"DATS A5D VOICES. bt a. r. LATHRor. Swift the elm-tree's leave are falling Plain tfrely the pee-wee calling Miorlea with the leaves bia notes ; Autltb ghost ol summer float Through the air. Like the leavea, the days long vanished. Mixed with voices dead or banished. Come to me with those sweet notes. Hut the ghost of gladness floats j ' Through despair, Scribner's Monthly. Epldeaalrs A , Children. The other day. say a lady in n ex clianre, we listened to a very interest ing lecture on this subject given by a member of the medical profession, and took notes of portions of it for the bene fit of onr readers. The three epidemics spoken of were measles. scarlet feverandsmatl-poi. In reDeating what the physician stated we Oixll sav nothinir about the treatment of these diseases, leaving that to be de termined by each reader for himself. and only mention points inwresung jilikA to nil. A child affected with measles appears to have a severe cold in the head ; its eves are red and very sensitive to the liV'ht ; its fuce is swollen and on the third dav the eruption appears on the face in blotches of a crescent or horse shoe eiiane. which spread and cover the surface of the body. When the finger is pressed firmly on these reu blotches uie l-lneRA does not no awav. iscarlet fever generally begins with nausea, followed by pain in the limbs aud sore throat; the face is not swollen and the eves are not very sensitive to the liirht. On the second day the rash appears, first on the face in small points ol vivid reu, wuicu oecouiesuiuuHeuauu spreadovertheeutire body. Thetongue w verv white with Mood-red sitots ap pearing above the furred surface. If a pencil or tne Linger is presseu umiiy on the skin the reduesswillgive place form time, leaving the skin white where the pressure waseserted.arid then the scar let returns. On the fifth day the rash turns brown and the skin is very dry. This is the daDgerous time, since the ktin tiein? nnable to Derform its func tion, the kidneys and lungs have double work to do. At this stage of the illness the foundation is often laid for lirigbt's disease of the kidneys, aud everything depends on keeping the skin soft and moist. This can 1 done by oiling it freely with saladoiUwith pure lard,with nnsaited butter, or wuat is mosi agree able of all, with glycerine and rose wa ter, two parts of the former to one of the latter. In England the favorite treat ment is to immerse the patient in a warm bath, which is repeated fre quently. The symptoms of small-pox are. first, a chill, then violent nausea, pain in the head, and aching in the bones. On the third day the eruption appears on the forehead aiidalwmt the face in scattered pimples that feel when the finger is passed over them as thongh a bead or the head of a pin were imbedded in the skin. Measles require a treatment so simple that anv intelligent mother should be able to take her child safely through it. The svmptoins of scarlet fever and of siuall-"pix are so pronounced that they are not likely to be mistaken. The first thing to be done is to quarantine the patient, so as to prevent the infection lrom spreading. This can be success fully done by placing him in a top room of the house, from which carpets, np holsterered furniture and woolens of every description should be removed. The furniture left should le of the sim plest description, a single or three quarter bed for the patient, a lounge tor tiie nurse to recline fupon, wooden or flagged chairs, aud a table. There should be a grate in the room and a tire kindled in it. This will not only keep the room ventilated, but destioy the,; germs of the disease as they pass over the tlanie on their way out of the room. Since so much in these diseases de pends on the care taken of the patient. order there should lie two nurses, in that one mav be on the watch while the other is resting. 1 htie is no danger oi ronrajMon until the eruption comes to the surface, so that in case of scarlet fever the mother has two days to tke precautions against the spread of the mfection, and in small-pox three days. When the disease is passed the bed clothes may be disiufected by a thor ough boiling and all not treated in this way should be burned. Ijtacbtrr. The following paragraph we find floating through the newspaper world, occupying a prominent -space in the local departments of some of the most influential journals in the country. As it suits almost any locality where people of buoyant spirits and jovial disposition dwell, it will assuredly find willing readers in this latitude: After all what a capital, kindly, honest, jolly, glorious good thing is a iaugh. What a tonic! What adigester! What a febrifuge! W hat an exorciser of evil spirits ! Better than a walk before, or a nap after dinner. How it shuts the mouth of malice, and opens the brow of kindness ! Whether it discovers the gums of infancy or age. the grinders of folly, or the pearls of beauty ; whether it racks the sides or deforms the countenance of vulgarity, or deep lines the visage, or moistens the eye of refinement iu all its phases and on all faces, contorting, relaxing, overwhelm ing convulsions, throwing the human form in happy shaking and quaking of idiocy, and turning the human coun tenance into something appropriate to liilly Burton's transformation, under every circumstance, and everywhere, a laugh is a glorious thing. Like a "thing of beauty," it is "a joy for ever." There is no remorse in it. It leaves no sting, except in the sides, and that soon goes off. Even a single un participated laugh is a great affair to witness. lSut it is seldom single. It is more infectious than scarlet fever. You cannot gravely contemplate a laugh. It there is one laugher and one wit ness; forthwith there are two laughers. And so on, propagated like sound. What a thing it is when it becomes epidemic ! Lanrtiter ! i m poor man pla.ter, Covej llig up eaiji dieaeter. ntigbiiiic, be lorget fan trouMes, Which thu;rh real Mvm but bnMde. l-envrbter ! whether limd or mute. Telle the human kind In-m brnte. Laughter ! 'tie U-e'e liviug voi-. Kidding on to uiake m choice. And to cull from thorny bowers. Leaving thorn and taking Sowar.' The Moral KHeeiajrHarry. To the thonghtf ul, the moral conse quences of tension and hurry are very saddening, to the physician their results areamatter of a pro t'ountl concern, their grave evils coming under his daily ob servation. Xoevolutionof force can take place with undue rapidity without dam age to the machine in which the trans formation is ell'ected. Express railway stock has a much shorter term of use than that reserved for slower traffic. The law is universal that intensity and duration of action are inversely propor tioned. It is therefore no matter of sur prise to find that the human nervous system is no exception to the law. The higher salubrity of rural over urban life is not entirely a matter of fresh air and exercise. Kural life involves leisure and pause in work, which are very es sential to the maintenance of the ner vous system in a state of due nutrition. I'nremitting spasm soon ceases alto gether. The tension of life produces weakness at the very place where strength is most needed. The damage done to the health of the most valu able part of the community, the best trained thinkers, most useful workers, is incalculable. Work and worry, though not proportional, ar closely connected, and an excess of the former soon entails an increase in the latter beyond the limits which the nervous system can bear with impunity, espe cially under the conditions under which work Las to be done. The machinery and organizing the work of a commu nity has to be rigid and inflexible, and in the strain involved in bringing a changing organism into harmony with a machine, the former must inevitably suffer. ,Lundon Lancet. -.. AetlCClTCBlL Concrete ffius.-To make a tarred and gravel walk that will be perma nent proceed as follows : Dig out the walk to a detth of one foot. Ia the bottom of the excavation place brokea stones, pieces of brick, or coarse gravel to a depth of nine inches. Kam or roll this until it is firm and solid, leaving the centre rounding, and Higher than the sides in the proportion of one inch to a foot. Thus a walk four feet wide would be two inches higher at the center than at the sides. Upon this foundation spread what is known as "pea gravel," or gravel as coarse as peas or Deans, mat nas ueen sepiuatcu from the finer portion by screening. This should be rolled down solidly, and should be laid to a depth or nearly three inches. Upon this should be thinly scattered the fine gravel or sand screened from the coarser material and upon this hot gas tar should be spread as long as it is absorbed by the gravel. When no more tar is absorbed, dry sand is scattered upon the surface, and the roller is drawn back and forth upon it. As the tar is squeezed through the dry sand, more Sana is scawereu over it to absorb it, and the rolling is continued until a compact, solid dry surface ia obtained. The walk is thus finished piece by piece until the whole iscomDlete. The rolling and sanding should be continued until "he surface is made nerfectlv hard and no tar oozes out when it is rolled, which will Uke a week or two. Coal ashes may be used in place of the gravel and sand, and coarse clinkers in place of broken stone. The intention is to form by this gradual process a homogeneous concrete of gravel and tar, and any mrans bv which this end Is reached, or anv material bv which it may be ef fected, will answer the purpose as well as the plan here described, although this has been found very satisfactory, both as to durability and agreeablenass in use and appearance. Apples fob Milch Cows. A corres pondent of the Country Gentleman writes : "For manv vears I have fed annles to cows, verv much as recom mended, except that usually, after the cows had become used to eating a pec or half bushel each at one feeding, have fed them a bushel each at once. for a day or two, and have then allowed the cows the run of the orchard (the marketable apples having been picked and barreled!, where they ate as many a 4 thev nleased durlns the day. If cows are in the habit of eating apples thir uldnm choke, unless a few apples are fed to many cattle, when the fear of losing the choice morsel causes them to take more than one apple at a time into the mouth. The vagrant cow mat jumps into an orchard and eats at her leisure, never chokes, neither will a herd, if not hurried or hooked by each other. In twenty-five years' expert ence I have never had an animal get choked except one calf. This one would, when a basket of apples was poured over the feuce into his pasture, invariably take into his mouth as many apples as possible before attempting to eat. Many of my neighbors fed cattle and horses as freely as I did, and I never heard of the loss of an animal : 1 have seen three or four hundred bushels piled up on a barn floor to use after cold weather came to fatten steers, or the milk vield in a dairy ; and these apples were always fed with a scoop shovel, in the mangers, giving a half bushel each to cows, and a bushel to fattening steers, at each feed. The only precaution was feeding salt very freely until the cattle had become ac customed to eating large quantities of apples." Ter uerox Horses. This breed of horses, now become quite popular, are managed very peculiarly in their own home in France. During the term of gestation the mares are worked con tinuously, except a very few days about the time of foaling. The colts re moved at six months, and put Into the best of pastures, and for a year are I Simply an expense to iiicu v " , . i receive no extra attention, the food being almost entirely grass and hay," with no grain. At a year and a half old the colts are put into work under the guidance of a skilful, patient, careful man. They are put at light work, three or four doing the work oi one full-grown horse. During this time tney are wcu leu, ue cause somewhat productive; even now however, they are not fed grain ; but the greatest caution is manifested in their training and they are never over worked. Thus, after a Percheron colt attains an age of eighteen months it is employed sufficiently to pay its board and care, and still its development is not checked but its -training perfected and size and strength attained in greater and better proportion than if left to itself until three of four years of age- TRivripLES of Goon Fabmino. First The farmer who would succeed well, and derive pleasure a well as profit from his calling, niu-t manifest a.i ac tive and abiding interest in bis voca tion. It takes heart-work to make hand-work pleasant. Second The farmer must study how best to increase and maintain the fer tility of his soils. There is no inertia iu agriculture. There must be motion either forward or retrograde. Third The farmer must strive to iu crease the quality as well as the quan tity cf his crops. It is the quality that determines the price. Fourth The farmer must seek with a watchful eye to improve his market facilities. It is the transportation that eats up the profits. Fifth The art of raising better slock is not as well known as it should be. Keep no more animals than you have the facilities to feed and care for well Sixth The farmer must seek to im prove his social, intellectual and finan cial condition. Beets for Cows. Last year I raised a lot of Mangolds and carrots. The mangolds were gathered first and put in the cellar; afterwards the carrots were gathered and corded up on top of tbem, so that when 1 began to reed them to my cow, the carrots came first. The cow gave about her usual quantity of milk, except the usual shrinkage on account of cold weather and being put on dry fodder, t earing that the beets would not keep as well as the carrots, and also thinking they possessed better milk producing qualities, 1 was anx ious to get at them. Accordingly I re moved part of the carrots and com' menced feeding the beets, when to my surprise, my cow began to fall of her milk until the deficiency reached to about one-third. Wishing to test the matter still further, I changed back again to carrots, when her milk iu creased to about the usual standard. Poor land which needs improving ought to be manured before seeding to grass or clover when this can be done, that is, when manure can be had ; but a common practice is to seed the poor est land as a means of bettering its con dition. Land which is laid down to grass ought to be in the best condition in order to be profitable. Manure can not be applied to better advantage than to poor land when seeded to grass. Black Teeth ix Pigs. About two weeks ago, I had a fine Berkshire pig, about five months old, that was taken lame. 1 took it out of the pen and put it on the ground. It kept getting worse its hind legs became so weak it could not stand on them. I killed it, aud in a few days another one was also taken which had been in the yard some time. A neighbor told me to "knock out the black teeth," which I did, and now it is as well as ever. Walbridge, a German writer, says, he saw forty large bee-hives filled with honey, to the amount of 70 pounds each, in two weeks, by being placed near a large field of buckwheat in flower. SCTETTinC. Miriral and Vegetable H art. Min eral waxes are hydrocarbons, often crystallizable, and differing from each other in their temperature of fusion. They are frequently derived from re sinous trees buried in peat beds and rarely from lignites or coal formations. The principal variety used industrially is ozoKerit, sometimes cauieu uanum naratlin. It is less dense than water, of a waxy luster, and in one direction presents a conchoidal iracture. ureas. uig into thin translucent scales. Its color is a brownish green oy renecteu light or yellowish white. It is soft, flexible, cuts like wax, and softens at a low temperature. The odor is aromat ic, and becomes more bituminous when the wax is ruuoeo. r nciion aiso eiec tritiAa it netrativelv. It is fusible into a clear oily liquid, and burns with a bright name, it is soiuuie cluioij m turpentine and naphtha, more or less in ether, and slightly so in boiling al cohol, when the material separates in crystalline state on cooling, it is un attackable by sulphuric acid. Uzokerit is found in tne Lancasas. in England, and in Austria. In Moldavia, it is directly employed for illumination. being used in gas mating, anu iu mo manufacture of candles. A factory in Frankfort on the Oder prepares the material under the name of cereaine, and produces over 100,000 lbs. yearly. Ozokerit. in Durilied form, is largely nsed by perfumers anu in puarmacy in place ot beeswax, as it uinuers meuica- mitntB frvkni fwnniinir rancid. A similar substance, now but little employed, is hatchetiu or mineral adi pocere. This is of a yellowish white color, has a mother-of-pearl lustre, is of about the consistence of spermaceti. It is found in ltelginm, Moravia, Bo hemia, Wales, and England. It is scarcely attacked by nitric acid, but is completely carbonized by sulphuric acid. It is slightly soluble in boiling alcohol and ether, leaving a viscous and inodorous residue. Other mineral waxes ate neft-gil, found in the island of Tscbelukan in the Caspian Sea, near naphtha sources, and baikerite, ' from the vicinity of Lake Baikal. These are fossil waxes, or more piobably bitumens, as are also kir and elaterite. The latter, often termed elastic bitumen or mineral ca outchouc, is of less density than water, of a blackish color, and is elastic like rubber. It has lieen found in this coun try, near Woodbury, Conn., and in many parts of Great Britain. There is a large number of vegetable waxes but slightlv known. Some are secreted by insects, which absorb the sap of various plants. Others are de rived from the exudations of palm tiw), Th fnnrruirin rerifera. a Bra zilian tree, bears leaves from the glands of which carnauba wax is obtained. The commerce in this material exceeds 2.OU0.0UO lbs. vearlv. In the Andes there exists the cerorylon antlieola, which also yields a material known as palm wax. La Suture. Various Kinds of Camphor. Cam phor is camphor to most persons, few knowing or cariug whether it is all the nroilnrt. f nna or manv dilt'ereut 8 De fies of trees. The laboratory tells us that them arn various kinds. The or diuary camphor comes from Jap-n or the island of rormosa, out mere arc various liiirhl v esteemed species of cam phor obtained from Borneo and Suma tra. There is also another var,tv of medium qnality produced by the Jjiu- mea balsamitera. a Plant oi tne com posite order, which grows in the east of Asia. The Chinese denote it by the name Ngai, and make use of it in me dicine and the manufacture of ink. It produces harder and more brittle nuts than the laurel camphor. Like this latter, it is sublimed at an ordinary temnerature. but less easily, while the Borneo camphor does not show any trace of sublimation, even after several years. All camphors tloat in water, oui when the air in te interstices is ex hansted liv an air sumo. Ngai and Bor neo camnhor sink to the bottom, while the laurel raninuor swims. The site cific gravity of laurel camphor is .IW-i .1 . f . , f- 1 .1... f 1 1 I. mat oi gai i.uj, anu iu i uuiu"i 1.011. Laurel camphor melts at 3.V5 degrees Falir., Ngai at 50ft degrees, and liorneo at 4o. degrees. Liaurei cam nhor washed with hydrochloric acid and still moist, quickly changes to a colorless liquid. Ill the same circum stances Ngai and Borneo absorb the acid verv slowlv. and do not turn to a linnid till long after. Nitric acid chan ges riorneo campuor into an 011, wuicu, on the addition of water, deposits a substance identical with laurel camphor -i 1 ne same thing occurs with Ngai Iiurul Sex i orker. 'Enameled Bricl. The process of enameline is verv interesting aud may be briefly described. The enamel which comes in large cakes, bearing stron? resemblance to sulnhnr. is pas sed and re-Dassed through a Blake Brasher, breaking it into small pieces It ia then reduced to powder by grind ing in hoppers. After being reduced to the d.-sired fineness, it is mixed with a certain liquid in tin vessels, when it is ready to be applied to the bricks. This is done by men carefully dipping the side of the brick intended to be enameled into the mixture. Theenam el hardens almost instantaneously, and is finished by being placed in fire-clay vessels, live bricks in each, and baked in a large kiln. The company have three kilns, each capable of baking 20,000 bricks at once. The process of baking occupies sixty hours, so the company have a manufacturing capa citv of 1.000 enameled bricks per hour. The brick, after the enameling process is completed, is beautiful iu the ex treme. The enamel is Dut on in all colors and shades of color, and some of the finished bricks exhibited recently were of the most beautiful shades of green. tearl. and blue, as true aud del icate in tint as though they had been oil painted. The great lieauty of this enamel is that it is absolutely mde structible. the color unchangeable, and that nothing can permanently soil or mar its beauty. The great variety of color, and the durability of these bricks, is destined to work a revolution ia our style of buildings. Die Sonorous Qualities of Metals. M. Decbarme has recently concluded a series of experiments to determine the sonorous capabilities of different me tals. Cylindrical rods. 7' inches in length and 0 :W inch in diameter, were suspended by threads or rested on cork prisms. Each was struck by a piece of wood covered with rubber. As regards number of vibrations, lead was found to yield the lowest, or in the ra tio of (i'JO to the maximum of 2,702 for aluminum. The intermediate results are : For gold 976, silver 1,034. tin 1,101, brass l,:!0;i, bronze 1,31, zinc 1,422, cop per 1,462, cast iron 1,843, wrought iron 2,i:2, and steel 2,222. As regards du ration of sound, the following results were obtained in seconds of time and fractions: lead 03, tin a little less than 1, zinc 1, cast iron a little less than 2, copper about 5, wrooght iron 12, brass 14, bronze 24, steel 45. The author notes the fact that a steel rod, when supported on the sides of cork prisms, gives a sound which lasts but 25 sec onds, or but little over half the period as when the steel is suspended. Brass, on the contrary, sounds from 20 to 2o seconds when on the corks, instead of 24, as when suspended by the thread. A Hospital in a Crater. The Board of 1'hvsicians of the Neapolitan Hos pital for Incurables have determined to build a hospital in the crater of Holfa tara. lying between Naples and I'ozzu oli, in Southern Italy. The vapor that arises from the crater has been found to be charged not onlv with snlnhur but also with arsenic, and it is said that several persons suffering from lung diseases nave been restored to health by inhaling this vapor for a few weeks. Chloroform has been administered to a child during sleep, and a painful operation was performed, the child sleeping on and awakening in the morning unconscious of anything un usual naving occurred. Shell lime, which contains consider. able phosphorus, is superior to stone lime lor agricultural purposes. vonsnc. What to Eat. This term in medi cine, according to some, comprehends the whole regimen of life, with regard to air, meat, drink, sleep, watching, motion, rest, the passions,- retentions and excretions. I restrict the term to eating and drinking alone. The natural constitution or tne Doay oi man is sucn, that it can easily bear some changes and irregularities without . much - injury. Had it been otherwise we should be al most constantly put out of order by very slight causes. This advantage comes from those wonderful communi cations of the inward parts, whereby, when one part is affected another comes immediately to its relief. Thus when the body Is too full, nature causes eva cuation through some of the outlets; and for this reason, diseases from abso lute inanition are generally more dan gerous than from repletion, unless the latter be excessive: because we can more expeditiously diminish than in crease the juices of the body. ' Upon the same account though temperance be beneficial to all men, the ancient phy sicians advise persons in good ueaitn, now and then to eat and drink more abundantly than usual. But of the two, intemperance in drinking is safer that eating. If a man is obliged to fast, be ought to avoid all laborions work From satiety it is not proper to pass directly to sharp hunger, nor from hunger to satiety : neither will it be safe to indulge in absolute rest immedi ately after excessive labor, nor suddenly to fall to hard worn alter long iuiems. In a word, all changes in the ay of living should be made by degrees. The softer and milder kinds of liament are proper for children, and for youth the stronger. Old people ought to lessen the quantity of their food, and increase that of their drink ; but some allowance is to be made for custom, especially in cold climates like ours; for as in these the appetite Is keener, so is tne aiges tiou better performed. Milk pottage for breakfast is far more wholesome than tea with bread and butter; and, if made after the following manner, is in many respects preferable to milk alone. Let equal quantities oi miia anu waier be boiled up with a little oatmeal, which will break the viscidity of the milk and be at the same time more easily digested than the latter in an undiluted state. Besides, oatmeal is a much warmer nourishment than wheaten flour, and agrees better with weak stomachs. Gherkiss. Made in seven days; first day wash the cucumbers in cold water and place in the jar: make a brine of one-quarter of a small bag of salt and two gallons or water; scaiu an pour over; keep them down wun a piaus auu cover tight; second and third days scald the same brine and make a weak alum water; scald and pour over; use alum size of a hickory nut; fifth day draw off alum water; stew small quantities of garjic, mace, cinnamon, allspice, and black pepper mixed in one pint oi vine gar until black, anu pour over me pickles just beiore you pour ou mo gallons of scalding vinegar again; seventh day, just before you pour in the scalding vinegar for the last time, scatter over the top a good handful of stip-nr. one-ouarter pound or white mus tard seed and two green peppers; If kept in a coel place will keep years ; use pure cider vinegar. To Restore the Whiteness to Ivor v- bandleo Knives. Wash with soaped flannel and lukewarm water; then wipe very dry. Soak them occasionally In alum water that nas been ooueu anu allowed to cool. 1-et the handles lie for one hour In this, then remove them and brush them well (say witn a nan brush). After this take a clean linen towel, dip it In cold water, squeeze it out, and while wet wrap it around the handles, leaving them in it to dry grauu allv. as if dried too rapidly out of the alum water they will be Injured. If properly managed, this process will whiten them. n.nives, alter using, should be wiped with 6oft paper, re moving the grease, etc.. then placeihin a deep can or vessel, keeping the handle above water, lukewarm, until washed, cleaned, and thoroughly dried. Paste. Glue and Whitewash. A scientific contemporary states that the decomposition of paste may be prevented by adding to it a small quantity of car bolic acid. It will not then become of fensive, as it often does when kept for several days, or when successive layers of paper are put on with paste. In the same way, the disagreeable smell which glue often has may tie prevented. If a few drops of the solution be added to ink or mucilage they will not mold.- For whitewash, especially when nsed in cellars and dairies, the addition of one ounce of carbolic acid to each gallon will prevent mold and the disagreeable odor which sometimes taints the milk and meat kept iu such places. Carrots Instead or Eggs. An ex change says: It Is not generally known that lioued carrots, when properly pre pared, form au excellent substitute for eggs in puddings. They must, for this purpose, be boiled and mashed, and passed through a coarse cloth or hair sieve strainer. The pulp is then intro duced among the other ingredients or a pudding, to the total omission of eggs. A pudding made up in this way is much lighter than where eggs are used, and is much more palatable. On the prin ciple of economy, this fact is worthy of the prudent housewile 8 attention. Rra Bread. Set the sponge with wheat flour, the same as for wheat bread. After the siionge has raised well, mix the dough with rye flour, working it well : after the dough has raised well, mold it into loaves, and raise again, isake on an oven bottom, and when almost done, take the loaves out of the oven and wash them on top with a little brown sugar and water. and then set them back to finish baking. Those who like caraway seeds in rye bread, can put them In while mixing the dough. Hulled Corn. Soak over night In warm water, in the morning put it on in an iron kettle, with warm water enough to cover it. To each quart of corn 1 put a rounding tablespoonful of soda: boil until the bulls come off readily, then wash In several clear waters, and after it is thoroughly washed, put it on to boll again in clear water, Boil until tender, and then salt it and let it boil a little longer. Turn into a sieve and drain thoroughly. Eat hot or cold, in milK. Milk and Atmospheric Impurities, Attention has been called in the daily papers to a practice prevalent in some parts or the country which appears to Il lustrate the power possessed bv milk or absorbing atmospheric impurities, it is that of placing a saucer of new milk in a larder to preserve meat or game from taint. It is said that not only does it answer that purpose, but the milk, after a few hours, becomes so bad that no animal will touch it. If you are made miserable with chills and fever, dissolve fifteen grains of citric acid in a cup of hot coffee, and drink it just before the chill attacks you. It has been known to cure the worst cases of this disease. Lime, lemon, or sour orange juice will have the same effect. To preparb an egg for an invalid Beat an egg until very light; add sea soning to the taste; then steam until thoroughly warmed through, but not hardened this will take about two minutes. An egg prepared in this way will not distress even very sensitive stomachs. JIi.nce .Meat. Mince steak or roast beef very fine; add cold water enough to make a gravy. Let it heat through, anu wnen justattne ooiung point shake iu a little flour. Never allow it to boil up, as boiling hardens the meat. Serve with nice toast. HUIOKOCS. Shb Simply Counted Thim. "There are just exactly seven real gentlemen in.. this audience," observed a Chicago young lady to her escort, as he came back to his seat, smiling and chewing on a clove, between acts, at the opera one night this week. "rlow do you arrive at souenutiea ndmberr" he softly inquired, as be dropped into the seat. "By Simply counting tnem," repnea she. roguishlv: "when the curtain rlmnned last time. I counted all who didn't have to go out to see a man!'" The voung man started, hemmed, ano seemed very anxious to have the next part of the evening's performance start in. Chtcaijo Journal. A beggar accompanied by bis dog. stands at a Paris street corner. He tiis nlava a nlacard: "Have pltv on the blind." He is caught attentively re garding a coin dropped into his cup. "Aht yu can see then." "Yes." "Why then the placard?" It is not for myself I beg. It la my dog who is blind." t It is difficult to explain the workings of the youthful mind. A boy who will listen indifferently to the sublimest truths of theology will be roused to the acutest interest by the progress of a caterpillar over the collar of the bald beaded man in the pew in front of him. A Dasbcrt school teacher has hit upon an Ingenious device for punishing children who laugh in school. She stands them on a chair, with a cloth over their heads. This knocks the levity out of them, and adds mightily to the scenery of the room. Danbury Setes. Lady "Are those the hardest boot brushes you have?" Shopkeeper "Oh, ves m'ii ; fact Is, m'm, they're generally considered too hard for boots, m m, and are used by laundresses to seruo gents shirts and collars, m'm. They're the hardest brushes made, m'm?" "Fcssy monkey," said Mrs. Parting ton, as she saw him patiently sitting, "but be sets as if be had the plumbago In th hack, and 1 could wisn mere im more hair on his reprehensible tail. Mimot vet believe, neither, mat they're our posterity." Iiiti Subscribes fexcited aud point ing to an objectionable article) "What does that mean? Every statement is false." Editor (gazing reflectively at the article in question)"! snouiun wonder if the whole article was a typo graphical error." A dreamy philosopher has discovered that mosquitoes are animated by tne souls of wicked men who have gone to their last account. If this is so a good manv wicked men's souls are being plastered up agaiust bed-room walls "Cax you speak German?" enquired a merchant of a young gentleman ap plying for the position of foreign cor respondent. "S-o, n-o-t exactly," was the reply: "but I have a brother who can play the German flute." "Pompey. what aradat what goes when de waggon goes, stops when de waggon stop; It am no use to de waggon, and the waggon can't go with out it?" "I gib it up, Clem." "Mhy de noise, ob course." A Norwich mas calls himself on his card "a temperance bootmaker." lhe need of temperance boots is apparent, and, though they're not generally drunk, it's a notorious Tact that they're often very tight. I never did see such a wind and storm," said he. "And pray, sir," in quired a would be wit, "since you saw the wind and the storm, what might their color be?" "J he wind blew and the storm rose." At this season the Question which interests a boy is not so much whether his life will be crowned with glory and honor, as whether his new winter vest is going to be made out of his father's old trousers. A beautiful but blind young lady recovered her sight after marriage. On hearing this an old bachelor wickedly observed that it was no uncommon thing for people's eves to be opened by matrimony. "It was too bad to sentence that sick old man to prison for life," said a sym pathizing author at the close of a trial. "Ves. poor fellow 1" said another; "he won't live to serve out half his sentence." ThEi tried to scare a man in Missouri by threatening to tar and feather him ; but he replied : "Come on with your old tar; I've been there six times, and I've got a receipt ror washing it on." "It is curious," said Totter, "why men will pay a dollar to go into a snake show, when for a less sum expended it barrel-house whisky they can get. up a whole menagerie of their own." "When is the best time to pick apples? This is a very simple question. The best time for such work is when the f irmer is not looking and there is no big dog in the orchard. "What is a camp meeting?" asked a little boy of another. "Camp meeting," said the other gravely ; "why, it's a place where they have Sunday every day in the week." "What a blessing it is," says a hard working Chicago Irishman, "that night niver comes on 'till late in the day when a man is tired and can't work any more at all, at all." A Frenchman got exceeding angry with a waiter at an English hotel. You rascal!" exclaimed he, "I blow your nose for yon !" "What did you give fur that horse?" inquired a friend. "My note" "Cheap enough." The young man who wrote and asked his girl to accept a "bucket" of flowers became a little pale when sl'e said she wooden t ware it. A brewer having been drowned iu one cf his own vats, "Alas? poor fel low," said Jekyll, "floating on his owu watery bier I" What is the difference between the ace of trumps and a musical instrument? One is a pet trump, and the other a trum-pet. Two enterprising lawyers in New York are named respectively Yard aud Furlong. Do they belong to the Union League? A bull-frog is never entirely "broke" financially. He always has a green back, you know. "Sure, which is the entrance out?" asked an Irishman at a railway station, the other day. "The Indian Department marked "U. S.I. D." "U Divide" eh ? bids are Steal, I Why ought a cobbler never to "peg out?" He's supposed to be ever-lasting. '. When ought mariners to have fruit at sea? When they stem the currents. When is a blow from a lady welcome ? When she strikes you agreeably. Advice to young men about to settle down settle up first. New school eloquence College oar- auons. Out-door relief A breath of air. Getting fat buying lard. fresh YOUTH'S C0IX17. Little Kindnesses. Brothers, J'8?8' did you ever try the effect which little acts of kindness produce upon that charmed circle which we call nonieT We lov to receive little favors our selves, and how pleasant the reception of them makes the circle ! To draw up the arm-chair, and get the slippers Tor father; to watch if any little service can be rendered to brother; to help brother, to assist sister, how pleasant it makes home ! A little boy has a hard lesson given him at school, and his teacher asks him if he thinks he can get it : for a mo- nont or Twr. tha little fellow hang8 down his head, but the next he looks brightly up. . ' . "I can get my sister to help me, he says. That ia right, sister ; help little brother and you are binding a tie round his heart that mar save him in many an hnnr of tomntntion. "I don't know how to do this sum. but brother will show me," saysanoth At- littln nnn. Siatr. I've droDDed a stl ten iu my tnittinir : I tried to Dick it up, but It ha. v-nn flown And I can't fix lt The little girl's face is flushed, and he watches her sister with a nervous anxiety while she replaces the -naugn t atirjli V "Oh, 1 am so giad : sue says. v uo receives it again from the bands of her sister, all nicely arranged. "You are a pood irirl. Marv." "Bring it to me sooner the next time, and then it won't get so bad," said the gentle voice of Mary, lhe little one bounds away with alight heart to hn- iati liMf- rnalr . If Marv had not helped her, sue would have Inst her walk in the gar- Hen. Knrvlv it. ia hotter to do as Mary did than to say, "Oh, go away, and don't trouble me:" or to mold the little one all the time you are performing the trilling favor. Little acts of kindness, gentle words. loving smiles, strew the path of life with dowers ; they make the sunshine brighter and the green ear id greener anil H who bade na "love one anoth er," looks with favor upon the gentle and kind-hearted, and lie pronounces the weak blessed. A Post-OJUe in India. X post-ofiiee in that country is a dark, bamboo nut, only lighted by a lamp, whien is notn inr more than a wick in a sort of shal low eonner nan. more like a large ink- stand than a lamp. Inside the places you find some men busy doing wnat they call "sorting letters and you are asked to throw your letter in among the rest, by way of posting it. You feel much inclined not to do it for it seems to you you may as well throw it any where, while you are about it, as to toss it upon the heaps of other letters lying about. There are plenty of other people there, who are standing about, looking on, evidently with nothing to do, and having no business where they are. Bat if you try to hint this, or ask the Dostmaster what they are doing there, he answers: "This man. Sahib I Oh! he is my brother." "And this man T" you say, pointing to one who had been very industrious, indeed, in looking on at other .people working. "He? Oh! he has married my sister." So, of course, you can say no more ; though you don't see that being the postmaster's great-garndfather would give a man anything to do with the letters or the post-ofiice ; and you walk away, feeling very much as if you had just dropped your letter out of your pocket, instead of having taken it to the post-office. But if you were to wait until the end, you would see all the letters sorted and fastened up quite safely in their paper bags, aud taken away to be sent to their different ad dresses. Good and Bad Apples. One day Ro bert's father sawhim playing with some boys who were rude and unmannerly. He hadobservedforsome time achange for the worse in his son, and now he knew the cause. He was very sorry. but he said nothing to Kobert at the time. In the evening he brought from the garden six beautiful rosy-cheeked ap ples, put them on a plate and then pre sented tbem to Kobert. He was much pleased at his' father's kindness and thanked him. "Von must lay them aside for a few days, that they may be come mellow," said his father. And Kobert very cheerfully placed the plate with the apples in his mother's store room. Just as he was putting them aside, his father laid on the plate a seventh appie, which was quite rotten, and de sired him to let it remain there. "But, father," said Kobert, "the rot ten apple will spoil all the others. "Do you think so?" Why should not the fresh apples rather make the rot ten ones f reshl"' said his father. Aud with these words he shut the door of the room. Eight days afterward he asked his son to open the door aud take out the fruit. Kobert did so. and tound that the one decayed apple had infected all the others. The moral of this little sketch must be plain to all. The goodcan sel dom improve the bail, bat asso ciation with corrupting influences will almost invariably contaminate the pure in heart and reduce tbem to a common level of wickedness. Tlie Doa 7 stole Huts. Xot long ago a new kind of robber was caught n Pans, not far from a hatter s shop. It was a dog; and he had a new hat between his teeth, and with it was scampering along, as if to get out of the way of the police. Vt hen some one tried to take the hat away from him, he would not let it go : and there was a fight which ended vtry badiy tor the hat. On inquiry it was found that the dog was owned by a man who had trained him to go where certain things were exposed before a shop, for sale, seize one of them, and run off. The hatter said be had lost no less than six hats iu this way daring the week. "Is Greece in Turkey I" asked a boy of his father at the breakfast table. this morning. "Why no: what makes you ask such a foolish question 1'' re sponded the father. To which the boy replied: I thought all turkeys had grease in them." He was ordered to leave the talkie at once. ye ie l ork Ex press. Bertie : (who has a difference with his sister about a story) "You are wrong, Katie. But I won't argue with you, because papa says it's wrong to argue with a woman ; and I can't call you a fool, because that would be be low the dignity of a gentleman." All for the Bett. A devout philosopher came to a town whose gates were closed. Hungry and thirsty, he was obliged to pass the night in the open air. He said, "What God sends is good," and laid himself down. Near him stood his ass ; also a burning lantern, on account of the insecurity of the country. But a stona arose and ex tinguished his light; also a lion came and devoured his ass. He awoke, found himself alone, and said, "What God sends is good," and waited quietly for the dawn of day. When he came to the gates, he found them open, the town devastated, robbed and plundered. A gang of robbers bad invaded it daring the night, and had killed or taken the inhabitants away prisoners. He was spared. "Said I not." exclaimed he, "that all that God sends is good t Only, generally it is not un til the morning that we see why He denied us something in the evening. Perseverance. All the performances of human art at which we look with praise or wonder are instances of the resistless force of perseverance; it is by this that the quarry becomes a pyramid, and that distant countries are united with canals. If . a man were to compare a single stroke of a pick axe, or of one impres sion ol tne spade, with the general de sign ana last result, he would be over whelmed by the sense of their dispro portion; yet these pettv ooerations. incessantly continued, in time surmount the greatest difficulties, and mountains are levelled and oceans bounded by the sienuer lorce or human beings. a. aTatartaaa The London Telegraph perpetrates the following: "-wnen tne look out for the locomotive.' Such ia the ominous notice painted on mo . im posts in the streets of the most populous guberba of every American town. It means that when a bell la heard jang ling, It will be one placed over the mld-dl- of the boiler of a steam engine drag t ir,c train of cars which have ir iuiuxi from the depot, and win philosophically pursue tneir the crowded thoroughfare en route for the far West or the far East, as the case mav be. The track is neither walled nor fenced In ; to carry " J a viauuCl over the houses would be too expensive ... . ,1.. to suit American notions r railway economy, ana is iounu .11 ...linnilrr. that -wnen tue hell rlnra' the locomotive way be ex pected to come plunging and snorting along. Unfortunately, In American cities, as everywhere else, there are a number of deaf, purblind, nervous, anu stupid people to say nothing of wildly r-nii.'snmn Yankee children: and the consequence is that, lustily as the bell may ring, a considerable proportion oi the population, especially me juveniles. do not look for the locomotive, but get crushed to death or miserably mutilated beueath the monster's pitiless wheels It ts difficult to visit an American in firmary without finding some of the beds occupied by the victims of street railway accidents." , Tk Tra EcaaBy f Llf. Th true economv of hnnian life looks at ends rather thau incidents. and-adiusta expenditures to a mora scale of values. De Quiucey pictures a woman sailing over the water, awake ning out of sleep to find her necklace untied and one end banging over the stream, while pearl after pearl drops from the string beyond her reach; while she clutches at one just falling, another drops beyond recovery. Our days drop one after another by our carelessness, like pearls from a string, as we sail the sea of life. Prudence re quires a wise husbanding of time to see that none of these golden coins are spent for nothing. The waste of time mnra aerions loss than the extrava gances against which there is such load acclaim. . There are thousands who do nothing bnt lounge and carouse from morning till midnight drones ' iu tue numau hive, who consume and waste the ho ney that honest worters wear inem selves oat in making, and insult the day by their dissipation and debauch. 1 here are ten thousand idle, irivoious creatures, who do nothing but consume and waste the honey that honest hands accumulate, and entice others to live as useless and worthless lives as they do. Were every man and woman honest toilers, all would have an abundance of everything, and half of every day for recreation and culture, lhe expendi ture of a few dollars in matters of taste is a small matter in comparison with the wasting of months and years by thousands who have every advan tage society can otter, and exact every privilege it affords as a right. The ErMirrn er Animate. Animals, even of the least important snecies. sometimes resort to shifts and expedients, to defend and support their existence, so curious anwasiuuisu nru those observers who are most familiar with their habits. The little gossamer spider, having no wings, still finds its home in the upper air. Weaving a tiny kite of web and Hying it aloft by un winding athin kite string from its spin aret, it finally fastens the lower end to a twig, and climbs fearlessly up the filament, till at last it sits far above the earth and catches midges npon its floating raft in the airj This little for ager has been found sailing in the air nearly a mile high by balloon ists ! The male spider has usually a very poor show for liberty or even for life. Small and lean, weak ami cowardly, a mere speck by the side of his big blush ing sweetheart, she generally catches him when he first comes courting, spears him with her tierce mandibles, gnaws the quivering flesh off his bones and flings his polished skeleton into the sewer. She is heaitless and fero cious a coquette and a warrior. o- man's rights are carried to an extreme. The husband is not allowed to vote or to govern his own family. Before his brood of 1,000 children have climbed merrily upon their mother's back, she has generally made a breakfast off him, and his bones bleach in the bock yard. ScHExex's PtxMoxrc Syrup, for the Cure or Consumption, Coughs and Colds. The great virtue of this medicine Is that it ripens the matter and throws It out of the system, purifies the blood, and thus effects a cure. Schesck's Sea Weed Tonic, for the Cure of Dyspkpsia, IsuititaTioN, Ac. The Tonic produces a healthy action of the stomach, creating an appetite. forming chyle, and curing the most ob stinate cases of Indigestion. Schesck's Mandrake Pills, for the Cure of Liver Complaint Jfcc. These Pills are alterative, and produce a healthy action of the liver, without the least danger, na they are free from calomel, and yet more efficacious In re storing a healthy action of the liver. " these remedies are a certain cure lor Consumption, as the Pulmonic Syrup ripens the matter and purifies the blood. The Mandrake II lis act npon the liver, create a healthy bile, and remove all diseases of the liver, often a cause of Consumption. The Sea Weed Tonic gives tone and strength to the stomach, makes a good digestion, and enables the organs to form good blood ; and thus creates a healthy circulation of healthy blood. The combined action of these medicines, as thus explained, will cure every case of Consumption, if taken in time, and the use of the medicines per severed in. Dr. Schenck Is professionally at his principle office, corner Sixth and Arch Sts., Philadelphia, every Monday, where all letters for advice must be addressed. E. F. Knakrl'a Kilter Wine ot This truly valuable tonic has been so tho roughly tested by all classes of the commu nity that it is now deemed indispensable as a Tonic medicine. It costs but little, puri fies the blood and gives tone to the t-tomach renovates the system and prolongs life. Everybody should have it. For the cure of Weak Stomachs, General Debility, Indigestion, Diseases of the Stom ach, and for all cases requiring a tonic. This wine includes the most agreeable and efficient Salt of Iron we possess Citrate of Magnetic Oxide, combined with the most energetic of vegetable tonics Yellow Peru vian Bark. Do you want something to strengthen yon I Do you want a good appetite 7 Do you want to get rid of nervousness ? Do you want energy ? Do you want to sleep well ? Do you want to build up your constitu tion? Do you want to feel well ? Do you want a brisk and vigorous feeling? If you do, try KUNKEL'S UlTTEK WI.NE OF IRON. I only aak a trial of this valuable tonic. Beware of counterfeits, as Kunkel's Bit- Are You Going to Paint " Then Buy the N". Y. ENAMEL PAINT COS OHE3MIOAL. FA.X1ST AND SAVB OMiS-THIKU Till COST Of PAlNTlNli, and ret a paint that t Ml CU UASDMSaA lartTWICa- ASLO.NOaaaayatkerpaiBL la prepared ready for aaa hi WI1ITB or ANT COL0 la oa many thonaand of the flnoat braiding in tha country, many of which bar been palola-l "J JTJ aad aaw look aa well aa whan Arat painted. THIS CHKMICAL PAfST haa takaa FIRsT rKKMIlI"' twenty of tb.i'tateJ'aira of the l'am. 8AUPLR CAKOd o COLORS SKNI FKB. Addreaa "TV I. T. EH A MEL 00, 103 Chamtwn Bt, H. T, ar KILLE& BR03, 109 W.tar 8t. OlavaUail. lav Win, nf Tmn ia t H - ..... "ul lad. . u... . wu" u worm f .i manent ear of byspepaU and DT le as there are a number of imUAUoBl,, to the public. I would caution th. aity to purchase none bat the geajwj ele, manufactured by E. t. Keakd " havinr hia itaDD on lha mv au tie. The very fact that otken a5 ing to imitate this valuable rtmtdT its worth, and speaks volnmea is fa Get the genuine. E. F. Knnkel'. Sold only in l bottles. Sold br gists and dealers everywhere. F Tr kel. Proprietor, 253 North Nata V Philadelphia, Pa. ""a, Head and all complete In two hn o fee tilt head passes. Seat B!ii Stomach Worms removed bv Li t Pa. Send ror circular, or ask V drngglst for a bottle of Kcxxn.', JJ Stri p. It never fails. Price, n rr Sever Coacha matt Laa . alalata. t Canton, Bradford County, p. XOV. &t lj" Messrs. Seth W. Fowle A Son Z. Gentlemen About ten years apTJ' ter having had a severe attickjj 5 measels, 1 was troubled with t iTir ...... ..Vi unit w-ta thro.tai.1 . . sumption. My father having dfejT I lie age oi uiirvy-one, with consanv tion of the lungs, and my aunt hTt been carried off with the samt eni! plaint, It seems to be hereditary h family. At the time alluded to, I , induced to buy a bottle of Dr. w't u Balsam of Wild Cherry, and eta -! conscientiously, I believe it saved a, life. I was blacksmithlng at the n J and often felt pains in my chest a lungs, which the balsam relieved. I cheerfully give this statement, nj hope you may have success wisfc beneficial a preparation. Yours trait A. J. MfMrt'' 30 cents and fl a bottle. Sold br in d.itrri4ra ' cancer: S Trmtawnt. C. aiuarj, i., n Ku.ii.au Street. Pbils-Wt,,.- ft, rantni. Na Kaitr.Caawtica, Lcaau Slo-alur.kaa, Call oc nd tor partiralara. Bewaia ul frufe. 11-13-4 w ( - Fancy Carta, all -trht, with name 1. foavj .'J J. m. uuarap. aVnna Co.. 3 j. B an arrangement no erof tfuFt-r mpk parkaoor rran.fer MrEa. a-na l-r. atHtnp for p-t-.. Tt-T are htuMTrt v, tuL and easily trn-nrrt-l tn any eWn. ueK . L. r aTTES M CO., IU Wima at, W. I 11 15m Stock Speculaiic:. ADVICE AND rNFoRMATIOX FrRX!Bni TO TUE BE.-T MODE OF OPiKATINfc IS WALL STREET. OUR SPE LVLTY. Realizing Fronts In every case. Snil for our new Pamphlet entitled Stnlllf Sent free on application. W. F. HUBBELL 4 CO, Stock Broker, 46 Broad SU, 5. T. II rCHTC oor '""" Chrumo" fr. J.l AuLlllOa Ml-huK A 0., PbiU.Wfha.fi lu-L-a RFAItT FOR AF.T-TRE CENTENNIAL DESCRIBED AD ILLtsTII ATKII. A arnphle pa-pirlair f u klatarr. . . ..... . r ....k,,. ( rnu iiuimbb. aeaucrifti wmmimn rarltailin, (rnU oaja, iic rrofaeel' ltlatrmlrl, rwo.F . ainl m rkp- .If W iawmeaae'ly. .. M.II WleBled. Sn-I frr lull partaulir. 1 m, aili i lat rbMnre f IOO vr, to ra-lH mear j faat. Let tlieonlj rl table hwtur y. Hi-mtu . Pu! . 7.-: m .iwl, I'hil ! Ii-l". !- P A TTTTn AT avl - tXi U A lUil w,i.r, a-ammr - " i.fH-i.,1 " nl telling Imm will lulipna a and Jeeptembrr. l-L:-e AinaMavalloiiie, A ient wanted. Ostltwi OXeW " tree. TttCE A CO, Augusta, U o matter now al.jhtlT diklt ttulUlllJ Bountiea. increase aud m-pewet ctaiuvt niy a-ctalticA. Adtke free, lucloa ttaaiB. TH0S. . MICHAEL, Att'j, 707 Sansom St, Phiia, ft TEAS. Th clfrtire in In rltt ! pjrtrtV pro - LAU-tft tOaoro Aiiavnca iAae arttrlo pktw wrbOit r Irut cuntinuallj .BcrAtitin Agt-nta w&nteti Tiryaht Nt iDtlurment" V tit wtvtte tim fwrx arm': Iu Kobut W ELU, 43 Ycswj SL.VI, K O But Ltf. LOOP PK BELT READ & LIVE! ON"E person In eirrr four Is mptumt and two-thirds inus it- aictrd deln to at thev miller from y vril.KplBal HI rmtr. Fatrailyala, ealal leraac me-ait. A Debility- X"HU A LVS SPRLNti PAD btLI IKL X For the treatment and cure of Rnptnreand Her nia, patented 175, is Uie only stle ntinc Troa lnv-nt-d. Every physician endorses it at aitfl parinra hnr it t atirht. Katptatrod Manrra from oiil-fashlone' mrtailii-and uanl-nilihersprlnptflndeaiawfairt N-ud in.tio for sample Ttu circulars, ami dorx-nieuls of thousands who have N"-n curvt and of the li-aillng physicians In the tniwl Siatwi. lm:ul:n the great doctor and sureoo. ;r-i;orv. principal of th" St. Louis M-Mlcsl' ol les:e. All Ny a Is the B Traat ll lias cured a S-year rupture In nve weeas. wnd 1 cents for our weekly Truss paper, etc. Kr Howe, lhe paxeuu-e. 19 ruptured ou both sUej badlr. and iiaa been for SS wars, and he Inyentnl his .rat Traiaw for huusell only. 'e rnaka them for Men, Women and Children! who dally bl.-ss Mr. 11. for his Intention. THE HOWE FE1ALE HirFOITU to the best known for abdominal afrectloni. If you have a friend ruptured, do him a taw by sending us his naiue at once. v Address y A UOWK TRUSS CO.. Box 1170. . ouucU Bluff. I""- I- AOOO Traviilln? Ajrents wanted, states, Counties aud Townauips tor side. vfi-am forta At fraa. Ktunws A Co, rortlalaUlaii f AGENTS WANTED FOR HISTORY vENTEN'L EXHIBITION It ell Outer tlian anv other book, one ageni a 73 copie in tw. .ljr. Send for our eitra tera Agent-. Nvnu.iAl. FcaUSBlKj Co Philadelphia "ANAIKESIS." r. S. sua- EXTZBSALPILKBEEBT rrr rw m.tf. and n infallible r To prove It we send sanv pies fm to all applicant F. NEl'ST.-fcUTKR A CO- Sole Manuiaciun:" -ANAKEMS." Box 394. New York. ...,. iaxrre of rmmlrrfit.t In bnvtn the ASr o.- . r. . .... .... Aun.r.,l to ffet the (fen UK m fit vm " a m (itaerve thai the slifnaturv oi l 1 1 - i I f u Ti , i. . -a onr! lit I hi bOX. O0Dr-Ot i P.O.Vl-KEKY.AUTMW.n J3B PRINTING ITBATXT KXSCTOD AT THIS OOTC1 'I"' pATt -AW I .1.. AAA J 77 "- taWT . lllr-u-Wewilv J iAyJ V 1" r a-wt-.t'.- 'all k .' awl' . ' rtOatPBESS wrj,; 7 rKMrowie"' w 'i exTTenuspr-im. aieiHei rf r-X-i ill 1lll. rnuiWieaiiruffvwrT:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers