J.gTicnl tuval. Pocltbt n Gardens. If one could only make use of the good qualities of poultry in gardens without suffering from their bad ones, what capital thing it would be. The amount of in sects they destroy is astonishing to those who have not been initiated into the mystery of the thing ; but everybody knows that they claim all the crops in pay therefor, if they get a chance ; and thus we have all our labor for our pains. We like to have our peas come up early, but they come up a little too soon when there is a flock of chickens about ; and they are not satisfied with the early worm, but want the early green blade from the strawberries also. There are many times when chickens can not only be introduced into the garden without serious injury, but with great good. It is best to have a good chicken-yard attached to all gardens, where the poultry can be confined when there is damage to be done, and let out when they can work to advantage. Besides this, simple arrangements can often be employed whereby the seed beds, and often the growing crops, can be preserved from danger, and at the same time the chickens be allowed to roam about, doincr rood as they go. Brushwood can be laid over seed beds and young crops just planted, for a little while, and found to be a good protection. Chickens do not care to rumple their feathers against these crooked sticks. Then, again, many have coarse fish nets, or other manufactured articles, which. suspended over the seed beds, make a cheap and efficient protection. Of course all these suggestions are intended only for small gardens. They cannot be well employed on a large scale. But it is only in small gardens that the evils of chickens running around loose are so seriously felt. In the Far West ducks are looked on as excellent things for potato fields and vineyards ; and even in gardens they are looked up to as the preservers and defenders acrainst insect enemies. Whether, what good they do in this way pays for their keep we do not Know ; lor, as a general thing, ducks are hardly a paving invest ment. Thev shovel down the food alarminclv in most cases : while the "luck" in raising young ducks, or in getting an abundance of eggs, is not equal to that from the ordinary fowL Where there is water, or marshy ground, or other conveniences where ducky can get in a measure his own living, it is of course different. we are speamng chieflv of ducks as an everyday affair. and solely from an insect-gathering point 01 view. Curing Clover Hat. It is a wide pnread error that it is difficult to cure clover hay. Like anything else that is carelessly and unskiluully done, it will be badly done : but with ordinary at tention clover can be cured as easily as ny other hay. It should be cut when heads of a greater part of the field or patch are of a brown color. If the cut ting is delayed until the entire crop is brown, the parts that ripened first will be too ripe. Clover should never be "spread out to cure." It should be left in the swath. The less any hay is exposed to the sun while curing the better it will be. The sun extracts and dries up tne juices ana succulence of the stalks whicu consti tute the value of hay. When cut the clover should lie in the swath until more than half the upper part is sufficiently cured, which will be the case in favorable weather in eight or nine hours. When the upper part is thus cured the swath should be turned with hay forks bottom up, and allowed to remain for five or six hours, when that side will also 1e cured. Then the swaths should be thrown together into windrows three swaths to a windrow and this being done, the operation of hauling home the hay should be com menced at once. In the best clover regions of our country, if the weather is fine, clover is generally hauled home the evening of the day it is cut, and never allowed to remain out beyond the following day. Cured thus, every part of the clover, leaf, bloom and stalk, is dried equally, the evaporation of mois ture has taken place gradually and re gularly, and all the nutritive juices of the hay have been preserved, whereas if the hay is exposed too long to the action of the sun, the leaves and blooms are dried to a chip and nothing is kft but hard fibrous stalks. TrRxir Flavob is Butter, Turnips fed to milch cows impoit, as is well known, a disagreeable flavor to the milk, and if the milk is employed for butter making the turnip flavor is also carried to the butter. Various methods have from time to time been suggested for arresting or destroying the flavor in the butter made from turnip-fed cows, and one of the most efficient, we are in formed, is that practiced by the Irish dairymen. This consists in mixing sour milk with the new or freshly drawn milk and then setting it aside to cream. By this procedure the sourness of the new milk is hastened, thereby preventing the flavor, which is greatly caused by allowing the milk to sour slowly. In many of the Irish dairies the whole milk is churned, as the butter made from whole milk is considered to have a better color and flavor than butter produced by churning cream. If the turnip flavor can thus be destroyed, as it is confidently asserted by those who have tested the plan, it is well worth knowing, and may prove of value to some of our dairymen who may have turnips to feed to cows in milk. Among some of the best butter-dairymen of Ireland it is customary to give cows grazing on pasture in summer "a daily drink," which is composed of bean meal crushed oats and bran three and one half pounds to each cow mixed with water. The "drink" is said to have a very decided effect on the milk and butter. Ilural Xcw Yorker. How to Catch Mice. A correspon dent says: Having noticed mice in our seed-barrel, I bethought me how I might trap the little intruders. I thought of saturating a piece of cotton witb chloroform and throwing it in. then closing the lid. On raising it again in a few minutes I would find that life had almost or quite departed. Having on one occasion left the piece of cotton in the barrel, on again return ing I found three mice with their heads in close contact with it. and dead. In the evening I saturated another piece ana placed it in the barrel, and on open ing it the next morning, to my surprise, I found nine dead mice. Thk Rose on the Lawx. An English journal says: "Few persons are aware of the magnitude to which the rose may be grown, or the splendid enect it can be made to produce on a lawn or plea sure ground ; yet with sufficiently strong stem, and system of careful and patient training, there can be no reason able doubt but that the standard roses can be grown to the size and form of the ordinary examples of the weeping ash, having the branches all produced from the top of a single stem, and flower ing downward upon all sides avery ornamental object for the lawn. Treatment of Torso Turkeys. Doubtless your young turkeys get out of doors and into the wet grass too early in the morning. They should not be allowed to do so. Let the sun get well up and the grass get dry before they axe permitted to go abroad. Tan practice of scalding poultry be fore plucking it has very properly been vetoed by market dealers. Fowls may be plucked with equal facility and better effect in preserving the flesh, immedi ately after death, and before they have had time to cooL Scientific. PAnnva rr ruifi u Aumvyres. Fatal poenlt. rxt miOAninor ftTA mOflt freOUentlV occasioned by delay in applying, or by " . . . - , mi... r-.ll. ignorance oi, the anuaoie. xue mmw ing is a list of the antidotes of the com- I .. .3 T annnoat Vl tlf ,))Am. UIUU UUUKfUP, HUU a dujjkvb. ' istg, dyers, druggists, and others who are brought daily in contact wun poi sonous substances, post this list in some conspicuous place in their laboratories. lor alkaloids, sucn as morpimie, quinine, etc. : Emetics and the stomach wxnmn mnct Ha relit, nnnn rather than chemical agents. Astringent liquids may oe aamimsxerea, sucu as uuuic acid, which precipitates many of the albalnirle (mm their anneous solution. absorption of the poison being thus re tarded. For antimony (tartar emetic, etc) ; In. farm f1 tannic? erHil mav be admin istered (infusion of tea, nutgalls, cin chona, and oaK oars, or asircugein solutions or tinctures), an insoluble The stomach pump must be also applied zi 1- as speeaiiy as pouwuie. For arsenic (Paris green, etc) : Re cently precipitated moist ferric hydrate, best administered in the form of a mix ture of a solution of perchloride of iron with carbonate of soda. Emetics should be also given, and the stomach pump applied. For copper (verdigris, etc ) : l- or an onti.lrtA twlmininter iron rilirifrfl. also white of 'an egg (albumen), which forms with copper a compound insoiuDie in water. Apply the stomach pump. For hydrocyanic acid (cyanide of potassium, etc) : A mixture of green sulphate of iron, solution of perchloride r.t i mr ani t. t (i mscmeftia nr rarttnn- ate of soda, is the recognized antidote in cases of poisoning witu prussic aciu. Inhalation of ammonia is also advised. Vnr feail Arlminiatpr a solution of Epsom salts or alum, and induce vomit ing- For mercury (corrosive sublimate, Mi Ku-allnw the whites of several eggs. Albumen gives a white precipi tate witn salts oi mercury, wuicu is in soluble in the juices of the stomach. Jt or oxalic acid : in cases oi poison- with siTali aMil r RnH.4 nf ftnrrel. chalk and water may be administered as a chemical antidote, with the view of producing the insoluble oxidate of lime. Emetics should also be applied. For tin : In cases of poisoning by tin uaHs Mwr'a fin linnnri. solntinn of carbonate of ammonia should be given, n-i - i , .1 : i 1 I llite oi egg is aiso oaiu ias tux m nu inonlnltle nreeinitjltA with compounds of tin. Vomiting should also be speedily induceu. For zinc : Large doses of zinc, for tnnfttelv ttrt ar rtnwerfnl emetics. If vomiting has not occurred, or has taken apparently to an lnsnlhcient extent, a enlntinn f)f fMirlirtnftfA nf Rrwlp. ( (Vim m DTI vofihinff Anting imme,1ifttelv followed bv white of eggs and demulcents, may be aaminisiereu. New Street Ratlwat Locomotive. A trial recently took place on the Man chester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire railway, between the Orange .Lane and Tinsley stations, of a tramway engine. constructed by the Yorkshire Engine Company, upon Lu l'erkin s patent system, for the Belgian Street Railway Company, Brussels. The novel features of this engine consist in its not emitting any smoke or steam into the atmos phere, and making comparatively little noise. The engire used steam at 500 lbs. to the square inch, and maintained this pressure by natural draft without any difficulty. The engine is compound, and expands the steam to the most economical limits, and then condenses it by means of two air surface conden sers placed one on either side of the machine. The engine can be driven from either end, all the driving gear being duplicate to obviate the necessity of turntabies. The engine accomplished a speed of fifteen miles per hour, draw ing its full load up gradients varying from 1 in 200 to 1 in 80. Iron. Preservation of Woodex Labels. The following method of preserving wooden labels that are to be used on trees or in exposed places is recom mended : Thoroughly soak the pieces of wood in a strong solution of sulphate of iron ; then lay them, after they are dry, in lime water. This causes the formation of sulphate of lime, a very insoluble salt, in the wood. The rapid destruction of the labels by the weather is thus prevented. Bast, mats, twine, and other substances used in tying or covering up tree3 and plants, when treated in the same manner, are similarly preserved. At a recent meeting of a horticultural society in Berlin, wooden labels, thus treated, were shown, which had been constantly exposed to the weather during two years without being affected thereby. The Warm SritiNOs of Costa Rica. A. V. Frantzius states that these springs, more than 30 in number, may be regarded as a continuation of the remarkable series of warm mineral springs discovered by Humboldt in Venezuela, and extending for 150 miles from Cape Paria to Merida. The Costa Rica springs begin indeed 13 degrees of longitude farther west, but are situated under nearly the same parallel of longi tude, namely, 10 X. in a strip of land running for 30 miles from east to west. Most of them occur in narrow mountain gorges on the banks of rivers, or are even overflowed by the rivers, so that they are visible only in the dry season. Their temperature is higher in propor tion as they are situated at a lower level, the highest observed tempera ture is 157 1". The water contains some salt. A Xew Comet. The discovery of a new bright comet is announced by the Academy of Sciences, Vienna, in 21 hours 23 minutes right ascension south, C degrees 56 minutes declension. An observer at Yonkers, X. Y., states that it is nearly globular, about two minutes in diameter, with a decided condensa tion toward the center. In brightness it is above the average, but it does not in other respects present any notable difference from objects of its class. Its position at 4 o'clock a. m., of April 14, was approximately : Right ascension, 21 hours, 1G minutes, 31 seconds ; south declination, 5 degrees, 15 minutes. Its motion is toward the north and east. An observer in this city states, April 17, that it rises at 2 a. m., east one-half south. Half an hour earlier on April 24. It is a telescopic object. Test Sign of Death. Tie a string urmiy around one of the hngers of the supposed corpse ; if the blood circulates in the least the whole finger from the string to the tip will swell and become discolored. The Academy of Sciences in Paris offered $4,000 for the discovery of a conclusive test of the sort. This was among the most simple and satis factory of the suggestions. The Lvk of the Asciexts. In a letter addressed to the Society of Arts Jour nal, it is stated that, by making a solu tion of shellac with borax in water, and adding a suitable proportion of pure lamp-black, an ink is produced which is indestructible by time or chemical agents, and which, on drying, will pre sent a polished surface, as with the ink found on Egyptian papyri. Black Phosfhorus. It is considered that the color of the variety of phos phorus known as black is due solely to the presence of metals or foreign metalloids. Arsenic in commercial phosphorus causes the appearance of the phenomenon, on account of ft separation of phoephuret of arsenic -No allotropic modihcation exists. i Domestic. Tea Roses. Of all the various classes of roses, the tea-scented are the most desirable for house culture. The origi nal tea rose was imported from China in 1812, and its descendants have yearly increased in beauty of coloring and in fragrance, until they outshine all their beauteous sisterhood, and are, indeed, more beautiful than all others. For the past two years the demand for them has been very great, as no gentleman could attend a party unless a tea rose decor ated the button-hole of his coat, and every young lady must either wear them in her hair, or carry them in her hands, and loop her dress with them. So the florists have cultivated them, and no stand of flowers is complete without several varieties of them. They can be purchased in all shades from the deep est purplish red. to yellow ana snowy white. They need plenty of sunshine, a very rich compost, and fresh air, to bloom in perfection. A hot, dry temperature, with stifling air, is not adapted to their neeas, ana although they will live patiently in it. they cannot flower, ihey will, now ever, bud and blossom luxuriantly in a soil of leaf mold, well decomposed horse lrrtYof tL bndsTfwfng tue buds areiormmg, manure, and sam each, and when give all the sunshine that can be ob tained, but when they are bursting into bloom their beauty will be more per manent if they are set out from the di rect ravs of the sun. They must be kept well watered, or the buds will blast j When the flowers have fallen, we must prune thoroughly, if we would have fresh shoots put 'forth, and new blossoms form. So cut back the branches fully two thirds of their length, keep the roots a little dry, and set the pot away from the glass not so far that it will receive no sun, but far enough to give it a little rest. In April or May re-pot in fresh compost, and when all danger of frost is past, set the pots into garden borders, putting cinders or ashes at the bottom of the hole to pre vent the roots from striking through. If you wish to keep the plants solely for winter flowering, it is better to pinch out all the buds as soon as they appear, and this will send all the strength of its roots into forming fresh wood. Roses for winter flowering should al ways be kept in pots, for you cannot transplant a rose bush that has bloomed during the summer with much hope that it will continue to do so during the winter ; but if the plant has been set in the shade, and not received enough wa ter to make it put forth buds, it will produce an abundance of flowers during the winter months. This rule also ap plies to Fuchsias, Geraniums, etc Roses are especially infested with in sects, brown scale, red spiders are all fond of them ; but if the plants are well showered with water in which carbonate of ammonia and saltpeter have been added, one tablespoonfal of each to four quarts of water, they will soon be routed. Attn England Fanner. Baked Tomatoes make a choice dish. Select those of good size and ripe, wash, and bake unseasoned on a pie dish in a hot oven for forty minutes, or until quite tender. Tbey are best to bake them on the top first, and then set down to bake on the bottom and to re duce the juice. If there is danger of drying up the bottom before the fruit is done, add water or more tomato juice. A little of the thick juice should be ! served with each tomato. These bar I monize nicely with beans, for a dinner side dish. If desired the skins can be removed before they are sent to the ta ble. These baked tomatoes are nice to dry, pouring the juice over them as the dry- ing proceeds. If put away in a close I jar, these can be used to good advan- tage for soups when it is not desirable to open a can, or they may De gently soaked out in hot water and used as baked tomatoes. For the latter pur pose, however, it is better to can them as soon as baked. Have an abundance of juice, pour some of it into the can, fill up with the hot tomatoes, then boil the can a little while to expel the air, and seal up as you do other fruit. Fruit Gixgerbread. 2 lbs. flour; 3-4 lb. butter ; 1 lb. sugar ; 1 lb. rai sins, seeded and chopped ; 1 lb. cur rants, well washed ; 2 cups molasses ; cup sour cream ; 6 egg ; 1 heaping teaspoonfnl soda dissolved in hot wa ter ; 2 tablespoon! uls ginger ; 1 tea spoonful cinnamon ; 1 teaspoonful cloves. Cream the butter and sugar, warm the molasses slightly,aud beat these to gether ; then the beaten yolks, next the milk and spice, the soda, the flour and whites, well whipped ; lastly the fruit, which must be thickly dredged. Beat well before baking. A little citron, shred fine, is an im provement. Bake in two broad pans, in a moderate oven. This cake will keep long time. Dutch Sauce. Put into a saucepan one tablespoonfnl of flour, two ounces of butter, two tablespoonfuls each of vinegar and water, the yolks of two eggs, and salt to taste ; put over the fire and do not allow it to boil, but stir it constantly until thick ; if it happens to curdle, strain the sauce through a strainer, add the juice of half a lemon, and serve in a sauce-boat. To Mekd China. Take a very thick solution of gum arabic in water, and stir into it a plaster of Paris until the mixture becomes of aproperconsistency. Apply it with ft brush to the fractured edges of the china, and stick them to gether. In three days the articles can not be broken in the same place. The whiteness of the cement renders it doubly valuable Macassar Haib Oh. The following is said to be the composition of this celebrated hair preparation : Oil of sweet almonds, 1 pint : alkanet root, half oz. ; oil of cinnamon, 5 drops. Allow the oil to stand upon the root, in a suitable vessel, for a week ; then strain through muslin and add the per fume To Preserve Ficttbes from Decat. To strengthen a decaying canvas, and to preserve sound canvas from decay, the back of the picture should have given to it two of three coats of white lead ; and in this condition the picture may be handed down from generation to generation. Bandoline fob the Hair. 03 of Sweet Almonds. 1 oz ; White Wax, J oz ; Tincture of Mastich, j oz ; Oil of Bergamot, oz ; Melt the Oil and Wax together, then add the Mastich ; strain and then add the perfume. To fix and retain the hair in form. Kevedt for Wocnds. Geranium leaves, bruised and applied to cuts and other wounds where the skin is rubbed off, it is said, possesses excellent heal ing properties. The applic ttion of one or two leaves will effect ft speedy heal ing. Apple Custard Ptddiso. Fill the pudding-dish ft little more than half full of quartered apples ; add ft little water, and stew until soft ; then add custard made of one egg to ft quart of milk, sweeten to taste ; bake one hour. Pickled Oxioxs. Peel off the outer skin of small onions, boQ them until clear or half cooked, in salt water, and throw them while smoking hot into a jar of cold vinegar, spiced. Iron-bust. To remove iron-iust from linen, apply lemon juice and salt, and expose it to the sun. Use two applica tions if necessary. Humorous, Some allowance must of course be made for the fact that the story comes from London, but, however much exag geration there may be in it. the bnei narrative is an excellent hit at what a prominent clergyman has styled "oper- 1 . ...Iiin A . Ttalian erantlAman WblU WUIOIXJJ. AM hi . u p, - --- recently arrived in New York. Being a lover of church mnsic, on the first Sun day in the Sew World he inquired of the bookkeeper of the Fifth Avenue Hotel where he could find the best church music The quartette choir of Grace Church at that time being con sidered something extra, the gentleman was directed there, and shown into one of the best pews in the middle aisle, a ladv oeennvinir it with him. At the commencement of the first chant. Mad' ame, with the usual politeness of Ame rican ladies, handed the stranger a book, pointing to the chant, The book was politely received, but soon closed and put down. At the second chant Madame repeated her offer, when turning to her with a polite bow, the gentleman said, "Thank you kindly, but I seldom use the libretto. A ww wav nf Ttmnnsinir marriage is reported, and we' give the facts for the of those interested. A gentle- ..,, . . in v - vrV r- 1X1 nil ai.uuuit am inn - cently, and fell in love (as gentlemen sometimes do) with a demoiselle in the floral temple. He bought a $10 basket of flowers, and handing her a 50 bill, said, "If you don't give me the exact change, I'll marry you.' The blushing maiden handed him back gJU (she was probably confused), and he remarked, "I thought so." Cards will be out early next week. A tall Yankee standing six feet three inches in his stockings, was suddenly seized with symptoms of fever. Having a violent pain in his head, his wife to afford him relief, was about to apply dranghts to his feet, when he asked: "What are ynn putting them on my feet for?" "Why," says she, "to try and draw the pain out of your head." "The deuce !" says he ; "I would rather it would stay where it is than to be drawu the whole length of me !" The observations of ft married man have led to the conclusion that money put into mirrors is a good investment. as it affords marvelous amount of comfort and gratification to a woman. He says his wife thinks just as much of consulting her glass when she ties on herapron as when she ties on her bonnet, and while he goes to the door at ocoe when there is a rap. she exclaims. "Mercy ! Joseph, who is that T" and dashes for the looking-glass. Axotiier horrible scene in the British Royal family. The Duchess of Edin bnrg had borrowed the Princess of Wales' crimping irons. In returning them she presented the hot ends to her Royal Highness, who thoughtlessly took hold of them, and then waltzed around with one hand between her knees for several minutes before she could speak. Eye witnesses of the occurrence express their belief that the days of the Russian Empire are numbered. A SiMtLARrrr. "Go to Lake Cham plain about this time," says an enthu siastic sportsman, "and what do you see? Geese, geese, and nothing but geese." Go to Washington, says the Brooklyn Argus, and look down from the gallery of the House of Representa tives, about this time, and what do you see ? Pretty much the same thing. "Define difference between experi mental philosophy and natural philo sophy," said a school-master to one of his pupils. "Why, sir," replied the boy, "experimental philosophy i ask ing you to give us a half holiday," and natural philosophy is your saying, "Don't you wish you may get it?" Jofinnt B., aged five, asked his father if he knew why the stars were made The father, thinking the lad had con ceived some queer notion as to the use of the heavenly bodies : "Xo, do you ?" "Yes, it never rains when thestars shine, so they must have been made to plug up the rain holes." A mas in Ann Arbor, Mich., who was anxious to know just how highly he was prized by his friends, had a paragraph printed to the efiect that he was dead, and sent marked papers to them. They did not even come to his funeral, and his zeal for knowledge is checked. A student chloroformed ft valuable dog, in Troy, the other day, in order to relieve the animal from pain while his ears were being cut off. The operation worked to ft charm. The dog did not even wince and never will. The dose of chloroform was too large. There is an elm eighty-four years old and about six feet in diameter at Frank lin, Vt., and the man near whose house it stands says that when be was ft boy he pulled it up, which made his father so mad that he walloped him with it and then set it out again. Whtle a couple of women were dis cussing, the other day, the merits of a certain physician, one of them asked the other what kind of ft doctor it was. "Sure, I dunno," was the reply, "but I think it's an alpaca doctor they call him." Ax awkward fellow, while trying to stop a lady's new spring bonnet which the wind had taken from her, stepped upon and crushed it. She looked at him but uttered no word of gratitude as he presented the mangled bonnet to her. A Chinamax stepped into a jewelry store in Sau Francisco, and inquired if they had any "consistencies." On be ing asked to explain himself, he didn't know what consistency was, but had been told it was jewel. Take ft company of boys chasing but terflies, says a cynical writer, pnt long tailed coats on the boys, and turn the butterflies into dollars, and you have the panorama of the world. Mrs. Partington is collecting auto crats, and will be grateful for specimens of the handwriting of any extinguished character ; says one of onr religious weeklies. A colored lawyer prosecuted the colored rioters in Louisville, Ky. He told the Court that he blushed for his brethren. The Court couldn't detect it. A paper at Elgin says that ft man's social standing in that town is graded by whether he drops a ten-penny nail or a quarter iato the contribution box. Have we two brains ? was the subject of Dr. Brown-Sequard's last lecture. Most people esteem themselves lucky if they have so much as one. The Dundee (Scotland) Adi-ertiser is printed on paper made of reeds. Well, why should it not be ? A paper is in tended for reading. A Sunday school teacher being asked what became of men who deceived their fellow-men, promptly exclaimed, "They go to Europe." Chicago newspaper reporters are now called "plenipotentiaries." But the salary is by no means adequate to the gorgeousness of the title. A female bill-poster is doing an ex tensive business in Xew York. The sex was always good at running up bills. IMiseell&ny. T Klads maiden A (. V home ran be iiut what it was be fore when it has been entered by third person, who, without belonging actually to its life is yet to be its inmate. There are two pictures of the maiden aunt, and each equally faithful to its subject. Uue is trained ueauuiuuy lunciiou aim song; the other, the torture and bane of domestic peace, is rarely portiayed it i more than enough that she lives. The maiden aunt of the novel U pale. patient, and much abused, tier early and only love hasgone toheaven.where Khe expects to meet him, a seraph; and bv way of preparation, washes the children's faces, and makes and mends their clothes, endures their naughtiness with the imperturbability of a saint. She accents the sliirhts. scoldings. drudgery, and ca-st-od' clothing of her sister-m-law witu tne grace oi a enns tian and the countenance of a martyr, or endures the unwilling toleration of her brother-in-law with the meekness which lu itself is a guarantee of the kingdom of heaven. But in actual life how often the maiden aunt who derives a parasitic existence from the family of another, either never had a lover, or lost him through the fault of her own nature; and for this cause alone never forgives the woman, whose home she shares, the fact that she has a husband and is the mother of children. Useful she is. indispensable she may be in the daily routiue of domestic laior,anu yei no less is she a spiritual disturber, an actual maker of mischief, the secret and often unknown sourceof nusunder stauding, estrangement and sorrow in expressible. Where one family is made happier by the fatal third person, many are made wretched, and not a few are finally broken up and destroyed through such au lutiueuce. If Tea "t!v Hnl." Young Hun, To both single and married men in the Eakt who have decided to go West, we would whisper it their ears one thing which, if heeded, will be of value to them. It is this ; Avoid a too com mon error, that of puffing yourselves up with the notion that you are going est to show the natives bow to wore ; that out there you will be looked up to as somebody unusually smart in your line. The Western people estimate man by what he really Is as a meonanic. and do not give him credit for what he is not. True, if you are heralded as a workman of superior skill, they await your coming anxiously, and will lay nothing in the way when you have stripped off your ooat and are one among them. But the moment it is discovered that you hare been over-estimated, all your pleadings about "how they do it East" will avail nothing. Hundreds of instances have come under our observa tion wherein workmen from the East have gone West inflated with conceit, and, when they were put to the test, were found almost worthless. Carriage Monthly. m Lingnage f the Clond. The colors of the sky at particular times afford wonderfully good evidence. Xot only does rosy sunset presage fair weather and ruddy sunshine, but there are other tints which speak with equal clearness or accuracy. A bright yellowish sky in the evening indicates wind, pale yellow wet, neutral gray color constitutes favorable sign in the evening and an unfavorable one in the morning. The clouds are full of meaning in themselves. If their forms are soft, undefined and feathery, the weather will be fine. If the edges are hard, sharp and definite, it will be fouL Generally speaking, any deep, unusual lines, betoken wind and rain, while the more quiet and delicate tints bespeak fair weather. Don't cram the child at school, it is bad for the brain ; nor at the table, it is bad for the stomach. The Invalid A !- pirmr. See her pallid countenance.but a short time ago the picture of ruddy nealtn, the envy of the school and the pride of the household. She was always wel comed by her schoolmates, for her lithe form and pleasing disposition carried cheerfulness into their ranks. Diligent, punctual and exemplary, obedient and graceful at home, she won the hearts of all. But, alas, we are sorrowed. Those rosy cheeks and ruddy lips are blanched by Consumption. The voice once so enchanting in laugh and song, is feeble. husky and supplanted by a hollo eough. Let us approach her conch gently and take ner band. Do not Blind' der because of the feeble and passion less grasp. The hand once so hearty and plump is emaciated and shows bony outlines, while the cords and tortuous veins are plainly mapped upon the sur face. The pulse that bounded with re pletion, carrying vigor to the whole sys tem, and imparting life, beauty, viva city, health and strength, is delicate to the touch. The feeble heart cannot propel the thin, scanty blood with force. Must we lose her while yet in her teens? Companions and friends gather around with words of cheer and consolation, and depart with moistened eyes and silent steps. Must we lose her? Xo ! there is relief I We can stay this destroyer of our happiness and not suffer the loss of so bright a gem. something more is reqnired now than dietary and hygienic observance, for nature calls for aid and she shall have it. Take this pleasant medicine. It is invigorating. How it allays the irritable cough, im proves the appetite and digestion and sends a healthy tingle through the frame. The blood is enriched, nervous force increased, and the heart bounds with a new impulse See her face brighten by degrees ; the color is re turning, her voice is getting clearer, and pleasant words are spoken. The strength falters yet, but is gaining. Let us take her out in the warm sunshine. In a short time she will be able to go without our aid, a cheerful girt This delightful medicine mnst be God blessed. It is restoring health to our loved one. She is emerging from her sickness sweeter and nobler than before, and Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery must have the credit It has raised her. S. R. Eolar, druggist, of West Union, O., says that Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi cal Discovery has effected a wonderful cure of Consumption in his neighbor hood. Johnson Anodyne Liniment will give more relief la cases of Chronio Rheumatism, no matter how severe, than any other article known to medical men. Used internally and externally. It is often remarked by strangers visit ing our State that we show a larger pro portion of good horses than any other State in the Union. This, we tell them, is owing to two principal reasons : in the first place, we breed from the very best stock ; and in the second place, our people use Sheridan' Cavalry Con dition Powders, which in our judgment are of incalculable advantage. 1 VrsEOAB Bitters. The great merit of VnrEOAB Bitters has made them the leading medicine of the day, and re spectable druggists everywhere write : "They are the best and' most popular preparation in the market" They have stood the test of pnblio opinion and won confidence. They sell rapidly be cause they cure. If yon are sick yon want reliable medicine. Vixf.oar Bit ters commend themselves to the ailing and afflicted, aa they are deficient in one thing alone, viz.: the stimulant that unduly excites the brain.and creates a morbid thirst for spirits ! There is no phase of Indigestion, Biliousness, Ner vous Disease, or Physical Debility, in which they will not effect a cure. Inva lids who are wasting way from ft want of proper action in the liver, stomach and bowels, will find them constitu tional ipeetfle, and fountain of vitality and vigor as refreshing and exhilarating as a cool, gushing spring of water to the parched and fainting traveler in the desert. " The Happiest Discovert op the Aoi. Anaxxsis, an infallible cure for Pile, a seaenti3 combination of poultice, in strument and medicine, endorsed by physicians of all schools, discovered by Dr. Selsbee, a regular physician, and used successfully in thousands of cases. Sufferers who have tried everything else in vain, will find instant relief and per manent cure. It is regarded by medical men as the greatest of me'era discov eries, and pronounced infallible. Prwe $1.00. Sold by Druggists everywhere. Depot, 46 Walker St, ew lora. a The noblest aim of science la to re lieve human suffering. Its highest tri umph is found in Da. Hickman's Rheu matic F.r.rtiR, a remedy of the highest character and standing. Acute or chronio Rheumatism, Gout, and all aches and pains which are caused by the above diseases, give way before its beneficent power, r or sale by all re spectable Druggists. Price $1. If your Druggist has not got it, take no otner, but send SI direct to the Sole Proprietor and Manufacturer, Da. Wm. H. Hick man, 336 South Second St, Philadel phia, Pa. Also Manufacturer of Dr. Hickman's Electrio Fluid for Neural gia, Headache and Toothache. Tap Ittrml Tap Warn 1 Tin Ynm moored hi from to t honn with harmlfM Tnp-table Biralk-ine. The worm tMaun frtm the ny-tt-m alive. So fee asked until the entire worm, witb head pawew. Mediciue baruileea. Can refer those afflicted to the raudenU of this rity whom 1 have cured. At m y o(bo can be seen hun dreds of specimens, measuring from 4u to lo feet in length. Fifty prr cent, of cases of byspeiNUa and disorganisations of lJTer are caused by stomach and other worms existing in the alimentary canaL Worms, s disess or tne rotwt uangeroos cnarsiier. ao little undf rstoud by the medical men of tne present day. Call and see the original and only w.mu dMMtrnver. or send for a circular which will give a full description and treatmenW'f all kinds of worms; encniee s ceui stamp ior mum ut lucwm Dr. C F. Kunkel can toll by seeing the patient whether or not. they are troubled with wornis, and by writing and teUiug the symptoms, fee., the Doctor will answer bT malE DU. E. F. Kl'.VKKL, No. W N. Ninth HT Philadelphia. Pa. ( Advice at office or by mail, free.) Seat, Pin and Stomach worms also removed Advertisements. HERCHANT'S GARGLING OIL The. Standard Liniment of ths Unit! Sutet' is ooou Fuu hinu wi SatUt, rtcmbiMnt, ' WMUM, wirrWl sr BOa, -ywfa, af JTnajef. oWw AiepVs, latrtd liimlt, liM hrruti, FlrJk K.mmU, Jtrfs, Has , r f". Orami, feseners. t. f Vuos). drralrAet ar Unut, Saml Cnrlct, AmfUl, WimdgaUt, IM'; y all kimit, IUaM Krl, s.ifa-1, KtsoksK VjrrJ frrls, I HI Brit, Kid in AiftM, Hila AnimaU, Rp t Wn-y, r..4WV. lamt Hack, sic, dtc La nre Sis fl-00. esiaa SOc tt stall Sic Saiall Sis nr Family Das, IS seats. The Oargllac OU has Wa la ass as a Uaiateat a ae 11 All ws sk Is tmr tnoJ, hat b are aad follow direct loss. Ak yoar searaet Draggtst or dealer la Palest Mediciaes lor oae sf ear Almaaaca, aad road what tBeaenpfe sy about the OiL The Oargllsg Oil Is for sale by all mepaetahl dealers Unoaghat the I'mOtU -SUtUt mmA sfAer Our Uttimamalt date frost lSTTt to the arsssat. aad ar amsWiofed. W also maaafactars nercliant's) Worm Tablets. Ws deal fair aad liberal wtta all, aad def aoauadicuoa. Maaafaetarsd at Lockport, X. Y., U. S. A., by Merchant's Gargling Oil Co., JOHN HODGE, Secretary. Afsaassatsaasmaasaslasawasaw Dr. J. Walker's California Tin PCar Kilters are a pnrely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the na tive herbs found on the lower ranges 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 of Vinegar Bit TERsf Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, ami the patieut re covers bis health They are the great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Kenovator and Invigorator of the system. Never before in the history of the world has a medicine been compounded possessing the remarkable qualities of Viskgae liiTTEa.i in healinp the sick of every disease man is heir to. They are a gentle Purgatii e as well as a Tonic, relieving Con (test ion or Inau-ii.atioo o' the Liver and Viae ral Organs, ia Bilioot Diseases. The properties of Dr. Walker's Vikeoa a Bitters are Aperient. Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-1m taut, buuunlic. Altera tive, and An ti Bilious. R. H. MrDOXAl,n At CO.. Dmnrurts and Gen. Art.. San Francisco. California, and cor. of Washington and rharlton Sts.. V Y. Hold kjr all Enraaatata asid Dealers. THE NEW IMPROVED REMINGTON SEWING MACHINE. AWARDED The "Medal for Progress," IT Tit XXI, 1S.3. mi HIGHEST OBDEB Ot "MEDAL" AWAEDED AT TUB EXPOSITION. A'o Scwinr Machine lieceived a iligher tPrize A FEW GOOD REASONS t 1. A AVw Invention Tbobocqblt Tested and secured by Letters Patent. 2. Makes a perfect lock stitch, alike on both sides, on all kinds of goodt. 3. Runs Light, Smooth, Noiseless and Rapid bat combination of qualities. 4. UFBABLE Runt for Yean without Repairs. 6. Will do all tarittiet of Work and Fancy Stitching in a superior manner. 6. Is Mmt eanlg Managed by the operator. Length of stiieh may be altered while run ning, and machine can be threaded without passing thread through holes. 7. Design Simple, Ingenious, Elegant. forming the stitch runout the use of Cog Wheel Gears, Rotary Cams or Lever Arms. Has the Automatic Drop Feed, which insures uniform length of ttitck at ny speed. Has our new Thread Controller, which allows eay movement of needle-bar and prevent injury to thread. 8. Cohstbuctios most careful and ri- ished. It is manufactured by the most skillful and experienced mechanics, at the cele brated Ttemington Armory, Jlion, JV. 1. I'Miladelpkia Office, .(, Chestnut Street. 6-7 2m w AH TED, AGENTS MALE OB FEMALE, FOB the most awmsr Wlfc1wj jfovsitlaa m the mar ket. or Damcalars. add! HJLAUKU'HIA NOV XT WTO. CO . U-Mtf BM fassai.is St., FhlUdolphla, Pa. Advertisements. DYSPEPTIC CONSUMPTION. Can Dyspeptic Consumption ba Curedt We mnsxetr, TESI First. Remove all the aahealthy mawoas that gathera abomt the walls tJ the BtxmUk from udigjeatioa. Ssooad. rredne) aa aetiv. esaditi- Liver aad Kidneys without depleting the lyitam. Third. Supply or aid Bator ia furaishiaf the drain Mat ef the ompeBeat parls thai eompoee healthy laida. We, from thooaaads who have beea rare, assert that a rare ema be perfermea taw tbeary REKETJIES USED, Apart from our Office Practice. FIRST. THE GREAT AMERICAN DYSPEPSIA PILLS, taatevB the faeguj matter freat the BUmae. aad raw ire it U a healthy eaadUijev SECOND. THE TINE TREE TAR CORDIAL I lacs aa rhe Liver, heala (he Stemeek. aa aeta ea the Kidney aad Servo ! Byatem. rr farther aaviea, eafl ar writ DR. UQ.C. WtSKftBT, MSI JtTmrUa Sscsnsf Street. ADMONITION. B M kaewa at all reader (hat aiae Dm. Lit WISHAKT ha followed the eaaas aad amr af djjaasia, aad the great vain) af TAB a a ewrativ remedy, as directed tJ Bishop Berkley aad Rev. Joka Wesley, thai ataay have attempted U mak a TARpr aanUea lev THROAT AND LCNQ DIS IABES. Be H kaswa thai Da. L. Q ft VUHAJLT? PIHE TBI! UB COBDIll Is ta Bly remedy, from long experience, aaesl ky ear moat akillful phytieian ft? Disaharia, moeratrd Throat, Long, Kidney, fMeataoh. Asthma, aad General Debility, veil a for Ceagka, Cold aad Laag Af DR. L. Q.C. WISHART C02TSULTI1,3 ECCM5 12TD S7C22 No. 232 N. SECOND ST . PHILADELPIII 1. This Cat Inuttratet the manner of Uiing I n 1 B II TJR. PIERC.S'S Fountain asal Injector, -j DOUCHE Thin intrnmcnt I wpectalTj def.ned tur tht perfect application of DR SACE'S CATARRH TEMEDY. It U th onlT form of InMrnmerit yet iiaWitrd with which Auil nmljcine can btr carried Moh tp and perfectly appftft tuatl part-ol the aftV-ctt-d na tal paa:rw, and the cliambcrs or cavitie cm niaDicatin therewith, in which "ore and nicer frequently exit. and from which the catarrhal rii charge reneralljr proceed. The wart 01 niece" in treating latarrn neretoiore rta anwn larreiy from the imLHM-ibi1itr or apply in remedies to the cavitie and chain He. w by artT of the ordi nary method. This obstacle in the way of ef frctiair careisetitirelT overcome by the invention of the I)nhe. In nsinr thi inormment, the Fluid U carrie-! by Ht twt weight, (no smiflmo, lorcmg or pttfaDinq Dcmg requires. n one noeirii in a inn tiently navrin tUmui. to the litL-het portion of the na.al paa"e. pJiw into and thorotitrhlycleaii-e-a!i the til' a:id cliamlcn connected therewii h, and Iowa out of the opposite nostril. Iifo-e i- pleas ant, and tw Mm pie that a r h, Id ran nndntand it. f ull and explicit direction ae. company each instrument. Wha need with this instrument. Ir Sn-e t'ltarrh ftrnrMw enr- re cent attacks or "Cold ia the Head by a fow application. AymitoaiJof Catarrh. Freonent head ache, discharge tall. n-j iiito thrat. iMmit-tinie pro fuse, watery, thick mucn, purnk-nt.flt nr . tc. In others a dryne, dry. wuU'i, weak or ir. darned re, stepping up orolitrartinn of nasal paf airs, nnin ia ear, deafness. bawkini and roa'hinK t clear thr-iot, nlceration, ivarw from ulcers, Toice altered, nasal twan, oftViwive breath, im paired or total deprivation of ten of mMl and taste, dir2ines, nxntaJ depression, los f appe tite, indigestion, enlarged tonsil, ticklin? ro,.Lh, etc Only few of these pymptoma are likely to be present in ay ease at one time. Or. Satyr' Catarrh Kcmrtty, when n-cd with Dr. Pieree'o Nawal Ioa he, and accompaiued with the con-titntional treat ment which, i recommended In the pamphlet that wrap eaca bottle of tbe Remedy, ia a per fect speciflc for this loathsome fit -rale-, and the proprietor ofiVrs, in pood faith. $.00 reward for a ra-e he can not en re. The Remedy is mild and pleasant toose.critaininr no siroivroreantrc drus or poisons. The Catarrh R-mr!T is mM at 50 cents, Donrhe at fiO rents, hjr all Drufr Kitt9 or either will be mailed by proprietor on receipt of AO eenttt. K. V PIFUC C, ltl. D Bole VrTietor. BLTr AUiiJ. 1. STATIONARY, PORTABLE AND AGRICULTURAL STEAM ENGINES. Osasral AfaU for KCSSELL CO. 'a Massillon Separators HORSE POWERS. i floss's HORSE RAKES, btkdickh hay CUTTERS AXD OTHER FIRST-CLASS FARM MACHINERY. HARBERT4 RAYMOND, 1835 Market Street PHILADELPHIA. THEA-HECTAB ia A PCKB BLACK TKA. with the Green T flTor. W,r ruted to tmit ail tMt-. "r bbbvI everywhere. And for bMfiftie on It by tbe Great At antic Pariac Tea Co., M Fnl ton HC, and 4 Charrh Ht. Hi. T. P U. Box 56.-4. bend tor The IVertsr eirmtar. -MT SHOW CASKS! SHOW CASES! AB styles. Silver Mounted and Talnut. new nd second hand. Berwreiy packed for sbipping UOUSIsJla. BABHArlfcXVIJia. btuUX FIX ROUSB AD OrFIOaPrlfStrrTTRt all ktnde Tbe largest and brat assorted stock, new and second-band In tbe City. LKWIe etc TIRO., -!-! y IBTUlOa. llriiaa 15 KIIHiK ATL. Phlla. BLANKS BXATLT PRINTED AT THIS OmCa. B OR e itJ ti r Advertisements. EUGENE SCHOEHING'S CELEBRATED OF PERUVIAN BABE. The Hecrpe for thta Bitter wae found among lb papsra ofaSwssdlsh pnjsJclaa. a atngle aua, whs lost als Ufa, when lot rears eld. by a fall of hie horsa. Bald recipe than had been kept a profound sacrst bt hie family tat men than three esntnrlea. Durlna il this Urns they made frequent nee of the Bitters, which rendered them a soon- and km; tiring est of psnpls. enjoying excellent health. Originally the secret of preparing thla Bitters and lta wonderful effects was obtained by one of their kin. while parrJctpetliig m the earnest expedition of the Spaniards In America, after a solemn promise, never to diralgs It bat to tbe presumed principal hslx. THIS aEXinXR SWEDISH BIT- TEES as It Is Bf?w callsd. hasatoe coming Into pnbtle ass, effected thousand of astonishing enresafpa, Uenta already glrea op by many physicians, and has proeed Itself sneh a powerful restoratlTs and pre eathr Bemedy, that Indeed it need no farther bua- sidnal-raeenunendatlon or praise. HOW IT OPERATES. The effect of the Swedish Bitter directs ttsalf. ta tbe Bret place, to the nerve of the dtgeetlT organ throughout their entire extent, bat mainly to the stomach and the visceral tract It normalise then? functions, and thai ef ore, according to the nature of twiiH IrregTxlarttle or remorea obstructions and retentUin of all kind, or stops Dtarrboja. Dysentery, Of ftthftT ar"wU"fs discharges and eftlnwle, ByregO, latins; the abdominal organs, of which depend tbe aotirlahEoent, the eonserratlon and tne deveiopemeni of the human body the Swedish Bitter invigorates th nefTes and th vital power, sharpen tbe erases and tbe intellect, remove the trembling of the limb. the eddly, th burning, noses, and pain of the sto mach, uuyrute Its d'gestrvo faculties, and ta an ex. eelleat Prophylactic and rernetty atrainst nrrroas Irri tability, Flatulencr, Cholle. Worms, DrcQey, he. if taken h double doses. It operates as a ore apensot, but la a mild and pilnisas way. Ia consequence of these quantise of the Swedish Bitters It has become one of the most celebrated rtme dies against iliinar of th organe contained m the abdomen, and of affectione that befall mankind In onnisqnmrs of said diseases. Thns the Swedish Bit ten haa aa aztsnrpessed renown for curing Liver Complaints of long stinrTtng, Jaundice. Dyspepsia, Disorders of the Spleen, ot tbe Pancreas, of the Mesa, raic Glands, and also disorders oi the Kidneys, of the Urinary and Sexual-Orfrans. Besides these the 8 we. dish Bitters curse those innumerable nervous, or con gest! ts affections and dlirasfe. whicn originate from said abdomlna disturbances, sal Congestion of the Lang, the Heart, and th Brains, Cough. Asthma, Headache. Kearalgls, in different parts of the body. Chlorosis, Internal Hemorrhoid aad Piles, Gout, Dropsy. General Debility. HTpocnondrtaais, Malar eholy. ao. ae. Of great benefit the Swedish Bitters ha also been found In the beginning of Gastric and Intermittent revere. But this Is only one aids of Its msatlmahla power of protecting those who nee It regularly against all ad- -nA epiHemie s The Swedish Bitter haa by long experience la many thousand eases main, telaed lta great ranowu of being the moat reilaMs FRESEBVATOT AXD PKOrrrTLACTIO-UZSlTDI AGAINST Typhus, OrientalPest, Ship Fever, Yellow-Fever, ASIATIC CHOLERA. The su i ei lor uruiotUio end sanative vtrroee of the Swedish Bitters against Malarious Fevers, Dysentery and Cholera, were most apparently tested In tbe late wars by French and English physicians, who by pre scribing the same to their respective troops, soe eseded in reducing tbe mortality list ef epidemic die. asses from a to 1 per cent, DIRECTIONS tsVAll persons who have to perform long and hard labor, and while doing it, are often exposed to sadden ehangeo of temperature, or tbe draft or alr,or obnox ious dusts, smells, or vapors, should not fall to us tbe Swedish Bitters, ae a few drops of it, added to their drink, are sufficient to pi oast le them in Ineetl mabls health and vigor. Those who are accustomed to drink Ice water during tbe summer, should sever emit to add some Swedish Bitters to tt, tsTTerson given to sedentary Ufe should nee the Swedish Bitters. It will neutralize the bad effects of their want of exercise hi open air, and keep them la good health and good spirits. taTTo th Ladles tbe Swedish Bitters most aspect, ally be recommended. Because Its use con tributes most essentially to piusans the regularity of the phyetolo. glral functions, peculiar to tbe del irate female coev stitutlon and thus proves aa effectual barrier against those Innumerable Nervous and Blood Diseases, which nowa-days hsvs grown so frequent a to be takea by many for Bv natural Inheritance Bat the Swedish Bitter dose not only secure good health; It alaoeffacte the full development of tbe female body, and of its beauty by perfect forme eed fine eomplectlon and color. Thus the Swedish Bitters haa booomo oae of the COSMETIC AND TOILET ARTICLES tsv Fanners and their families, who have tried Swedish Bitters, prefer tt to ta similar articles. For them It proves beneficial ta various ways. In Summer, when their calling require them t often endure the Intense heat of tbe sun. while per forming hard work, tbey are Induced to be not suf ficiently cautious In satisfying their burning thirst by water, or ia eating fruit not yet ripe, as. Thus fum ing people are very liable to suffer from sun stroke. Fever. Dysentery. Cholera, Ac., ae. The regular use ef tbe Swedish Bitter make these dangerous Inso aoces all harmless. In Winter, during the time ef rest, many country people, trying to Indemnify themselves for past prk rations are very apt to often overload their stomachs and thus impair their digestive organe the roota of the tree. The nee of tbe Swedish Bitter prevent dismiss from that cause. Amatterof course, la ease of elekiiese, the pa tient should avoid food wot agreeing with aim or such, ss m known, to be difficult to digest or unsuit able to the disease tn queatiom. The rale: "Be moderate In all you est, drink or do," hi strictly te be observed. HOW TO TAKE SWEDISH BITTEia The Swedish Bitter shall only be taken ni U.S ab sence of Inflammatory symptoms. Grown person tak one tablespoonfal three times per day, before or after meals, pur er diluted with water. Person under a year, two-thirds ef that euentlty- " l Children from t year uuwarda, tne eighth of that fuanuty. Persona accustomed te shew tobacco, should ab stain from It sa much aa possible, while using Swe dish Bitters, tbey may substitute some flower ef chammomlle or root of ealamno. but then swallow the salvia, instead of spitting It away. Ia the same way emoting of tobacco should only moderately be preo. Person afflicted with dyspepsia must not eat hot bread or cakes, or fat or salt meats, but should take moderate i nrrtse In free air voiding all sndoeu chap, gee of temperature, an tn temperance la eating and drinking, and an undue mental excitement, by which they will contribute largely to the effectiveness of th Swedish Bitters. R. a Should the Swedish Bitten not rait an taste It may be takea with some sugar, or eaa be diluted with some sugar-water or syrup. Hsvtng acquired by vurchaee tbereeroe end thee, elusive riKht of preparing the Only Genuine Swedish Bitters, heretofore prepared by Eugene Schoenlng. late C. 8. Army Surgeon, we have, la order to frus trate fraud and deception, the name of B. Schoeaing burnt into the glass of each bottle and tbe envelope around It marked by E. Sehoaningw and by our owa aem. BuCVos without then mark are spurious. DENIEL & CO., Bo. es Worth Third Street. Philadelphia, Price per Single Bottle. 7 cents. Half a dnaea, A old Wholesale by Johnetoa, Holloway it Cowden. a Arch Bxreet, Philadelphia. For Bale by ell drug-
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