Poetry. TOO LATE. BT ALTOED H. LOCln. With bnrniiig brow on fevered haul. Slow fading with tba fading da;, I sat beside the darkling strand While moaning tide and land-wind say: Thy wide world died by ian 1 and sea With that great heart that died for thee." The sighing of her wasting breast Were breathed to cold, nnansweriug niht- AJone, forsaken, and tuifrueaaed. She passed, a blighted flower, from au;bt; And now the land-wind bears mj cry To deaf abyss of seaward sky. A single star's unpitvin; gleam Lights op the storm-weed at my fuet; And, shore-cast wreck, I sit and dream While my lost heart with waning beat. Breaks slowly, by the breaking sea. For that great heart that brake for me. Harper Majozine. ZMiH .ll:m.V. A Core for lh Ills tr Civiliza tion. The Barest remedy for tha ills of civ ilized life is to be f jund in some form ff retnrn to barbarism, and the com mon sense of the mass of the people has tanght them this: but tbey use the remedy in a weak form, and therefore fail of the largr good its ampler use might Kive. Tired men and women, fearful of summer heats, make escape to the country and under.-) prolonged cremation in boarding-house or hoteL It is better than nothiD?, and some people like it, or say they do. lut though our so-called couutry life sc- cures fresher air, it ensures a large suddIy of new irritation and annoy ances, while for vast numbers of men it means uncomfortable ntguts in a 6U3 urb, hasty breakfasts, a daily railroad dusting, and the hot. Ion?, weary day in town. It is better than to be in the city all the twcnf.j-four hours.but while it may help, acd cannot hnrt, it is a life which will not act as a complete remedy for those who are at all sen ouslr exhans;ed, or for snch n are Le ginniug to feel the ffrst inroids of any of the many wys in which worried work toioients us. Oue wulU sopit thing iuore than few da.s at At lantic City or murk v C-tpe Ty. die want more than eight iv ten t. j sWp in nud society of n kind olb does not cr.v. auci the delights 01 unlimiied barding-hoase p-'as-p. Civiliz-itiou has h.irt barbaris.a ln'l heaL la a word, my tired man wh. cannot sltep, or who dreams B'ocks and dividends and awakens l( g heavy, and who has fifty other nameless symptoms fchall try awile the hospital if t'o htone carver. He shall reverie the coudi tions of Lis life. Wont to live in a house, he shall sleep in a tent, or, des pite his gu'de's advice, shall lie beneath 'the moon's white benediction." So shall he be in the open air all day and all night, for the teut is bnt a mere cover and wind guard, or 6caree that. He shall rise when he likes, nntirred by imperious gongs; bnt I think he will le apt to see the sun rise.and, honestly tired from travel or food-getting, will want to turn in at eight or nine. If too warm, he will take his coat off; if cold, to replace the demon furnace in the cel lar, with its breath of baked air, he shall fiud warmth in the "ruby wealth of roaring logs" he has helped to chop and carry. The best part of Irs meals he shall earn by sweet labor with his rod or or his gun. His shall be the daily plunge in lake or river, and the intense, eager bungriness which has no quarrel with the mntt of wood or stream. The sleep that is dreamless, the keen senses, the Arab vigor that makes exercise a jest and the mindless work of the camp a simple pleasure all these are the reward that comes to a man who is living the out-door life of the camp by silent lake or merry river, or far in the noiseless deeps of northern forests rich with scent of pine and the fragrant wood odors of the mouldering logs of the windfall. This is indeed a true and potent al terative ;aud just what it is in detail.how full of harmless health-giving eujoy mentsandof novel surprises will bears little comment. It is an odd thing at first to feel you are living out of dxrs with no buitded home to sleep iu; but this simple fact is full of value. In our common, e very-day life of house and street we practically change oar climate whenever we leave or enter a house,and from this, with overheating of our homes, come, I suspect, the many little colds aud nasal catarrhs to which most of ns are liable. The dweller iu tents has no such annoyance, and ftr from the constant exposnre giving rise to diseases of lung or throat, the out-door life seems to be an almost absolute in surance against these. Yet the changes of temperature are often enormous, but as they are always natural, and unac cented by going into and out of houses, their lack of abruptness seems to de prive them of danger. Oa the north west shore of Lake Superior the midday temperature in August was often 7D to HJ Fahrenheit, and the minimum of the night 39 to 65s; yet, as I remem ber, no one of a large party suffered in any way. Both on our sea coast an 1 in Maine this is well understood, and is often practically applied; so that it is thought to be best for persons recover ing from inflammatory rheumatism to live on the sounds for awhile or out iu the woods, and as soon as possible to loosen the stiffened joints by handling an axe. Not only are well people better for such steady work, but cases of chronic throat-trouble, catarrhal disorder and chronic bronchitis rapidly disnppear nnder the natural and miid treatment of what, for brevity, I have ventured to call the Camp Cnre. I have more than once aeen alarning coughs simply vir iah after a fev nights iu camp, while, on the other hand, it wss a common thing aramg our men acd oflicers dar ijg the Into war to find thai a leave of abhence and the exchange of teut life lor nuuse ale frequently oronght about colds or coughs. I weli recall als a casj of chronic loss of nnca which for years had bjffljd mai.y wise doctors, aud was perfectly and permanently cured by three weeks in camp on the Potomac. During the war it was a subject of frequent surprise to civil sur geons to see how speedily wounds healed when men were living in tent hospitals, and bow potent was their use iu dispelling acd checking the progress of that horror of all surgical horrors, hospital gangrene. I have several times bad occasion to remark while in camp npon the same quick healing of wounds nl to see injuries which at home would have sent a man to bed to get well without the slightest annoyance and with singular rapidity. The evils which are naturally dreaded as results of camp-iiienave in reality no existence. Lippineott's ifajazin: How is it that girls can always tell a married man Irom a single one 7 The fact is indisputable. Blackwood says that "the fact of matrimony or batch elorship is written so legibly in a man's appearance that no ingenuity can con ceal it. Everywhere there is some in explicable instinct that tells ns whether an individual (whose name, fortune, and circumstances are totally unknown) be or be not a married man. Whether it is s certain subdued look, such as that which characterizes the lions in a menagerie, and distinguishes them from the lords of the desert, we cannot tell ; bnt tha truth is so, we positively affirm." Agricultural. Fowls is ths Houss-stablr. Fowls should never be permitted to have ao tn. tha hnrse-stable. nor the feed room, nor the hay mow. Their rooms should be entirely separate irom iue stable, so that they may not always be ready to slip in wheuever a door is opened; and that the vermin which in fest poultry may not reach horses and cattle. . . .. It is a well-known fact that fowls of all kinds frequently drop a very sordid, offensive, clammy, vicious odor; and when allowed to tjo on the hay mow, or in the feeding room, or anywhere in the barn, they damage more fodder than we are wont to suppose. We would as soon allow fowls to live in the kitchen, and to hop on the dinner table while we are eating, and to roost on our bedstead as to allow them to have free access to the horse-stable and barn. Some horses are always afraid of fowls: and when one enters the manger, or rack, the timid horses will imme diately surrender their entire right, however hungry they may be, to these lawless marauders. And after they have scratched over flie feed with their foul feet, and smeared a portion of it with their filthy droppingsa horse must be exceedingly hnngry before he will eat his mess. Many a hungry horse has been deprived of his feeding of grain by a lot of bold, gallinaceous rob bers that had learned when and where to fill their empty crops with the feed of a j aded horse. Let gates and bars exclude fowls aud pigeons from the doors and windows of all horse-stables. Tlasteb fob .Potatoes. According to Mr. Crompton, author of the prize essay on the cultivation of the Potato, very remarkable results are obtained from plaster by dusting the vines with it as soon as they are through the soil; again immediately after the last plow ing and hoeing; aud at intervals through the whole growing season. The first application may be lii(ht, the second heavier, and after that more bountiful, say 2i)0 pounds to the acre. I: renders the plant less palatable to the insects, aud appears to be fatal to many of the fuutji family. The vines retain a bright lively green color, and the tubers con tinue swelling until growth is stopped by the frost; beside, potatoes thus grown ara so sound and free from dis ease as to be easily kept for the spring market, without any loss by rot. Mr. Crompton hays he has seen a field, all planted with "the sitae variety, at the same time, oa one-half of which, that had received no pl.u.ter, tha yield was but 01) bushels pi-r aere, and many rotteu; while the other half, to which plas-ter had been applied, .'Med 3iK) bushels pT acre, aud no' an nnsouud one among them. So alt Lehs is Fowls It is not very difli'-'nlt to determiuo tha cause of this affection called scurvy on the legs of fowls. It is want of cleanliness and proper ezvrcise but not very dit!i:ult to effect a cure If the fowls have been permitted to run for a considerable time until the legs are eucased iu scurf, a thorough washing with warm strong soap su Is to remove the outer scurf, and after dryiag the legs, make an ap plication of hogs lard and Hour of sul phur mix-d together, will generally effect a ctira In very bad cases a second application may be necessary. This affection gen erally manifests itself by a sort of ashy appearance on the inside of the legs of fowls jut below the hock joints and about the feet. At this period a simple thorough greasing with lard alone will often effect a cure. Kerosene oil has been tried effeclu.lly in many cases, but the lard and r-nipiinr is sapposed to be the best remedy. Yerbesas It may not be generally 1. . . . . . . ...... 1 . . . - i ming flower can be grown so as to pro ' dnce tiowt rs from seed the first year, but such is the case. Procure of a reli : able seedsman seed saved from the choicest flowers, and sow them any timj during March, either in a well pru i pared hot-bed,or in a box of rich, line soil, to be kept in tne bouse nights, aud cold days: water with warm water as often as dry, and transplant into the garden as early as June. If the plants should grow rapidly, they should be transplanted, at least once in the hot bed or boxes, so as to make them grow stronger, and keep the roots more com pact. Plants properly grown in this way will produce larger and healthier flowers than those propagated in the green honse, from cuttings, although they will not be of any particular variety. Fkedixo Horses. Professor of X ology, has been investigating the re lations between the food given to draught to horses and the amount of power it produces that is to say, the strength-giving valin of the nitrogenous elements of food. By a series of sci entific calculations, tested in the stables of the Omnibus Company of Paris, he finds that the rations in practice given to the horse are in conformity with science and the views of the company, to feed the animals so that they will not run into flesh, they will lose nothing in strength. The mean average weight of the 'bus horse is 1,80) pounds; he is employed four hours daily, drawing a weight of two and threequarter tons, at the rate of two and a half yards a second. Etch horse's daily rations consist of nine pounds of hay, twenty pounds of oats and one and a quarter pounds of bran. To Make Tapku to Kill Flies. The following are approved recipes for making "fly papers," taken from the DnigrfiHit' Circular Dtp filtering or bibulous paper in one of these solutions: lQnamim chins 1 otmre VWUT 1 HUt Boil ten minutes and strain. Some add one drachm of powdered nnx vomica, and boil it with the quassia. 1 Black rrrr ' onnce iKiiluift ter .. irint. Make an infusion aud strain. g-Areniateof sods 10 grains. Watr 4uunccs. Dissolve. The paper is to be simply immersed in the liq-iid. and dried. I When wanted for Use, a piece of the paper is laid in a plate with a little sweetened water. The formnla Xo. 3 is the surest but requires caution in using. Accoedtso to 11 e hard, a veterinary surgeon, a simple method of preventing flies from annoying horses consists in painting the inside of the ears, or any other part especially troubled, with a few drops of empyrenmatic oil of ju niper. It is said that the odor of this substance is unendurable to flies, and that they will keep at distance from the parts so anointed. If this treatment shonld accomplish the alleged result, it may perhaps be equally applicable in repelling mosquitoes from the face and hands of tourists and sportsmen when passing through the woods or meadows. Foreios Weeds. Xo less than 214 species of plants which come nnder the popular designation of "weeds" have been introduced into the United States from foreign ciaatries. Chickweed, which is a native of most paru of Europe aud Asia, was first introduced into South Carolina as food for canary birds, and soon spread all over the country. An old lady in Massachusetts being informed that a dam above the village where she lived was likely to give way, immediately wished for a pair of clean white stockings saying in explanation that she once saw a woman struggling in the waters, and that she floated along fe.3t upward. Scientific. Qualities Most Estmabl is the Rosa A rose, taking all things into consideration, is perhaps the most splendid of lowers Throwing aside the national affection for our emblem, the rose is appreciated for itself. It has qualities peculiar to itself. It is beautiful, from the moment when the color peeps from its green covering until its flower is complete handsome in all its stages. Its perfume is nnequaled ; and whether it be a single bud or bloom in the hand, a bush in the border, a tree on the lawn, or climbing the pillar, or winding around the archway, or covering the front of a house, it is equally admired. In estimating the various qualities which give value to the rose, we are almost inclined to place that of con tinual blooming first, even before per fume, although without this a rose loses its great charm ; but continuous flowering is of so much importance, the prolonging of the beauties of the garden is so essential, that we think it of more consequence than any other feature. Sae a garden, liberally planted with summer roses in a blaze of beauty in June or July, and it is a second para dise ; but what is it before or after that period ? The rose trees bereft of adorn ment are eyesores ; they are, in fact, in the way until they bloom again. But see the same or another garden, judi ciously supplied with continuous bloom ing roses of the nature of the common Chins and we have them in flower the last of all our favorites. A frost that will kill down dahlias to the ground will only injure the flowers of the rose ; the buds are scarcely damaged, and it is not an uncommon thing to see con tinuous blooming roses flowering in a mild autumn op to Christmas ; and be it remembered that we have now hun dreds of beautiful varieties possessing this valuable quality. We now come to a quality which is of more importance than it at first seems nam-ly, thickness of petal. The alvantages of this are, first, that, whatever be the color, it is more dense than it can be in a tuin petal ; but apart from the superiority of color, thick petals are more lasting than thiu ones, and sun and winds have less effect upon them. A rose with thick petals will remain perfect for days, while thin ones are burut or shrivelled in a few hours ; and we hardly know of a more disagree able fault than speedy decay. To see the ground strewed with petals in a few hours, and the plants disfigured by the remains of decayed flowers, is very far from pleasant, and this is luevitaoiy the case with thinly petaled roses Upon the whole, the qualities of a good rose are continuous blooming ; thick, smooth-edged petals ; flowers round, forming half or two-thirds of a ball, very double and full-faced, very symmetrical and imbricated ; wood short jointed ; color dense, that is, whatever its shade be, the color de cided ; and, if striped or blotched, the striites or blotches well defined. Babies rs Asts Corrosive sublimate it is said, has the most remarkable effect upon ants, especially the variety of insect which we lately described as living Uion fungi found on leaves of trees. The powder, strewed in dry weather across their path, seems to drive every ant which touches it crazy. The insect runs wildly about and fiercely attacks its fellows. The news soon travels to the rest, and the fighting members of the community, huge fel lows some three quirters of an inch in length, make their appearance with a determined air, as if the obstacle would be speedily overcome by their efforts. As soon, however, as they have touched the sublimate, tnys the narrator in the Xaturaliat in Xicaragua, all the state liness leaves them ; they rush about ; their legs are seized hold of by some of the smaller ants already affected by the poison, and they themselves begin to bite, and in a short time become the centers of balls of rabid ants. As these insects are one of the scourges of tropi cal Americs destroying vegetation in immense quantities, it is probable that this extraordinary remedy may be of considerable service to agriculturists Dangers or Xitbo-Gltcerine. -Nitro glycerine is a thick colorless oil, and appears to be as harmless, to look at, as lard oil or petroleum. People are so accustomed to the handling of oils of all kinds that it is almost impossible to make them realize the danger that lurks even iu the smallest quantity of nitro glycerins It explodes when gently struck, and is ten times more powerful as an explosive, weight for weight, than gunpowder. The other evening, in Jersey City, a gentleman aud lady were taking a moonlight stroll on the bights. in the vicinity of one of the shafts of the new Delaware and Lackawanna railway tunnel. The man saw on the ground the glimmer of a small tin tube, picked it up, and slapped it from one hand to the other, when a terrific ex plosion ensued. His eyes were de stroyed, his flesh lacerated, his limbs broken, while his lady companion was dreadfully injured. It was a discarded uitro-glyceriue tube.auch as are used in blasting, and is supposed to have been thrown away by workmen at the tunnel shaft. It is said that osmium is the most powerful poison ever known. At a re cent meeting of the Paris Scientific Academy, AI. H. bainte Claire Devuie, a member of the learned assembly, offered to his colleagues, in a perfectly tight vial, eight kilogrammes about fifteen pounds of osmium. Osmium, he said, is the most poisonous of all poisons Twenty pounds of it would be sufficient to poison the entire popu lation of the world. One thousandth part of a grain of osmic acid, set free in a volume of air of a hundred cubic yards, would possess such a deadly influence that all the persons respiring the air could be nearly killed. Osmio acid is so much the more dangerous because no counter poison is known for it. Tbaisixo op Boat Rowers. At some of the colleges the training of the racing crews is about as follows : In the morning an easy walk of an hour's length, at noon a quicker walk of half an hour, and in the afternoon a pull of seven or eight miles, after which comes a bath and a good rubbing down. The system of diet ia rather one of pro scription than prescription. Certain articles welt known to be unwholesome are proscribed. Other things may be eaten. Pastry, tobacco, coffee, pork, and all stimulants are ruled out. The crew pulled a plain forward and back stroke, with no special pretension to style or scientific points making gene rally 32 strokes to the minnte. A paste for cleaning metals has been introduced in France, the ingredients of which are vegetable. It is said to be snperior to anything yet introduced for this purpose, as it not only imparts a beautiful luster, but preserves the metal from tarnishing longer than any other article known. To facilitate transpor tation, and also to preserve it, the in ventor has reduced the same substances to a fine powder, which answers equally well for polishing glass ivory, gold, silver, is The Diaososis or Lipomata. An excellent suggestion is made in a French journal. A character peculiar to lipo mata resides in the property, belonging to all fatty tumors, of hardening under the action of cold. When, after the nse of ice or the ether spray, in the case of a doubtful tumor, the growth becomes harder, the presumption is that it is lipoma. Domestic. How Much Good Cooking has to do with Health asd Happiness. There is no more important branch of "pre ventive medicine," than cooking. Bad Cooking may cause a dwindling of the race, ruination of the temper and deterioration of the morals. Good cooking, on the other hand, is accom panied by national prosperity and do mestic bliss So say the promoters of the National . Training School of Cookery, who are undoubtedly right in the main and are deserving of all im aginable success Now cooking is both an art and a science. For its progress as an art we are not greatly concerned, although our profession would un doubtedly suffer in pocket shonld fine art cookery go out of fashion. "Elegant" dishes are generally whited sepuichres, and the forerunners of blue pills and other disagreeable correctives We hope that the school will bnsy itself mainly in imparting a knowledge of the scientific principles of cooking, and will teach their cooks that the quality par excellence which all food should have is wholesomeness The bulk of the English people live in big cities, and if we were asked to name the most predominating characteristic of our urbane population, we should say "dys pepsia. Those who spend their days in dark offices, chambers, or consulting rooms and keep their noses everlast ingly upon their respective grindstone s, seldom know that good digestion which should wait on appetite. Hitherto their dinners have not been so skillfully pre pared as to demand the least possible effort from a jaded stomach ; but let us hope that the national disgrace of indi gestibility will no longer dim the brightness of our hospitality, and the number of patent medicines which are sold so largely in this country as aids to digestion will undergo a rapid diminution. Summer Diet. Whoever takes his morning walks through the markets may there behold the crisp lettuce and cauliflower, the brittle radish and the succulent pes and all the glorious pomp of vegetables, fresh from their native soil. Who can resist the fra grant berries aud the long array of early fruits that only need a little wisdom to mike them food fit for gods ? Or the dried fruits tempt those who fear the green aud fresh. Tueu there is the economical and braiu-feediug fish, the lobster, aud the clam. A'l these, with many fariuaceons preparations bread, rice, tapioca, aud ao on furnish fortli a table that strengthens while it cheer- and cools Depend upon it, there is something besides mere sentimental fastidiousness that repels when we look in npon a i-ircle of hearty meat eaters in the heat of a summer's d ly. The healthy stomich instinctively revolts from the steam of the groaning board ; aud though man may not live by bread alone, he i ves best aud most comforta bly when he suits his diet to his climate. Train oil and seal-fat for an Arctic winter ; fruit, fish, and vegeta bles for summer. Greek Cons Puouiso AHow one long ear of sweet coru for each person. Take half a pint of milk, one egg, a dessertspoonful of sugar, one of butter, and a tetspoouful of salt to every two ears. Beat the eggs aud sn gar well together, and ad J the milk salt. Cut the corn off the cebs with a sharp knife, aud chop the divided grams with a chopping knif, but not too fine ; or, better still, split each row of corn down the middle before cutting them off their cobs The corn must not be boiled first. Stir the chopped corn into the milk, and bake in a brisk oven in custard cups or in a tin-pau until the top is nicely browned, but not hardened. Serve hot, with sauce. This is a delicate dish. Common corn may be used, if young and tender, bnt requires as much agtiu ol sugtr. Jams It is not generally known that boiling fruit a long time and skimming it well, without the sugar and wit jout a cover to the preserving p in, is a very economical ami excel lent way economi cal because the bulk of the scum rises from the fruit and Dot from the sugar, if the latter is good ; and boiling it without a cover allows the evaporation of the watery particles therefrom ; the preserves keep firm and well-flavored. The proportions are, three-quarters of a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit. Jam made in this way, of currants, strawberries, raspberries or gooseberries is excellent. The best jam I know of is made of an equal quantity of goose berries and raspberries Some made by us last year of this half-and-half mixture was preferred to all others Tomato Fish Sacce. To one pint o f the water in which the cod was boiled, add one pint of stewed and strained tomato. Salt to the taste ; thicken with one gill of wheatmeal rubbed in water, and boil five minutes If liked, it may be seasoned with minced onion, which, however, should be cooked in the sauce for half an hour, and with powdered thyme added when the sauce is dished. This sance is far more wholesome than the drawn-butter nsnally served with fish. If served with simple baked fish, the drippings of the latter can be added with water to the tomato, or the sauce can be made with one half water and one half tomato, without any fishy flavor. Fob Good Whitewash ob Coloring. Take a bucket of lump lime and put in a barrel ; cover with water ; wlieu it begins to get hot pour iu half a gallon of Unseed oil ; take care not to let the lime "burn ;" let it stand until cool, then add two pounds of alum dissolved in warm water ; thin with water to work easy. This will wear for a long time, and for outside work longer thau lime and alum simply. The above mixture can be colored to suit, by lamp black, Venetian red, yellow ochre, etc. Spiced Tomatoes. S "ven pounds of green tomatoes, chopped, one quart of vinegar ; boil one aud one-half hours, then add two pounds of sugar, and spice to suit your taste ; boil as long as before, and put up in bottle or cans. It is excellent to eat with meat, and is easier made than catsup and mneh better. How to Make Tomato Catsup. Half a bushel of tomatoes ; cook until soft enough to strain through a sieve flue enough to hold the seeds ; then add 4 tablespoons black pepper, 2 tablespoons mustard, 6 tablespoons salt, 1 pint vin egar, 1 tablespoon cayenne pepper ; boil about one hour, and bottle, A Cure ros Hidrophobia. A friend gives the prescription for what it may be worth : "Boil poke root and new milk, equal parU, and give it to the patient until it produces sleep." The above was used in one of the worst stages, and proved effective when science and medicine failed. Orange Lilt. Spread boiled rice one-third of an inch thick on a dessert plate, cover it with small pieces of sweet orange, pour over it a sauce made by simply sweetening the expressed juice of the orange (aud flavored with pine-apple if at hand). Sprinkle with sugar and serve cold for dessert. Cold Slaw. Tolks of two eggs ; a tablespoonful of cream ; a small tea spoonful of mustard ; a little salt ; two tablespoon! uls of vinegar. If cream is not used, put in a small lump of butter rubbed in a little flour. Cut the cab bage very fine ; heat the mixture, and pour it on hot. Humorous. A Stuttering Stobt. S lived in an Eastern city ; he stuttered awfully. K lived in the same city, a j kept a corner grocery store. One day a countryman was driving down the street, and seeing K , says he, "Dodo-do you wa-wa-want to-to-to buy buy buy any whi-whi white be-be- B. No, sir, I don't ; but 111 tell you where you can sell the whole lot. Do you see that sign, S 's? Go up there ; he is awful on beans Countryman Ta-ta-thank you. Then he turned his horse and drove np to the store. By the time he reached there II., with a choice collection of friends, occupied box seats at the side door. The countryman entered, and it didn't take long for each one to make up his mind the other was mocking him. The countryman spoke first. Says he, "Goo-goo-good mor-mor-morning, si-si-sir." S. Goo-goo-good mor-mor morning, you-yonr se-se-self. C. Do-do-do you wa-wa-want to-to buy-buy-buy any whi-whi-whte be-be-beans?" S. No-no-no I do-do-don't. Who-who-who you mock-mock-mocking, si-si sir ? C. Who-who-who are you-you-you mo-mo-mocking your sel-sel-self 1 S. Ge-ge-get out of my-my-my sto sto store, yon-you t-t-thuderin' o-o-old scon-scou-scouradrel, you-you-you. C. I'm I'm I'm a goo goo-good mi mi mind to-to-to kno-kno-knock your o-o-old hea-hea-head off. Here S. seized a two pound weight and rushed for him ; but B. and his friend ran in and stopped a fight. The madder a stuttering man gets the more he stutters, so you can imagine where the laugh comes in. Bathes Ingenious. There was a bishop in Dublin who engaged a painter to make a large picture for the cathe dral. The subject chosen was the crossing of the Bed Sea by the Israel ites. After a time the picture was com pleted and hung iu the cathedral, cov ered by a heavy curtain, aud a great crowd of people assembled to see it unveiled. Ail faces were turned in expectation to the curtain. But lo 1 when it was drawn aside, nothing could be seen but a vast eipin-e of wa er. In a r ig", the bishop turned to the artist and rX 'laimed : "I thought I asked you to paint a pieturn of the Israelites croasiug the - S -a !" "Trne for you ; that's just it," said the paiuter. "B it where are the Israelites ?" asked the ludigtiaut bishop. "They're gone over," said the paiu'er. Well, but where are the Epti ans?" They're gone under !" A Sad Mistake. The waiting maids at Saratoga dress almost as fiuely as their mistresses, aud many amusing coittrctcmpn have occurred iu conse quents. Oao of these young women w:s standing on the piazzi of the Uuited States, wheu a gallant young gentleman fT-red her a chair, which she accepted. He ws repaying himself for his courtesy by speaking "pretty nothiug" to her, when a little boy ran up to her and said : "Ma says she wants yon to come right in and put Carrie to sleep." The obliging Ches terfield was much shocked, and, when he saw everybody tittering at him, was no less mortified. He was afterwards heard to say : ' By Jove ! how the deuce was I to know that she was only a servaut? Any fellow might have done the same thing." IT'- will proba bly not do it again at all events At Sabatjoa, recently, about the time the comet first became visible, a young husband rushed into the draw-ing-rooni for his cara sposs seated comfortably on the sofa, receiving with mischievous delight the compliments and the "houimajres" of two snowy haired Cubans. "Mary, Mary, quick I Come and look at the comet," ejacu lated the husband. "I'm engaged at present," she replied tranquilly, "and will see it some other time." "But you cau't, for it's going away soon," he persisted. "Oh, John, don't bother me," the lady responded peevishly ; "as if wo were never going to Saratoga again 1 I can see it next year, you goose, you !" A celebrated artist of Boston, who excels in paiuting auimals, saw as he was passing through one of the rural towns of Massachusetts a very animated looking bull. Thinking he would like to take him on canvass, he got permis sion of the owner, an honest old farmer and in due time produced an excellent likeness of the bu!l, which he sold for SJ00. Ou seeing the farmer soon after, he tol 1 him he had sold the picture of his bull for 82J0. "Good soons? ' said the old man ; "why I would have sold him the bull for less thaa that 1" Improved Fiett. A Scotch parson had a farmer neighbor who was in the habit of shooting on Sundays, but after a while this Sabbath breaker joined the church. One day the minister to whose church he belonged met a friend of the farmer and said : "Do you see any change in Mr. 1' since he joined the church?' "0.i, yes," replied the friend, "a great difference. Before, when he went out shooting on Sunday, he carried his gnu over his shoulder, but now he carries it under his coat. A clerotm in informed his people at the close of his sermou, that he in tended in a few days to go on a mission to the heathen. After the congregation was dismissed, a number of the mem bers waited for their pastor, and crowd ing around him, exp reused their aston ishment at the new turn in his affairs, asking him where he was going, and how long they would be deprived of his ministrations. He said to them, "My giod friends, don't be alarmed, I'm not going out of town." Boston Otohe: Advice to mothers in the habit of taking children into the omnibuses : Dispor-e your offspring carefully in diff-reut parts of the vehi cle when you enter, aud sit for admira tion. The moment that you see that the attention of th9 publio is flagging, call the smallest boy to you and kiss hiai. Bepeat the process at intervals "Where's that twelfth juror?" ex claimed an Idaho Jndge, on the Court's resuming business after a recess, scowl ing as he spoke at the eleven jurors in the box, one of whom rose and said : "Please, Judge, it's Ike Simmons as is gons H had to go oa private business, but he's left Lis verdict with me !" Some people are not endowed with the faculty of seeing a joke. Lord Morpeth used to tell of a Scotch friend of hio who, to the remark that some people could not feel a jest until it was fired at them with a cannon, replied : "Weel, but hoo can ye fire a jest out of a cannon, mon ?" "Mt dear bot," said a fond aunt to a very fast living nephew, "don't you know that in leading this irregular life you are shortening your days ?" "It's quite possible that I may be shortening my days, but then how I lengthen my nights," was the cool reply. A LAzr editor in Ohio reads all his exchanges in bed. He finds it the easiest way to fill up his sheet. T n V Pissra nt tha World's Disren sary, Buffalo, N. Y., whose Family Medi cines have won golden opinions and achieved world-wide reputation after pa tient study and much experimenting, suc ceeded in perfecting a Compound Extract or sman-neea, or naier rrppir, wu AmtiwA a Wnma . . ttlhrattl aS h II other medicines. It owes its efficacy not entirely to tne smin-nwi, wuicu, .... ia . anvAreiirn. remedial affent. but largely to a happy combination of that herb with Jamaica Uiueer ana omer vegeuiuio agents The combination is such as to make it a very pleasant remedy to take. Taken internally, it cores Diarrhcrs Dysen tery (or Bloody Flux), Summer Complaint, ri,.i.K rhoi.n Mnrhirn. Cholera Infan tum, Colic, Cramps and Pain in the Stom ach, breaks up Colds L ramps, reorus aui Inflammatory Attacks. Rheumatism and N'euralgia. Applied externally, it cures Sprains and Bruises Frost Bites Chil blains, Felons, Rheumatic A(Tections,Scalds Burns Cuts. Neuralgis Pain in Back. Sore ness or Stiffness of Joints Stings and Bites of Poisonous Insects and Reptiles Caked Breast or "Agus in Breast," and Enlarged Glands; in short, is an unexcelled Liniment for Man and Beast. It is sold by druggists. Dr. Walker's California Vinegar Bitters We can aver, that after one Tear's experience in the use of Visiqab v. r i D ITT1CKS Ul OUT OWU uuubvuuiu, wum.w never found any medicine which so completely remedied nearly all human ills. One of the ereat levers which this medicine briDgs to bear upon the system is, it attacks the irregularities of the stomach. It pitches into the liver, and perfectly astonishes that vital organ, which in some people is so lazy. It sets it to wore witn vigor, a . ... , a- a- ..11 good appetite ana aigesuou iuuuw. Food assimilates and the whole man is at once made new. His blood, which is the life of the flesh, rushes through the arteries, imparting a tone to the system which is easier felt than de scribed. This subject may seem of little im portance to some of our readers But it is not so. Good health is more pre cious than fine gold. He who discov ers or invents remedies which enable us to overcome disease is a benefactor of his race. Texas Jfew Yorker, Octo- ler, 1870. 62 Gi eat harm and discomfort is caused by the use of purgatives which gripe and rack the system. I'arton 1'urga tive Pills are free from all impure mat ter, and are mild and health-giving in their operation. At this season of the year cramps and paina in the stomacL and bowels dys entery, diarrLoes tx, are quite com mon, and should be checked at once. Johnson's Anodyne .Liniment is the beet article that can be used in all men cases, and should be kept in every family. Used luternrtily. 3 Don't Temporize with Piles. Oint- meuts. lotions, electuaries aud all man ner of quack nostrnms are a waste of time ami money. The only abtoluttly infallible cnre for these paiutul dis eases is Anakesis discovered hy Da. Silrbke. It has been pronounced by scientific men as the happiest discov ery made in medicine for 20!) years, it affords instant relief from pain in the wort cases and has cured more than 20,000 sufferers permanently. All Doc tors prescribe it. Price $1. Sent free bv mail on receipt of price. Depot, 46 Walker St., New York. 3 Tap Worm! Tap Worm t T Worn msorM tn from 1 to 1 boars with hnuLiNi Ti-ffeUble nu-du-ine. Th worm paiutitiK from toe TttD !!. No fw ak-d nntll the entire vinu. witfc nad pm. Mrdiciue htrnile. Cmn refer lb'. mltlirteU to tbe ri.leuU of this city whom i bare- rurtsi. At njT otb.-e i-su be set-n bun .Ire,' of six-ctai-!!, mt-MuriuK from t to liw feet in lecuzth. Flftjr per ceut. of ces of l)'ileila and dktorualiiZittloDs of Liver are caused y stma4-b aud other w .nus eiwiiuie iu tbe alimentary canaL Worms, a disease of tbe most daiiKen.u ebarat-ter, are so little understood by the mediral meu f tbe present day. Call and see tbe ontiiual and only worm deatroyer, or send for a circular which will ffire a full description aud treatment f all kinds of worms: euclose i cent stamp for return of tne same It. K. V. Kuukel can tell by sremir the patient whether or not, thev are troubled with worms, aud bT writing and trllm'g the symptoms. Ac., the I.ictor will auswer by luaiU UK. E. F. KL'NKKL, No. 35V V Ninth St., Philadelphia, Pa. (Advice at utbc or by mail, free.) beat. Put and Ulomach worms also removed AdvertisementH. DYSPEPTIC CONSUMPTION. nan Dyptptic Consul option CWss H' mnswsr, YFSl first. Rents all ts eta!tby zsra hat gathers about tks walls sf U swaaass rom iodigtstioa. Second. Prodae as attir ssaditiM tt Liver and Kidneys witfesni sepletisf tke lystem. Third. Supply ev aid ratuie ia fnraishiag he arsis sf seme sf the seapeaest pans -hat scmpsss kealtky laiia We, from thousands whs have beea ewreel, inert that a eare eaa he perferaew e this -a aery. REMEDIES USED, Apart from our Office Practice. fTHST. THE GREAT AHEP.ICAN DYSPEPSIA PILLS, sUaisvs the fss-3S auUer fresi the tsars sh. eaa reel ire it U a healthy seeviiue SE003D. THE PINK TREE TAR CORDIAL! lets sa Che Liver, kea's Che SUatask, aat seta ea the Kiiaoys sad Kervooa Bateaa. fsr further advice, sail er writs) OR, L (J, C. WISH&BT, S2 JTTt Setm Slrts ADMONITION. B hi kaewa is all rsadsrt that eiaaa Dm. L. Q. C WISBAKT has followed the eases asai ears s diseases, aad the peat vala si FAB. sa a e retire remedy, as directed by SUhep Berkley aad 2av Joha Wesley, that ataay have) attempted te mats a TAK pre raratie. far THROAT AND LC.NQ PIS CASES. Us it kmswa that Da I. CJ G. ttSHABrfl PISE TRIE TIR E0BDI1L Is the only remedy, frets leer, experieae, sad by ear stest skillful physisiaaa fa Dipthsria, Ulcerated Threat, Lug, Kidney, SUwuch, Asthaa, aad Otseral Debility, 1 vn sa fsr Cenjhs, CjUs aad Lttsf Afea- DR. L. Q.C. WiSHART, XSaTCLTETS HOCKS blXb ET02S. No. 132 N. SECOND ST , rHiLA9ELrni. SLAHXS ITZATLI FKCrXZD AT THIS OITI01, Advertisement. IBs ----- Dr. 4. U alter s laliiornia in pnar Kilters are a pr.rcly Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from tbe na tive herbs found on the lower range of tte Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, the medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without the nse of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked. "What is th cause of the unparalleled success of Vinegar Bit ters f Our answer is, that thev remove the cause of disease, and the p.i:ieut re covers his health They are the great blood purifier and a life-givins: principle, a perfect Renovator and Iuv.gorator of the svstem. Never before in the history of" the world has a medicine hem compounded possessine the reuiarkab'e qualities of Visbuak BiTTHM in healin the sick of every disease man w heir to. Tiey are a rentle Purpiti- e as well as a Tonic relieving Conirestion or Ic?aiJ ation o Uie Liver aud Viae ral Organs, m Bihou. Diseases. The properties of P. Waiters Vl.tKUAB UiTTKBS are Aperient, DiaphoreUO. Carminative, Nutrition. Laxative. Uiureua, jetlatne, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Altera jre. a Inti-ltiliioa- Gratefal Thousands proclaim v eoar Bitters the most wonderful In Tigurant that ever sustained tha sinking So Person can tale these Bitters according to directions, and remain lonj unwell, provided their bones are not de stroyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. Uiliaus. Remittent and Inter mittent I evers, which are so preva lent in the vaiiers of our great riven throtijrnour the United. States, esneciall those of the ilississiDDi. Ohit, Missouri. Illinois Tennessee. Cunilierland. Arkan sas. Ked, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grar.t'.e, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile. Savannah, Ro anoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country am in? the Summer and Autumn, and remarkablv zo during sea sons of unusual heat and drvness, are invariably occompnnfed by extensive de ranr'meits ot the stomach and liver, and otner abdominal vscera. In tneii 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 Vixegar Bitters, as they will speedily remove the darfc colored viscid niatter with wuich the bowels are I'.aileu. at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vixesar Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armea. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head ache, f'ain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth. Bilious Attacks, Palpita tation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Tain 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 Kind's Evil, white Swelling. I'lcers. Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, scrofulou Inflammations. Indolent Inflammation. Mercurial -Affections, Did Sores, Eruptions of tbe Skin. Sre Ejes, etc In these. a in all other constitutional Dis ease, Walker's Tixeoar Bitters have shown their rreat curative powers in tba most obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout. Bilious. Hem it tent and Intermittent t'evers. Diseases of the IMood, Liver, Sidneys and Bladder, these Bitten nave no equal. Such Diseases are caused ly Vitiated blood. Mechanical Diseases. rersons en gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers Trpe-wtters, (jnld-beaten. and Aimers, a they advance in life, are sul)ot to paralyiis of the ItoweU. To gnard ajrainst this, take a do?e of Walker's V li eu a r Bitters cca.-ionaHr. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tet ter, Salt-Kheum, Blotches. Spots, Pimples, Pustnles, Boils, Carbuncles, King-worms. Scald-bend, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch. Scurfs, Discoloration of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literaHy dug up and carried out of tbe system in a short time by tbe tut of these Bitters. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are ettectuatly destroyed aud removed. "o BVstein of medicine, no vermifuge, no an theluiinitics will free the f jstcm bum 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 improvemeut is soon oerceDtiMe. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when ever you tind iu impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Ernptions, or Sores, e'eanse it when yon find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins; oieanse it when it u foul ; your feefings will tell rou when. Keep tbe blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. H. II. MrDOSAI.D Ac CO.. Drna-pista and Gen. At . Saa Franciseo, Cnrifmrta eaa ct rf Wnshitiemn and Chariwm sta.. N. Y. SoM ejr all UiafbU ast OeaUsrs. 3TATIONABY. PORTABLE AND AGRICULTURAL STEAM ENGINES. O aural Agate far RUiSELL k GO.'I Massillon Separators HORSE POWERS. HORSE RAKES, bd,c, IIAY CUTTERS AND OTHER FIRST-CLASS FARM MACHINERY. HARBERT& RAYMOND. 1835 Market Street. s-vsa PHILADELPHIA. SHOW CASES I SHOW CASESI All atrtes, Btrvvir Minuted an4 Warner, sew ad PBcnnu-nana. iwieareij t-kFl Tnv snipping. COUillHd, JiAB-l, flHtLVISo), tiXUllJi FIX 1 1 ncn, arc HOUSE AND OrruiK ft R-VITTTtR all ktnda Tbe lannet sod beat assorted stock. Ben aud eeoond-iuuid In the Cur. liKWlM e n t-, e-ie-iy iom. una. luxe aad ia Biit ilk, raua. JOB PRINTING R IATLT raCTJIBD AT tBU OTIIV, Eugene Schoening's CZLDBRi VED SWEDISH Bi t TERS. OF PERUVIAN . tBX aSee!ie tor tale Bitter was toead aawaf tat assets er a -nedlak aeyalalaa, s stasia ataa, w, lest ala Ufa, wa lot yean eld, ky a (all af ki. ken, laid nls- taea aaa sees kp s prafon eeeret ty kls .'U7 far sura Ikaa tan mi ana starts- all tala tuae tkey sisde frqat w af ta. Bitten, wklck readend tkesi s etroaf aad loat Bvtaf est ef fvle, eaJeTtag est Heat kaaltk. rig taallT Ik neret ef Tpane Uli ttrra ad Ha woadarfal efacta. wsa ektaised y e.e f uuit kl. walla partial atl( la tke rlii a piUaa ef tke laaaiares t America, aflat a kaa r. ta, aererte 41valf a It kat le tke at nmM artaaV selkelx. THIS GENTJX5E 8WEDISE E:TTER3 ee II le sew ealled, kss els Its eoaVkf late saklla see, efeeted tkoaaaade ef aaUalsto af a. Baat alnady ftvaa T sua) I IjaUaaa, aad kas ntai Itself euk a wtra ietarttiv aad araaarvatlva Bmedy, tkat la-J t ata a fkitker ladlTtdeal neeaweaeaU- secants HOW IT OPERATES. Tke eft ef the Iwedtak Bitten tnv ttaalf, a Ike am slaee, te tke wia ertkedl(eUT orgasa taroagaaat taalr eatlr eateat.kat atalalj tth eteataek aad Ike etral tnet. It aotmalt etfei faaetlaas, aad thanfoi, aaaordiag ta the aatan af axiatias lmgoiarltiee er nsaer katrvetloaa aad reteaUeaaef ell klad, er slope Dtatrhsa, -. . tery, er otker aaaavolaaa dlackarf e aad aflavla. By nfslallaf tke abdominal ergase, ef whlck fead Ik Boatlakmeat, tke eeaaemlloa and tha 4 valoamnt ef tke ksaaa kody sat Iwediak !- ten Levis aiataa tke sense aad Ike vital auwtrm, ebarseae Ike ease aad the latalltet, naoveetae srasikUsf eftke Uaik.tk aridity, Ik karatac. Bastes, acd pslse ef tke stosutk. Iststna lu 41 f aatlv faesltiea, aad Is aa zllat Pnehylaeti sad Xeswdy a at Bat aerros I nl lability, rials, kaaey, CkeUe, Wetma, Dtosay. A a If lakaa la desble deeee. It ta-taua as a sen aperleal, kat la a sUld sad ssibIm say. Ia eeeseqeem ef taa aiatltlta f tk tsadlak BttMn It kat kom a a f taa swat lbratd RSMdlee afaiaet dta-e ef ike rfa sid la Ik akdeSMS, aad ef arattloee tkat brl! awa klad ta atqase ef aatd dlaa late, Tbaa v. wadlak Bitten kae aa saaerpaaetd na wa for esrlaf LlvtrOmplaletaof laoi ataadlaf , Jaaadia Dyapaptla. Dtaerdare ef Ike Spl, f tk Paa anaa, f tk Maral Olaada, aad alee dlaontt of tk E'dacys f tk Urtaary aad Btxsal-Orf ate. Baslda that tk Iwadiak BttMn nna thoae Is asawabi serves, er eftitv Affoatloaa ad Pi east, wklck r!ftBaie frost aaid asdoartaa dletsrbaa, se : Coafaattoa f Ik Laaga, th Bean, sad k Bntas Ceef ha. Asthma Headech BcBtalflaa, lad. far at part ft body Chloral BItraal Harnett Bold aad Ptl, Goat Draaay Gral Dei Ulty, Hypockcadnsala. Malaaaboly, A a., Aa. Of (ial keseBi Ik tsdlak Blltora k ala ba feted la Ik ksglaslaf f Saatrlt aad Is ttBlttrat-Fvn. Bet tbla la ly oo tide of as lat1maM.rf srefrertse IAom evfce see it regular mgainM si aieeaaatir s 4 epidemic dietare. Tb Sstdnk Bltun hae ky leaf esperteaee ta maay Uoaeaad mala tala d Us tteet nsowa af bataf tk mott nuakl rUlUTATITl 1MB PBOPHTLACTiC Illf BT ABAIIR Typhus, Oriental Pest, Ship-Fever, Yellow-Feyer, ABB ASIATIC CHOLERA. Tba ea parlor trotaotlva sad aaaattve vlrtaaa . tk Isadiak BlUtrt a(alaat Malartaaa Favtr Byaea ery, aad Ckolota, wen moat eprnrostly tetrad la lb let wan by Prtack aad laxlltk pky- tlalaaa, whe, ky praatnbiaf tb to their re. peetlve truope, eaadvd la ndaetng tk amiltv let f pidai dlMaaee fteai M I 1 par aoM. DIRECTIONS fJsV All penes wke lav te perfersi long sad bard labor, aad while detag It. an aft ospoaad te tsdds kaagt ef teaipentan, at th draft r air, erebaeales dasta. amalla, er Tepora, tboald ao fail U see tke Iwedisk Bltun, aa a tew dropa af It, addad te Iketr dries, an aaflcUal to ptraerre Ikes ta laeetlniakle healtk aad rigor. The wk an setsttemad M drtak Is water dariag Ik aa- ster, ahesld eevet nit I add aom Iwvdiak lib tera ta It. Panosi five ta aadaatary life tboald at tk Bwslttk Bitter. A will aeetnltts the bad ef fccta ef their weal oft zerelae laopea air. aad keep tkm Ib good health aad good tpttlte. Te tke Ladlee tke Iwedtak Bitten meat etpeetally be reeommeaded. s-aaaaa Ite ate eoa tribatee stoat eteentleUy te pt tut Ike nealertty eftke pkyelologtea! raaettoaa, peeallar t th dlt este famai eosatltetlea aad thee preree aa f fattaal katttet agalnet tkoee tanamenkle Betreaa ead Blood Dliaaaaa, wklak aew-a-daya ban grow aa fnquat. aa le bo takea ky suay for Ivt't aatatal laker ttaaee. V Bat tke Iwrdtak Bitter dot at o!y win good health. It alee efbets tte fail development ef Ike fbaule kody, aad ef tte keaaty ky parfott ftrma sad la eompleetiee and eeler. Tkae tte Iwedtak Bitten kae kinase ea ef tke aeat and meat atUlen COSMETIC AND TOILET ARTICLES, Par mn aad tkelr PuaUtas, wko have tried Iwedleh Bitten, prefer It to all similar artlelea. Per them It pr eee hesolttsl la rarlae ways In Bsnanarr, wkes tkaat eoiltag no,aina them te eftea vadan tke lateaee baat of tb ass, whit pot p,irmlag hard work, they sn ladaeed I ke sot enSeloatly eaatlese Ib oatlafytag tkelr kernlag tttnt ty water, er la eating Brsit set yet tips. e Tkae faiBtiag people en eery liable to euftt frost eaa stroke. Fever, Iyerstrry, Cholera, As. Aa. Th ngalar no of Ibr Iwedtak Bitten makeatkeae daagetose ladst-sceeall kataaU-. In sTister, dariag tke Urn ef met, msay wastry ppl, trylag Is taderoalfy themaelvee for peal prt'Biloae, an vry apt to eftea overload tkelr etoaueke aad tkae Impair thalr digestive ergaae tke t ate ef tke tree. Tke ate ef the Iwodtaa lit er pnreate dtteenve from tkat ansae. Aes vsttor ef eesree. Is esae f alehsaa, Ik patloat ehoeld eveid food net eg raelsg wtfh lm or asek, aa la k dlfleall to digest rsa, satiable to tba ' Vaaatlos Tb r a: " AV AttmaUnteiateriu er So," le atrtetly r- tiirrid HOW TO TAKE SWEDISH BITTEES Th Iwodlak Bitten aba 11 ealy ks takes la tke abersee sf tsisaamstory symptom. Grown peraoea tnkeees takloapoeafal throotlaiei at day, kefener after avesla, par er dilated with watof. Persona nndor yesrs, twe-tklrde ef tkat eaet! - I " Ms-half " I " ess-sfr " Ckfldrea from yean spward, aao-oigbth of thai tnasttty, Persa eeoattomed te ekew tekeeee, ekeald ab elaia from tt ee mock eapoalblo, while aetas Swd lab Bitten; ttty may aaketltste tome loaen ef ekamaveaille er toot ef calamsa, kat Ibeeawallow tk alTta.laetoadaf apttttagtt away. lath earn way asMkiag ef tobseee ahesld osly awdeteuly to ftsetleed. Pereose eaaieted with dyspepsia meat act eat hot kieed er eakee, or fat or tail stent bet akesld take wdtauezaniee la froe air told. eg all aeddaa ehaagee ef trmpetstsn, all latemperaaee la tatiag and drtnktnc sad all sadse mental ostium!, by wklek they will eentrtbate largely to Ike efetUvs boss ef tke Iwedisk Bitters. . B 41b raid tke iwodt-k Bttten set eaH aB laatoe, tl suy be takes with eosae esgar, er eaa be dilated wltt aome eager-water er tyres. Having aoqalrad by psrahaae the reelpeasdtke earlnalve tight af pmpsrtag tb Only Oaaala IwsHak Bitten, heretofore prepared ky Begone ekeealng. late V. I. Army largeoa, ws hare, ta ardor to frsetrato tread aad doeaptlot tbt same of' B. lekeeslsg karat tat Ike glaae ef eaek be lie and tte envelope ereend tt marked ky B. sckoas ttf'e sad ky ear own asms Battles wltkeet tt ajarka are aearlosa. DEN1EL & CO., Be. sertk Third atreet, PkUadelpkls Priee per Btngl Beetle. na. Bait s deees 40. told Wholesale ky Jekaotua, HuUewey ,MAnkawoea,rnfledalJes ssexsesr 14
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers