTIOHS lar AH iteraoue who hare fee peifnrin long snd hsrtt labor, and while doing It, are of tea sx posed to sadden ehanges ef temperatore. or the draft or air, or ohnox tous fleets, emails, or vspore, ahoald not M to see the shredlsh Bitters, as a few drops of it, added to their drink, are sufficient to preserve them in tnestt mable health and rigor. Thoee who are eceustomed te drink Ice water during the snmmer, ahoald never emit to add aome Swedish Bitters to it. giren to ssdentsry Hfe should use the Swedish Bitters. It will neutralize the bed effects of their want of exerciee In open air, and keep them la good health and good spirits; snrTe the Ladles the Swedlah Bitters nmst aspect, ally borocommenrtod.Bocaosstta ess contributes roost essentially to pi seat ia the regularity of ths physk4o rtesl functions, peculiar ta tho dehrste femals con stitution, and thus proves en effectual barrier against these Innumerable Nerrooeead Blood Dl-aees.whkh SjOT-s-days bars grown eo frequent as to be taken by many for ire's natural Inheritance Bui the Swedish Bitters dose not only serurs good health; also effects the fall development of the female body, and of its beauty by perfect fwrms end aneeomnleetlon and color. That the Swedish Bitters has beootne on ef ths COSMETIC AST) TOILET AKTICLE3 l farmers and their families, who hare tried BWedlah Bitters, prefer to all similar articles, t or them h proves fienefVUal In various ways. In Summer, erhen their carting require them to often endure the Intense heat of the enn, while per forming hard work, they are induced to be not suf Scaastly estrtloaa m satisfying thslr horning thirst by water, er in sating fruit not yet ripe, ho. Thus farm ing people are very Bsble to suffer from son stroke, 'ever, rjysentery. Cholera, he., no. The regnlsr one ef tho Swedish Bitters makes these dangerous lnnu eneae all harmless. In Winter, dmrteg the tbne of rest, many emutiT people, trying to Indemnify themselves for past pri vations are very apt to often overload their stomachs and thus Impair thetr digestive orgins-the mote of thetree, Tho nee of the Swedish Bitters prevents ettsasss from that cause. Asaatatterof eovree,ta eaee of ek-knes. the pe, two aheoldavold food not agreeing with him or each, aa te known, to be dtflcnlt to digest or ansuit able te the dineee to pupation. Theruls: "Tim moderate in all Toe eat, drhik or e" w. strictly to bs observed. HOW TO TAKE SvTEDISII BITTERS The Swedieh Bitters shall nnry be taken tn ths ab sence of Inflammatory symptoms, Srowa person tar one UMespoonfnl three Cms. per day, before or after meela, pare er dilated with screens radar ta years, twe-tbtrds of that quantny- 1 " one-half - I - Children f t years anwwda, eae-aighth ef that quantity. roreong ectuahimaei se ism t. .w etaln from It as mnch aepoaalble, while asing Swe dish Blttere:! thsw ... m . ehaniutuuiileor mot of calamus, bat then swallow the meroaa of spitting it away. In the aarae way smoking of tobaeew alweld eoly ntsdarately be prac ticed. Feisuus afflicted srttb iSi.ii. . bread or cakes, or fat or salt meets, but sbnold take sasrose at tree aa void! ng aO. sudden ebsa tea of temoeratnre. an inamn.M. i- . drinking, and an endue mental excitement, by whlrh largely tr the effectivenraa of the Swedlah Blttara, aT. B... Shonld the Swedlah shm - m .n at amy ne taken with eomo sugar, as see. be wita soma eturar-watas- Havmg acrrulred hv rnma tw... ,,. . -- . .... ehsttre right of preparing tho OiUy OraaJne Swedish Bitters, ksretuf ute Branered K rn. u-k hue D. S. Army Buixeon, w hare, la order te true. weuspuon, us name of K. Schoenlng sevrntketothe glass of seh hett ik. eroondlt marked by I. ScxMenlnere and by onr own wiwoux usee marks era spurloes. DEKIEL & CO., Berth Third Street. Philadelphia. Frlee any Bmaie SnrtisL re i. " - u eM Vssasaala by Johnston. HoOoway Oosraea, s overs ruiaaeipauv ret Sale by all drag. BBIH,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers