A.gTicul tnral. Hop Cultubx.' The attention of American agriculturists in some por tions of the country has of late become absorbed in the culture of hops as a marketable commodity, with a degree of success scarcely commensurate to the labor, care and expenditure invested in the undertaking. Hence many hare abandoned the experiment, under the impression that soil and climate are unfavorable in most of the Atlantic States for the successful culture of the plant. This is altogether an erroneous idea, the fault being in the manner of cultivation, and the soil selected for its production. The hop plant is peren nial, and although indigenous to Great Itrit&in and different Dortions of the European continent, it was not until some time during the reign of Henry MIL that the culture of hops was introduced into England from Flanders. All previous attempts to cultivate the plant successfully as a mercantile com modity were failures from the simple fact that it was not properly under stood. In 1837 the mmber of acres of hops, under cultivation, in England alone, was 50,323, and in the same year the excise duty, levied at the rate 18s. 81. per cwt was 310,794 4a., equal to $1,553,971 of our currency. Since that period the average is C8.000 acres, and the annual yield is measurably greater. Now it is very evident that the same causes which appear to operate so un favorably with the American agricul turist attended the efforts of the Eng lish hop-grower prior to the period indi cated, when the Flemish introduced the proper method of hop culture into England. The wonder is that our people, who are apt in most things, have not profitted by the experience of their transatlantic brethren. To produce hops abundantly for mar ket, the plant requires to be carefully cultivated in good soil, in a temperate climate that is not subject to lengthened extremes of heat or cold, or long spells of rainy weather ; even then it is one of the most precarious of crops. The fol lowing hints will be of service to Ame rican hop-Towers: Select a loamy soil on a dry subsoil, and place the plants in hills or groups of three or four in a group the hills should be in rows five or bix feet apart, add about the same distance in the row. A full crop is not produced until the fourth or fifth year after planting. Every year the ground should be dug in inter and kept clear of weeds dur ing the Summer. When a hop planta tion is first made, as the plants are weak, the poles for the support of the vines are not required to be more than five or six feet in length, but in the third or fourth vear they require to be ten or twelve ftt in length, and three or four to a hill. Any kind of young trees or saplings may be used as hop oles, but the most durable are those of the chestnut, oak and ash. To pre- serve the poles thev should be taken up after the crop has been gathered and stacked away in a dry place until again needed in the Spring. Ti. m i.i.nTil.1 lu carefully packed by hand, and immedi - stely thereafter taken to a drying kiln. When thoroughly dried, pack in bags, .i a 1 1. ... j v v- mi 'iv 'ix viwvij w " . i .i i "ii 1 1 elude tue air as mucn as possioie, me - 1 . ' letter to guard them from dampness, dust, insects, 4c The hop plant is particularly liable to be injured by in fects, extreme cold, continued rains, thunder storms, Ac ; hence the neces- ,.t it m. ; it. 4 ff v,o .,n ha lw t.v1 bags should be kept in dry, airy lofts, nmt liar tiin varm tiir taa ivtLl ftvni.linfV alsove all, exposure to a damp atmos - i there u. r...-..,; ;.,;, M 41.0 tt;h GoldinciL the Branilimr Ooldines. c.i.ii ..,1 wi.itv. i. ri - (ioldings. These are mostly seedlings that have been brought to a high state of perfection, and afterwards selected from particular stocks which hsve been ,.r,,.i tn ns-.aas.aa Anvram nno liios in .1 4. mor the. nhni .hnni.i 1. rr.ron tr. nlimu t, !... rUn h.t r .raiUMfl tlior can be no objection, however, to a top .lrrccin. r.t ti.i in l.A Vail Grubbing should be frequent during the lute Fall and Winter months. Dkessixo MrrroN is Texas. A Texas correspondent of the Mobile ltegistcr tells how he dresses sheep for mutton. "Hang the sheep by the heels and cnt his throat thoroughly wind-pipe, swal low, jugular vein and all. lie will die very quick. So soon as life is extinct, or motion ceases, remove the entrails with a sharp knife, opening completely from tail to tongue. Ihis job 1 gener . .. , ... r . . r ally ge i through with in ,ust about half .miuuio. i Bu . liar flurnr nf limilv nanrllujl mnttrtn ... , ', . . , - "",u u. " f ha nrtrailc ltrmr 1 1 ul 1 1 in ir ,n tliA am- niaL I pay no particular attention to the wool other than is demanded by neatness. Un the plan above named, I frequently kill mutton four miles from home, tie them to my saddle, take them home, and even allow them to remain over night, without skinning, and no woolish flavor results. My mutton is nrnvCTliiKl for its nfMiiMipv atiil aorn.it- t r j . '.i i' , .- j manage it. AGRicrtTTBE im France. A traveler says "We see no pastures anywhere. If the cows are not tethered in the grass fields, they have au attendant, often a very old woman, who Fpenda the rem nant of her days in that service. Here and there in the valley are small flocks of Merino sheep, always in the care of a shepherd and his dogs. It was inter esting to see the movements of the dogs, one each side of the flock, and both constantly trotting np and down, keep ing the flock close together. If a sheep strayed only a foot or two, it was in stantly driven back. The dogs must have remarkable endurance to keep thus in motion all day, and that at not a slow pace. At the close of the day the flock follows the shepherd out of the field, very naturally suggesting the tenth chapter of John: "lie goeth before them, and sheep follow him, for they know his voice." Tits Pelnnia was discovered in South Americas bout fifty years ago. The ori ginal of the species was white and single. For the seven succeeding years no other color was known, but in 1830 a purple variety was found in Brazil. A double petunia was unknown nntil about 185C, when a double white one was shown. The questions of some of our corres pondents prove that they misunderstand the mode by which the double varieties are obtained. Double petunias produce no seed, and can only be obtained by fertilizing the single blossoms with pollen from the double ones. The operation requires much care, and is often unsuccessful, and at best only partially effective. Charcoal for Swine, the Country Oentlcman asys, is frequently pres scribed in agricultural papers, without any directions as to quantity. It should not be given carelessly and at random. Good, fresh charcoal, properly pulver ized, may be given at the rate of one teas poonf til for every hundred pounds of animal, whatever its s'ze may be, and at this rate will do no harm nor scour the animals, and may often be very useful. Spring time in Australia began August 20th. Summer began November 20th ; autumn, February 20th ; winter begins May 20th. Trotting on tba ice is lively in Connecticut. Scientific. Tititox, Kvt Blast. Some new and interesting applications of this in- vention were lately described at a meet ing of the students of the Polytechnic College, Philadelphia, Pa : Samples of raised lettering on marble, also of ground uncolored and of stained glass ornamented by the process were exhibited. Samples of thick plate glass, perforated by the sand blast with well defined holes inch in diameter, were shown. The holes for the axles of the glass plates of electrical machine cn be safely cut in this war. The lettering of the block of marble had been done by first grinding and polishing one of its surfaces, attaching the stencils (letters of the size and shape required cut out of plat metal), and then blowing sand, by means of a jet of steam, ou the surface, until, where unprotected by ths stencils, it is cut away to the required depth leaving the letters in bold relief. The stone to be cut is placed upon a small struck, and then removed backward and for ward upon a horizontal table, directly under the nozzle through which the sand is blown. The nozzle, which stands vertically over the table, has the pipe for the sand, entering the upper end, passing in the line of its axis, to wards its lower opening. The pipe from the steam boiler enters through the side of the nozzle near its upper end, so that, when in operation, steam sur rounds the tube through which the sand runs. The latter is connected by a rubber pipe, with a box of sand set about it. When cutting glass, the sand is compelled by a current of air from a reservoir, kept under pressure by a small blowing engine. In such a case the stencils need not be of metaL Bob ber, and even thin muslin, will protect the glass. The DeprLATios of Hides with Char coal. It has been discovered that pul verized charcoal applied to sheepskins produces the depiif-tion of the hair. Charcoal, as is well known, has the property to take up large quantities of oxygen from the atmospheric air, ana the oxygen in this form seems to exert a chemical influence on the fatty sub- : stance present in the neighborhood of the elands of the hair roots. An oxiila tion takes place in the pores of the skin which destroys the glands and loosens the hair. Finely powdered charcoal is mixed with sufficient water to niase thin paste, and the hides immersed for 4 or 5 days and well turned over in the meantime, when the hair can be taken off at once. Hides treated with char- coal do not require further treatment, ' as is the case now with the lime pro- cess : and alter being washed with water, they are ready for tanning. This will be a great advantage to the tanning : trade, as leather treated in this way j possesses more toughness, solidity, and flexibility. The other advantages of this treatment are great saving in time and ; labor, each hide weighs J to 1 pound more, and has less spots, the work is more pleasant and healthy, the splitting with the machine is more easily accom ! Pushed, and the cost price is the same used over again. Animal or vegetable coal can be used in any quantity, having i . i nnilalittAnniianrntuirtvshflUiiPTiir'ftnil -"- I , . 1 l" A. Ilk iinni. '1 ii w-it It ,- for each hide G or 10 pounds, with the necessary quantity of water, are sulh cient. 1 he temperature should be tl or 70 t ah., and can be easily main tained by introducing steam into the i vats, l he tanning process is laciutawa I as no lime is left behind to neutralize the tannic acid. I ! , WElearn from the English Mechanic "at Professor Forel has recently been investigating into the character and ' can9f8 of certain phenomena, which the ; inhabitants about .Late Geneva call fontame. They are the irregular spots ' which appear on the surface of the lak,e l 18 PfflJ 7 bfk breze j or h7 falling rain. Where the surface Ul lUTJ AeUVO Um 113 UUIIUM W1UI LUC i waves are sharp and move rapidly : but, ! when the limits of aonta ine are reached they become more sluggish in their movement, while the bases are convex I and the tops rounded. A careful ex 1 amination of these surfaces proved that I tue phenomenon they exhibit is due to : the presence of oily matters that are suspended or float noon the water. which foreign substance may have come from a factory situated on the banks, or from some passing steamer. In order to verify these conclusions, the profes sor took occasion to deposit, at certain points, small quantities of oily liquids. By this means fontaines were readily produced. It was, moreover, deter mined that one-third of a cubic inch of oil would suffice to cover a surface of oil would suffice to cover a surface of Iort thres thousand square feet Although the thickness of this laver - - . -.. was hardly one two-millionth of a milli metre it wa9 stin sufficient to reduce ' . j the friction of the winds, and so visibly auect the waves. 1 ishermen upon the Mediterranean Sea are acquainted with this property of oil to render the sur face quiet, and so often cast a few drops of it on the milled surface of the water. being thus enabled to see the fish be low. A piece of plate glass fitted into the bottom of a wooden box is also used . ... for a similar purpose. Preserving Brickwork. The exclu sion of damp from brickwork has long been an important problem with build ers. It is stated that one of the most effective methods of accomplishing this object is the following : Three quarters ol a pound ol mottled soap are dis solved in one gallon of boiling water. and the hot solution spread steadily with a flat brush over the outer surface of the brickwork, care being taken that it does not lather ; this is allowed to dry for twenty-four hours, when a solu tion, formed of a quarter of a pound of alum dissolved in two gallons of water. is applied in a similar manner over the coating of soap. The soap and alum form an insoluble varnish, which the rain is unable to penetrate, and this cause of dampness is thus said to be effectually removed. The operation shonld be performed in dry settled weather. Another method is to use eight parts of unseed oil and one part of sulphur, neatea together to 2. a , in an iron vessel. Is a recent communication on the energy of electricity. Rev. Arthur Rigg describes a galvanometer of so delicate a construction that if one finger be laid in a trough of water and another finger in an.adjoimng trough, and the muscles ol the arm be then slightly contracted. a current of electricity will be excited that will readily make its presence felt upon the gnlvanometer by a deflection of the needle. Devtist's Solders. For gold solder. use 8 grains American silver coin and 4 grains best copper wire (or copper from an old style cent) to each pennyweight of gold plate on the same fineness as that to be soldered. For silver solder, use 8 grains best brass wire to each pennyweight of silver coin. Melt with borax, cool, and roll into plate. ElUTTLEXSSS IN THE BONES OF HORNED Cattle. According to Jfessler, the un nsual brittleness of the bones of horned cattle in some parts of Germany is due to the nature of their food, and he finds that this affection prevails in certain localities of the Black Forest which are characterized by the presence of granitic Fetttno Rabbits' Hair. These hairs were formerly treated with a solution of mercury in nitric acid for the pur pose of enhancing their felting proper ties. A mixture of nitric acid and trea cle is proposed as a substitute. I Domestic. Salt Kisnro Bmud. Pat three tea cups of water, as warm as you can bear your finger in, in a two quart cup or bowl, and three-fourths of a teaspoon f ul of salt ; stir in flour enough to make quite a stiff batter : this is for the rising, or emptyings, as some call it. Set the bowl, closely covered, in a kettle, in warm water, as "warm as yon can bear your finger in," and keep it as near this temperature as possible. Notice the time when you "set" your rising ; in three hours stir in two tablespoon! uls of flour, put it back, and in five and one-half hours from the time of setting, it will be within one inch of the top of your bowL It is then light enough, and will make up eight quarts of flour ; make a sponge in the center of your flour with one q uart of water of the same temperature as rising, stir the rising into it, cover over with a little dry flour, and put it where it will keep very warm, and not scald ; in three-fourths of an hour mix this into stiff dough ; if water is used be sure it is very warm, and do not work as much as yeast bread ; make the loaves a little larger and Keep it warm for another three-quarters of an hour : it will then be ready to bake. Whilo rising this last time have you oven heating ; it needs a hotter oven than yeast bread. If these rules are followed, yon will have bread as white as snow, with a light-brown crust deli' ciously sweet and tender. How to Make Good Coffee. Coffee should be browned at least twice week and kept in air tight canisters, and only ground jnst immediately be fore using. Pick the green coffee care fully over, shake it in a collander to free it from dust, and rub it in a cloth, While roasting stir it all the time, the moment the berry crackles and becomes crisp to pulverize, it is sufficiently roasted. Stir in a small piece of butter the size of a walnut and put it steam- ing hot into an airtight canister. For making the proportions are one and one-half onnces ot ground coffee to a pint of boiling water, or if you do not like it strong use one ounce of ground coffee to a pint of boiling water. Put your coffee into a bowl with just sulh cient cold water to moisten it, beat in an egg, shell and all, mix it well through the coffee. Rinse your coffee boiler out with boiling water, put the coffee in and pour over the required amount of boiling water. L.el it boil hi teen min utes. When it begins to boil stir it fre quently, and never leave it nntil the eronnds sink. Ponr a little from the spout in order to remove the grains that may, have boiled into it, and ponr it back into the pot. It spoils the best made coffee to decant it as much as it would champagne. This is my way of making coffee, but 1 may be one of the 'thousands upon thousands, who never tasted a good enp of coffee. Be Always eat. Some folks are very charming at evening parties, but surprise them in the morning when not looking for company, and the enchant ment is goue. There is good sense in the following advice to young ladies Your every day toilet is part of your character. A little girl who looks like "fury" or a "sloven" in the morning is not to be trusted, however finely she may look in the evening. Xo matter how humble your room may be, there are eight things it should contain mirror, washstand, soap, towel, comb, bair brush, nail-brush, and tooth-brush. These are lust as essential as your break- fast, before which you should make good use of them. Parents who fail to provide their children with such appli cations not only make a great mistake, bnt commit a sin of omission. Look tidy in the morning, and after dinner work is over improve your toilet. Make it a rule of your daily life to "dress up" for the afternoon. Your dress may or need not be any thing better than calico ; but with a ribbon or some bit of ornament, you can have an air of self respect and satisfaction that invariably comes with being well dressed. Crystallization. Put 18 ounces of alum into a quart of water and dissolve by simmering gently in a close tinned vessel over a moderate fire, stirring it f reqnentl v with a wooden spoon. When the solution is completed it must be poured into a deep glazed jar, and as it cools the subject intended to be crys tallized should be snspended in it by a piece of thread or twine from a stick laid across the mouth of the jar. Let them remain twenty-four hours. Take them out, hang in a shady, cool situa tion till perfectly dry. Take care the solution is neither too hot nor quite cold, as in one case the crystal would be very smaU and in the other too large. Insets, spiders, beetles, and 'grass hoppers, vegetable productions, hops, ears of corn, daisy, hyacinth, pink, furz blossom, lichens, and mosses are some of the most suitable. ests of small birds with eggs, particularly if fastened on a branch of a tree, are very pretty, Cream Puffs. Boil in half a pint of water three-fourths of a cup of butter, stir in whileboilingoneand three fourths cups of flour ; when cool, mix in five eggs, one at a time, not beating them, and a scant half teaspoon! ul of dry soda. Drop on buttered pans half the size wanted when baked, then varnish each with a feather dipped in the beaten yolk of an egg. Bake in a quick oven till quite brown. If they are taken out too soon they will fall. hen baked cut them open at the side and fill with the following mixture ; ileat one pint of milk ; mix one-half cup of sifted flour, one cup of sugar and two eggs together, stir in the hot milk and replace on the hre to thicken, i lavor to taste. Xhis recipe makes about twenty puffs. Remedies for Burks. Tar gives im mediate relief from pain as it excludes the air from the burned surface. Lin seed oil (unboiled) applied with a feather also allays the burning ; so does finely carded wool laid thick upon the wonnd. Arnica tincture diluted with water is good for a burn. An excellent liniment for bnrns and scalds is made bv filling a two ounce vail a third f nil of strong lime water and the remaining two-thirds with sweet oiL This should be shaken well before applying. A cor respondent gives her remedy for barns as follows : Spread nnsalted lard on a cloth and sprinkle thickly with black pepper, apply and the ellect is magical. To Clean Swan's Down. Take out the lining and wash the collar in warm water with soap, handling it as any deli cate fabric, rinse in warm water thor oughly and hang it out doors to dry, giving it occasionally a gentle shake while drying. Another authority says use suds made of white hard soap, lay a part of the collar on one hand and the water over with the other, passing the hand very gently over the fur one iraw each time. When perfectly dry shake well to separate any portions of the down that may cling together. Snow Cake. The whites of ten eggs beaten to a stiff froth, one and one-half tumblers of sugar, one tumbler of flour, one teas poo nful of cream of tartar, fla vor with lemon or vanilla, and bake in a slow oven three-quarters of an hour. Invalid Pudding. Soak one even tablespoonful of tapioca in nearly a cup full of milk for an hour, or till thoroughly softened, add a little salt. sugar to taste, and the yolk of an egg, and bake 15 minutes. Coffee- Milk. Pnt a dessert spoon ful of ground coffee into a pint of milk : boil it a quarter of an hour with a shaving or two of isinglass ; then let it stand ten minutes and pour it off. Humorous. From Danbtbt. Blobkina was rich, handsome and vain, he imagined all he had to do was to look at some fair dame, and she'd fall dead at his feet. Blob kins attended the circus, and as he en tered the first tent he took a look at the monkeys which bore a family resem blance to his tribe, although the genuine monkeys do not wear eye-glasses. Here the species to which Blobkins belongs differs somewhat from the usual tribe exhibited. He was delighted with the elephant and proposed to give Bailey a check on his "Pa" which Bailey mag nanimously refused to accept. It took him some time to visit all the cages and satisfy his curiosity and thirst for natu ral history. Then entering the circus he took a back seat so that the young man selling peanuts would not step on him. He thought the entree a wonder ful sight, and as the twelve ladies and gentlemen dashed around the ring the sight was most bewildering to the pro mising Blobkina. When Geo. Donald turned forward somersaults on his bare back horse, Blobkins turned a backward one nearly off the seat, and when Clark, the clown, pointed out the "handsomest man" in the show, Blobkins bid his face behind his hat for fear he would be the object of the jester's remarks, but Clark was pointing the other way which disappointed Blobkins. Frank Melville and little Alexander pleased Mr. Blob kins, Esq., to such an extent that while they were riding he was beard to "hi ! hi !" so frequently that the man who feeds the lions told him to "dry np, or he would chaw off his left ear." Blob kins replied " What's the matter wid-ju?' Clark remarked that "One fool at a time was sufficient and all that Bailey paid for." When the Orrin brothers flip-flapped into the ring and stood on each others ears, eyebrows, and hung by their lip, Blobkins thought that some pumpkins, and resolved to try it when he went home. Frank Robinson turned himself inside ont so easily that Blobkins thought it no more to do than to turn his undershirt, and he imagined De Haven was a silly youth to run so frantically from that ""little hoss,".cven if he did come at him with his mouth wide open, and suggested if De Haven would half svle the seat of his trowsers with an armor of strong leather he would be out of danger when the hoss snapped at him in the rear. He offered no suggestions for Melville when he rode, but sat with his mouth and eyes wide open in mute astonishment and wondered what kind of a plaster Melville used to keep him on his horse, and swore that Alexander had weights in his feet so that he could stand on his dad's head and let the horse have his own way. But when the elephant come in and stood on his tail, and balanced himself on the end of his trunk, Blob kins thought he had enough of that kind of fun for one day and made a speedy exit from the canvas, upsetting an old woman selling watermelon skins on the sidewalk, stepped on a "ki nails" narrative and plunged headlong into a passing street car aud fell broad side in the lap of a fat Dutch woman returning from market with three dozen eggs, two mackerel, and a pound of beef-steak. Blobkins was satisfied. He had seen Bailey's show, broken np a Dutch boarding-house, tore his pants, and was ready to die. A Turk ! The Colonel "As for what they call 'intellect,' and that sort of thing, why, what 1 say is, the less of it in a woman the better, my boy !" Little Tomkyns "My sentiments to a T, sir I Intellect, indeed 1 As for me, I've always looked upon woman as a mere toy !" Closed-Up. Xewly-fledged B. A. to his late College Tutor "I say, old fel low, ever since I matriculated I've wanted to ask you which tailor made your clothes." Tutor "Humph ! Fubbius in the High !" B. A. "Much obliged; I'll take doosid good care he never make mine 1" A rot of sixteen, employed the other day in manipulating some old govern ment stores, thought, from the smell, that two small pills which he found must be gunpowder. He tried with a match, and found that he was correct in his surmises. The jury returned a verdict of accidental death. This pre cocious youth adds another to the long list of martyrs te science. A newly-married couple found thcm selves in a railway carriage with only one fellow passenger, who appeared to sleep profoundly. Soon the lady com menced to call her young husband all the endearing names that natural his tory could supply. The traveler, roused up, begged the lady to call her partner a "XoaU's Ark" at once, and allow him to sleep quietly. As the sun in all his splendor was peeping over the eastern hills, a newly married man exclaimed, "The glory of the world is rising?" His wife, who happened to be getting up at that mo ment, taking the compliment to herself, simpered out, "What would yon say, deary, if I had my silk gown on ?" Thei tell this story of an Scotch Judge, who, when one of his colleagues failed to take his seat on the bench, leaving a brother to excuse his absence on the ground that he had lost his wife, exclaimed, "Has he 1" That is a good excuse indeed, "I wish we all had the same." Irascible Old Party. "Conductor, why didn't you make me, as I asked you ? Here 1 am miles beyond my sta tion." Conductor "I did try, air ; and all I could get you to say was, "All right, Marie ; get the children their breakfast and 1 11 be down in a minute A cowardly fellow having kicked a newsboy for pestering him to buy an evening newspaper, toe lad waited till another boy accosted the "gentleman," and then shouted in the hearing of all bystanders, "It s no use to try him. Jim, he can't read." "Tour children may never have wealth," observed a clergyman recently to his congregation ; "but when they grow np it will be something for them to boast that their fathers were not members of the Forty-second Congress." "Take a wing," gushed, a pompons upstart, extending his bent arm to a sensible young lady, at the close of the prayer-meeting. "Xot of a gander," she quietly replied, and walked home with her mother. Thb TJtica Herald gays men will never know what effect it would have had on Job. if eleven little girls had called on him, one after another, and tried to seu him Sunday-school picnic tickets. The Des Moines Quartette were some what startled by finding that the selec tion, "When wearied wretches sink to sleep," had been printed on their pro grammes, "When married wretches," Arc. 'Have I not, my son, offered you every advantage ?" "Oh, yes, sir, but 1 could not think of taking advantage of my own father." An Irishman, being asked in court for his certificate of marriage, showed a big scar on his head about the size of a small shovel. A Danbtbt bride received among her wedding gifts a receipted bill for eight dollars for gate hinges from her father. A stent heart is a good cuirass. 3Iiscellanj-. Saving for the Children. It not un frequently happens that the children of two families living near each other and brought np under the same social and educational influences turn out very differently on arriving at ma turity. The family that seems to have had the most careful training does less credit to itself than the families whose childish freedom of action shocked the critical observer. We say "seems to have had the most careful training," for it is often only in seeming after all that the difference has consisted. As a rule it may be predicted of wise family government that it will be known, as a tree is, by its fruit. All government that is enly from the outside, and therefore despotic, fails necessarily of reaching its end ; and all government whose aim from first to last is to teach its subjects self-control must give them considerable latitude. The latter sort, however, takes very much more time and thought than the former, and is compatible with certain things which have come to be by many people ac cepted as cardinal points in family policy. For instance, if father and mother set out primarily with the idea that they must save for their children, and so feeling, if they bend each year the strength of their natures in a united effort to add acres to the farm or to increase the money in the savings banks, they will spend all their force there. The father will work hard, late and early, saving here, economizing there, growing stoop-shouldered and gray, but gaining his point and thinking, compla cently, of the amount he is worth. The mother will pinch, and contrive, and patch and darn, practicing a thousand small economies that nobody ever sus pects, and losing even the memory of the day when she was a bonny, blithe hearted girl whom her tired husband used to come miles to see in courting days. The children who are first in the loyal, honest hearts that love them, though they never have time to show it in any sweet way, meanwhile grow np. Maria wants to take music lessons, John wants to go to college, but father and mother think of the expense, count np the dollars it will cost, and decide that a common school education is good enough for their children as it was for them. This only sometimes, and seldom where the parents are Americans, born to the idea that the son may be Presi dent one day, and that, as we wrote in onr copy-books, "Education is the life of liberty." Oftener the music lessons and the college course are allowed, however, and the home economies are doubled, while it is iu countless little ways that the love of the-beautiful is stunted and crushed, and the children made to feel that of all nnlovcly, hard, prison-like places, home is the most so. There is a parlor, to be sure, grim and funeral as a hearse, and it is only used on solemn occasions, as at a christening, a wedding, or a funeral. For Mary and Lucy to sit there of an afternoon with their sewing, or for Charlie and Sam to take a lamp there in the evening to play checkers, would be an unheard of trea son against the household economy. Ii there be a piano, and if it stands in the parlor, there is sure to be a strip of stair carpet between it and the door, and another strip of stair carpet in front of it, lest the necessary going to and fro of the girls to practice shonld wear out the splendors of the best three-ply of tapestry. The children desire to take a paper or magazine as their neighbors do, bnt it costs 1 or $ 4 a year, and father shakes his head. There is to be a course of lectures in the neighboring church by distinguished men and women, and it would be pleasant to go but winter is coming and there is coal to get, and tlonr will be wanted, and mother says, '.'Better not mention the lecture to your father." Xow, when the choice is between coals and flour aud music and lecture tickets and there is honestly not enough money to afford all, why the latter must go. Cut your coat by your cloth, of course. But we are talking of cases where there is enough money to afford aesthetic and intellectual enjoyment as well as food and fire ; to afford books and papers other than school-books, and to pnt now and then a picture on the wall and a flower in the window, as well as to buy when needed a chair and a table. Save for the children if you can, and so much as yon can, but remember it is spendthrift economy that does it by saving from them. The time when they need a home full of grace and beauty is in the forming period of life. There are very few men, if they knew it, who can afford not to have the visits in their family every week of a fresh, breezy, bright instructive paper ; and there is very few who can afford not to let their children have good times in the house hold while childhood lasts. When the final interest is apportioned it will be those who have spent most wisely who will have the largest dividends. Hearth and Ilome. The Last Moment of finerrazzl. Guerrazzi, the Italian author and statesman, died at his home near Leg horn, surrounded by his family. The last book he read was De Gubernsti's "Lives of Illustrious Italians." He had just finished the closing pages of his last work, "II Secolo che muore," and had expressed to his friends his satis faction that he had lived long enough to bring this work to completion. He had already designed another work, to be called "The Origin of Comets." The countenance of Guerrazzi after death was calm and placid. A cast of the features was taken and the body was embalmed. Scientific and Safe Treatment. When applied with Dr. Pierce's Nasal Douche and accompanied with Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery as constitutional treatment. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy produces perfect cures of the worst cases of Catarrh and Ozsena of many years' standing. This thorough conrse of medication constitutes the only scientific, rational, safe and suc cessful manner of treating this odions disease that has ever been offered to the afflicted. So successful has it proven that the proprietor has long offered a standing reward of 8300 for a case of Catarrh which he can not cure. INDISPUf ABLE EVIDENCE. Thos. J. Bishop, of South Brooklyn, N. Y., writes that his wife had suffered since a child with Catarrh until it had resulted in what eminent physicians pronounced Consumption ; that she has used Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy with Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and they have worked wonders with her case. STEALING OUR TIIUNDER. People should beware of those im postors who not only try to imitate Dr. Pierce's Family Medicines but also copy his original style of advertising by of fering various sized rewards for cases of Catarrh and other diseases which they can not cure. Those who do not possess F.ufficiect intelligence to enable them to write original advertisements of their own, but have to steal those of others, are not likely to have made great and valuable discoveries in Medicine. Look out for them. 9 Medical Advertising. The medical profession are outspoken in their de nunciation of the system of medical ad vertising,and declare that any medicine that is advertised is a fraud. How thor oughly inconsistent and unfair is such an argument. The men wh are so loud in their criticisms, are those who adver tise themselves as medical a ana by ostentatious display-; splendid resi dences with massive door-plates ; fast horses and costly carriages. Dr. J. Walker, of California, an old practi tioner, respected alike for his skill and conscientious independence, dares to differ; and having discovered in his Vinegar Bitters a purely herbalistic medicine, free from all spirituous poi sons a wonderful specific for numerous disorders, advertises the same for the relief of his fellow man. and is borne I out in his declarations of its many vir ! tues by thousands of inv ilids, who are : li.:...H'T nf i1t.a.livif4rd 17 UCUJJf IU1CU Ul WAOW V W understand that the whooping cough is quite prevalent in the towDS around us; but that no cases have E roved fatal. Some families use nothing ut Johnson's Anodyne Liniment. Our Doctor, however, says a little ipieae, to produce vomiting, would be an advan tage. There are more than one thousand different kinds of pills in the United States. Some of them are worthless and injurious.others are good aud beneficial. Old Dr. Parsons invented the best anti bilious pill we ever saw or heard of. They are now sold under the name of Parsons' Purgative Pills. 4 An Infallible PILE Remedy. Suf ferers with this painful disease who have tried electuaries, lotions, oint ments and a long list of nostrums for its relief, in vain, will thank us for call ing attention to Anakesis, the happy discovery of Dr. Silsbee, an experi enced and scientific M. D. Thousands of cases attest its virtue, it is a simple ; suppository, acts as an instrument, soothing poultice and medicine, gives I instant relief and cures permanently. Price S1.00. Sold by Druggists every 1 where. Anakesis Depot, 46 Walker j St., "ew York. I The noblest aim of science is to re lieve human suffering. Its highest tn nmph is found in Da Hickman's Rheu matic Elixir, a remedy of the highest character and standing. Acute or chronic Phrumatism, Gout, and all aches aud pains which are caused by the above diseases, give way before its beneficent power. For sale by all re spectable Druggists. Price SI. If your Druggist has not got it, take no other, but send SI direct to the Sole Proprietor and Manufacturer, Dr. Wm. H. Hick man, 330 South Second St., Philadel phia, Pa. Also Manufacturer of Dr. Hickman's Electric Flcid for Xeural qia. Headache and Toothache. Tape Worm ! Tape Worm ! RraoTed In m few hotirn with hmrm!w V. (rotable !Micm. No fif- a-ik-il nntil tiw rutire wnnu. with hn.l. Refer thoiw .muted to iwiUeiiM ol l'bilAUelpbia whom I have cured, that had btvntin. iK-ee-hf uilv treated at the Jeff,-rsou Medu-al College, ou Tenth atreet ; had taKea in Tain tlirpeutlile. tu OK-alled wii.'Oini, and all known reme.uea. Ur. E. F Kunkel. Nx 35 North Ninth street, Puuadelhia. Tne LHictor has been in utininesa I- r over twouty-nve years, and ia jierfectly reliable. Call bd.I s-e. Advire free. Removed taue worm from a child six years olii measuring fi-et. At hia oinc can he -eeu i-e-ctmens, aoiue of them OTer fe-l in lentrth, wlm-li have been removed in leMs than three hours br taking ouetloee of his medii-ine. lr. Kilnkel's treatment is simiile, aaf and iwrfectly reliable, and no fee until tae w-.rm, with heml. i.eA. Lr. K. F. Kunkel. North Ninth street, Pluuiuciuhu, Pa. Couaml tion bv mail, or at olhce free Advertisements, WHIT Dr. J. Walker's ( aliioi ni:i m oirar Hitters aro a purely VeuTtable preparation, made cliieily from the na tive herbs found on the lower ranges of :Le Sierra Nevada mountains uf Califor nia, the inedit'inal properties of which arc extracted thfiflVoiu without the U:-; of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked. "What is the cause of the unparalleled success of Vinegar IiiT tkks ?" Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, :mdtlie patient re covers his health. They arc the great blood purifier and a lU'e-givins: principle, a perfect Kenovator and luvigorator of the (system. Never before in the history of the world lias a medicine bwn coininc.inJ.il jxwi.es.-ing the rcniarkalilo qualities of Vinkoar Uitteks in healing the sick of evry ilisove n;an is heir to. They are a pciitle Purgative as well as a Tuie, relieving Congestion or Inflammation ot the Liver a"il Visceral Organs, iu Uilions Diseases. The properties of Dr. Walker's Vinegar liirrKHS are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, I-aiative, Diuretic, Sedative, Countt-r-Irritant, Sudoritic, Altera tive, and A uti- Bilious. it. ii. .mi-im w,r s. c.. Dmcri't nf fl t Ifn. A., S.m Frnnci-Vtv California, sod t-'tr. tif Wnthtncltm ami Ch:irlt"n Sis.. X. V. Sold by mil lruszlts a lift Ife-alrr. $10 Breslau Lots. 5,000 LOTS Of SSxtOO feet, f-r Sat in Ik CITY OF BRESLAU, al f0 ptr Lot, 2,000 Garden Plots Of 10 Lots each, at fif 00 per riot. Tho City of Brcslan Is located on the South Bid Railroad of Long Island, and is known to b tba most enterprising placa in tha State, having three churches, schools, several large manufactories, koUls, stores, etc, to., and a population f several thou sand inhabitants. Every one Euctts Ereslan, And thos who don't, please call for particulars on TH03. TTELVTCOD, 13 Wflloughby Street, Brooklya. REMEMBER, $!0 PER LOT. Title perfect and warrantee deeds given free of incumbrance, street! opened and nrreyed free of extra charge. Apply to T80M&S WEUVQOD, 15 Wlllonghby St., Brooklyn, L L, k Ko. 7 Beefcman 5L, Rooms 519, IUw Tork City. Or U EDWARD SALOMON, CIS k tU Chestnut St, 1-11-ly Philadelphia, Pa, BLANKS ireiir.T PBrsTsn at this omcz. Advertisements. DYSPEPTIC CONSUMPTION. Can Dyp-ptic Consumption b Cured Jft mntwer, YES I Firs'- Remove aH the .nheahby aeut that gathers about t. wails of ta. stomach from indigMtioa. Second. Produce aa active eonJirton of Liver and Eidasys witfceui depleting the lyttem. Third. Supply n aid nature ia furnishing the draia of tome of the eomponit ports uai compos boiwj Wo, front thousands who have boea eured, usert that a oro oaa bo performed on this theory. REMEDIES USED, Apart from our Office Practice. FIRST. THE GREAT AMERICAN DYSPEPSIA PILLS, Remove the fungus matter from the stomsoa, oad restore it to a healthy conditio. sEComj. THE PINE TREE TAR. CORDIAL! AeU oa tho Liver, heals tho Stomach, an e'o on tho Kidneye ad Serrouo System. For further advice, emll or write OH. U Q C WlSfMBT, 232 .Vorlh Second Street. ADMONITION. It is knows to all reaJers that since Pa. L. Q. C. WIS1IART has followed tho cause and rare mt diseases, and tho creat value of TAR so a curative reme-ly, as directed by Biehop BerkWy and Rev. Joha Wesley, tW atony have attempted to make a TAR pre paration for THROAT AND LCSQ DI EASES. Eo it known that Da L. Q. WIS DARTS flSif Jiff TiB CQBDlit It the only remedy, from long experience, used by oar most ikillful phyeieians for Diptheria, THccrated Throat, Long, Kidney, Stomach, Asthma, and General Debility, at well os for Coughs, Colie ood Lung Affee tioaa dr. l. q.c. wishart. cc:tsultii;3 2:cis a:td stcss, No. 232 N. SECOND ST., rHiLDF.i.rni.i.. .we?cv.ve PEILETS.W -35, ' o o o o o Or Sugar-Coated Con re titrated, Hoot and Herbal Juice Anli Itillou Granules. THE " LITTLE .IAT"CATHAUTIC, or Holtum In Parro Physic. The nnTMT of modern JT-MIeal, Chemical rd Pltarraaceulual Self nee. 'o ac ol" any Wnirvr taking the larve. zvpuhnre ami nauiu piiK co:nrHxl of ctieap, crude, ami bulky ingredient. whto we ran by a careful application uf cht'inic:.! ecienrre, extract ail tiie cathartic aitd olb.r meui rinl pronertit. (mm the most valuable nxtn aiuj hero, and concentrate them into a minute nan uK McarceSy larccr than a niutarl weed, tn.it ran be readily waiiowed by Uneti the m -t :o!iuve Nnn.icn and fx-ndiou ta.t . Kat h little Parcalifo Pellet ivpreeiite. ui a ni't conrt-ntrjtrd form, a- much cathartic power aa i4 einltodird in any of the iaie pi Us founa U-r f'ale in the dm? shops. Front their wonderful ca thartic power, in proportion to their Mze. people wh havn not tried th-m are apt to snppore that they are Lurtt or d atic in erl - ct, but -orh is not at ail the cae. the different active nifd- mal prin ciple of which t t are o mooned be in; so har mouizt d aud mW irled, one by tho others, a to produre m mot searchlnc and ihor onxli, T-t Kcu.Iy aud kindly opt-rutin a; catlie&rtic .0 Reward Is hereby offered hr the pro prietor of th!e Ivliet. to any chemist who, uHn analr-riie, will find in tht-m any Calomel nr other forma ot mercury or auy viuer uuTal poien. Beintr ent I rciT vegetable, bo prtwular care i require-., while u-in them. They ulce rate without chsriftwmce to the cou-timion. li. t, or occtipitin. For Jan ud let Headache, Contipnlioti Impure It I ood 9 Pain In the Nheulder, ''ictTitiefat off the CheU lfizzinrts Sour Eructation off the Moinacb, Mud tale In mouth, Itillouat attack. Pain In region ol Hldnryis luternal Irrrr, R I on ted feeling about Stomach, Hu-h off Blood to Head, III! Col. ored t rine, 1 noc lability ami . I ooitl jr lorobod i n r , take ir. Pierre' Pleasant Purcatlve Pellet. In explanation of the remeuial powr of n.y Fur cative Fellers over po prcat a yariety of diiea-eft, I wi-h toay that their action moii the animal ueonomy I mil vernal, not a Klaud or IImuo eacaoiiiK their tana tlva Imprcft A-e doe not impair them; their airar-coatimj aiid, bein er closed In glaf-s bottles prerve their virtues ummitaired for anr k'nir' h of time, in any c Ungate, so that they are was fiesh and reliable, hich is not the cae with the pill fonnd la the dnu? stores, pnt np in cheap w-od or paste board boxes. Recoilect that for ail riis-ne where a Laxative, Altera tive or Purcatlre Is indicated, thewe little rvilets will rt j tiie most perfect satietactica to all who Urtc thftii. Ther are anld ISy all enterprising Drusgeaiat vw ccuU a b on tie. Io tvt allow any dnis to tndnce toti to take anything eke tiat Le iay pay ia jrj.t a eood as levy Pell'ts bei aiie he makes a lanje profit on that whir a be iwotumetidjo. If yim drmrji-t cannot supply thm. e:iclf 35 ckuU and receive therrt by r-Trm mvl from 11. V. riEKl'E, 3i. ,VepV, BUFFALO, N. T SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! AU sty!. Silver Mounted and Walnnt, nsw and tOt.N I tKS, BAll. SlIKLVINi. kVoftS! tt Tf'HKM, Kr. nOfSE AND OFFICII FCKXITTTRE all kind Til. 1 1 ru.it . ri. 1 hwt I ... Mcuod bami In h City. 1USI. 1023, lies ud lu-jj BliAlE AVt f Lila4eilil with the Urern IraiUtor. nntrd o mnt all Uatra. nit .Trrywhem. And Ut u bolale only hrtbGrest At lantic a Pinnc TV Co.. lal Fill t"n Ht and 1 4 Charrh t , j T. P O. Hoi 56.4. BemlforTh trtar etrrniar. Mlf T ANTED. AGESTS MALE OB FEMALE. FOB - r - - - J '- "e .wmuw ii uiq nir- irt. F-r partlrnhtrs, adilr--. PuHAiKLlHr. NOVFATTMTO CO. 11 28f 6u4 Fsamklu bi. luUUdpiua, Fa. Fi X, 13 H S a SEWING MACHINE, and boauty of Mitri. duILuhlVrt XHfli Cfealltig Mm ww1 w nil . . . rill and examine. an4 for imwHm a It 1MB tn.dny.in or vx gmuu-nauH i3B a, Lisa ai 1kv Look :iwt Advertisement":. EUGEUE SCHOEHIHG S CELEBRATED OT PERUVIAN BARK. fba Baarpe fa hlo Bitter waa found among tha paper ef o8wdlaa phrodoo. o lnlo mas. whe loot am ttfe, wbea lot J1 eld. by o fall of kla bora, aid rastpottaaa had baaa kept sprafoand eeeret by h family foe mora than thraa oantnrh OnrlncaU tha time they Biadefreqnent oa of the Btttora, which reodarad Umm a atrotvt and loin llTinj -t of ponpla, aojoylnf axcallant kaalta. Orlainany Iho aarrat of praparlnf thla Blttar and tta woodarful &acta.waa attained by onoof their kin, while participating ta lb earUaal expedtrJona of tho Spaniard In Amarira. tTUii"' - '"" "JH but to in ramiMd principal nau. THIS QEXUIXE SWEDTSn PIT TERS ' a II b no called, na dnco ft oomlng Into pnMie , effected tnooaanoa a bmowbiuur vwraa pa. .. .iMu. cima in bv man bOTetciana. and haa provad Itaalf rack a powerful reatoratlra and pnarr. Tatlva Kmdy. that tndaad It nasda ao funhaf ludt Ttdoal reoemmendatlona or pralea, HOW IT OPERATES. Tbffeetof theSwediah Blttar dlreeta Itaalf, tn the ant place, to the una of tho digeatlT organ throughout their entire extant, bnt mainly to the etomacb and th Tteoerel tract. It normalise thetr fnnctlcm. end therefor, according to the Baton of -rirfiTig trregnlaiitleo or remoeeo obatrnctiooa and rataotlotia of ail kind, or etnpe Diarrhoea. DyaanterT, v oder eaamolone dleeharree and aflraTia. Byreirn. koing th abdominal organ, of which depend th onrtahment, th ooneerratloo and the deTetopemnil af the human body th Swedtah Bitten mrlgoratM lh nerre and th rttal power, aharpen the era and the totalled, nmoTa th trembling of the Urn be tho acidly, th btrrnlng. nan, and pain of th ato mach, linproee It dlgesttr farultlee, and la an ex oaUent Prophylactic and remedy again ivrvoua 1 rrv lability. Flatulency. Caatto, Worm. Iroy. fte. n taken in doubla doeee, R operate a a ear atierwot, bat la mild and pilrliee way. In QOBawrnence of thee analttlee of th Bwedtnh Bitter it ha beoom one of the moat celebrated rem die again! illaieei e of th organ contained tn the l1lwwt and of affertlono that befall mankind tn eonaeqnenco of said dlaaaae. Thna the Hwadieh Bit. tare hao aa ononi paiowit renown for coring IJnr Complaint of long Winding. Jaandlce, Dyipepete, Disorders of the Spleen, of the Pencreae, of the Mtea rale Gland, and also dlaordere of the Kidney, of th Urinary and Saxnal-Orffana. Beeide thee th Swe AtM Bitter enre tho innumerable nervon, or con. geetlTO affection and diseases, which originate from said sbdomias disturbance, aa: Congestion of the Langs, the Heart, and the Brains, Coughs. Asthma, Headache, Nenralgla, tn different parte of the body, Chloroala, Internal Hemorrhoida and Files, Gout, Dropsy. General Debility, Bypoehondrlaaia, Melan choly. Ac, aa Of great benefit th Bwdiah Bitter bae also been fonnd In the beginning ot Uaetnc and Intermittent Terara. Bnt this Is only on aid of tta inestimable power of protecting those who nee tl regularly against all mi asmatic and epidemic illume. The awedieh Bittere haa by long experience In many thousand cases main. lained tta great renown of being the moat reliable PMaXBVATm A1TD PBOPHTLAOTIO-EKKKDT AOAXNST Typhus, OrientalPest, Ship Fever, Yellcw-Fever, AXD ASIATIC CHOLERA. The eamsior proeeottr and aenatrre rbrtue of the twdh Bittere agamst kt alarleus Ferer. Dysentery and Cholera, were moat apparently tested In the 1st war by French and English pbyaiclana, who by pre scribing tha amo to their reepeetfe troop. no eeeded la reducing th mortality list of epidemic u eases from at to 1 par eant, DIRECTIONS Carli! persona who bar to peirmni long and hard labor, and while doing It, are often oiioood to redden ahange of temperature, or th draft or air, or obnox ious dusts, smells, or rspors, ehoold not fall to nee the Swedieh Bitter. a few drape of tt, added to thetr drink, are sufficient to preset i s them In tneetl mable health and rigor. Those who r accustomed to drink Ice water during the summer, should never emit to add some Swedish Bitter to it, w i-ersone given to eedentary Ufa ahonld nee the Swedish Bittere. It will neutralise the bad effeeta of their want of exerciee in open air, and keep them la good health and good spirit. CWT th Ladles the Swedish Bitten must eepeel. ally be recommended. Because ita nee contribntea moat axeentlilly to preseere the regularity of the phyaiolow gleal functions, peculiar to th delicate female con stitution and thus proves an effectual harrier against those Innumerable Nervous and Blood Dleeaaee. which oow-aHiaya hav grown eo frequent as to be taken by many for Eras natural inheritance IB But th Swedish Bitter does not only secure good health; tt also effects the full development of the female body, and of tta beauty by perfect forma aod ftne eomplection and color. Thus th twadleh Bittere be besom dm of th safest and moat efficient C03METI0 AND TOILET ARTICLES Farmer and than? famUlee, who hav tried SwedUh Bittere. prefer tt to all similar articles For there tt prove beneficial In various way. In Summer, wheel thetr caning require them to often endure th In tense heat of th sun, while per forming hard work, they era Induced to be not suf adently warrtlone tn satisf ytng their burning thirst by rter, or a eating fnm not yet rlpe.no. Thosfarm-ir-f people aro very Oable to suffer from ran stroke, I" ever. Dysentery, Cholera, Ac, ka. The regular oa f th Swedish Bitters make thee dangerous InSo- allt In Winter, during the time of rest, many country People, trying to Indemnify thetneetvee for pest pri vations are very apt to often overload their etomecbe and tho Impair thetr dlgeattv organs th roots ot thotree. To see of the Swedieh Bittere prevents from mate Ass matter of eonree, ts ess of sirkneee, the pe ttent abowld avoid food not agreeing with him or roeh. aa I known, to bo difficult to digest or unsuit able to the disease tn qnestlon. The role: "Be moderate In an yo t, drink or ir I strictly to be observed. BOW TO TAKE SWEDISH BITTERS The Swedieh Bitter shall rart bs taSaat ns tha enc of Inflammatory symptom. Grown persons take one-eehlesrjooafni tana n per day, before or after meals, par r diluted wttb water. Ttfxm enter ej year, two-fhtrde f that enanttty i - enohaif - " no-auwtew " ChCdren frees rear onwards. ax,Mk mt task quantity. Pel SOU aCCUStomed aa chaw anhaAnaL SVaM en. tain from It as much aspoanbls, while Being Bwe- outers-.) taay may substitute Bom Sower of ehammomiie or root of ealamns, bat then swallow the ajTta, instead of esltttn It r th. rooking of tobooao should enly moderately be prao- wex Person afflicted with dvenanata ens ivsidM bread or cakes, or fat or salt meats, but ehoold take moderate exercise tn free sir voiding an sadden chan ges of temperature, ail Intemperance In eating and onnsing; euu au unon mental excitement, by which they will eontribst largely tr tho effectiveness of th wedieh Bittere. K. B . Should the Swedish RtttjMmMaR ell tubs B may b takes with earn eugsr, or oaa bo diluted wim some suar water or syrup. Havmff aoa ulrad bv 1 rn .. sins! re right of preparing the Only Genuine Swedish " asssvsor prepared oy Eugene achoening, late V. a Army Surgeon, we have, i order to fro, trata fraud and deceotlon. tba nein w avKnaams burst sate Use giaes of sach bottle and th envelop around B marked by K. Bchoentng'a and by our own sssv skxu without theee marks or spurious. DENIEL & CO., Bo. eta Forth Third Street, lflsdotphla, per Stogie Bottle, ntonta. Balf a dosan.Be. WboleesJ by Johnston, BoOowsy tt Gowda. k Street. Philadelphia, for Sola by oU ares. ninim
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers