Agricul tural. QrrETKEsa w Mtlxtso. The cow is naturally sluggish in her movements, and should not be hurried out of her natural gait. Sbe should never be driven to the place of milking faster than walk, and if she has far to go, tue walk should be a slow one. Hurry ing a cow when she is full, and the weather warm, hastens the circulation of hrr t.lood. and heats both her blood and her milk. A very little heating of the blood perceptibly affects the milk. It increases its odor as well, raises its temperature, and modifies the butter or cheese made irom it. ui mis account driving cows with a dog is not to be recommended. We have seen the milk of a dairy numbering thirty cows, per ceptibly affected by the milk of a single cow driven in haste bv a dog. She happened to be out at night and was accidentally left in the lot a hundred and fifty rods distant, when the herd was driven to the barn. Against our protest, a dog was sent after her and nhe came running to the barn, panting and frightened. In ten or fifteen min utes afterward she gave about six quarts of milk instead of ten, hot and odorife rous. It was mixed with the rest of the milk and. as was then customary, left through the night without any other cooling than it got by stirring. The ertra odor of the feverish milk, acting as a ferment in the slowly cooling mass. made its impress upon the milk and curd of the next day. The milk of this cow was not regular till after several milking. This was an extreme case. Less heating and worrying produce less effect, but never fail to do injury, Un less the number of cows is very small, and they are all very quiet and peace able, they had better be fastened in a milking barn or shaded stalls, rather than to be milked in an open yard. A large herd requires yard so large as to give too much chance for dodging, runnicg, hooking and disturbing each other. It soon becomes trod up and filthy, especially in moist weather. The practice of milking in open yards is rapidly going out of use, especially in large dairies. All harsh and violent treatment bhould be avoided, l'am and fear, worrying and solicitude, are clearly detrimental to milk secretion, and never fail to make the cow hold back a part of her mess, if they occur at the time of milking. Kind and gentle treatment and quietude promote secretion, and are absolutely essential to drawing all the milk. Canada Farmer. Controlling Xrnunox. When one understands the elements of plant nntri tion, and knows how to control it, it is surprising how great are the results of farm or garden art. In grape culture, for instatice.in England, it is essential to prow the foreign grape under glass ; but of course, a great amount of direct per sonal attention has to be brought to lx ar in order to make it a success. But this close attention makes the grower intimately connected with the wants of wie plants be prows ; and in tlie case of the grape vine, the English growers beat anything ever known of grapes grown in the best wine countries in the i-pen air. In Europe, they have two ways of growing the foreign grape. They make good, deep and rich borders ; and then, under a glass erected on the prepared ground, grow the grapes beneath. The other plan is, to grow the plants in pots from ten to fourteen inches wide. It is remarkable that the close attention required in the case of the pot vines, leads to such an excellent practical re sult, that those who grow them this way are often as far ahead of those who grow in the ground under glass as these iast are ahead of those wbo.as vignerons, pride themselves along the Ilhine and elsewhere, as being among the most successful grape growers in the world. In a recent English horticultural exhi bition, two plants of grape vines, grow ing in ots, were exhibited, with thirty two large bunches on one, and thirty four on the other. The pots were four teen inches in diameter. Xo open ground culture could pro duce results like this. It is a useful lesson not only for grape culture, but for all culture. The more intimately we know plants and their wants, such a knowledge as this kind of culture brings, the more profit can we make out of them. AsTAKAGrs. We advise all our friends who own a garden or farm, to plant a led of this most delicious vegetable. There is no crop more sure, and no vegetable more palatable at this season of the year. Once planted, it continues to yield freely for many years, and if well cared lor, will produce large and line stalks. There is said to be several varieties ; we think that the soil and treatment makes the difference, rather than the variety. Formerly, the one or two old roots were set quite deeply, say one foot deep in the trenches ; but within a few years the practice has somewhat changed, as it cannot be had so early by deep planting. We should not advise planting it more than four or six inches deep, preferring on many soils four inches. The young plants should not be covered more than two inches deep when set, or they will be likely to decay. The earth can be drawn in gradually during the summer. The rows may be three and a half or four feet apart, and the plants in the rows about a foot apart. .Latterly some of the gardeners have adopted the plan of planting in stools some two feet apart, uud treating these stools as a stool or hill of rhubarb. We doubt not larger stalks can be raised in this way than by the old method. Salt may be used to advantage on the beds. Ve have seen salt applied so as to cause the soil to turn red, and to prevent all weeds from growing, and yet the asparagus would ilourUn finely. JSoston Tran xrrijtt. (liussrxo a SLorE. A steep slope may be grassed over without sodding by first smoothing the surface, and then mixing a tough paste or mortar of clay, loam, and horse manure, with sufficient water. The grass seed, which should le mixtnre of Kentucky blue grass and white clover, should be thickly but evenly scattered npon the moist surface of this plaster, as it is spread upon the bank. The plaster should be at least one or two inches thick, and thin layer shonld be laid over the seed. The surface should be kept moist, and a light dressing of some active fertilizer would help the growth. In a few weeks the growing grass should be cut, and should be kept short at all times nntil a thick sod is formed. Aitir York Tri hunt. The French Society for the Encour agement of National Industry offers a prize of 3, 0(H) francs for the suggestion of a practical plan for diminishing the expense of harvesting grain the reaers used not answering the pur pose. Also, a prize of 2,000 francs and a medal valued at 500 francs, for the best plan for managing and utilizing mountain sides and slopes. Also, two prizes of 2,000 francs and 3,000 francs respectively, for best plans for irriga tion in mountainous regions, which are arid, by water from melted snows, and on lower regions, by the nse of spring, ruin, and river waters in the formation of meadows. Cankeb in pigeons, according to great authority, should not be cut out, but the cankered plaoe dressed twice a day with a solution of zinc or copper (crystalized) about half an ounce to quart of water. Merely wash the sore with a slight feather. The lotion most not be too freely used in the month. Scientific. The AitTrpiciAn Pbodcctios of Low Tzmpera TURKS- By the Windhausen process, a steam engine is employed to condense air to, say, two or three at mospheres. The heat developed by the compression is drawn off during the passage of the condensed air through pipes in a series of chambers, in which cold water is flowing. The cooled air is then allowed to expand into cylin der under a gradually diminishing pres sure, the expansion being attended with the development of great cold. It is claimed that under a pressure of but 35 pounds to the square inch, a reduction of 51 Fah. has been obtained, sur prisingly low temperature, considering the means employed. The following modifications of the apparatus would render its cold-producing power almost unlimited : 1. A communication between the ex pansion cylinder and the chambers through which the condensed air is conducted before it is allowed to ex pand. Supposing this outlet regulated by a cock, a blast of very cold air could replace the running water, and reduce the condensed air to a very low tempe rature. 2. The introduction of a second com pressing cylinder, with which the con densed air, after being cooled, could be still further compressed, again cooled, and finally conducted into the expansion cylinder. Under a pressure of, say, 60 atmospheres, a considerable mass of air at the temperature of say 100 Fah. would, in its expansion, produce a re duction of temperature greater perhaps than any yet obtained. Since by means of the communication between the ex pansion cooling chambers, the con densed air can be lowered to any tem perature obtainable in the expansion cylinder, there wonld appear to be no other limit to the reduction of tempera ture save what would arise from the strength of materials, or the liquefac tion and subsequent freezing of the nitrogen, or the oxygen of the air, or of the air itself. Among the advantages that we may rationally expect to accrue from the apparatus thin modified are the following : 1. The confirmation or otherwise of the "absolute zero," as determined by the expansion or contraction of gases by heat or cold. 2. The liquefaction and subsequent solidification of many of the incoercible gases, the determination of their physi cal peculiarities as liquids or solids, together with their crvstaline form. 3. The action of intense cold on the chemical affinities of certain gaseous compounds. 4. The action of intense cold on the color of certain chemical compounds. Journal of the Franklin Institute. Liquid Carbosio Acid. Cailletel has, bv use of an apparatus very similar in principle and construction to that de vised by 1'roressor Andrews, ol liellast, succeeded in liquefying carbonic acid, under conditions which enable him to test many of its properties, while still in the liquid state. His apparatus con sists of a hydrostatic press, by which mercury can be forced, under a pressure of SW0 atmospheres, f necessary, into a cylindrical glass reservoir, terminating in a narrower thick tube. Liquid car bonic acid he finds to be colorless, mobile, and a non-conductor of elec tricity. It is not decomposed by powerful induction spark, but the spark has, in the liquid, a very white dazzling appearance, salt, sulphate ol soda, chloride of calcium, sulphur, phos phorus, stearin, and paraffin are quite insoluble in liquid caroonio acid. Iodine is slightly soluble. Liquid car bonic acid is but slightly soluble in water : petroleum, however, dissolves five or six times its bulk. Bisulphide of carbon dissolves sparingly. Ether mixes with it. in all proportions with great readiness. Liquid fats dissolve in it, but not solid fats. Sodium does not reduce it Gold dust, for printing in gold. known under the name of bronze, comes mostly from Fuerth, in Bavaria. Fine cnttings of the metal are mixed with sticky liquid and then ground like paints. Thus reduced to a powdered form, the sticky matter is separated from the metallic dust by washing in water, after which it is sifted into the various sorts. It is obtained in as many as fifteen grades of fineness and in the different colors white (made Irom sil ver leaf), pale yellow, orange, frreen. and red. In printing in gold the im pressions are first struck off in printer's gold size. The gold or bronze dust is then applied by means of a cotton tuft or a brush of short fur. If it is desira ble to have very rich gilding, bronzes of various colors may be used. Care mnst be taken that the paper which is used for the bronzing process be per fectly dry. A Floral Chameleon. The French Bishop of Canton has just sent to the Jardin f Acclimatation, at Paris, a plant whose flower changes color three times a day. It is spoken of as another wonderful evidence of Chinese art in leading Nature out of her custumary patns. It appears, however, that it is, if not the same, at least not more re markable than a natural floral freak found in Southern Australia. It is a beautiful flower, similar to our well known morning glory, with five streaks of color on its bell-shaped calyx. In the early morning the color streaks are pale blue. Toward noon they turn to a rich purple tint, which changes to a light pink during the afternoon. As the day declines the color fades, dis appearing entirely after sunset, when the flower closes and dies. Chicory in Ground Coffee. A pre liminary examination of coffee lor ad mixture is best made by gently strewing the powder upon the surface of cold water. The oil contained in coffee pre vents the particles from being readily wetted by the water, thns causing them to float. Chicory, burnt sugar, etc. contain no oil, and their caramel is very quickly extracted by the water, with production of a brown color, while the particles themselves rapidly sink to the bottom of the water. On stirring the liquid, coffee becomes tolerably nni formly diffused without sensibly color ing the water, while chicory and other sweet roots quickly give a dark brown turbid infusion. Boasted cereals do not give so distinct color. An exhibition of appliances adapted to economize fuel is to be held in Man chester, England. The exhibition will comprise : 1. Appliances which may be adapted to existing furnaces, etc.. whereby an actual saving is effected in the consumption of fueL 2. Appliances which may be adapted to existing fur naces, etc., whereby waste heat is utilized. 3. New steam-generators and furnaces, boilers and engines, specially adapted for saving fuel, and appliamies whereby waste products are utilized, the radiation of heat prevented, etc A variety of similar apparatus for manu factoring, agricultural, and domestic purposes, will also be exhibited. The exhibition promises to be interesting and instructive. Is a discussion on the value of meat extracts as food, Max Von Pettenkoffer holds that the extracts pre Dared, ac cording to the present plan of Baron Liebeg, are quite equal to, if not supe rior, to meat itself. He thinks it bears the same relation to meat as cheese and butter bear to milk. Somnerstown, Lookout Mountain, 2,400 feet above the Tennessee, com mands a view of six states. It is popu lar with southerners. Domestic. Scarlet Geraniums. Nothing is more showy in the flower garden or pleasure grounds daring the whole sum mer and autumn months, than beds or masses of scarlet blooming geranium, of which the old horse shoe geranium is the original type. There are great number of new and very beautiful sorts, and when they are properly grouped to gether on the lawn, they make glori ous display. There are few plants more easily grown, or that better repay the care of the cultivator. All the kinds require light, rich soil, composed of loam, leaf mould or rotten manure and sand. They will root readily without either glass or bottom heat Gardeners generally take cuttings in autumn months and put them into six inch pots, well drained and filled with sand, and placed in a cold frame. They will be rooted in a month or five weeks, and they should be carefully lifted and placed in three inch pots and taken to the greenhouse, or some sheltered place until they begin to grow. Water occa sionally, nntill such "time as the weather compels you to honce them. During the winter, they require little water and cool temperature. In March, shift into five inch pots, and when the time comes for bedding, these plants will re pay for all labor. As there are many who would be glad to cultivate them who have no greenhouse in which to keep them, 1 will mention for the bene fit of such, a very simple method which I practice occasionally with great suc cess. As soon as the first frost nips the foliage, I take as many geranium plants as 1 want, and put them into as small pots as possible, and take them to a dry pit or cellar free from frost. Here they remain dry nntil spring. When my beds are ready, I cut them to four or five eyes of the collar, and, so far from injuring them, 1 firmly believe they flower much finer after a winter s resi than when kept in a greenhouse. Gardener Monthly. Symptoms of Sunstbokk. The one great symtom the center of the group in all forms of the disease is the high temperature. If the skin be cool, the case is not sunstroke. After death the high temperature continues, and is said sometimes even to rise Higher. .Decom position follows with exceeding rapidity. On post mortem examination the only appearances of striking importance are a condition of blood similar to mai seen in low fevers, a rigid, contracted state of the heart, in which it feels like wood and a great tendency towards the rapid but transient developement of that pe culiar stiffening which sometimes after death takes possession of the muscular tissues. There should in such cases be no waiting for the doctor. The remedy is so simple, the death so imminent, that the good Samaritan passing by should save his brother. The good Samaritan must, however, have a cool head to be useful. Not every man that falls un conscious on a hot day has sunstroke. There is, fortunately, one criterion so easy of application that any one can nse it Go at once to tne lauen man, open his shirt bosom, and lay the hand upon the chest ; if the skin be cool, you may rest assured that, whatever may be tue trouble, it is not sunstroke. If, on the contrary, the skin be burning hot, the case is sunstroke, ana no time anouia be lost The patient must be carried to the nearest pump or hydrant.stripped to the waist, and bucketful after bucket ful of cold water be dashed over him. until consciousness begins to return, or the intense heat of the surface decidedly abates. Lipptncott Magazine. How to Make Tomato Fios. Pour boiling water over the tomatoes in order to remove the skins ; then weigh them and place them in a stone jar, with as much suear as you have tomatoea, nd let them stand two days ; then pour off the syrnp and boil and skim it until no scum rises. Then pour as before, then boil and skim again. After third time they are fit to dry, if the weather is good ; if not, let them stand in the syrup nntil drying weather. Then place on large earthen plates or aisnes, ana pnt them in the sun to dry. which will take about a week, after which pack them down in small wooden boxes, with fine, white sugar beteen each layer. Tomatoes prepared in this manner will keep for years. Pea Soup. To every quart of nn shelled peas allow two quarts of water, in which boil the empty pods half an hour ; remove, strain, add one pint cold water, plaoe over the fire, and put in two pounds of beef cut in small pieces ; boil slowly one hoar, and if not enough water, add some boiling hot ; put in the peas, and if the meat is not desired in the soup, remove it ; boil half an hour, and ten minutes before serving add two tablespoonfuls of rice floor stirred smoothly in half a teacup ful of new milk ; stir frequently to pre vent the flour from scorching. Boiled Peas. They should be fresh when cooked, and boiled in just enough water to cover them, which should be salted, and boiling when the peas are. put in. Do not cover tne vessel wnue thev are cooking, which ought not to be longer than twenty minutes, unless they are old. Drain off all the water ! add a Utile cream and a small piece of butter. Whooping Cocoa. Just before the patient retires for the night, after the third week, pnt an ounce oi iiquia am monia in a gallon of water in an open pan ; in this quench half a brick made red hot and let the patient breathe the ammonia ted steam. 1 his, it is said , terminates the malady in three or four days, and will tranquilize the nervous system. Remedy fob Baldness. Take of box wood shavings, six ounces ; proof spir its, twelve ounces ; spirits of rosemary, two ounces ; spirits of nutmegs, half an ounce. Steep shavings in the spirits at a temperature of 60 degrees for four teen days ; then strain liquid off, add ing other ingredients. Bub scalp thor oughly every night and morning. Spinach. It should be cooked so as to retain its bright green color and not sent to table, as it so often is, of a dull brown or olive color ; to retain its fresh appearance, do not cover the vessel while it is cooking, and when done, drain in a colander, chop fine, add a lump of batter, heat through, and serve. Strawberry Jelly. Mash the fruit and squeeze the juice through a bag ; to every pint put three quarters of pound of sugar, and boil it twenty min utes briskly. This keeps better than the preserve. All small fruits must be cooked nntill the seeds looks done. To Remove Ink Spots Iron Mould io. Oxalic Acid, 1 os ; Cream of Tar tar, 4 os. Mix and apply with the aid of little water and a piece of sponge or cloth to the stain. Oxalic acid being poisonous, it should not be placed in the hands of children. Lemon Jxlly. Two caps of sugar ; yolks of three eggs ; juice of two lem ons. Cook till thickened by setting in boiling water, then add the well-beaten whites of three eggs ; spread between the layers of the cake, and turn off the rough edges. Wine Whet. Boil a pint of milk, nd pat to it glass of white wine ; set it over the fire till the curd has settled, when strain it and sweeten to your taste. Gilt Frames can be restored only by being rarilt If brushed over with wa ter in which onions have been boiled, it is said flies will avoid them. Il timorous. His Dai Ix.-''Onoe in a while," says the D anbury iVeu. "there is a day when a man is oat of work, and he stay s at home. After breakfast is eaten and the dishes are removed, he polls out the family drawer, and dumps the contents on the table, to look for Si per of suddenly acquired importance, aving got a chair which has lost a leg, and for that reason had been set aside where nobody will be apt to get into trouble with it he drops into it snd it immediately comes apart, and deposits him under the table. He jumps to his feet at once, and kicks the chair into the hall-way, to the imminent danger of his wife and the woman who lives in the other part of the house, both of whom, being under the impression that one of the children had fallen from the man telpiece and broken its back, have started to the rescue. He immediately asks his wife what kind of an idiot she is to leave a broken chair where any one can sit down on it and jeopardize life and limb, and sarcastically inquires if sbe wanted to kill him, or merely cripple him for life, and scouts with scorn indescribable the intimation that the chair was placed where no sane party would ever think of looking for one. After that he gets a new chair which he is confident will throw him and hurt him, and says so, and pores over the paper again. Pretty soon he is attended by one of the children who is making herculean efforts to scale one of the table legs with a view to getting on top to see what is going on. As the little round head, with the swelling cheeks and bulging eyes and tumbled hair and very dirty mouth, appears above the top, and beams op at him, he nervoosly cries, Hey, you, now. come out of that ! and start after your mother ; she wants you.' But the child knows that its mother doesn t want him, and so does he, and being at a loss to explain why, he falls to work at the papers again. In a very little while. one very chubby arm is thrown on top of the table, and the eyes have reached the level, and are taking in the wonders of the display. There is another move op. then a sudden weakness in the legs that are tightly hugged to the table's legs, then a desperate but hopeless clutch at the papers for safety, and the little head disappears with lightning velocity, and then an ominous bump, and then a scream, and the miserable man is on bis feet again, holding the suffering child wrong side np and screaming for help. The moment it is in its mother's arms, and the camphor is in reach, the man, who stays home because he has nothing to do, pats on his coat and hat and beats a hasty re treat leaving tne wife to calm the dis tracted breast of the child, and to set the table to rights. When he has another day to himself, be dnmps out the drawer again, and goes over a simi lar performance. " It is an old story, but a good one, which tells of a very negligent man who was going on a visit to name friends. His wife extorted from him a solemn promise that he would abandon his usual custom, and put on a clean shirt every day. So he packed a dozen in his trunk. When he came home again his wife was glad to perceive that he had grown more fleshy ; but she was alarmed when upon examining his trunk she found there was not a single shirt in it He had kept his promise to mount a clean one every day, but he always put it on over the others ; and now he was sporting around with the whole dozen on his back. Some men will never let women have their own way. Some days ago a letter was received in New Orleans, directed to "the big gest fool in New Orleans." The Post master was absent, and on his return one of the young clerks informed him of the receipt of the letter. "And what became of it ? inquired the postmaster. "Why," replied the clerk, "I did not know who the biggest fool in New Orleans was, so I opened the letter my self." "And what did you find in it ?" inquired the Postmaster. "Why," re plied the clerk, "nothing but the words, "Thou art the man I Artemus Ward, in one of his lectures, used to tell of an old frontiersman who had built him a comfortable cabin and was living alone with his wife and family far away from all civilization. On re turning from a protracted hunt one day. he fonnd his cabin burned by the Indi ans, his wife and children gone, and the bones of his stock in the ashes of his stable. The old squatter gazed npon the scene for a moment Artemus said. and then murmured, in tones of anguish, "How ridiculous I A Boston bride received among other presents a horse and coupe. It was the desire of her parents to exhibit these among the other gifts, and the only way in which it could be done was to pnt horse and carriage in the back yard. An admiring throng viewed the equi pagefjpm the rear windows, and pa and ma were tiius uuue aupreiueij iiupyv, A New Tore lawyer, who probably does not recognize the code of ethics of the bar association, having collected half the amonnt of a note placed in his hands, responded to a request from his client that he would remit the amount "All respectable lawyers retain one half for collection. I have collected my A gentleman inquired of a carpenter's boy: "My lad, when will this job you have on hand be done ?" "I can't tell, sir," replied the honest boy, artlessly. "It's s day job. and it will depend npon how soon the governor has another order. "Haven't yoa mistaken the pew, sir?' blandly asked a Sunday Chesterfield to a stranger as he entered it 1 beg your pardon," replied the individual, rising to go out, "I fear I have ; I thought it was a Christian's." A little boy carrying some eggs home from the grocery, dropped them. "Did you break any?" asked his mother when he told her of it "No." said the little fellow, "but the shells came off some of 'em." Alluding to the death of s citizen, recently, the D anbury New remarks : "With the single exoeption of twenty three years sgo, when he took a few lessons on a violin, his life has been blameless !" Mr. Smith is bound to have his joke. His wife walked nearly in front of s railroad train the other day, and he ta d that if she had gone s step farther his children would have had a step-mother. It is calculated that it takes s domes ticated fly a two-billionth part of a sec ond to wink, while an industrious mos quito can do it in one-tenth that time. Corrections solicited. A western paper says of the air, in its relation to man: "It kisses and blesses him, but will not obey him." Poor Dobbs says that description suits his wife exactly I 'TVv' ann mnpulf rwtnt. mw an. ing away, my darling. Absence, you know, makes tne near grow ionuer. "Of somebody else," added the darling. Chicago is ahead again, having a black Maria drawn by four white horses snd driven by s stylish policeman ing a white hat Miscellany. "Who hurt you. bob?" asked a pe destrian of s small boy who aat howling on the curb-stone. "Johnny Kydd," sobbed the victim. "I'll see about him if he does it again," remarked the man, oondolingly, but the boy suddenly stopped howling, snd exclaimed : "Just leave him alone. When I grow up I'll get on the police force, and then I can belt him all I want to I" A letter must be answered, uidess yon wish to intimate to the writer that he or his object is beneath your notice. Symptoms of Catarrh. Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of nasal passages, discharge falling into throat sometimes profuse, watery.acrid, thick and tenacious, mucous, purulent, maoo-porolent bloody, putrid, offen sive, eta In others a dryness dry, wa tery, weak or inflamed eyes, ringing in CATS, deafness, hawking and coughing to clear the throat ulcerations, scabs from ulcers, voice altered, nasal twang, offensive breath, impaired smell and taste, dizziness, mental depression, tickling cough, etc Only a few of the above symptoms are likely to be pre sent in any case at one time. No dis ease is more common or less understood by physicians. The proprietor of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy will pay $500 reward for an incurable case. READ WHAT IT WILL DO. Bbooeville. Pa., April 27, 1872. Dr. R, V. Pierce: Sir Having first applied to num ber of home physicians and failed to get relief, I resolved to try yonr Remedy. Four bottles have completely cured me of one of the worst cases of Catarrh, of which I have any knowledge, having suffered for months with an acute pain in the head, and breathed only with the greatest difficulty. I deem it due to you as well as suffering humanity that this recognition be made of what we deem an invaluable medicine. 22 Chas. Q. Anderson. Glad Tidings fob the Slaves of Kino Alcohol. How many a manly form is palsied ; how many a noble mind is destroyed : how many a price less soul lost through the curse of strong drink ! To the despairing victims of the Satanic tyrant A lcohol, whose shattered nerves, and trembling limbs, and rack ing headaches, seem to find no relief except in the renewed use of the fatal poison which brings them every day nearer to their miserable end, we an nounce glad tidings of great joy ! Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bitters contain not a single drop of Alcohol in any form. but are a sovereign remedy for the ills of drunkenness. They restore tone snd strength to the system, and entirely eradicate the pernicious appetite for liquor. Try a few bottles of Vinegar Bitters, and you will never crave strong spirits again, but hud yonr neaitn re paired, your mind restored, and be once more a man in the best sense. Health is cheap when Vinegar Bitters are SI a bottle. u An Infallible Pilk 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 ns for call ing attention to Anakesis, the happy discovery of Dr. Silsrrk, 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 instant relief and cures permanently. Price $1.00. Sold by Druggists every where. Anakesis Depot, 40 alter St., New lork. 4 There are several kinds of worms which trouble horses; the pin-worms (pointed at both ends) are the most common and most dangerous, Sheri dan's Cavalry Condition Powder will iu a few days eject the worms, and the horse will begin to thrive. Factories and machine shops should not be allowed to run a day without Johnson' Anodyne Liniment. In case of a sudden accident an immediate nse of it may save weeks of suffering, and perhaps a limb, or even life. The noblest aim of science is to re lieve human suffering. Its highest tri umph is found in Dr. Hickman's Rheu matic Ki tttb, a remedy of the highest character and standing. Acute or chronio Rheumatism, Oout, and all aches and pains which are cansed by the above diseases, give way before its beneficent power. For sale by all re spectable Druggists. Price $1. If your Druggist has not got it take no other, but send $1 direct to the Sole Proprietor and Manufacturer, Dr. Wm. H. Hick man, 336 South Second St, Philadel phia, Pa. Also Manufacturer of Dr. Hickman's Electric Fluid for Neural gia, Headache and Toothache. Tap Warm! Tspe Worml Tspe Worm rrmovfd hi from 1 to S hours with harmless v-getable medicine. The worm passing from the syt.teru alive. No fee ssked until the entire worm, with hesd pa. Mdifine harmless. Can refer thnee afflicted to the residents of thia citj whom I have cured. At my office can be seen hun dreds of pttecimena, messuring from 40 to ltsi feet in length, Fifty per cent, of case of Dyspepsia and diftorirantzationa of Liver are caused ty stomach and other worms existing In the alimentary cauaL Wurnw. a diseeae of the most dsngt-rnuii character, are an little understood by the medical men of the present day. Call and see the origins! and only worm destroyer, or send for a circular which will give a full description and treatment of all kinds of worms; enclose i cent stamp for return of tue same Dr. E. F. Kunkel can tell by seems: the patient whether or not. they sre troubled with worms, and by writing and telling the symptoms, Ac., the Doctor will answer by mail UK. . F. KUNKKL. No. 36 N. Ninth St., Philadelphia, Pa. (Advice at office or by mail, free.) beat, 1'iu and Stomach worms also removed. Adyertisements. THE NEW IMPROVED REMINGTON SEWING MACHINE. AWARDED Tiis "Medal for Progress," AT TIEX51, ISIS. Till HIGBE9T OEDER OF " MIDAL" AWAKDID AT THE EXPOSITION. "o Saving .Machine 7ieceired a Jigher J'rize.' A FEW GOOD REASOXSt 1. A Sew Invention Tiioeoighlt Tested and secured bj Letters Patent. 2. Makes a perfect lock iititch, alike on both sides, on all kinds of good. 3. Runs Light, Smooth, Noiseless and Rapid test combination of qualities. 4. Disable Rum for Yeart without Repairs. 6. Will do all tarietiet of Work and Fancy Stitching in a superior manner. 6. Is Mif$t tatily Managed bj the operator. Length of stitch may be altered while run ning, and machine can be threaded without passing thread through holes. 7. Design Simple. Ingeniout. Elegant. forming the stitch rxthout the use of Cog Wheel Gears, Rotary Cams or Lcto; Arms. Has the Automatic Drop Feed, which insure uniform length of Hitch mt unf rpced. Has our new Thread Controller, which allows easy movement of needle-bar and precent injury to thread. 8. Cohstecctios mart careful and rts ished. It is manufactured by the most tkillful and tzperienced mechanic, at the cele brated "Remington Armory, Jlion, V. 1. TMiladelphia Office, ftO Cketinut Street. 5-7-2m ' Advertisement., lie 1 IValL-or'a ralifomia Tin- egar Kilters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made cuieny irom iut u-tit-o horla fiiiind on the lower muces of the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, the medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked. What is the cause of the unparalleled success ot iegak ou ters f Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient re covers his health They are the great blood purifier and a life-givins principle, a perfect Renovator and Invlgorator of the svstem. Never before in the history of the world has a medicine been compounded possessing the remarkable nn.lirio nf VlYKttAK HITTERS ID lieallUe the sick of every disease man is heir to. They are a gentle rurgame as weu as relieving congestion or -the Liver and Vise ral Organs, in Biliout Diseases. The properties of Dr. Walker's Vi.iegae Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Ponnindlir. V II fifing ljtiative. Diuretic Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Altera- ive. nd Anti-iiuious. Grateful Thousands proclaim Vrs Egar Bitters the most wonderful In vigiiraut that ever uutuined the tunking Bytem. No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not de stroyed by niintrai poison or other means, and vita! organs wasted beyond repair. JUlious. Kcmittent and Inter mittent I erers, which are so preva lent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, esjiecially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Urande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro anoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during sea sons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive de rangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow erful influence upon these various or gans, is essentially necessary- There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walker's Vinegar Bitters, as they will speedily remove the dark colored viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body auainst disease by purifying all its fluids with Vixegar Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Ilead ache. Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Ptlpita tation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symp toms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise ment. Scrofula, or Kin?s Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck. Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Hcrcuriul .Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes. etc. In these, as in all other constitutional Dis eases, Walker's Ti.xeoab IIittebs have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intractable cases. Fcr Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious. Remit tent anU Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases are cansed by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases. Persons en gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and aliners, as they advance in life, are subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of Waikeb's Vi.v egab Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tet ter, Salt-Kheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring worms, Scald-head, Sore Eye?, Erysipelas. Itch, Scurfs, Discoloration of the Skin, Hnmors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug np and carried ont of the system in a short time by the nse of these Bitters. Pin, Tape, and other lYorms, lnrking in the system of fo many thousands are effectually destroyed and removed. No svstem of medicine, no vermifuges, no an thelmintics will free the system front worms like these Bitters. For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo manhood, or the turn of life, these Tonie Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when ever yon find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when yoa find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins ; cleanse it when it is foul ; yonr feelings will tell von when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. R. II. MrDOXALD CO.. DntTfrists and G"- Arta San Francisco. California, and cur. of Washmctun and rharltna Sea.. X. Y. fcwlsl by all UraukU aul IcUcar HERCHANT'S GARGLING OIL The Standard Liniment of the United 8tatss IS UOOD FOR ffHrnsmnl Seattlt, JtVuwtua, feavrrJUi ar Biles, .Virr ytpffes, IM. nl UrnuU, Hsfla, Mm c, Sfmsrins, .Wv?, ScraldiessT Urease, SnnghaU Wutdgailt, ftaWMi, R in .VWp, Jt-mwm Wrrjr. 1m Back. av Fl'iA HoSJMNi, Prrm Bites, tjtrrmit Steams. tml Ctm-kt, lialU tmU InmU, Mfid, Ktmobm. HJl ril. Hit n Animals, TomVtacne. Ur Sin S1.09. Irdiia toe. KmU tic Ssaall Mis fcr Faajtlj Vss, 23 oral. Taa Oanrllar. Oil aaa la tat as a Hattaoat aea 1M. All ws ak w a air tnol, kiu b ars aad follow direction. Ak roar aarat Uracil or dfalsr la PaMat sTrdidaas lor oaa of oar Almanacs, aad road what Iksamne aar abonl tno OIL Tko Oarglliii Oil l !. l br all RaswuMs dsalora UiroafaoU lb I'nUtd Halt ami thtr rmtmtries. Oar Ustimvminls dato from 1KB k taa arsssac. aad art awohofcd. Ws alas siaaafactoTa Merchant's Worn Tablets. Ws al fair aad lltwal wlik aiL aad dafr soalradicuoa. Maaafactaiad at Lockport, X. Y., TJ. S. JL, by Merchant's Gargling Oil Co., JOHN HODGE, Secretary. IHEA-DTCTAB 18 A PC BLACK TKA, wtth tha Gran Taa aaor. War ranted ta anlt all uatM. For sal svarywbar. And for sale wnolaaais onlr by tna Great Al lan uc a Pacific Tea Ca., Ul Ful. ton HL, and 14 Chnreh M. H. T. P. O. Boxatws. SaBdlorThasr Advertisements. DYSPEPTIC CONSUMPTION. Can Dytpeptio Contirmption b Cured! W mntvtr, YES! t.i.i an tha nhtalthT aeasa that nthera about the walla ef Ue awaadh from indigestioa. SacoDd. Produce aa ati ton l'.tiaa M Liver aad Kidasra wiUeot dsplstiag Us tystem. Third. Supply tr aid nature ia ruraisaiaf the armia ef mom ef the eempoaeat parte that eonpeae healthy tuida We, from thooaaada whs ha bea eared, assart that a eare eaa be psrfsrasd sa this I aery. REBEDIES OSED, Apart from our Office Practice. THE GREAT AMERICAN DYSPEPSIA PILLS, tonaeve the faana Batter tfm the sUaasA, aad raaUre it U a healthy eaadUiea. SECOND. THE PINE TREE TAR CORDXAI.! Asia sa the Liver, heala Ike Stoaaeb, aad aeta a the lidaeyt aad Hervooa Bystaaa. Fer farther adriee, call ar write OH. U Q C, WISHABT, 132 MtrU jvaf S!rmJ. ADMONITION. It ai kaewa te afl reader that si no Dm. L. Q. C WISH ART hie followed the eaaas aad ear t dimama, aad the great raloe tf TAR a a raratir remedy, ae directed by Bisasp Berkley aad Rev. Jeaa Weeley, thai Biaay hare attempted te aiahe a TAR pre paratiea far THROAT AND LCMS DIS EASES. Be a kaewa thai Da. L. Q 0. wTSHARM PIRE TRIE TAR COBDIll I the enly remedy, from leag txperieaoa., aed Vy ear most skillful phyaieiaa far Diatheria, IHeerated Threat, Long, Kidney, SUmach, Asthma, aad General Debility, n aa far C auras, Celda aad Lug Ala. DR. L. Q.C. WISHART. C02JSU1TIN1 EX2C AID S7C22 No. 2S2 N. SECOND ST , PHILADELPHIA. size sr m - ..vi-e mirrs.w aV o o ooo Or Sagar-Coated, Concentrated. Root and Herbal Juice, Ant'l Billons Grannies. THE "LITTLE GIANT" CATHARTIC, or ,71 alt a as In Parvo Physic The noYflrr of modern MMlc-L CbemiraT mo PhanDacpatical Science. No ne of any lonim Utfinz the larce. nroalsiTe and naarM-ou Dill computed of cheap, crude; and balky intrrpttirnt wbea we can by a careful applicatfua of cbroika ncience, extract all the catliartic aud other m. cinal properties from the nvuei valuable root a in heriM, ano concent rate inem into a suinaie iran ulr. acarceSr I m rarer than a aaaMard seed that can be readily wallowed ly thomeo the mit sennit ire tomachw and laetidiufj tatf Each little Purgative- relict n prrw-i.i. iu mFt cooceiitntiej form, a- much cathartic I0" u is embodied in any uf the imrje pill ft mid. t ftr ale ia the dm? whops. From their wonderful ca thai-tic power, in proportion to their ize. people who have not trie! them are apt to npnM tlat the are hrh or d -atic in effect, bat ach i no! at all the cae. the jitTerent active medicinal prin cipleof which th am comported brm to tar- inonizeil aud mf men. one oy me oiner. n u produce a ant scarrhliic and borv oitli, v.t a;en A J aud kluUly ouvruiiug cathartic. $30 Reward 1 hereby offered by the pro prietor of thee I'elleti. to any cheniiC who, upon analynit. will Ind in tbera any alomel or other forma ol metrury or auy other aunti ptnn. 4 Rolnaj entire.? vegetable, somrttrnlar care i required while uiinj them. They ope rate without disturbance to the con-titm ion. diet, oroccupauoa. or J a italic,. Headache, Constipation, Impure Hlood, Pain In the fehwuldens 'I Isfftne-a off the Cheat. Uizzines, Sour Erartatiuns off the stomach, Bad fa-ace In an on I h, Hilloaa attack. Pain In real on of Kidney, Internal Fever, Bloated feel In J aboat Momaeli, Kutth off Blood, to Head, llliU Col. ored trine, I nwociabtlitr and Gloomy lore bvdInK- take Ur Pierre Plea-ant Purajutlve Pellet. In explanation of the remedial power of my fur rjative I'eiMr over to creat a variety of di;eaef, I wih to ay that their art ion npon the animal economy ! unl fml, not a laud or tifcwuv escaping their nana llvs tniprr A''e doe imt impair them; their Pu?ix-cotitinir ai d being enclosed in fr'tar bottle preserve their virtuea uniiniaatred for any length of time, in any climate. m that they are ai wa frech and reliaMe. which i not the cae with the pilU fonnd in the dratr etorc. put tip in cheap whid or pa-te-board box, ftecotlect t!at for all riif-ep where a Laxative, Altera tive or Purgative i indicated, the little Pellet will pive the luoet perfect aavtblactiun to ai 1 w ho bk them. They are sold by all enterprising Drags imt at 2 i ceuU a boHtlc, Do not allow any drnr?it to Induce von to take anything ele that Le "aay any ia jura a trootl a aty Pellet le.-aa-- be make a iare profit on that which be rectmmend. If yoti drutnrift cannot anfiply them, eiiclotxj 25 cen'a and receive them by return mail from V. PI EUL'2, AT. i , "Hrp'r, BUFFALO, N. T STATION ART, PORTABLE AND AGRICULTURAL STEAM ENGINES. Gsaaral Afaat far KCSsBLL A CO.'S Massillon Separators HORSE POWERS. nfio HORSE RAKES, BrEDIaH HAY CUTTERS AXD OTHER FIRST-CLASS FARM MACHINERY. HARBERT& RAYMOND, 1835 Market Street -80-" PHILADELPHIA. SHOW CASES I SHOW CASKS! An atria, fttfmr Moontnt and Wa'inrt. nw ad jyjft'y10' ""uraij WW t.vr ahippin. COfcSltUUJ, BAit-L ftHtXVI.NU. b'TOKi FIX TTTtK-l Ao. HOU8B ASD OrriCK FUBMrTTJRB aD Mnda Tha laravat and bert assorted stuck, nam and aaoood-oaud tn the Out. LKWIH die HTIO., WS.1, no. last, ton aad I04J Rllrbk Af L. falla. W ACTED. AOETT9 MALE OR FEMALE. FOB tb moat mtnwf making Xoraltias ia tha mar kas. FornarumUr, adUrfm, HCLAUKU-HIA NOVELTY MFO. CO., U-tttf ait rmusnuM t Phliadalptua. Pa. BLANKS BXaTLT PBOTTO AT THIS OPP1CX. hw , A aa Advertisements. EUGENE SGHQEHIHG'S CELEBRATED OF PERUVIAU BABE. Tbs Kacfpa for thla Bitters wsafooad: anions; tha papara of atmadlaBi phTstdaa. a angle mas, whs lost his ltfa, whaa MM yaan old. by a fail at hi bona. t-t ractpa than had base kspt profound serrst ttj hla family for moan thaa thraa esnrartoa. Durlnral! iv,i.m.imTutriMBi aaa at tha Bitters, which mdarad tfcm a strong and km ltrtor sat of panpla, snjoTini sxoaUent health. Originally tha earret or preparing thla Bitters and tta wonderful sffarts. was attained by ana of thatr kin, whila participating m toe aailliwjt expeditions of tha Spaniards ta America, after a aosama promise, nersr to diruiga n but to tha presumed principal heiz. THIS OEXULXE SWEDISH BIT TERS as ft Is now called, has stoco tta eomrng into pnbUo as. effected thousands of sat finishing cures of pa. Hants already gtrea ap by many physicians, and has prored Itself soeh a powerful iwtutatlTe and preser. mtrt Remedy, that indeed needs ao farther UusV tlilnsl iwiiiiiicini1itlone or praise. II0"W IT OPERATES. Hie effect of tha Swedish Bitten directs Itself, ta the first place, to the Mm of tha digteClrej organa throughout their entire extant, bos mainly to the stomach and the Tlaceral tract. It aormaUsea their functions, and therefore, according to tha nature ot eetiwg frreffularttlee or removes obstructions and retentions of all kind, or atopa Diarrheas, Dysentery, or other ajMvnoloaa discharges and effluvia. By regu. lattng the abdominal organa, of which depend tha nourishment, the conservation and tha developement of the human body tha Swedish Bitters Invigorates the nerves and the vital powers, sharpens tha senses and the Intellect, removes tha trembling of the ttmbe tha acidly, the burning, nausea, and palms of the sto mach, improves Its digestive facultlea, and ia an ex cellent Prophylactic and remedy against nrrvoua Irri tabUity. Flatulency, Cbolle, Worms, Dropsy. Ac. If taken la double dosee. It operates aaa aura aperient, but In a mild and julnlnss way. Ia consequence of these qualities of tha 8wedlh Bitten tt baa become one of the most celebrated retue dies against dlsisisoa of tha organs contained in the abdomen, and of affections that befall mankind ta consequence of said diseases. Thus the Swedish Bit ters baa aa unsurpassed renown for curing Liver Complaints of long standing, Jaundice, Dyspepsia, Disorders of the Spleen, of the Pancreas, of the Mnaa raic Glands, and also disorders of the Kidneys, of tha Urinary and SexuaXOrgana. Besides these the Swe. dish Bitten euros those innumerable nervous, or eou gestiva affections and diseases, which originate from said abdomlnn disturbances, ass Congestion of tha Lungs, tha Heart, and tha Brains, Coughs, Asthma, Headache, Neuralgia, tn different parts of the body. Chlorosis, Internal Hemorrhoids aad Piles, Gout, Dropsy. General Debility, Hypochondriasis, If elan, eboly. Ac. Aa. Of great beneflt tha Bwedlah Bitten has also been found In the beginning of Oaatric and Intermittent revere. But this a only one side of tta Inestimable power of protecting those who use tt regularly against all ail. esmatic and epidemic dlsessea, Tb Swedish Bitten has by long experience In many thousand cai tained its great renown of being the most reliable rBZSEBYATIYX AND PBOrHTLACmO-RXMIDI AGAINST Typhus. OrientalPest, Ship Fever, Yellow-Fever, AND ASIATIC CHOLERA. Tb aiawrfor pwtocttr and aanstlr Ytrtrwa af th twMlfib Bitten .gainst Malarious FeTen, Dywntery and Cholera, wer moat apparently teatel In tha lata war bj French and EnKllab pb jaKiana. who by pra acribing tha aama to their raapectlva troopa, aoo eaeded in reducing tha mortality list of epltiaunlc ttiav saaas from to t par oaot. DIRECTIONS w-sr' AC peraona who bara to perform long and hard tabor, and whUa doing it, araoftca eipotwd toaudtlen change of temperature, or tb draft or air. or obaox fooa dosta. etnella, or vapora, ehoold not fail to na tb 8wdial Bittara, a a few drops of tt, added to their drink, ar annVlent to preearr them In liiaatft mabta bea'th and vtgnr. Tboa bo ar eceoaxomad to drink icm water during tb anmmer, should atftff arntt to add soma 8 wediah Bittera to tt IsT feraoTis glren to sedentary Ufa eho-ald ma tb Swedish Bittera. It will oeatraiix th bad etTaet of their want of exercise ta opan air. aad keep them la food health and food spirit. rsTTo th Ladle th Swedish Bitters must especi ally be recommended. Because its as contribute most eetcnttaliy to praaarva the regnlanty of tb pbyatolow gtral ftinctiona, peculiar to tb deiicat femal coav st it ut ion and thus prove an effectual barrier against those innrnnerabl Nenooaand Blood Dtsceewblcb aowavdaya bar grown ao frequent as to be taken by many for Evefa natural Inharttanc 17" Bat th edifih Bitter doe aot only secure good health; tt also efforts the full development of to femal body, and of tta beamy by perfect form aad fin oomplectioa aud color. Thus tb Swedish Bitten ha bsjoom o-ve of tb feat aad aaoat eACeeat COSMETIC AND TOILET ARTICLES I a Tarmerc and thatr families, who bavw tried Swedleh Bitters, prefer tt to ail similar articles, fur them tt proves bene octal in various ways. In Bummer, when their calling requires them ts often sndun tha intense beat of tha aun. while per. forming hard work, they an Induced to be not suf ficiently cautious In sstlfytug their burning thirst by water, or In eating fruit not yet rips. Ac. Thus farm ing people an vary liable to auffar from sun stroke. Fever. Dysentery. Cholera. Ac., aa. The regular use of tb Swedish Bitten makss thess dangerous Influ ences all harmless. In Winter, during the time of rest, many country people, trying to Indemnify themeelvea for past pri vations an very apt to often overload their stomachs and thua impair thetr digestive orgsna tha roots of the tree. Tha use o the Swedish bitters prevents dliaiesa from that cause. As s matter of sourse. la ess of sickness, the ps tlent should svotd food not agreeing with him or sorb, ss m known, to be difficult to rtigsst or mrirt able to tb disease ta question. Tha rale: "Be moderate In all you eat, drink or do, m strictly to be eossrved. HOW TO TAKE SWEDISII BITTERS The Swedish Bitten shall only be taAea ta th ab enc of Inflammatory symptoms. Grown persons take on toMeapoonful tare am per day, be ore or after meals, par sr dilated with water. Psrsons under fj yean, two-thlrda of that fuantltr " I --if -" " ans-quartsr " Chfldrsa from i yean apwerda. ens eighth at that Quantity. Porsoos sceustomed tr chew toosoco, should ab stain from tt aa mach ss posslbls. while using Swe dish Bitters;! they may snbstltnt some fiowere of chsmmnrrlle or root oalamna. hot then swallow th salvia. Instead of spitting It swsy. Ia the same way emoking of tobacco should amy aeodsrstaly b pn need. Persons afflicted with dyspepsia most not eat hot bread or cakes, or fat or salt meat, but should tasa s&odnrste eirrciss in free air voiding all sudden chast ges of temperature, all In temperance la sating and drinking, and all undo mental sxdtement, by which thry will contribute largely to ths effectiveness of the Swedish Bitten. . B. B. should th Swedish Bitten not salt all tests It may be taken with eom sugar, or sa b dilitft with sum sugar-water or syrnp. Having aca aired by rareness ths recipe sad ths ex clusive right of preparing tb Only Oen trine Swedish Bitter, heretofore prepared by Zugen Hcboenmg. hue C. 8. Army Surgeon, w have, ia order to fro. trat fraud and deception, tb nam of X. Schosning burnt into th glass of each bottle and th envelope around tt marked by B. rfchoociinga and by our owa is without thess marks an spurious. DENIEL & CO., Bo. am Sorth Third Street. Philadelphia. Price per Single Bottle. 71 centa. Hast a dnaaa. at. Bold Who sail, by Johnston, Hollowny Cowdea, aa Arch Btnet, Phi Udell Ji la Wo Hals by all drs BDIHTTH,
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