Agricultural. Extract of Apples. In Rome parte of Ohio new processes of utilizing apples hare been invented and pat in opera tion, whioh place the culture of this fruit noon an entirely new basis. Oue process is of making apple-jelly, and one of "anDle-butter." The jelly is a condensed product requiring a large quantity of apples for a corresponding small amount of jelly, and tt must, by conseauence be dear, and perhaps it is neither as profitable nor as popular an industry as the other, which uses the whole of apples with little condensa tion. Apple-bntter differs from the ap- ple-sause of New England only in the manufacture. Appie-sauoe is made, or nsed to lie made, by boiling down ci der, that of sweet apples UHually pre ferred, aud of adding pared and quart ered apples when the whole was boiled just enough to make the apple soft, but not enough to break down the structure. In making apple-butter the boiling is continued much longer, and the whole maris is thoroughly mixed together by constant stirring until it becomes like muuh, and the more thoroughly this process is performed the better is the quality, particularly in regard to keep ing, iioth preparations are kept in j are, and often in barrels made tot the pur pose. The chief defect of apple sauce was that when warm weather came in the spring it was apt to ferment and be come sour, when it was necessary to re boil it. Apple butter seldom fermented and if kept in a cool place it woulJ re main good for years. The commercial apple-butter factories provide first a cider-mill of improved structure and cop per boilers, with tanks for storage and additional treatment, all of suffi cient capacity to work np 1,000 barrels of rfvples a day. The product is packed in barrels, when it is ready for ship ment to any part of the world, and if properly made, it will keep as well as flour, pork, or molasses and it is as much of a cash article as either. Use of SrxpHrB in the Vineyard. A writer in the Jorticulturixt, says of the reports made of recent experiments in the use of sulphur on Catawba vine yards on the Islands : It was stated by one of the grape-owners from there, that sulphuring the vines had been practiced to some extent for several years past, and that when judiciously done, it was found a certain preventive of mildew and rotting of the fruit, and also of the blighting of the foliage ; and where this was practiced, in ln2, the vines ripened their wood so well as to tuner but little damage from the winter, and thus produced a half crop, while vineyards not sulphered bore no fruit at all. These facts will cause a very general nse of sulphur hereafter, and much improvement is expected there from. The practice is to mix the sul phur with an equal quantity of flue, air-slacked lime, and apply the powder with a bellows of which they manufac ture a very cheap style for the purpose. The first application is made as soon as the blossome are off in June, and re peat once a month or so during the sum mer. The labor and expense are quite j smau compared witn tne bcuems ; and the practice is recommended to grpe growers generally, especially for varie ties thatare subject to mildew or blight ing of the foliage. Let ns all give the experiment a trial and report, the re suits utxt year. CcxTivATiON- or White T.eaxs. There is no reason why the cnlture of field beans, if carefully harvested and eared for after harvesting, should not 1 profitable. The great trouble is that, during the time of curing, the beans are apt to become discolored, more or less, causing them to be un salable nntil they are hand-picked, a tedious process, .twenty acre is a good crop. For culture, drill rows two and a half feet apart, at the rate of from one to one and one half Imshels per acre, and keep the crop from weeds. Do not gather the crop until alout dry. Pull only when the dew is off, and in dry weather; place the handful in regular rows on the tops, the roots placed together. If you are so unfortunate as to get the crop wet after being pulled, the bunches must be turned until dry. If not, place them loosely on scaffolds as soon as suffi ciently dry, or else thresh ont immedi ately and spread the cleansed product on a floor, turning from time to time nntil thoroughly dry and harj. How to Tell a Goose from a bee, In sorting out a flock of Gan- geesa for home breeding or to make sales, it is often difficult to dibtinguish the males from the females. A correspon dent t nils delineates the difference : "The goose has always a feminine ap pearanca and the gander the opposite. Her head is smaller and her beak shorter ; knot on forehead smaller and not so pointed ; her neck shorter and more delicate ; the black streak on back oi neck not so lugn ; colored ring around bead not bo bright ; her neck comes ont of her body more abruptly (this is occasioned by her having a larger breast tlian the gander), giving a square appearance to the body. The voice of the gander is keener and louder; coloring about the head more brilliant; eves keener and always on the lookout. .Vith such marks plain to view, any practical gooseman can readily distin guish one from the other. Salt Erini fob Lice. In answer to many inquiries for a remedy for lice, the Jiural World states that an appli cation of brine, as strong as can be made, is a certain remedy. It will kill the lice outright, but not always the nits ;hence second or third applica tion is required to be effectual. Hogs are greatly pestered with lice, and they should be destroyed. Watch the colts and calves carefully, and if you see any failing look out for lice. A close inspec tion will reveal hundreds of them feed ing upon the poor animal. An applica tion, on a warm day, of brine will bring great relief. A decoction of tobacco applied will also rid the animal of these pests. A thorough greasing is also a remedy. Don't let the poor animal suffer. These applications are as good for human beings as for brutes. Wet Boots. The Agriculturist gives the following advice to farmers, who, Beit to fishermen, are apt to get their boots wet through : "When the boots are taken off, fill them quite full with dry oats. This grain has great fond ness for damp, and rapidly absorbs the last vestige of it from the" wet leather. As it takes np the moisture it swell and fills the boot with a tightly fitting last, keeping its form good and drying the leather without hardening it. Iu the morning shake out the oats and ' hang them in bag near the fire to dry, ready for the next wet night, draw on the boots, and go happily about the day's work." Hogs are fattened very rapidly if fed Oi cooked sweet apples or pnmkins, through which is divided the amount of corn meal necessary for them. We have long practiced sowing peas broad cast on spare ground, and, mowing them close to the ground, feeding the whole to hogs, and tuns commenced the fattening process without any expendi ture of corn. a A correspondent of the Country Gen tletnen says good application of two or three bushels of blacksmith's cinders spread around young fruit trees, par ticularly pears, not only keeps down the grass, but affords some principle which gives health and vijor to the growth of the trees, 1 Scientific. A New Use for Chicken Feathers. Chicken feathers are among those waste products of the farm of which no regular means of utilization has hereto fore been suggested. Myriads of them are strewn over the barn yard, packed into the floor of the chicken house, or are converted into positive nuisances by the wind which bestrews them over lawns and flower beds, or drives them into open doors and windows. The down alone is, we believe, occasionally used as a stuffing for pillows or cush ions, and sometimes employed as an adulteration is goose feathers ; bat the long plumes of the wings, sides, and tail of the bird, unless made into rude bundles to serve as dusters for the housewife, are generally regarded as totally worthless. "According to statistics very carefully compiled," says a writer in La Xature, "we throw away yearly a quantity of chicken feathers, the intrinsic value of which is equal to the money which we pay out for cotton." A startling state ment, bnt the author considers it true ; and he proceeds to explain how the feathers are prepared to render them valuable : The operation is to cut the plume portions of the feathers from the htem, by means of ordinary hand scis sors. The former are placed in quan ties in a coarse bag, which, when full, is closed and subjected to thorough kneading with the hands. At the end of five minutes, the feathers, it is stated, become disaggregated and felted together, forming a down, per fectly homogeneous and of great light ness. It is even lighter than natural eider down, because the latter contains the ribs of the feathers, which give extra weight. The material thus pre pared is worth, and readily sells in Puris for, about two dollars a pound. About 10 troy ounces of this down can be obtained from the feathers of an ordi nary tized pullet ; and this on, the above valuation, is worth about 20 cents. It is suggested that, through the winter, children might collect all the feathers about farm, and cut the ribs ont as we have stated. By the spring time a large qnantity of down would be prepared, which could be dis posed of to upholsterers, or employed for domestic uses. Goose feathers may be treated in similar manner, and thus two thirds of the product of the bird utilized, instead of only about one fifth, as it is at present the case. The chicken down is said to form a beautiful cloth when woven. For about a square yard of the material, a pound and a half of down is required. The fabric is said to be almost inde structible, as, in place of fraying or wearing out at folds, it only seems to felt the tighter. It takes dye readily, and is thoroughly waterproof. There appears to be a good opportunity here for some ingenious person to invent machines to cut and treat the feathers. Whitwobth Steel. Some idea of the solidity of compressed casting of Whit worth metal may be gleaned from the fact that, five minutes after the appli cation of pressure, about twenty tuns to t'ie square inch, a column of fluid steel becomes shorter by 12 '5 per cent, or 1 inches to the foot. Sir Joseph Whitwortb, as a writer in Iron states, holds the proportion that for certain purposes a metal must be used having a certain tensile strength and a certain percentage of ductility. Hence the metal cast at the Whitworth works is classified according to its possession of these qualities, and arranged for conve nience in four groups, distinguished by colors, red, blue, brown and yellow, and by numbers, Xo. 1 of each group representing the most ductile metal, aud No. 3 the least so. Of Low Moor wrought iron, the tensile strength per square inch is 27 tuns, and ductility or ! percentage ol elongation, In good cast iron the same qualities are repre sented by 10 and 0 7j. Various samples of Whitworth steel similarly tested gave from 36 to 72 tuns tensile strength, and from 33 3 to 11 per cent elongation. There is fchown a singular relation be tween the t. usile strength and ductility of the metal, the one generally increas ing as the other decreases, a circum stance, which, it is suggested, may possibly deserve investigation. P.vetmatic Teleoratht. An inter esting exhibition of telegraph machines worked exclusively by air, was lately given in London by the inventor. A number of different instruments were on new. I he impulse is produced at one end of a tube by the operator, and performs the mechanical work at the other end, either by ringing a bell or turning a needle round a dial The rapidity and precision can be made equal to the electric telegraph, the con ducting tulie being able to belaid nnder or cover in the name manner as the or dinary telegraph. Attached to each machine is a bell and dial, and the message is transmitted by the moving of a small lever which drives the air through a pipe to the other operator. As the lever is moved np and down, the dial, which stands where the message is destined for, registers whatever the words may be. Each dial is supplied with needle ; and as each spurt of air presses against the works of the ma chine, the needle is moved exactly the cumber of times that the lever is pressed. Each instrument can receive or send a message about 400 yards. The instruments exhibited were de signed for intercommunication between large coffee houses, offioes, hotels, and vessels. The Flioht of Bibds. Professor Guthrie, in relation to the hovering of birds, states that, when the bird de sires to hover over given spot, it moves by an expenditure of muscular force until it finds a region where one layer of air is moving, say, from right to left, and another from left to right. Then placing its body and most of its right wing in the lower stratum, it tilts its body so that some of its left wing is in the npjier layer. By altering its hight, by turning one wing in its socket and probably also by turning some of the pen feathers on their axes, and altering the inclination of its wings, the bird so governs the pressure on the two wings that the sum of the vertical re volved parts is equal to the bird's weight, while the horizontal revolved parts are equal and opposite. The Correlation of Forces. Of the various forms of energy existing in Xatnre, any one miy be transformed into any other, the one form appearing as the other disappears. This is what is meant by "the correlation of forces." Thus the rotary power of a wheel, if applied to turn a magnet, is converted iuto electricity ; and this electricity, if employed to drive a wheel, is changed back into rotary power. Mb. Sfenceb placed a South African diamond, about the size of a pea, in the interior of a mass of refactory clay. which was mixed with soda and hydrate oi lime. In is was tben kept at a cherry- red heat for three days and nights, at tne close of this time the diamond had disappeared, whereupon he concludes that carbon in this form is combustible at much lower temperature than is generally supposed Uttlizatios of Waste Soap Ltes and OrLT Lhjcors. Instead of separating tne fatty matters from the water by means of mineral Acids, the author pro poses to treat them with salts of mag nesia. Magnesian soaps are thus formed, containing 60 per cent, of fatty matter, and which may be nsed in the manufacture of gas for lighting pur poses, i DomeHtic. Waste of Heath asd Strength ts the Yoc.no. Let me ask yon ladies, with all courtesy, but with all earnest ness are yon aware that more human beings are killed in England every year by unnecessary and preventable diseases than were killed at Waterloo or at Sadowa ? Are you aware that the great majority of those victims are children? Are yon aware that the diseases which carry them off are for the most part such as ought to be specially under control of the women who love them, pet ttiem.edueate them, and would in many cases, if need be, lay down their lives for them? Are you aware, again of the vast amount of disease which, so both wise mothers and wise doctors assure me, is en gendered in the sleeping room from simple ignorance of the laws of ventila tion and in the school room likewise, from simple ignorance of the laws of physiology ? from an ignorance of which I shall mention no other case save one that too often from ignorance of signs of approaching disease, a child is punished for what is called idleness, listlessness, willfulness, sulkiness; and punished too, in the unwisest way by an increase of tasks and confinement to the house thus overtasking still more a brain already overtasked, and depress ing still more, by robbing it of oxygen and of exercise, a system already de pressed ? Are you aware, I ask again, of all this ? I speak earnestly upon this point, because I speak with experience. As a single instance, a medical man, a friend of mine, passing by his own school room, heard one of his own little girls screaming and crying, and went in. The governess, an excellent woman, but wholly ignorant of the laws of physiology complained that the child had of late become obstinate, and would not learn ; and that therefore she must punish her by keeping her in doors over the unlearned lessons. The father, who knew that the child was usually a good one, looked at her care fully for a little while ; sent her ont of the school room ; and then said. "That child mnst not open book for a month." "If, I haJ not acted so," he said to me, "I should have hail that child dead of brain disease within a year." Now, in the face of such facts as these is it too much to ask of mothers, sisters, aunts, nurses, governesses all who may be occupied in the care of children, especially girls that they should study thrift of human health human life, by studying somewhat the laws of life and health? There are books I may say a whole library of books written by scientific doctors on these matters, which are, in my mind, far more important to the school room than half the trashy accomplishments. so called, which are expected to be known by governesses. But are they bought ? Are they even to be bought from booksellers? Ah for a little knowledge of the laws to neglect of which is owing so much fearful disease, which, if it does not produce immediate death, too often leaves the constitution impaired for years to come ! Ah, the waste of health and strength in the young, the waste, too, of anxiety and misery in those who love ana tend them How much of it might be saved by a little rational education in those laws of nature which are the will ef God about the welfare of ovr bodies, and which, therefore, we are so much bound to know and to obey the spiritual laws whereon depend the welfare of our souls? Presebved Pears. Take small, rich, fair fruit, as soon as the pips are black; Bet it over the fire in a kettle, with wa ter to cover them ; let them simmer until they yield to the pressure of the finger, then with a skimmer remove them to cold water, pare them neatlv. leaving on a little of the stem and the blossom end. Pierce them at the blossom end to the core, then make a syrup of a pound of sugar for each pound of fruit. When it is boiling hot, pour it over the pears and let it stand until the next day. Then drain it off, make it boiling hot, and again pour it over. After a day or two, put the fruit in the syrup over tha fire, and boil gently nntil" it is clear, put it iu the jars or spread it on dishes, boil the syrup thick, then put it and the iruit in jars. Wedding Cask. Three pounds of butter creamed with three pounds of brown sugar, two dozen of eggs, yolks and whites beaten separately, fonr pounds of raisins (after they have been seeded), chopped tine five pounds of cur rants, after they have been well picked over, washed and set aside to dry, two pounds ot citron, sliced very thin and chopped fine, two nutmegs grated down, one tablespoonful of ground cinnamon, one-third of a teaspoon ful of ground mace, two pounds of sifted flour, cream, butter, and suirar, add yolks, then two-thirds of the flour. alternating with the whites of the eggs, then add spices. Dust the fruit well with the remaining third of the flour and mix in at the very last. Peach Jellt. For a table ornament nothing is more elegant. Dissolve in sufficient water one oz. of isiugl iss ; strain it ; take half a dozen large peaches and pare them ; make a sirup oi one pound of fruit sugar and half pint of water. Into this put the peaches and kernels ; boil gently fifteen min utes, then place the fruit on plate, and eook the sirup ten minutes longer ; add to it the juice of three lemons and the isinglass. A pyramid mold is very pretty for this. Fill part full of jelly, and when set, pnt in one quarter of the peaches. Place on iee.and let it harden; add more jelly, harden, etc, until fulL Let the base of the mold be jelly. A paste for cleaning metals, has been introduced in France, the ingredients of which are vegetable. It is said to be superior 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 transporta tion, 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, tx Fried Cucumbers. Take a ripe, full grown cucumber, pare, and slice it a qnarter of an inch in thickness. Dip each slice into a butter made of one egg, three tablespoonf uls of flour, and a little water, just enough to make a stiff batter. Fry in very hot lard, and plenty of it. Serve hot, with slices of salt pork freshened in sweet milk over night and dipped into the same batter. This makes a nice dish for breakfast. Crullers. Three tablespoonfuls of melted butter, six tablespoonfuls of sugar, three eggs, the whites and yolks beaten separately, and flavor with nut meg or anything yoa like. Mix soft and roll very thin. For Kzeptso Meat Fresh in Hot Weather, Place in a clean porelain bowl, and pour very hot water over it so as to cover it. Then pour oil upon the water. The air is thus quite ex cluded and the meat preserved. Flakkel. Sadd flannel before you make it up, as it shrinks in the first washing. Much of the shrinking arises from there being too much soap and the water being too coll. Never nse soda for flannels. To Take Gheasb out of Carpets. Apply on the greasy spot whiting, and continue the application nntil the grease is removed. Three applications will generally suffice. Ilnmorons. The other day as a Detroiter was riding on the Pontiao Road, says the Detroit Free Pre, he came across an old lady seated in a buggy which had been halted within a few yards of the Grand Trunk Railroad track. She seemed to be uneasy about something, and, as he drove up, she asked : "Bay, mister, hain't that engine going to come along pretty soon ?" He asked her to explain, and she pointed to the sign, which reads : "Look out for the en gine ?" and added : "I've waited more'n two hours for the old engine to go by ; but I'm getting tired, and if it don't come pretty soon I'll drive right over the track and go hum I" "Oh, no, dear Charles," said a Balti more widow to hear cousin, on their return from the obsequies of the lamented, "nothink no, nothink can e'er assuage my grief. But, for my friends' sake, I must live on ; and if you could order half dozen of those nice soft-shell crabs, and a porterhouse beef steak (rare) from around the corner, I will try to be unselfish for love's sake." "Now, then, Joseph, parse courting," said a teacher to a rather slow boy. "Corn-tin' is an irregular active transi tive verb, indicative mood, present tense, third person, and singular num ber, and so on," said Joseph. "Well, but what does it agree with ?" demanded the teacher. "It agrees with all the gals in towa. !" triumphantly exclaimed Joseph. - It has been a fashion of late with novelists to give their work short titles. But an English writer has reached the climax, by calling his book "B." If this mode of naming novels from a single letter should become pre valent, we would suggest that good many of them mny with gerat propriety be named , signiiymg naught. There was a man in Murray county, Wisconsin, who got mad when he found grasshoppers had called for his wheat. So he got a big roller and crushed wheat and grasshoppers together into the ground. It killed the insects, and succession of showers revived the wheat. so that it was as good as new. It pays to get mad now and then. "I hope, Mrs. Giles," said a lady who was canvassing for a choir at the village church, "you will persuade your hus' band to join us. I am told h has a very sonorous voice." "A sonorous voice, marm ?" said Mrs. Giles. "Ah ! you should hear it comin' out of his nose when he s asleep. A young lady came to the city, the other day, to have her picture taken. V hen the artist showed her the "proof and asked her how she liked it, she placidly remarked that he "put too much mouth on it" to suit her. "Mr dear," said a wife to her hus band, "do you know what is the most curious thing in the world ? les, madam," grufly answered the brute, "the most curions thing in the world is a woman that is not curious. Jones presented his wife on her last birthday with a beautiful silver service. one was very thankful, but said one piece in the set was wanting, for the proverb says : "One good T urn de serves another." Charles IL playing tennis with dean, who struck the ball well, the king said, "lhat s a good stroke for a dean. "I'll give it a stroke of the bishop if your majesty pleases, was the sugges tive rejoinder. Wbat relation is a loaf of bread to locomotive ? Its mother. Why ? Be cause bread is a necessity and a loco motive an invention, and we all know that necessity is the mother of inven tion. Is Japan the law requires that, when a person cuts down a tree, he shall plant one in its place. In this way the snpply of wood is kept np. George ashington owes his country a tree. "I wonder if it is sea sickness that makes Bailors always heaving np an chors I" exclaimed Aunt Hepzibah, as she looked thoughtfully np from her morning paper. "Dear vb," said a good old lady who was unable to keep np with her work, "I shall be glad when I get into eter nity, so as to have plenty of time for everything." The child of the sea is always a buoy, Treat! ok the Wrens DleNe. Many times Women call upon their family physicians, one with lriepia, another with palpitation, another with trouble of the bret, another with pain here and there, and in this wtiy they all present alike to themselves and their easy-going and in- linerent doctors, separate and distinct dis eases, for which he prescribes his pills ant potions, assuming them to be such, when. in reality, they are all symptoms caused by some uterine disorder ; and while they are thus only able perhaps to palliate for a time, they are ignorant of the cause, and encourage their practice nntil large bills are made, when the suffering patients are no better in the end, but probably worse for the delay, treatment and other compli cations made, and which a proper medicine directed to the cause would have entirely removed, thereby instituting health and comfort instead of prolonged misery. From Miss Lorixda E. St. Claib, Shade, Athens Co., O., Oct. 14th. 1872: Dr. R. V. Tierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Your Favorite Prescription is working almost like a miracle on me. I am better already than I have been for over two years." From Ella A. Schafkb, Zanesville, Ind , Aug. 8, 1872: Dr. Pierce I received the medicine you sent me and began using it immediately. As a result ef the treatment I feel better than I have for three years." From Mrs. Jobs K. IIamilis, OJell, HI., Mar. 19, 1872: 'Dr. Pierce The Favorite Prescription has done me good, which I am very thank ful for." 11 The Gbeat I'ili Kemept, ANAEESIS, he discovery of Da. Silsbek, is entitled to be called the wonder of the age. 20,000 grateful sufferers bless the only infallible remedy for Piles ever introduced, only those who have used lotions, ointments and nternal remedies in vain, will understand the grateful feeling of instant relief from pain and blissful hope of certain cure for he terrible disease, that ANAHES13 as sures. It is used by Doctors of all schools. Price $1. Depot, 46 Walker St., New York. Sent free by mail on receipt of price. 12 Cramps and pains in the stomach are the result of imperfect indigestion, and my be immediately relieved by a dose of Joknton't Anodyne Liniment. A teaipoonful in a little sweetened water is a dose. Heavy oats are good for hones; none will deny that : but oats can't make a horse's coat look smooth and glossy when he it ont of condition. Sheridan Cavalry Condition rotedtn will do this when all else fails. 3 Tape IVrml . Tape VVertn ! T Worm rnnoTd hi from t to 1 hours with hannl vpfftalilt medir!:!. The worm paMitin frmn lit "Ttani aliv. So fmmmkmA nntil tlie entire trrm. witn hfad vmtwv. Medicine hanulvoav Can rftr tho afflicted to the i-milent of this city whom I hare rnrvd. At my can be M-en nan- ilri of Piw-rmi u. lwaaunuK from to i. ret in length. Fifty pr ceut. of caera of lylejL and hinraoiuton of Liver are canned by atomarh aud other worma exintinjr in the alimentary cauaL Wonu. a dinnue of the mont daiiroiiii character, are ao littla nulnftood by the niedical men of the preaent day. Call and we the oriental and on It worm detroyer, or acuid for a circular which will (five a full 4itrrijition and trratnifnt of all kind of worms; eocLone S cent stamp for return of the name Dr. E. F. KnnkeJ can tWl br twinf the natlent whether or not, they are troubled with worma, and by writim? and telling the ttympfcima. ke the Doctor will answer by maiT DR. E. F. EL'NKEL, No. 2S N. Nith St., pHiiaADKLPHLa, Pa. ( Adnc at ofnce or by maiL, free.) beai, tin aud btotuaca worma also removed. Advertisements, DYSPEPTIC CONSUMPTION. Con DyrprpHc Osnamnpticm 6 Cvrtdt W. muwer, YESI First. Kemrrt all ths aakealtky wmmrn that gathers akaat tha walla tt ths stomas freoa inuifaatisa. Seeead. Frsgaat aa active eesditiee af liver 14 lHmf witaaal depleting Iks 7 ilea. Third. Supply er aU aiars is faraiihiag the iraia ef ef the eaiaeaeat parte that eompeee healthy laid. We, from theaaaads wke save feeea eared, a rt that a ears aam he yerfstmed ea tkis lassry. UBZPIS8 USKD, Apart from oar Office Practice. 1TB8Z. THK GBEAT AMERICAN DYSPEPSIA PILLS, Bwaere the faafas Mailer frees tie atsstash, a4 rattan HUi healthy itaJitism. asoomx THE PINE TREE TAR CORDIAL I lata ea Che Liver, heals tk Bteaiaek, aa Mte ea tk tidaey aad Nervous 8ytav For fajtker advice, call writ OB U Q, & WISHABT, $3 A'mrU Stcon Sir I. ADMONITION. It ts kaewa to an readers tkat fine Da L. Q. C WISHABT kas follewed tk aaat ad ear ef diisesea, aad tk great vala at TAR as a oralis remedy, as directed kj iabeB Berkley aad Rev. Joan Wesley, tkat aaay kave attempted te make a TAB auaUea far THROAT AND LCS9 SI IA8E3. Be it kaeva tkat Da. L. tk. EISHABTf Ml TRIE TIB COBDIil Ie the euly remedy, from leag eiperieaee, wed Vy ear meat skillful phjtieiaa fer DiaUeria, Ulcerated Threat, Loag, Kidney, Pismick. Asthma, aad Oeaeral Debility, a veil a fer Cf aa, Celds aad Laag Afes- OR. L. Q. C. WISHART, CGSSTTLTITC fiXXS A2TD STCS2, No. 82 14. SECOND ST., rHIt.ADEI.rHIA. Dr. J. Waller's California Yin- PSar .Hitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the na tive herbs fiiuml on the lower ranges or the Sierra Xeva!a Mountains of Califor nia, the medicinal proiierties of whicD are extracted therefrom without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked. "What is the cause of the unparalleled success of Vinegar Uit tkks !" Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, ami the patient re- rovers his health. 1 liev are the great blixxl purifier ami a life-givinir principle, a lierfect Kcnovator ami lnrirator of the system. Never leforo in the, liistorv f the worM lias a nieUii ine leen eoinMMit(le;l pn.esi:t;r the remarkable ipialitie of Vixk;-K liiTTERS in liealiu? the sick of every disea man is heir t. The; are a pentle Purgative a well as a Tonic, relieving Conp'Mii.n or rnflaiiimation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, iu liilions Diseases. The properties of Dr. Walkf'h Vixeoab HiTTlsRS are Aperieat, Diaphoretic, Carminative. Nutritious. Laxative. Diuretic, gedative. Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Altera tive, and AAU-Jiilioua, ft. II. NiIMHALD CO.. Dmnrwtn antltin. Artafvin fTanewro. California, tad t"T- of Wtuhinirt.in and Charlton Krs.. K. T. Bold bv all llriulili and avairra. STATIONARY. FORTADLE AND AGRICULTURAL STEAM ENGINES. Oeaeral AfeaU for RUSSELL m CO.'S Massillon Separators HORSE POWERS. t?Lru, HORSE RAKES, TE-icri HAY CUTTERS AND OTHER FIRST-CLASS FARM MACHINERY. HARBERT& RAYMOND. 1835 Market Street. (0-6 PHILADELPHIA. SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! AO tTli, Stiver Mount! and Walnut, new and cnrjd-tand. htciitWy piwked for aiiirnlng. COUKXUtM, BAiLri, SHELVING, FIX n n lis sc. HOUSE AH OFTlCfc FIKNITUBB aQ kind The larrat at J dm aaaortad atock. new and eound naud a tba City. lotl. ion. lutt and MS? KIDOE ATaV. Philadelphia NEW YORK BLACK LEAD WORKS. JOB PRINTING ATI.! axarjrjTaO AT rVIa O) Tl , A GREAT STRIDE TUa AdnrtiMtaaeat Cavfricatad. OLD METHODS found to be fault y fillenclnz Objectors ! Unllnv Ont the PMWibllllT Dropping erery feat GTJAKAXTEEIXG ING PURCHASERS "T ff JT f4 AGAINST MISi DISSATISFACTION By which It la hoped EXORMOU8 ESTABLISHMENT, Making ita Annual Salea mora than $3JOOftOOI 1 1 -- -v- t MFnmNQ and SECURING the Pitronad w! all claMM of the Community to a dfgrea it Crs. J V before enjoyed and be oommended BY WE FOUR CARDINAL WAXAMAKER 4 BROWN, WAN AMA K ER & BROWN, WANAMAKER & BROWN, WANAMAKER & BROWN, WANAMAKER & BROWN, WANAMAKER A BROWN, WANAMAKER A BROWN, WANAMAKER A BROWN, WANAMAKER & BROWN, WANAMAKER & BROWN, WANAMAKER & BROWN, WANAMAKER & BROWN, WANAMAKER & BROWN, WANAMAKER & BROWN, K 3 X EXPLANATION AND ELABORATION OF WANAMAKER & BROWN S NEW PLAN. 11 pflJVT Houses doing a credit business mujtt provide for losses on bad debts. Interest on long-standing 1 ctiw accounts, capital locked up, etc. To bear such losses themselves would drive them out of biwiness. C AS Ha Therefore a per cent, is added to the price of each article sold, to cover this leakage, and Cush Bmjrrt whether they tcmam it r Mot, nrnttg pmy the M tUbts mm the inter the Uq rmftta thm mther rwfttavrt.'f Under the t'ash Iatfmemt system one pays only for what he gets, and contributes nothing to a "Sinking Fund.' By this Radleai Chmnge we shall lose some of our customers no doubt, but we will gain ten where we loo one, the advantages being so great to ail who can avail themselvj of them. So we say CASH THROUGHOUT. Briiijj Money for Clothing, and we will supply it at prices posmM raaVr no other ftmm. The Mnm of thi feature of our plan all will praise. It is simply treating all alike ex art in, 7 nothing from indisposition to bargain or ignorance, and, al the same time, conmlnivi U thattthrewdneHU on the shrewdest customer's part could puasibiy extort, because the "One Prtoe" which we mark on 21 FOIST. "ONE PRICE." our goods, shall invariably NOT the NOT the "TOP" Price, but the VERY BOTTOM PRICE. In other words. Salesmen or " Headmen," have never heen allowed, under ordinary circum stances, to fall below a certain figure I It is at that, or at a Intrr-r Injure that we now determine to mark our tioods, calculating the cost to the exaot penny, and fixing the price at the low minimum profit on wtiich business on a large scale can be condurtod. We know that the larger business we aim for aod anticipate, will require a latere increase In the number of customers, and we shall therefore see to it that the "One Prioe" is based on the Smlle-t Profit, calculated to the exact and lowest penny, which will not be difficult to do with universal Caxli Payment for the rule. The price wtll be marked in plain figures and no alteration allowed. KOTR. Whsorror Om nteonefca of tho warns, tho atst of trrt. ot thr moor? mark majr dVmand. tsr rtKht hi nwrml to r hmnh enrmurk hrrrn-r krumrs noun aint neu-k twn siiy lot ur lottof uuh iJuuik.uic Uia lurw oa aa the laUtui,au Uml Us arm rubs sr Uie aune 10 all. moi ail buy alike si Um bistk daws poos, WANAUAHER A BROWN WIU. NEVER HOLD THEIR GOODS. upon Guarantee." A printed Guarantee, 'Warrantee. This binds ua Government of the Unitod We itrfty guarantee ltU That the priret ovr good thaO be a lav at tlui tame quality of material ami manufacture are told onyvkere in the I'nil&l Stat. 2J. That tlie frier or preriMiy tke tame to Wy or mm quality, on tame day of jmrckate. 3f. That the q'udity of good u a rpmntnl on prmud lubrl. ilk. That thrull amount of en.k paid tri.'t he rrfntulM, if nttamert jirul tke arllcU unmtitfartury, and rfturn tirm unwvrn and uninjured within IU day of date of pwhate. ISi-pud, WAXAMAKEK t BROWX, DATE,- F0I2?Ti This is simply a concession on our part to our customers, to Camh for goods the kfote wrap little mhtmtf and we thua prevent any SfiinrUdd. and every cause -whatsoever. If the garment ia not exactly what i the "home folka" prefer another color or another shape, if you fiml you rran buy the same material nn-i style elsewhere for leas money, if you conclude you don't noei it after you get home, if the 8ei-'n changes suddenly and you wieh you had not bought it, hrimf it bark unworn and uninjured, and ti full amount of money you paid will be returned on the spot. What more can we do for our custom- r? than this, when we make our clothing so that they can draw the money vulua with it equuily as well as with a check on the bank? THE ADVANTAGES IT MAKES CLOTHING CHEAP !! I I !! I I ! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ! Sinking the prlcsi Mrrral ii it ws beloir what they ban been heretofore, or mid poeeiMy be under ths old natem. a hj dial nun ua; with orrtaln clerks no lonirer needed. It returns "Hture Eieuats. Br entorana; CASH Payments, the bad debte are avoided. By patting plenty of reedy money m hand, a enahlee as to boy foods at ngxmm thai credit men know mathti about Bt lnerwe of sues, a pmaller profit an each article m euloclenl. All of these Hy.M ays' lead direct to and this without lowering the quality or atyle of our Celebrated make of Men's aad Buy's Clothing KOMI? OTIIElt THIX.X musstB our plan differs from others : (a) It combine, ill ibe g.ort ,ointo which exist, aeperately. or m partial ernbinstlona, and M adds eume sew and tmDortant natures (b) It gin auch a rmr.i.M ae no home in the world, 10 our knowledge. ereTeeumred 10 giro aa a rule mPn features. () It mk our goode eo,nirulrnt to elierka on s bnk. wheueter they are preeeuted nnworu or nnmjored. (d) It has the gralet adventure of an immenee bwuieas already eetabueued. to auetelB ths "Sew Couatttmi.. ..J j Hr. stances could eo mane railical eonceSNuus to euausner be made " ow ""sUtutioB, and under BO other dream- ENTIRE CHANGE OF BASE. We sow. twiaf clear af all csnablmmtlsas er raetsame, mmm bt-ra ike bridge fceklaat , Invastigatioa is askai into all wa have here pit forth. cotShutnl andefultofali, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1874, bound for ths Fall Trade, sad by aU oar experience m trade, and aU oar knowledge al homes tutors, we are led to anncqats that Maroettou and Unprecedented Increase of Business for which we are well prepared. Our wsreboasM, eranrrtetng T neetoae rooms, are stocked to ths fun, oar horns mills hare been turning out large qnsnttties of guoda ts ne that are now ta tors, aad Foreurn tobnee by the ship toad, are now oo our counters. Our workmen bars been a email army, and aa diligent and ekiulul as they are aumeruoa. With ths lBiproenenu already noted, then are also new atyaa, sew onkars, new sum and more carer al g Everything rrenlilv has beau duus Is meet aud WaOHAImlilEER BROU. ' THS XeASGSS? CLOTSm HOUSE IN AXSEICA. OAK HALL, S. E. comer Sixth & Market Sts., Philadelphia. UP AND OVER Suslness easterns I or objectionable, discarded. A new and Already tie Largo Clothing Concern in America, and leaUiug the Trade, 1 1 STARTS ON A NEW CAREER ! ! Thoroughly reorganised on a greatly improved Ananrins Equal nights to All t ' rnfalrnessl Securing a Scale of Still Lower Prices l of are liable even to Criticism! with Price or Purchase rendered IMPOSSIBLE I to doubla In tha coming year tha already Immense buinew of by ANY one Houw in any department ALL THOUGHTFUL F O Because advauutjeoua alike to both buyer and aelier. NOW ANNOUNCE THESE AS by which we will hereafter ateer our craft. ONE PRICE. FULL GUARANTEE. oe "First" Price, but the LAST and bearing the signature of our firm, will accompany each garment as a in every sense, and will be honored aa quickly as a good draft of the States. This is a sample of tha Full Guarantee, and tells its own story : GUARANTEE. aecaidliic to Art of 1874. m tl OSes of th Ltt. i nrlma ot Cnngrt . mx Waaa- ! t!t advantage plan hereby adopted ! plan. TAKES, FITS, i REPKESEXTATIOXS, rXDEK-ST 1XDI.GS. of trade 1 Sure to comnaeud itaeif THE POINTS S. E. Cor. 6th and Market Su. 8. E. Cor. 6th arnl Market St.. S. E. Cor- 6th and Market Su. S. E. Cor. 6th and Market Sii. S. E- Cor. 6th and Market Sl. S- E. Cor. 6th aud Market Su. S. E. Cor. 6th ajid Market Sts. S. E. Cor. 6th and Market Su. S. E. Cor. 6th and Market St S. E. Cor. 6th and Market St. S- E. Cor. 6th and Market Su. S. E- Cor. 6th and Market Sts. S. E. Cor. 6th and Market Su S. E- Cor. 6th and Maiket Su. M s X LOWEST PRICE. SLrIK mm Mnrltrt Strortm, Phil. necure them full confidence in dealing occasion for diaaatiafaction from any you thought, if your taste change, if
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers