Agricultural. Eooxomi Feed. The Tery dry spring has caused a very short crop of hay and other forage for the season, with very little over from last year's crop. It is not uncommon to see barns bat half filled and maDy farmers uneasy about their supply of feeding holding out through a hard winter. Farmers will have to shift in many ways to make their feed last through. I have used all-kinds of rough grasses, and it has to be a very poor grass indeed if by steaming and mixing a little mill feed one cannot help their stock through with it. I have had very good results from feeding common swamp and pond gratis, cut in September, by pouring but water over it and mixing with corn meal, shorts or wheat bran. The same process will make any of the late grow ing rough grasses, or even weeds, make ver) good feed, much better than star vation. J. nose who have means - r steaming can turn most all ktnJs of rough stuff into palatable feed, and those who have no steaming apparatus can make a good substitute by having a box, with size sufficient to hold a feed for their stock, and use boiling hot wa ter to mix their cut hay, straw or course feed with. I have fed the comrton swamp grass that way previous to put ting la steaming apparatus, and a little additional meal would make my cows milk as well as when they had the best of dry hay. My plan was to have my feed mixed about an hour before feed iug time, and let it stand closely cov ered d'iriug that time and soften as much as possible ; it was then about the right temperature to feeil. Scientific. (iitowisu and Fattemso IIo.i.s. The hog is accustomed to a great variety of fHL He will est animal and herba ceous food alike there is nothing that comes auii4 to him, and he thrives upon alL To select food for him. then is not the thing. Though you can fatten them on one kind of food, you canuot do it economically. Take what breed you like, and it is economy, in producing the preatest results from a given amount of food that is the point that gives the profit in hog husIian.Uy. The cheap est food then, is to be sought if it an swers the purpose. I!y the cheapest we nx'a'i aifo that which he relishes and thrives upon. Corn alone, though the gr.at hog feed made a speciality is not the most advantageous. Ihe ex ception to this is the West, when corn is very cheap. lnt even here, other graiu and feed added, will produce a better growth of muscle and fit. Ail animals require a variety of food, and the hog is no exception. His apetite then will be sutisiied, and all the wants of his system suppled. Grass in fum roer suits hitn ; he revel? in a clover field. Milk snits him the whole year round, and assists a rapid growth. Milk con tains a great variety of elements in so lution, and is sn aid to the digestion of the more solid food. Ho likes vegeta bles, but lT the mo.it concent rated and richer food, 'lliongha "hog," lie is governed by the same physiological principles s other animals, and is, therefore, liable to disease to mniry ailments ; but most ol these are caused by abuse's in manarcmeut. Where he is well attended to, and supplied with a variety of good feed, lie seldom sutlers from disease. How to Make Dr-rrii Chkesk. A cor respondent of the ui'i l'tinnrr says : I take some sweet milk and stand it cm top of the stove in a new tin pail, or pan, shaking it occasionally that the form ing curd may not settle to the lxttom. 1 turn the edges gently that the curd may form evenly, taking care not to break it, ai'd not to li t it cook to fast. If the heat is about right it will be done in half an hour. Then I drain oil the whey slowly, pressing down ou the curd until only whey enough remains in it so that the cheese will not le too dry. just moist enongh to mix well. Then I salt to taste, add a good lump of butter and work well with my hand, then pack it down in a crock, leaving all the moist ure in it. This is better than io press it into dry balls. Set away in the cool est corner of the cellar or spring house. The poetry comes iu when preparing it for the table. Take it out in a deep white dish and very carefully dip out ami lay over the top of it a few spoon fuls of thick cream, sweet or sour, but the sonr is preferable. Lay a clean, bright spoon beside the dish, and your wholesome poem is ready for criticism. Cold, and white, and pretty, and one of the nicest dishes known for tea Kfetcso Graphs Fuesh. A method of preserving grapes for a long time, even from one autumn until the next summer, has come into extensive nse. The grapes are kept ou the vine as long as iHissiole in I-ranee, where tins vie originated, to the end of Oetolier or beginning of November. Uefore the first frosts appear they are cut, leaving a portion of the stem of about two or three knots below the bunch and two alxive it. The section of the upper end is then to be covered with wax, to pre vent Hie evaporation of the liquids con tained in the pores of the wood ; and after carefully removing all the un sound grapes the lower end of the stem is inserted iu a small elongated bottle tilled with water, having a small quan tify of wood charcoal in the bottom. 1 ne space between the stem and the tight titting cork through which it is inserted is to be tilled up with wax. The bottles thus fitted are to be placed oa shelves in a dry room, and there ar ranged so as not to fall over, this being liest prevented by inserting them in holes bored in a frame, as close together as tney can stand conveniently. The Powvb of Mind oveb Body. The secretions are arrested or made active by nerve influence. Nursing mothers who give way to anger or other emotions poison their own mill. whereby the infant's health is often injured for life, if it is not killed out right. The bowels are purged by bread pills (as onoe was proved on a large scale by the Emperor Nicholas) pro vided people are told they are to be E urged ; eighty out of one hundred ospital patients have been vomited by a neutral remedy, when told "there had been a mistake made and they had all taken emetics.' Much sea-sickness would be avoided if people could be made to believe they were not going to have it. The stigmata, or marks of the nails on the- Saviour s bands and leet, have Ik en plainly seen to appear on the corresponding portion ox the bodies ol certain of kis more devont followers, among whom St. Francis of Asaissi must be specially named. Yet ought we not to lose from our sight the possi bility that these occurrences, however unquestionable tney be, are yet simply owing to an action of the imagination, whereof a notable instance is related upon authority of great weight : A mother saw a window sash descend with great violence upon her little child's fingers, whereupon she herself was instantly seized with extreme pains in her own fingers, which did afterward swell and inflame in such a manner that she was long in being cured. The fakirs of India are sometimes able to divest themselves of the signs of life-respira tion and circulation being stopped and bodily temperature lowered for months continually, ihe pain of toothache vanishes at the sight of a dentist's chair, neuralgia once disappered as the lecturer was about to enter on an operation for its relief ; most factional, and even some organic affections (as dropsy) may be cured by giving a patient the idea that he is to be cured ? And the well attested list of modern miracles is in the same category of acts. Dr. ftroica Snuart. 1'abadoxes. Water thrown into a red-hot metalic vessel does not boil, as we should expect, but quietly gathers itself together, forming a more or less perfect sphere, and in that condition floats about gracefully on the hot sur face as it slowly evaporates away. If at the same time a very evaponzable substance, as liquid sulphurous acid, is thrown in, the water may actually be frozen in the red-hot vessel. Water boiled in a glass flask until the upper part of the vessel is entirely tilled with steam, and then dexterously corked liefore air can gain admission, and placed in cold water, recommences to boil. The boiling is produced by cold instead of heat, and the experiment is known as the ordinary paradox. If steam from water boiling at '212- is passed into a solution of salt in water, the temperature of the solution steadily rises, passing reaches the boiling point of the solution, and finally the latter also boils at a temperature as high and even higher than lijO . accord ing to its nature. There wa have the extraordinary result of obtaining a high temperature, say viz, 21:!' . If there is anything in nature that possesses a positive character, it is light. Yet the physicist may so reflect the light from a given source as to cause it to destroy itself and produce darkness. Jn like manner, two sounds may bo mnde to interfere with each other, and either produce silence or increased intensity of sound, at the will of the operator. Gold and Violet Bronze Powder. The process for preparing these so called powders (tungstons tungstates of an alkali) by means of tin and fused acid tungstates has been so improved by Dr. Schnitzler as to be adapted to the preparation of them, in suitable furnaces, by the hundred weight, if the demand for them will justify it. He increased the amount of tungstio acid to such an extent that by pulverizing the mass obtained by the fusion of the ingredients at a high temperature in a crucible and heating it in a porcelain tube by a weak charcoal fire it, at most, simply became adherent by fusion. The reduction was then accomplished in a few hours by common burning gas. By moderate temperature the yield was considerable ; and gold bronze, after repeated purification with hot nitric acid and with caustic soda, appears by sunlight as a beautiful gold-yellow, uniform powder; by higher tempera ture, it acquires a cast of red. The violet bronze (the potash compound) needs a h'gher temperature. Auosa the recent physical problems ,J 8 is that suggested by the fact that a ball uc i . . i i it ii . or our ui bouu iron wm uoai upon a molten mass of the same metal. To account for this it has been argued that iron, like water, expands on solidifying and hence that solid iron is specifically lighter than when in a molten state, and that, this being the case, the iron floats, just as ice does in water. Un fortunately for the acceptance of this theory it is stated by its opponents and with good reason, that iron does not expand as described, and hence is not subject to the law that governs ice. The second and apparently just theory to account for the phenomenon is that, when a ball of solid iron is brought in contact with the molten metal, it does not sink, owing to a film of airadhering to it, which repels the molten iron and prevents contact. This phenomenon will be at once recognized as kindred to that known as the spheroidal state of liquids. Domestic. Practical Lessons to Womex. In a recent letter on "The Uses and Abuses of the Skin and Hair," (we find "our skin is formed of scales similar to those of fishes, only smaller ; in fish these scales are smoothed away and others allowed to come, in their native element the water ; our are influenced in the aame manner by the air. The ex clusion of this influence affects some of the sppendages of the skin. When long confined by hats, excess of any covering, false hair Ac., the natural hair falls out The present fashions in coiffures will soon make as all wig wearers. The Lair has been provided with pomatum by nature, and needs no other; this like all skin appendages grows better, and is healthier, from frequent cutting ; being analogous in this respect, as in others, to grass. Dyes of all kinds are injurious, hiving tendency to cause paralysis. Regard ing the nails, if not trimmed at all, they will grow to a certain length and then drop off those of the hands grow four times faster than those of the feet, owing to the restrictions of the latter's covering. In sickness the nails become thin. Do not clean them with a knife ; use wood or ivory, which will not ir ritate the skis under the nails. Sweat glands are another appendage or the skin which need special attention. Each human being is provided with twenty eight miles of perspiratory tubing drainage pipes of the system. Imagine the effect of closing these, which is done often by nncleanliness and expo sure to very damp atmosphere. Much neuralgia is caused from want of free perspiration, as is Blight's disease of the kidneys ; the skin not being allowed to do its share of elimination, these and other evils are the consequence. The body needs the tonic of water over its entire surface each day ; soft, fresh water, with little, or better still, no soap ; when nsed, white Castile is the best. Too much friction after a bath often results in skin disease. There is no need for sponges or wash-cloths the hand is better adapted than either. Do not nse coarse towels or hair mittens, Ac Skf.ltox Leaves. Leaves to be skeletonized should be gathered only in dry weather, should also be per fectly matured, July and August being the best months to gather them. Among the choicest varieties are vine, poplar, beech and ivy leaves. Dissolve four ounces of washing soda in one quart of boiling water ; add two ounces of qmck lime, and boil fifteen minutes : allow this to cool : then pour off the clear liquor into a clean saucepan, and when at a boiling point place the leaves care fully and boil one hour ; boiling water should be added occasionally to supply that lost by evaporation. If after boil ing one hour the cellulor tissue does not rub off between the thumb and finger, boil them till it will, always placing the leaves in cold water to separate the fleshy matter from the skeleton. Bleach the skelatons by put ting them in a solution of one quart of water, large tableepoonful of chloride of lime, and a few drops of vinegar ; let them remain in twenty minutes and then remove and dry between sheets of white blotting paper, beneath a gentle pressure, I e i To Preserve Citron. reel Hie! citron, taking out the seeds ; cut in quarters, put them in a preserving Humorous. Not to be Don. The Court Journal tells the following : Previous to the late Duke of Buo cleuch quitting his princely mansion he had occasion to visit a certain burg lying some ten or twelve miles to the north-west. On this occasion he pre ferred riding on horseback and unat tended. He came to the toll-gate. "The toll, Bir, gin ye please." His Grace immediately pulled up, and, while searching for the needful to s.itisfyso just a demand, he was thus accosted by the gate-keeper. "Heard ye ony word o' the Duke comin this way, the day, sir?" "Yes," was the reply ; "he will be this way to day." "Will he be in a coach an' four, or only a coach and two, think ye?" "In all probability on horseback," was the brief rejoinder. "In that case, do von think he wad be offended if I offered him back the change should he gae me a sax pence or a shilling to pay wi' as he passed ?" The Duke stretched forth his hand to receive theJ Fever and Acs, Chili Fever, At. Daiance, and, witn an arcn and Knowing look, replied : "Try him, friend, try him," and pocketed the coppers mut tering to himself : "Not to be done in that way." They tell a tough story about two sagacious mules out in Virginia City, Nevada. The mules were as good as can be made. Hank Blanchard, their owner, was driving them one day, with a friend Penn in the wagon. The mules came to a place and stopped, and refused to move a step further. They both looked toward the roadside. Hank looked, too, and saw what was the mat ter with the mules. There was a sign there, which read, "Hay $53 a ton," the regular price being $2o Hank got out of the wagon, went and talked to the man of the sign, and came back and told Fagan that he had ordered ten tons of that hay at greatly reduced rates, and that his mules might consider themselves in clover. He got into the wagon, and the mmes trotted briskly off. Apropos of the Tyndall-Darwin the ories comes in one of Gen. Sckenck's latest stories that he told to the wife of a British cabinet officer who assured him that "England made America ail that she is." "Pardon, madam," said the general ; "you remind me of the answer of the Ohio lad in his teens, who, attending Sunday school for the first time, was asked by the teacher, ' Vho made you ?' 'Made mc f 'Yes. 'Why, God made me about no long' (holding his hands about ten inches apart), 'but I growed tho rest.' " kettle, add some water, cover tiffht. an di"1" uieynaa nuaea bod nntil you can thrust a straw, easily I SWPTTi I through them; then skim out care- ! ,,1 .A th6 fullv. so as not to break them. T .. news- and Ket him some dry clothes. A corpLE of Irish lads, wishing to obtain a little pocket money, deter mined to go into the country during harvest time and work among the farm ers. "Can you cradle?" asked the farmer. 'Now, an Irishman in search of work was never known to confess ignor ance of anything, but the question was a perplcxer. The beys looked at each other for a suggestion. No use. At length Dennis, looking boldly at the farmer, said : "Of course we can cradle ; bnt couldn't ye give us an out door job ?" A Mobile man, who, ou returning home from his day's business, was sur prised to receive the congratulations of his friends at his having narrowly es caped from drowning, thought it a very good sell, and langhed immoderately iis best Sunday-go-to-meeting suit to i A FortsiBSvte OrphAa. ' In the year 1866 the cholera made terrible havoc in Belgium, and at Ghent it swept sway three generations in one family, leaving only little child, Flo rimond Depauw. The Journal de Oand records an interesting incident in con nection with this child. His father had been employed in the grain market, and when the fact became known that this child was left desolate, those em ployed there manifested great interest in the little boy, whose disposition was such as to make every one fond of him. His holidays were passed among them, and he had a home in half a dozen families. When he came ont at the head of his class in the free school the other day, and gained the municipal medal, his numerous friends in the grain market subscribed, and presented him with a handsome silver watch, with an affectionate inscription indicative of the pride and interest they all felt in him. A few months after having commenced the manufacture of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, the proprietor began to receive numerous letters from all parts of the Western and Southern S'.les bestowing the most unbounded praise rpon it for haw ing promptly cured the writers or their friends of Fever and Ague, or other forms of miasmatic, or malarious diseases, lie was repeatedly urged to make known the wonderful virtues of the Discovery in the cure of Ague and kindred diseases. He always replied that it was not intended for a "cure all," and should he recommend it to people as a remedy for so many different forms and classes of disease, he feared those who had never tested its virtues would at once class it among the numerous humbugs of the day. This answer was satisfactory to no one; they argued that the whole coun try ought to know it at once, and expressed their astonishment at bis indifference to the subject. His ear and heart being at all times open to the call of suffering humanity he has at last, after baring received testi mony from hundreds who have been speedily cured oy it, and many or them after quitu and all the usual means had failed, conges ted to make the matter known. N'iwxax, Jeff. Co., Kan., Jan. 6, 17 Dr. 1'iEBi'E: JJear Sir Having used a few bottles of your Golden Medical Discovery, and be lieving it to be the very best medicine for Chills and Fever I wish to buy it by the doxen, please give me your price for it. 1? Rev. TUOS. 0 R1ELLT. pound of citron add three-quarters of a 1 pound of sugar, using only the best I white, adding as many lemons as you j Stabtxino. It didn't rain for some time in a Western town, and when the n(. .omniin n, .i . ,i "ii i cooos aia descend, tne editor said : render the whole batch bitter ; add the ..After man o nd dedication, sugar to the liquor you boil the citron e '"P?1 1f"Ptaln8. mahalJjd their . i . . , tnuncerinir hosts and nonmd nntnnnn in i uuuiu a nice syrup: aaa me V .. s .r 7. S. citron, a little at a time : when done. ?corchinK humanity and the thoroughly skim out, and keep doing so until all are cooked ; add your lemons, cook a tew minutes more, pour over your citron, and they are done. To Preserve Grapes. Pluck the clusters carefully, remove those that are green or bitten by insects or blasted, and tie them to a pole about ten feet long, and so firm as not to bend much beneath the weight Hang the poles with the clusters suspended in a loft or chamber where there is a free circula tion, and there let them incinerated vegetation a few inches of "aquapluvialis." Good gracious ! "Yoc are from the country, are you not, sir?" asked a city clerk of a Quaker who had jnst arrived. "Yes." "Well, here is an essay on the rearing of calves." "That," said Aminadab ; as he turned to go, "thee had best present to thy mother." One of the Beecher girls used to say that she had three rules to guide her in ! fVinvnno' llAr fnt riAr'a mnnmuwnt, . T I . remain till , A. . , .. . . . I inter vu uuiwu, u wu not u I ; 11 a freezing weather, looking over them oc- iw. . . . ' . casionally and removing any that have . worJ mri with a canital letter it The Drt'HESE d" Agom lkme Pear. A French noblemen, obstrving his ten ant about to destroy a fine, thrifty pear tree inquired the cause. He was told that it was a chance seedling, and had born no fruit in tweuty years. He had already cut its roots preparatory to the nrst stroke, bnt was ordered to let it remain. He did so, and iu the follow ing year it was loaded with superb fruit of an entirely unknown variety. which at once becsnio celebrated. The root-pruning the gardener had given it worked like a chsrm. For many years afterwards, when the Duchess ot Ango ulence was passing through Lyons, its inhabitants sent her their hospitalities. Nine fair maidens presented the Duch ess with golden salvers, on which lav heaped this precious fruit, and begged her to bestow on it her name ; and the pear now recognized as the crowniug glory of all fruits was thenceforward known as tho Duchesse d'Anoulcme. The Aoe Ok Asimu-s. An Illinois farmer determines the n,Tc of animals over nine years old by the following novel method : After tho horse is nine years old a wrinkle comes on the upper corner of the lower lip, and every vear thereafter he has one well defined wrin kle for every year after nine. If, for instance, a horse has three wrinkles, he is twelve, if he has fonr, he is thirteen. Add the number of wiiukles to nine and you will get it. The best apple, butter is made by peeling, coring and slicing, selected sweet apples and stewing them in sweet cider. ery little of this sort of apple butter, however, comes to market. The bulk of that sold is made from second rate apples, peeled, sliced and stewed, and sweetened with brown sugar. A large quantity of such butter is made and sold for ship's stores for nse by the sailors. The wheat straw which has hitherto been burned by the California farmer will in future bs nsed in making barrels for shipping the very wheat it bore. . 1 A Terrible Poison prom Paris. At a recent meeting of the Academy, H. St. Claire Deville, a distinguished French chemist, offered to the gentle men present a tight-corked vial con taining fifteen pounds of osmium, the most deadly poison known. In a short explanation M. Deville said that twenty pounds of the metal would be sufficient to poison the entire population of the world. One thousandth part of a grain of osmic acid, set free in a volume of air of one hundred cubic yards, would possess such a deadly influence that all the persons respiring this air wonld be nearly killed. Osmic acid is so much the more dangerous that no counter poison is known against it. The P'rench astronomer Jaussen has invented an ingenious apparatus for ascertaining the precise instant of con tact of the planet Venus with the limb of the sun at the transit on December 10. A movable disk, having towards its edge equi-distant round openings, turns before a second disk covered with sen sitive paper. By means of clock work, the outer disk is made to move every second over a distance equal to the diameter of one of its openings. Hence every second there is a new plate ex posed, and a new picture taken. Bv examining each picture, it is possible to determine exactly the time of con tact. Oitdiziso Tower of Chabooau. Freshly prepared leucaniline dissolves in alcohol, and forms a perfectly color less liquid, wnicn may be kept for a long time without change. Ii this solution is boiled for few moments with a small quantity of animal char coal, it becomes of a deep carmine red. due to the action of the oxygen con densed in the pores of the charcoal. Tub yield of precious metal from the Pacific slope during the last quarter century is founi from an aggregation of the various yearly returns to be in value 1,534,280,000. The product for 1873 was 14 per cent greater than for 1872, amounting in value to 77,440,000. begun to decay. Then pack in dry saw dust, in dry. shallow boxes, and keep in a cool, dry cellar. The French often keep them a number of months by .i-tuK tueui iu. wi.ct wntiewasu, I to make me wuiuu wu urjiug, covers nieiu auu iniit with a thin white crust and excludes the air. didn't begin a sentence. Green Pickles. A premium recipe. To two gallons of vinegar put four ounces black pepper.fourounces ginger, two ounces turmeric, two ounces cloves, two ounces allspice, two ounces mace, one pint mustard seed, two tablespoon fuls celery seed, one large handful horse-radish, one handful garlic, three lemons sliced, two pounds brown su gar. The spices must be well beaten. The brine should be well soaked from the articles to be pickled before they are put in tne spiced vinegar. A fat French lady says : "I am so thin that I pray for a disappointment thin. No sooner does the disappointment come than the mere expectation of growing thinner gives me such joy that I become fatter than ever. "What do yon mean ?" inquired an inquisitive lady of a facetious lawyer, "by the term, 'putting a leading ques tion ?' " "When I offer you my arm, dear," said the learned gentleman suiting the action to the word. Wituoi t doubt hundreds of people who will read this item are suffering with Kid cy Disease in some form, which might be cured with a bottle or two of Johnton t Ano dyne Liniment, used intern lly. Why not try it: ration ruTtjatae Vult, wh?:h are now being extensively sold in this State, "re purely vegetable, and are niild and tet.,lt in their operation, (hie is a dose. Good qualities, certainly. - K. F. Ranker Bitter Mine ol Iron. E F. Kunkel's celebrated Hitter sine ol Iron will effectually cure liver complaint. jaundice, dyspepsia, chronic or nervous de bility, chronic diarrhira, disease of the kid neys, and all diseases arising froa a disor dered liver, stomach or intestine!, such as constipation, flatulence, inward piles, full ness of blood to the head, acidity of the stomaoh, nausea, heartburn, disgust for food, fullness of weight in the stomach, sore eructations, sinking or fluttering at the pit of the stomach, ewimning of the head, hurried or difficult breathing, flutter ing at the heart, choking or suffocating sensations when in a lying posture, dimness of vision, dots or webs before the sight, dull pain in the head, deflciencr of perspi ration, yellowness of the skin aid eyes, pain in the side, back, head, chest, limbs, etc., sudden flushes of heat, burning in the flesh, constant imaginings of evil, and great de pression of spirits. Price $1 per bottle. Beware of counterfeits. Do not let your druggist palm off some other preparation ot iron he may say is as good, but ask for Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron. Take no other. Kunkel's Bitter Win of Iron is not sold in bulk only in $1 bottles. E. F. Kunkel, Proprietor, So. 2j9 Xorth Ninth St.. Philadelphia, Pa. Sold by all Druggists aid dealers every where. Tapeworm Removed Alive. Head and all complete, in two hours No fee till head passes. Seat, l'in and Stomach Worms re moved by Dr. KcsKEL, J"j9 Noeth Sixth Street. Advice free. Ome, see over 1,000 specimens and be convinced. He never fails. Advertisements. EVERY! HOG MAX WHO owns A can pr.wit it froiu nxitinff tty n.mr lllLLJriTiMT kixmik. tl uuKiiir frr 1" Soernln; Tonn or Ilol.tm. tl 25. It Mail, jmrtt i-L Fr &tl hj lirlwar bntb-fm. Cirralare free. AiUlrrtrf, II. W. BILL CO. oclS-SOt-eow Dceatar, III. Bsd bugs will live a year without air or food when placed in a hermetically seaiea Dome ; dui Dnmstone will kill them. Place in the centre of the room a dish containing about fonr ounces of orimstone ; remove from the room such metalic surfaces as might be aflected by uie iumes ; ciose every aperture, even to the key hole, and light the brim stone. After fonr or five hours, enter tne room and open the windows for a thorough airing. The whole secret of a full form and rosy cheeks lies in pure blood, manu factured from wholesome food, by healthy and vital organs, oxygenated and vitalized in well-expanded lungs, and kissed by the life-given sunlight on the surface of the warm cheek. She who will have the color she covets on any other terms must buy it of the apothecary, and renew it every time she makes her toilet. To kep moths out of clothing : Mix half a pint of alcohol, the same quantity of spirits of turpentine and two ounces of camphor. Keep in a stone bottle and shake before using. The clothes or furs to be wrapped in linen, and crumpled np pieces of blotting paper dipped in the liquid are to be placed in the box with them, so that it smells strong. This requires renewing once a year. Baked Fish. To bake a fish, you should empty the fish at the gills ; then stuff it with bread and herbs, forced meat balls or oysters, just as yon prefer. Season the outside with pepper; turn the tail into the mouth and tie it. Lay it on sticks in your bake-pan and flour it welL Lay some pieces of butter on it ; half an hour will cook a small one. It will be acknowledged evenbyihose who practice it not, that clear and round dealing is the honor of a man's nature, and that mixture of falsehood is like alloy in coin of gold and silver, which may make the metal work the better, but it debaseth it. Let every family remember that each particle oi damp dirt about their dwellings is s plague spot ; and every servant and child be visited with the severest reproof, who knowingly per mits its continuance for a single mo ment. It is a solemn thing a very solemn thing to get married to feel that hence forth through life the mild-eyed girl at your side is to be the only female in the wild world duly licensed to throw flat- irons at your head. There is one consolation in being bald. When a policeman strikes you on the head with his club, the doctor doesn't have to waste any time in cut ting nair away from tne wound. Said a conscientious auctioneer : "Ladies and gentlemen, there is no sham about the carpets ; they are genuine tapestry carpets. I bought them of old Tapestry himself. NE YORK BLACK LEAD WORKS. SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! At) (tries, Stltur Mounted and Walnut, new nd weona-nmna. OUUJiTtUU, SAKri, UKanlf uarktd for lilw'!nir nil r.l L.I VX, D1UU nx Ax old maid suggested that when men break their hearts it is all the same as when a lobster breaks one of his claws another sprouts immediately, and grows in its place. "How mast regular, steady boarders are there in this honn?" aatro.1 a Mnm 1 taker of a servant girl "There's fifteen in all, sir, but not more'n fonr of 'em is steady persons, sir." "Pa, do storms ever make malt liqaors?" "So, child, why do you ask ?" "Because I heard ma tell Jane to bring in the clothes for a storm was brewing." "Is iik brother's body here ?" asked Pat of the morgue-keeper. "I dunno. " "C)ch," said Pat, "you'll know him in a minute by an impediment in his speech. Good mornixs, Smith ; yon look sleepy;" "Yes," replied Smith, "I was up all night" "Up! where 1" "Up stairs in bed. Mb. Marrowfat defines a "fashion able church" as a place from which people go to heaven for wearing good clothes. Something new for the Orientalists' Congress What did Noah's bees do while afloat ? They kept the arc-hives. The handsomest lady in a horse car is not always the one that is passing fare. How Patrick proposes to get over his single blessedness By proposing to Bridge it. The hardest things to deal with : An old pack of cards. Thb best legal authority on crema tionCoke. TURKS. o. BOUSE AXB OFFICE FCKNITURE all ktalda Tba hvrmat and beat aaaorted (toe, new and acaud-aanil fct tne City. L.KW1H Ac HI tO.. S-lS.lv UK!. 1023.102& tad 102 BlDfiE ATK Fklla. STATION AKY. POKTABLdS AND AGRICULTU11AL STEAM ENGINES. Otaaral Afaata for RUSSELL a CO.'S Massillon Separators HORSE POWERS. HORSE RAKES, HAY CUTTERS AND OTHER FIRST CLASS FARM MACHINERY. HARBERTlt RAYMOND. 1835 Market Street .!- miLADILPHM. I. W SHtHWUUP, TLORTST. BUUqUETS AND FLi'WVH BASKhTB MADKTOOKIF.K. Also WREATHS AND CROSSES FOR WEl)lINOi AKD FUNERALS, ucaa aib Fights Cowjiahti-v oa Bard. Mo. ICS SOUTH SEVEHTH STREET, tmlow Cheatnnt, Parru tiwv.wv a PATENT Hay and Cotton Preps. WATER PKOOF PATENT BUILDING FELT r mrtf fe. oatahte asa hwi af 0Url!iia. BM OLANK8 mrLt rxDrriD it THiOma. A GREAT STRIDE TUs Aahrwrtiseaaaat Cf7Tlstod. UP AND OVER EBusiness Cusfonis I a arnmSai, a Amatl a oata xifca Lik. : 14T4. tm 1 taHai at Cnaij r aa. a Wa OLD METHODS found to be baity or objectionable, discarded. A new nd Tsstly sdTmntsgeoos plan hereby adopted t J A ") HI A TU Ik, Already the Largest Clothing Conct-rn In America, and leading the Trade, !! STARTS ON A NEW CAREER IX Thoroughly reorganised on a greatly improved plan, gllearlng Objectors ! Assuring Equal Righto to AH I Ruling Oat the Possibility of Cnfalraess ! Securing a Scale or btiH Lower Prices Dropping every rent are liable even to Criticism! GUARANTEEING PURCHASERS "TV ITT JT f4 TAKES, AGAINST VI SSS, DISSATISFACTION with. Price or Purchase rendered IMPOSSIBLE! A. 3P3L. By which t is hoped to double In the coming year the already Immenee businee of Vfc JMf Ml -B'M' BY ENORMOUS ESTABLISHMENT, Making its Annual Sale more than fSfiOOfiOOHI MERITTNO and SECURING the Patronage of all classes of the Community to a degree never hitfore aninvnd hv ANY one Houoe in any department of trade 1 I I Sure to commend ilaeit and be commended ALL THOUGHTFUL Because advantageous alike to both, buyer and seller. AVE XOW ANNOUNCE THESE AS THE FOLK. FOUR CARDINAL POINTS WAXAMAKER A BROWN, WAXAMAKER A BROWX, WAXAMAKER & BROWX, WAXAMAKER & BROWX, WAXAMAKER & BROWX, WAX MAKKR & BROWX, WAXAMAKER A BROWX, WAXAMAKER A BROWX, WAXAMAKER A BROWX, WAXAMAKER & BROWX, WAXAMAKER A BROWX, WAXAMAKER A BROWX, WAXAMAKER A BROWX, WAXAMAKER A BROWX, by which we will hereafter steer our c:uTu OXE PRICE. A a K 1 r J 2 X S. E. Cor. fith and Market St. S. E. for. 6th an, I Market St S. E. Cor. tith and Market St. S. E. Cor. 6th and Market Si. S. E- Cor. 6th and Market St. S. E. Cor. 6lh and Market St. S. F- Cor. 6lh and Market S:. S. K. Cor. 6th and Markt Su. S. E. Cor. Cth and Market St. S. E. Cor. 6th and Market St. S. E. Cor. 6th and Market St S. E. Cor. 6th and Market St. S. E. Cor. 6th and Market St. S. E. 'or. 6th and Market Su. mm, "CASH." 2i POINT. OWE PRICE. rCIJ. GUARANTEE. EXPLANATION AND ELABORATION OF WANAMAKER & BROWN'S NEW PLAN. Houses doing a credit business aaau provide for losses on bad debts. Interest on long-standing accounts, capital locked up, etc. To bear such losses themselves would drive them out of business. Therefore a per cent, is added to the price of each article sold, to cover this leakage, and Caa Mmftra whether they U sr avat, resty jtey (Ae see" aVeta esi IKs t,Ummt Io errMtm Ihm ether aaaarr.f Under the Caw Jtaysana system one pays only for what gets, and contributes nothing to a " Sinking Fund. By this Ri'lirat Chang we shall lose some of our customers no doubt, but we will gain ten where we lose one, the advantages being so great to all who can avail themselves of them. So we say CASH. THROUGHOUT. Bring Money for Clothing, and we will supply it at prices seaa.'Ue aaeVr as MKrr p4mm. The Wrani of this feature of our plan all will praise. It is simply treating all alike exacting nothing from indisposition to bargain or ignorance, and, at tne same time, concerting iniiinnnuiw. on the shrewdest customer's part could possibly extort, tiecauue Uie "One Price" which we mark ou our goods, shall invariably be NOT the "First" Price, but t&e JaAST ana ljUWMr i'axujs. NOT tho "TOP" Price, but the VERY BOTTOM PRICE. In other words. Salesmen or " Headmen," have never been allowed, under ordinary circum stances, to fall below a certain figure! It is at that, or at a tmrrr fiyure that we now determine to mark our goods, calculating the cost to the exact penny, and fixing the price at the low minimum proiit on which business on a large scale can be conducted. We know that the l irger business we aim for and anticipate, will require a large Increase in uie number of customers, an 1 we shall therefore see to it that the "One Prioe " is based on the Smallest Profit, calculated to the exact and lowest penny, which will not be difficult to do with universal Caali Payment for the rule. The price will be marked in plain figures and no alteration allowed. NOTE. Whenwr th evlenc!-s of the eann. the stale of tno. or the money market mar ilemand. the nitht h reserved o go ttarwajs ooru-k helnraoraivr lawmwi hour an-l mark kmn any lot or lota of guuh. UianKiox u t,uiw us all Ihe latela,a Ua Um saw n axe the saiue to allu simI all buy alike z the uiarK dowo prio-a. WANAMAKER 3c BROWN WILL NEVER HOLD THEIR OOOD& 3d FOIKT. "run Qnarastee." bearing the signature of our firm, will accompany each garment as a in every sense, and will be honored as quickly as a good draft of the Govcmmcnl of the United States. This is a sample of the Full Guarantee, and telW its own story: A printed Guarantee, Warrantee. This hinds us GUARANTEE. 2. J. 3. . 4iA. DATE, TP kfrrltif guarantes TUiU (lie pri of our yvU nhnll be tu low as Vie time quality uf vmtrriiil and mannfarturt art mid anywhere in the. I'liiled Stale. Unit llie yrirrt are rr.vt7 lite mate to frrybmhj fnr unrnr tpudlty, on mm dinf of jntrrhiar. That the imitity ov. m o rrfimntril on printrd iiiea. I'Ai the J a II uuwiu.it ff ni'k jfid rill be refnmlnl, if entfoinrr jfJ the artidrM nnmttirfnetury, and return them unicorn and uninjurnl within 10 tiiya of date of pureKaar. Si,jne,l, WAXAMAKER Jt BROWX, BLrth eaal Jferke Mm, TKUrn. .tiPOIE "Cask Betarnei" if This is Rimply a concession on our part to our customers, to secure them full confidence in dealiru? for good tt-tf Ln4r rr tittle JWmf, nnd we thu prevent nny occasion for dissatisfaction from my and every cause whatsoever. If the garment in not exactly what you thought, if your tattle c-hanye, the "home folks' prefer another color or another shape, if you find you can buy the same material and style elsewhere for less money, if you conclude you don't need it after you get home, if the season changes suddenly and you wish you had not bought it, it tmrk unworn and uninjured, and the full amount of money you paid will be returned on tke ftpot. Wh.it more can we do for our customer than this, when we make our clothing fro that they can dww the money value with it equally as well a with a check on tho b-tnkT TIIK Incident to t tret era having for til ordinal points Uvn which w havs now explained, ars iiniIy InnwnsraUe. abatnc of all aocksteniig 4c, Ac, c, kc but above all Una IT MAKES CLOTHING !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! V1VAXTACJKS Sarin j of time aad tamper, perfect tenuity CHEAP ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Siclrh-if the price eevrral t1ow what tbrr bar la-en heretofore, or erald pmwiWT be under iLm uU ajatria. By diapeneiiif with certain clerk no ltmift-r iieeUvd, tt reduce "Stars Expttbess. By eulorciiiff CASH Payment, tbe bad deMa are avoided. By patting plenty of ready money in sand, anabies oa to buy goode at flgnns that credit men knew nothing abost Bt hicremae of ad, a smaller prvat on each article sufficient. AH of these By-U ays" led direct to and this without lowering th quality of atjle of our Celebrated mak of Xan, and Boy a Clothing. SOnV. OTHER TH IXC. WbereiB oar plan differs frera ethrr : (a) It oombiiH. all I ha noofl pointa which tM. anmtrly. or hi partial eombinatlooa, and It adds tonM mw and hnpsrtant f minus (b) It givea such a rninntia aa no btmp In th world, to oar knowledge, mr Tan lured to giv aa a nil. (e) It makes our goortm nmint to chrcka oa a bank, ahtuenr they are primmed at, worn or anlnjared. (d) It baa th. areata advaotaa of an minatia. huaweaa already amt.Niaiierl, to sustain lbs "Saw Constitution." aad sndsr ao other atrcnav stancra eould so many radical conreaatoua to cuatoruera be made. W, hay for year been wurktea wards the praariit point, and tnouch naturally falHne Into the current method of trad, w ill ml and noted the It' of th old ayatems, aud hat been carnally weighing for a long tun three newer plena, and preparing for thai ' ENTIRE CHANCE OF BASE. W now, iwli rlemr aI evil coaakiaatiama r castas., aaa harm la arid sea acaiaa as. Izvssugattfa is zzkoa. into all wa have hero pit fbrtL takln- the hard-earned and foacht-for reputation of ear honse (of which w eonfeea we are nronn on the fttthini - !.. . .u .. and conditious herein laid down. On Uiw new, and in uanj respect Original i'iau, we launch th ue iUll Craft on the SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1874, bound for th Fall Trade, and by all our oparlcne la trade, and all oar knowledge of human aalure, we an lad to anticipate that Marvellous and Unprecedented Increase of Business for which tee are well prepared. Ont warehouses, eunipilalng 7t epackra rooms, are docked to th full, oar home mlD hay bees turning oat anr anantttiaa of good to a that are now at tors, and Foreign fabric try to anip wao, are now on onr eonntar. uur woramen hay nee a email army, and aa duigaat and akiulol a they are aaiaeme With th Improvement already noted, there ar aiao new etjlae, new ODlots, new cat and am careful -i-i"g Everything pirn We sea bees doe t meat ae gratify the man, ana now THE LAE3EST CL07IO3 EOUSS Z27 A3G2ICA. OAK HALL, S. E. comer Sixth & Market Sts, PMadelphk