t'eut of En. Passion Week in Paris may be termed t he "feast of eggs." Every good Cathe 1 e not only fasts every Friday through out the year, but for week together at Easter. The Church does not allow at any time any flesh food; but eggs way be eaten in any quantity. On the first day In Passion Week everybody presents every one else with some little preseut emblematical of an egg in some shape or other, which is known as Paschal egg 4 (ccufi det Pasque). Among a people so iugeuious In Uifles as Parisians, the opportunity is not lost, so that egg shaped articles are to be bad In every conceivable variety of material. Oue would think that the once Imperial Eagle of France had summoned all the birds of the air to come to Paris, build their nests in shop windows, and there deposit their eggs; for, go where you ill, look into whatever shop you faucy, there jou see tggs Irom the size of a - caraway com fit, such as is found In the uest of the humming-bird, to one as large as a bowl the ostrich or emu's egg. The toy shops are full of egg suaped boxes; within tlieui are dolls and playthings. Here you have choco late egs full of cream where the yolk should be; there you have sugar eggs filled with liquor; and again, ivory eggs, within which is a scent-bottle. Passing along the streets are women with barrows, crying aloud, "Dts auft! Dtsauj!" eggs! eggs! On their per ambulating boards are piled two lots of eggs, one white, natural ; the other red, cooked in log-wood water. Thus red eggs, ready boiled, are sold in every street in Paris ; and aut runes is the synonym of aufs de Patque, in their literal seuse meaning Paschal or Easter eggs, and in the more acceptable oue, the presents usually giveu at Easier time. aouie of the nests are beautiful works of art. Here is a stoat or weasel stealth ily climbing up a tree to suck the eggs, with the parent bird in battle array, . ready to drive the intruder away. Here again a cuckoo has turned out a little chaffinches' egg, which lies broken on the ground below, while she has left her own for a foter-parent to hatch. Altogether in Paris Easter eggs are oue of its sights, and well worth seeing. The rank of Princess does not shield her from a salute on the cheek by the lowest boor that presents her an egg at Easter, in Kusla; and the custom of distributing peace, or pack ege the Passover or Easter egg is still observed by the peat-anty in different parts of England; while the young people of Scotland, where the festival has been suppressed lor centuries, still throw aboutand play with hard-boiled, colored eggs, which they finally eat. In the days when old and young alike received these eggs, the demand for them was such that they commanded oftentimes great prices. After they were boiled hard, and coiored in red, violet, blue, green, etc., dyes, Inscrip tions and various designs were traced ou them; and those thus ornamented were exchanged by those sentimei. tally Inclined, very much after the 6atne fashion as are the Valentines of the present day. The plainer ones were saved by the youth, and used on Easter Monday in playing ball, which, by the way, was a favorite game. On Easter Monday, even the clergy indulged in the delights of this game of ball, which men, women and chil dren reveled in. In many instances it formed a part of their service; bishops and deans taking a ball to church, and, at the commencement of the anthem, while dancing to the music, threw it to the choristers, who handed it back and forth to each other during the singing. After this service they ail retired for refreshments, which usually consisted of a dish of bacon, with tansy pudding this last symbolical of the bitter herbs they were commanded to take at the Paschal feast. Female Irueliata. WjmeD have often been the cause of duels, from the heroic age when Paris and Menelaus fought for the far-famed Helen of Troy to these latter days of the Bennett and May embroglio. Men heroic or foolish enough have always been found to take up the fair one's quarrel's, but that they should deign iua.-culine assistance and shy their own castors seems shocking to civilization and disgraceful to womankind. Mad ame de Villeclien says that the Henri ette Sylvie, of Moliere, fought a duel with short swords with another female, botli being disguised In masculine attire. Madame Dunoyer, in her letters, speaks of a lady of Beaucaire who fought a duel with a young lady of rank, and so enraged were the combatants that the issue wonld have been fatal but for the timely interference of attendants. Two ladies of easy virtue fought one on the Boulevard St. Antoine, and hacked up each other's faces and bosoms in ap proved style, says De La C mbiere. Mademoiselle Durieux fought her lover, Aulonotti, in open street. But the most celebrated female duelist of mod ern times was the actress, Maupid. j From Scranet the fencing master, who' was one of her lovers, she learned the art, and never let slip an opportunity to pnt her lessons in practice. When the actor Lumeny insulted her she de manded satisfaction, and when he re fused it, she stole his watch and snuff box, which she kept as trophies. At tending a ball one evening, she 'nsulted a lady, aud was requested to leave the r.xm. "I will," said she, "if those gentlemen who warmly espouse the lady's cause will accompany me." Three gentlemen followed. She killed them all, received pardon from Louis X.IV , and soon after repaired to Brus sels, where she became the mistress of the Elector of Bavaria. During the Regency, the Marquise of Nelse and the Countess Polignac fought with pis tols for the possession of the rakish Due de Richelieu. In 1827 a lady of Cha teauroux called out a -man who bad slapped her husband's face, and severe ly wounded him. The gay and festive Lola M outer, who now sleeps at Green wood, was in lavor of dueling. In 1846 she was mistress, at Paris, of Dujarier, the editor of La Preue, and when her paramour fought with Bouvallon, editor of the Globe, she said in giving her testi mony at th trial cf Bouvallon : I was a better shot than Dujarier, and if Bou vallon wauted satisfaction I would have fought him myself." Poor dead Du- jarier had left her most of his fortune, and she shortly proceeded to Munich, where the young King of Bavaria fell a slave to her charms and created her the Countess of Landsfeldt. Statistics show thatihe annual con sumption of egtrs in the United States is about 10,COO,OUO barrels. The oultry marketed or consumed in 1877, is esti mated at 6S').000,UU0 pounds, ol the value ol 168,000.000. One winter evening about fifty years ago, a post-chaise, with a single gentle man inside it, drove op to the little inn on the Pentland Firth, in the north of Scotland, where passengers who were going to cross to the Orkneys usually spent the night. The gentleman, whom we will call Mr. Mac T., v. as the owner of a large estate, and an old house which had belonged to his family for hundreds of years, in the Mainland, or chief of the Orkney Islands, and was now about to visit his property. It was a blustering, stormy night, but that only made more pleasant the cigar and the glass of whiskey, and the crackling wood fire by which Mac T. sat chatting with the landlord, who was an old friend both of Ms father and himself, and who w as proud of entertaining the "young laird," as he called him, with his wildest tales of adventure on the sea. They did not, however, sit lite, for the Orkney packet sailed very early in the morning, and Mac T. soon found himself in his cosy well-appointed little bedroom. The wind was chanting a grand Berserker melody, and the sea was roaringadeep bass accompaniment. Mac T. loved these sounds, for they had often been the lullaby of his child hood, and soon fell asleep. For some hours he slept without an linage or a thought reaching his mind; but at length, w hen the morning was glimmering grey in the east, a strange dream came to trouble him. lie dreamt that he was in the ancient banqueting hall of his own house, in the Mainland, sitting at the head of a very long table. The banqueting hall was now in reality almost a ruin, but in his dream Mac T. saw it hung w ith tapestry, and blazing with a hundred lights. The table was well filled on both sides, and bethought he glanced curiously down its length to see who his guests were. As he looked he shuddered in his dream. Those w ho sat at the table with him were all his dead ancestors for many generations back. He knew their faces and dresses well from their portraits in the picture gallery. Next to hiin sat his own father, who had died about a year before. And at ths bottom of the table sat a fair-haired man in a dress of skins who was a Xorse chieftain, the founder of the family. It seemed to him that he sat for some miuutes as if spell bound, w hile the spectres murmured together in low, hollow tones. At length they all rose, and slow ly, one by one, in turns, left the hall. But be fore they went, each one paused at the door, and turning, raised his hand In a w arning attitude, fixed his eyes on Mae T., and said in a deep voice, the word "beware." "The packet starts in twenty minutes, sir," cried a loud voice at the door, rousing Mac T. suddenly from sleep. Confused at first, yet soon remember ing where he was, he sprang out of bed and began hurriedly to dress himself. Being a bad sailor, his first glance was naturally enough at the sea, close to which the inn stood. The wind had risen in the night. The waves thun dered on the shore, and the little Orkney packet was tossing up and down like a limpet shell. As he gazed, his strange dream rose up with a sudden distinctiveness before Mac T.'s mind. He w as infected w ith a good deal of thorough Scotch superstition. Besides he did not much like the look of the sea, and so he resolved not to go till to-morrow. That day the Orkney packet was lost with every man on board, and Mac T. and his little wife, w ho was left at home w ith the babies, had to thank that warning dream for his life. lie Found the Klght Man. A thin old man with a pinched face, arrayed in a shiny black suit with a whitish appearance near the seams, and a faded, weather beaten black tile, was standing on the corner of Fourth and Race streets the other day, near the peauut stand, looking first up one street, then down the other, then at the chest nut roaster, then up to the tops of the buildings, and then at the niaiiy signs scattered about on the walls. His manner was hesitating and troubled, and soon attracted the attention of "Old Dan," the hand expressman, who makes his headquarters on that corner, and stepping up he said : 'Are you lost, stranger, or w as you lookin' for somebody V 'You dou't happen to know a man by the name Manxley, do you?' Joseph Manxley,"theold gentleman auswered, with another question. 'Yes,' said the expressman. 'I kuow a feller by the name Manxley, but I don't know what his first name is. What's he foller?T asked the stranger, steadying himself on his cane to keep his hacking cough from throwing him down. 'I don't know exactly, but I guess he kind 'o tinkers around the O. & M. freight depot.' 'What sort of a looking feller is he?' the old man asked, with much anxiety, removing his hat and planting it tight ly on his head to prevent the wind from making way w ith it. 'Well, squire,' said the man of the cart, 'he's a spindle-shanked, long-legged, pipe-stem sort of a hairpin, as lean as a fondiin,' and as homely as a yaller dog.' 'That sounds like Joe,' said the old man with dancing eyes; go on go on.' 'His hair redder'n a country school house.' Closer an closer. 'An' as for freckles, why sir, as sure as you are a bald-head, he's got 'em as thick as they can stick. I was along with him two or three Sundays ago when he went to get a deg- rrytpye took, an' I hope to never sleep if the boss of the shop didn't have to give him four heavy coats of powdered chalk before lie could even get started on a picture that didn't look as though it was badly worm-eaten. 'Better au' better,' exclaimed the old man rubbing his hands; 'how's his eyes ?' 'The worst case of squint you ever saw can't look at a man without turn ing half way round.' . 'That hits him to a dot that's Joe, sure. But how's gait outside of looks. Is it stuck up any? Got any conceit about him?' and the old man held his breath until the answer came. 'Stuck up) Conceited! Great grip sacks ! but I should say so, exclaimed Dan, with a laugh that wakened up the old peauut seller who was fast asleep in his box. 'Well, I should remark. hy, bless your heart, squire, you ought to see hi in sailing down town on Saturday night with his store clothes on, an' his hat hangia' on his ear, with his knees hittin' him in the breast at every step. Why doggone it all, you'd swear from his looks that George Wash ington's overcoat wouldn't make him a vest. 'Hurrah !' shouted the old man. jump ing till his bones creaked, 'that's my son! That's Joe that's him, an' no mistake this time. Where can 1 find thU boy?' AGRICULTURE. Swnrr Cora. As a forage crop tweet corn is growing In favor and rapidly supplanting other fodder crops in the estimation of the farmer. My own carefully formed opinion is that well cured sweet corn fodder is worth more than its weight in any other dry fod der, not excepting hty, while there is no green crop to fill the place of sweet corn to feed in the Summer and Automn months. Every farmer could carry a few more cattle, and keep them in bet ter condition, keep the cows from shrinking the supply of milk during the hot season, and in a season of drought, prevent disastrous loss by growing a few acres of sweet corn. There is no better food for work horses fian wilted corn fodder, while for fit ting np horses for sale it is superior to any other food, giving a glossy coat and putting on flesh rapidly. Ho dry fodder is cured with less expense. My plan Is to cut and when withered bind in con venient bundles and set up in small shocks. After they are thoroughly dried put into larger shocks and feed as re quired. I can grow from six to nine tons per acre, and the cattle will eat clean and thrive. Sow in drills with corn drill, or grain drill by removing teeth and closing seed orlfljes not needed. Cultivate thoroughly, cut when the ear is well formed, and you will find growing sweet corn for fodder a good investment. In these times of low prices one must either cheapen or increase production, or both, to make farming pay. Sweet corn fodder will do this by giving mere flesh and milk, and enabling the farmer to keep more stock on the same acreage by feeding during the hot, dry season. Fr oh thk Farm. We often hear the remark, "How dull farming must be;" or "Who would live in the coun try, where there are no opportunities for fun?" Well then if you want to know what genuine fun is, just pitch in and help to break a pair of three-year-old steei s. First, you catch a steer and tie him to a post in the barnyard. Then you catch the other one and tie a rope .round his horns. Then your dad gets the yoke and between you two and the hired man you get it fastened on their necks. Then the old man tells you to untie the rope gently, while he aud the hired man hold the critters. Just as you slip the knot, away go the steers with a bawl and a bellow or rather a pair of bellows and there arises a con tused mixture of horns, heels, tails, ropes, dad, hired man and curses on your stupidity, that reminds you of the picture of a volcanic eruption in the old geographies. And that's only the beginning of the fun. Bye-aud-bye dad gets hold of one rope and the hired man gets hold of the other and they run races down the lane the steers "neck- and neck" and the old man performing the curse on the serpent. Then there is the time in haying when dad under takes to show you how to mow over a bumble-bees' nest. He ain't afraid of these bees, nor needn't be just go right along they never sting unless you fight 'em; and then Mwhish!"get out o' the way I and dad's swatb comes to a sudden stop and he departs for the house and hartshorn on a dead run, at the business end of a dozen yellow- legged bumble bees. Oh, no, there isn't any fun on a I arm I Good stock, of the best breeds, can be purchased at very low prices tills spring. This is especially true of thor oughbred pigs. The low price of pork products tends to lessen the demand for pigs, and breeders are willing to accept prices wnlcn would nave heretofore been no temptation. We shall not be surprised to find young pies In good demand within the next year and be lieve that it Is a good time now to buy for the improvement of stock. As a general rule, it is a good time to engage in the production of any crop or class of stock when it Is low. Especially is this true of products or classes of stock the demand for which is limited, or which can be soon produced in quantities to overstock the market. We might enumerate tobacco, broom-corn and hops; and the same is true of pigs which multiply so rapidly that a single season affords time for stocking the country. Thk low price of clover seed should induce farmers to sow it on lands used for oats if there is any doubt about fol lowing by wheat. On lands a little too wet for wheat, but fair for oats, it will be wise to sow clover and let it remain for a crop next y t, for ten to one it will bring a better return than wheat would, and it will certainly be better for the land. If wheat is desired, the clover can be turned next year after the mowing, and no time will be lost. OppreMlre Flowers. Almost all those charming lilaceous flowers, the hyacinth especially, exhale a perfume which, however sweet when first perceived, affects the nerves, brings on headache and loss of appetite, end ing in unaccountable indisposition, its real cause being unsuspected. Many bulbs supposed to be innocent in this respect, because no scent is perceived w hen they blossom outdoors, really are not so ill the confined and warmer air of a living room. Example the annual ly welcome snow drop, of which Mrs Barbauld wrote that it looks as if Flora "By some transforming power Had changed an telcle into a nower, its name and hoe the scentless plant retains, While winter linger la lu lev veins." But bring a clump of blooming snow drops into the comfortable temperature which your apartments keep up in Feb ruary and you will discover that the snowy milkflower, galanthus nivalis, so far from being scentless, gives out emanations of sulllcient power to op press your forehead with a heavyweight. A great admirer of hyacinths, who could not stand their smell, used to grow them in a frame in his garden, gratify ing his passionate fondness of their beauty by going to look at them twenty times a day. They can also be cultivated so as to be seen w ithout being smelt, in a marquise or miniature outside green house a double window, in fact, with a wider space than usual between the two sashes provided the ventilation of the room is independent of drafts from that direction. The same remarks apply to the whole narcissus genus, to the jonquil especial ly. Beautiful and easy to force as is the lily of the valley, it is open to the same objection. Less potent In their influ ence are the lovely blue Siberian squill the bright little scarlet single Von TholL tulip, and the dog's-tooth violet. both pink and white (why so named I a mystery), with its pleasing mottled foliage, which alone ought to insure its acceptance as a window bulb, and the curious fritallarv or chessboard flower. The less strongsmellingot the winter flowering bulbs, as crocuses in all their different hues, may be grown in perfor ated globular pots, which, in fact, might be called omnibus flower-pots, and which are not a new invention. but probably a contrivance of the Dutch for the cultivation and enjoyment in doors of the early spring bulbs of which they are so fond. A Dru. Hfadact, roerrrBNMg. Lew Spirits and No Appetite ate some of the Inrtleatl ns of a Bilious Attack, wising from a Torpid Liver. Dr. Java? ttsnailve Flits will si on restore ine Liver to action, drive all ajmptnms ot Mllous ness from tbe sytteir, and assist In bringing about a regular acuoa ot the bowels. , SCIENTIFIC. ' j.t Bawsaawsavawi mbwb - r - ' - - 1 ev -Jersey's Clay. The report of the Geological Survey of New-Jersey In cludes a volume solely devoted to the clay deposits. These, according to the map furnished, occupy a strip nearly on a lice from South AmDoy to irenton, with a width narrowing from eight to five miles. After reaching the Dela ware, the width of the clay in the State is much reduced, but iu southwest direction is continuous along the border between New-Jersey and Pennsylvania. South of the clay, adjoining and parallel to it, Is an area of green aand marl, of a width varying from twenty to ten miles, stretching southwesterly across the State from Sandy Book on the Atlantic to Salem on the Delaware. These deposits have long been known, but their value and extent have not been recognized till very recent years. During the Revolutionary war tneciay was in demand as "fullers' earth" to cleanse the buckskin breeches of the soldiers. About the beginning of this century, a manufacture of stoneware pottery or this clay was started, nut me industry was of no great Importance so late as 1840. In 1874, the amount of fire-clav and stoneware clay dug annually near South Amboy was esti mated at a value of over fl.uuo.uw, ana twelve potteries in Trenton, employing 2,000 operatives, were turning out per year 11,500,000 worth or wnite eartnen and ironstone ware. The Geological Report gives particulars respecting the clay of each locality, and in most in stances a careful analysis. Advice is also tendered as to boring for clays in localities not yet productive, and good hope is held out that sucn examinations may prove profitable. To be worth working, the clay should not be over twentv-tlve feet below the surface, and the deposit not less than fifteen feet thick. A Scientific Ezvlanation. The cat, be it remembered, is more addicted to elec tricity than any other animal, except the electrical eel, and hence is peculiar ly susceptible to the influence of the earth currents, bo long as me cai walks over fences running from north to south bis axis is coincident with the direction of these currents. They pass smoothly through his spinal column, and beyond eently stimulating his mind and tail, they have no perceptible effect upon him. When, however, he tries to walk on a fence built, parallel to the equator, his private axis becomes per pendicular to tne eartn-currenis. xney penetrate into his vitals and wrench him all to pieces In their efforts to force their way through him. Filled with anguish, he stops, clings fiercely to the fence, and lifts up his voice in frenzied agony. To some extent the muscles of bis legs are paralyzed, and he is unable to move until the unfeeling boot-jtck comes hunting through the air and stimulates him into action. He then s Drin 8 from the fence, his pains vanish and his voice is silent. Is not this a complete and scientific explanation of the question wmcn nas so long oenea the ablest scientific minds. We thus see how beautiful are the reasoning pro cesses by which true science investi gates abstruse questions. We also see that one of the most common incidents of every-nlght life is due to the eleeV trlcity or the eartn. uel us, men, De thankful that we live in a scientific age and that there are more uses for elec tricity than any one has yet dreamed off. Lighting a Jloom bf it Wall Paper. Referring to the suggestion made in Germany that wall paper could be coated with oxalate of copper, which appears lighter as the room grows darker, and vice verta the Manufacturer and Builder advances tne mea mat a room might be made temporarily self luminous by similar means. There are several salts which absorb light exposed to it, and give it out afterwards. Among these are the sulphides of barium and strontium, and certain coal-tar extracts of the anthracene series. The nest way to produce the eflect would be to employ a bowerlul electric light in the room for a short time, until the wall paper had acquired its phosphorescent power, and then cut off the electricity and admit visitors into the room. Any thing more weird than such an apart ment Is scarcely conceivable, anu me experiment would not be exceedingly costly. It might be employed with sur prising effect in the initiation perform ancs of a secret society. Cleopatra' Titedle is to stand on the Victoria Embankment, at tne Aaeipni Steps, London. The objection bad been raised that, although the foundations ot the Embankment were laid in solid con crete, yet this rested on a stratum of Thames mud and ooze, so mat to erect au obelisk weighing, with its substruc ture, about 200 tons would be a hazardous experiment, J ne engineer of the Board of Works replied by point ing to the iron pillars of the Charing Cross Bridge, close by, which had long borne a weight on each square foot double that of the obelisk. The site was finally chosen by the board, and the Needle will be placed where its pro portions will not be dwarfed by sur rounding buildings, and where, as Mr. Dixon savs. the splendid gray granite of the Embankment, the solid grandeur of Waterloo Bridge, the distant back ground of Somerset House, the river, and the Adelphi Gardens form appro priate surroundings. Brocades. The ancients were acquainted with sold brocades. They called them auro- teztile, rettes, ex auro text at, also chryto- clarum, auroclarum, or fundatum. All these names designate silk fabrics, in terwoven with gold thread, the silk forming the background to the brighter threads of gold, setting ont the pattern in gold on a silk ground, or else form ing a gold ground for a silk pattern. Iu the middle ages the name for this arti cle of luxury, so highly prized, both on account of the heaviness of its folds and its elegance, was Baldachinus, from Baldach, i. e. Bagdad or Baby Ion. We must not, however, conceive of these gold threads as we seem them to-day, or in the brocades of the six teenth century ; that is, as consisting of a thick thread of silk, around which a thinly drawn and more or less gilded sliver wire had been twisted. This discovery was not made until the fif teenth century, in Italy. The gold thread of the ancients, down to the fifteenth century, was not round and drawn as a wire, but is cut in little thin and flat strips. This strip is not an ani mal but a vegetable substance, but.tho skin of a plant, which has been gilded on one side and wound spirally or twisted around a more or less coarse thread of linen or cotton. This discov ery was doubtless made in China, and the gold thread for all the manufacto ries was obtained from the East, until the modern, more expensive, but more valuable Italian discovery, rendered the importation unnecessary. We find the same system of manipulation in ail Japanese gold braids, and in a fabric in the Bavarian National Museum, which dates back far into the sixteenth century. Tbe brocade is produced by means of gilt paper. Therefore, bro cades made of gilded silver wires do not date-further back than the fifteenth century. Generally they are to be as signed to the later half of the fifteenth century, especially the non-Italian fabrics; because tbe new gold was more expensive than the favorite one iu use. DOMESTIC. About Wash mo asd Imomsd. Make good warm suds of clean soft water and hard soap or old soft soap will answer. Rub tbe garments through this thor oughly but quickly; then throw into a tub of clear soft water, slightly warm and well salted ; then put through the wrineer. starch and hang in the shade but where they will get a good breeze to dry. The salt in me rinse water is invalueable foi all articles in which the colors are Inclined to fade. A little salt also added to the starch, prevents the iron from slicking, and gives, to such garments as required It, a very pleasing gloss. To make a nice starch from flour for light calicoes, common skirts, table cloths, etc., mix flour with water until vou have a stiff dough, then work this dough under water with your hand, and the finer part of the flour wi 11 work out in tne water, leaving oniy the brown stick v substance In the hand. Have vour starch water boiling, and stir in the liquid ; adding a handful of salt, r or shirt oosoms we use a ooaru made Duroosel v to fit Inside of the bosom and keeps it smooth and straight. If Irons get rusty run mem orisniy on a piece of sand paper laid flat on the floor ? and when done ironing run mem wu- a bit or beeswax. Dcbmo a recent visit to Mr. Ilumann, In Oatheim, I bad an opportunity of be- umlnii ennainrerl with a verV success ful method of speedily getting rid of ants, wnicn are so irouoiesome in iuc One takes small bottles, fills them half full of syrup or sweetened water, and puts them in the places where the ants have their passage-ways, in such a nuniwr thuf. the neeks of the bottles lean against tbe wall or board, in order that tne ants may easny lau iuui mc trap and drown. By means cf camphor ants can be driven from rooms where honey is stored. In gardens, lime-dust operates very destructively upon them. Their bills, after being scratched open, are sprinkled with lime dust, and then hot water is poured on them. To render jars of honey or preserved fruits inaccessible to these insects, place the jars in chests whose bottoms have been previously covered with ashes or pulverized chalk. How to Remove t buckles. Freckles are not easily washed out of those who have a florid complexion and are mucn In the sunshine; but the following washes are not only harmless Dut very much the best of any we know: Grate horse radish fine, let it stand a few hours in buttermilk, 'strain and use tbe wash night and morning. Or squeeze the juice of a lemon in a goblet of water and use the same way. Most of tbe remedies for freckles are poisonous, and cannot be used with safety. Freckles indicate a defective digestion, and con sist in depositee of carbonaceous or fatty matter beneath the scarf skin. The diet should be attended to, and should be of such a nature that the bowels and kidneys will do thair duty. Daily bath ing with much friction should not be neglected and tbe Turkish bath taken occasionally, ir it is convenient. Boss Felon. Of all painful things, can there be any so excruciatingly painful as a bone felon? We know of none that flesh is heir to, and as this malady is quite frequent, and the sub ject of much earnest consideration, we irive tbe latest recipe for its cure, wmcn Is given by that high authority, the London Lanr-et: "AS soon as tne imisa tion which indicates the disease is felt, put directly over the spot a fly blister, about tbe size of a thumb nail, and let it remain for six hours, at the expira tion of which time, directly under the surface of the blister may be seen the felon, whicn can be instantly taken out with the point of a needle or a lancet." Lyosxaise Potatoes. Put a table- spoonful of butter into a frying pan, and, when melted, throw In two table spoonfuls of chopped onion. Have ready, sliced, a pint of cold boiled, or steamed potatoes. When the onion is turning brown put in the sliced iiotato, and a little chopped parsley ; season to taste with pepper and salt and turn the potatoes over with a broad-bladed knife until they are well heated, and very slightly colored, when they should be served immediately. To Prevent the Hair Falling. Pour a wine-glassful of dry table salt upon a sheet of paper. While the hair is dry dip a metallic hair-brush or a stiff bristle hair-brush into the salt, rubbing it into the roots of tbe hair. Apply daily until the hair ceases to fall ; then discontinue. Alum water will check the fall of hair that has become saturated and drowned with the me of oils, act ing as an astringent. A strong decoction of the herb "boneset" is a good tonic for the hair. To Cleanse a Nursery Carpet. Have a pail of very warm water; throw In a tablespoonful of powdered borax ; then, witlfa clean scrubbing-brush, and a very little of any soap, acruo well the soiled places, riuse with clean hot water, and rub very dry with a clean soft cloth ; if possible open the windows to dry quickly. Crcst fok Meat Pies. One quart of sifted flour, three tablespooiisful of good, firm lard, well chopiied in, two and one-half cupfuls of sweet milk, one teaspoon! ul ol soda, wet with very little hot water and mixed In with milk; two teaspoonsful of cream of tartar, silted into the dry flour, little salt; work quickly, and not make very stiff. Steamed Corn Bread. 4 caps of outtermtiK, 4 cups or meal, a cups ol flour, a cup or more of sugar or molasses, 4 teaapoonfuls of salcratus, 4 of salt; put Into a 2-quart pan, cover with pie tin or plate, set iu steamer over a kettle with about 3 quarts of cold water at 9 o clock and steam until noon. To Rid a House or Fleas. Sprinkle plenty of common table salt all over tbe carpets just before the sweeping is done, and sweep often. If this is fol lowed closely the fleas will disappear within a tew weeks. Am maa la real I v more nutritions than meat. There is really no waste in bone, rind and tough piece. Why I it? The troth of science and progreoaive thongbt have always beau compelled to batter down tbe DniwarKa or prejudice and dut belief, or I main forever unknown. Why ia it that people are bo reluctant to receive facta tnat relate di rectly to the phenomena of their own exist ence t Astrouomera, upon diacoTeruig a star, assign it a place at once, and it ia forerer hied. The rule by which a mathematical problem is once sol red be cornea forever an axiom; bat no matter bow clearly the princi ples which govern health and sickneas be demonstrated, some refuse to believe, l)r. Fierce s amu y Medicines, which are now so generallv need, and deaerredlv popular, were. in their early days, very reluctantly received ovine people, lo-dav Dr. 1'iercea Uolden Medical Discovery has outrivaled the old-tune amnaapsrillaa., his Pellets are in general use in place of the coarse, huge, drastic pdia formerly so muck employed, while the sales of his Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kemedy and his Favorite Pre- senpuon are enormous. TV here the akin sallow and covered with blotches and pimples. or where there are scrofulous swellings aud affections, a few bottles of his Golden Medical Discovery will effect an entire cure. If voa feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have sallow color of skin, or yellowish-brown spots on face or body, frequent headache or dizziness, bad taste in month, internal heat or cnuls alter nated with not flashes, low spirits and gloomy forebodings, irregular appetite, and tongue oosxea, yoa are suffering from Torpid Liver. or 'BiUooaness.' In many cases of "liver Complaint" only part of these symptoms are experienced. As a remedy for all such cases. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has no equal, as it effects perfect cares, leaving tbe liver strengthened and healthv. Debilitated females who ba undergone all the tertnrea of caustic and the knife, and yet suffer with those peculiar drsgginglown sensations and weaknesses, can have guaranteed to them ; prompt and positive relief by using Dr. Pierce's ' f avorite Prescription; while constipation and j torpid liver, or "bihonaness," are promptly , reuevea oj tarn rieaaaai rurgativ Pellets. buiu oy au isruggista. HUMOROUS. Osly pRACricwo. Two Intimate friends met on the street the other day, after a short separation, and the follow ing curious conversation ensued : "Ah, bow d'ye do, old leuow v crieu the first one heartily. Second i riend (shrugging his shoul ders) : "O, tray bang." First Friend (looking a little startled) : "Nice day, U It not?" Second do.: "Ah, we, say bang sure." First do. (doubtfully ; "You are not 111, are you f" Second do. (with indignation) : "Oh, nong." First do. becomes uneasy; thinking his friend is mad, he says, "Well, good day," and moves away. The Second smiles from ear to ear, shrugs shoulders, and replies: "Ah, bang sure, mong amie." All the day Number One feels ex tremely bad about his neighbor's un fortunate condition, and be does not discover tbe truth of the matter until evening, when, as he is reading of the Paris exposition, he suddenly recollects that his friend is going to France, and is studying the language. He was only practicing French in a preliminary sort of wav. Number One smiles as he thinks of the fate In store for the unfortunate natives of La Belle France. His Mistake. Asa Woodward avenue car, having a dozen passengers, was coming down town, a long-necked man who hadn't smiled since the last Cali fornia earthquake, suddenly tried to throw up a window, and at the same time called out : "There's a robin there's one of the beautiful Spring songsters I" Some rushed to the platform and others looked from the windows, but they could not see the bird. Finally one man asked : "Where is it what tree is he on?" "I guess 'taint a robin after all," re plied the strange man as he drew in his head. "Come to look closer 1 see it Is an old horse drawing half a cord of stove wood on a wagon I" The passengers thought they heard the noise of a coffee mill at work, but it was only the stranger's wsy of laugh ing down his throat. A PhOMPT Mclb. A good story is told of a deacon in Tennessee, who was in the habit of riding a bucking mule that is a mule that can make a camel's back of its straight one, and, by a spas modic movement of Its four legs and hump, discharge its rider like a cannon ball. The other day he came to the edge of the worst mud hole In the state, and tbe mule gave unmistakable indica tions of bucking. The good deacon knew tnat be was about to be thrown, and his m.nd hurried about for a prayer. His table grace came easiest: "Lord, for what we arj about to receive make us humbly thankful," he exclaimed, and the mule had bucked, and he was i0 . O.ie Ahead. A number of boys were playing in front or a Chinese wash house, when John came out and ordered them away, and took hold or one who didn't want to go. You're a heathen !" yelled the boy. "Me samee you me have alle Melican holidays!'' replied John. "No you don't !" protested the boy. "You kin jine In with New Year's, hang up yer stocking on Christmas and toiler the purseshiou on Fourth of J uly, but when it comes to April fool you've got to stand 'way back in the woods and not mix in ! We're one ahead of you, old pig tail, and I'll git even for this shaking up!" Ait Economical Max. A family is discussing the quaUHcatlnnsof a gentle man who has presented himself as a candidate for the position of son-in-law. There is some doubt, inasmuch as some one has given the intended the character of a spendthrift. Inquires are made among the tradesmen who know him. One day the rather comes in all radiant. "Make yourself easy, my child, I have seen his washerwouiau. He doesn't owe her a cent. Besides, he doesn't pay her more than a shilling a week." Weather or Not. Mr. Tremmles: "1 assure you, Mrs. Jones, I would never go out at all, If I could help it, in this dreadful climate one day hot, the next cold. What miserably wretched weather we have," Mrs. J.: "We do, indeed, Mr. Tremmles; but try and bear up; it's better than none, you know." "Understand me, Mrs. Trevolr, I don't say that your man was drunk, or that he had been drinking even, but my husband says be can prove by three wituesses that they saw him try to pare an apple with a corkscrew in broad daylight, and I thought that looked so suspicious I felt it my duty as a neigh bor to come and ten you about it." Alff OLIl eltixen In s mnntrir vttla.vA - v j . . a 1 1. 1 being asked for a subscription toward repairing tbe fence of the graveyard, declined, saying, "I subscribe toward improving that buryln' ground nigh unto forty years ago, and my family uaiii i n au no oeneni irom it yet. A POSTAGE STAMP is lust hiir ennnch to borrow, but too small to pay back. When a man is "roiteil tn (ha snnt" by fear, does he branch out before he leaves f A hand-to-hand fight Fcnr aces against four klugs. A lemoraUaed Editor. An editor was sitting in his easy chair, buoyant in mind and heart, with the calm serenity and blissful tran quility that none but editors know. A shuttling sound at the door brought him back to earth, and facing nervously about, he beheld a man, of deep, de termined look, closing the door behind him. With a sickly feeling of forebod ing, the editor motioned toward a chair, and. gazed upon the intruder, helpless and breathless, resigned to meet the worst. The hand of the man wandered toward his breast pocket. The editor's cheek blanched and his lipa turned blue. Alas! alas! he had guessed aright the dread mission of the stranger. The man pulled out a bundle of let ters and papers. The head of the editor fell forward upon his breast, and the hands dropped listless from the amis of his chair. "My errand is not a pleasant one," said the visitor, speaking slowly. "Thank heaven!" exclaimed the editor, plucking up courage. "Out with it suspense is worse than fate." "I have an execution on your home," continued the man, w ith professional sadness. "The mortgage has been foreclosed.". - . "Iloora ! ba ! ha !" roared the editor, springing up, and nearly shaking the man's arm off. "Heaven be praised ! but what a scare you did give me ! Blister my corns, if I didn't think you had a chunk of spring poetry. Drive on sell the old shanty it's a rat-eaten barracks anyway, and rents are taken off my mind! Let's have your name, and down it goes for two years free subscription. You're an angel in breeches, old fellow, but you don't look it, darned if you do. Ha ! ha I Cut your hair, man; cut your hair, and wear a stand-up color. It'll save your children sorrow." Tensnea Nnthlnir but the Droboecia of an ele phant compares in muscular flexibility with the tongue. It varies in length and size in reptiles, birds aud mammalia, according to the peculiar organic cir cumstance of each. A giraffe's tongue has the functions of fl ngers. It is hook ed over high branch, its strengin heinir eoual to breaking off large, strong branches of trees, from which tender leaves are then stripped. An antnear s tongue is long and round, like a whip lash. The animal tears open dry, clay walls of ant-hills, thrusts in Its tongue, which sweeps round tbe apartments, and by its adhesive saliva brings out a yard of ants at a swoop. The mechan ism by which it is protruded so far Is both complicated and beautiful. A dog's toDgue in lapping water takes a form, by a mere act of volition, that cannot be imitated by an ingenious mechanism. Tbe human tongue, in the articulation of language, surpasses in variety of motions the wildest imagination of a poet. Even in swallowing food iu office is so extraordinary that physiolo gists cannot explain the phenomena of deglutition without employing the aid of several sciences. "III! where did you get them trowsersr" asked an Irishman of a man who happened to be passing, with a re markably short pair of trowsers on. "I got them where they grew," was the indignant reply. "1'hen, be me con science," said Paddy, "you've pulled them a year too soon !" Alternately Shaken and Scorched By the paroxysms of chills and fever, the wretched sufferer for whom quinine has been prescribed eaoara in vain to exterminate the dreadful disease w.th that hurtful palliative, which at best only mitigates the violence of the fits, and eventually proves highly injurious to the system. In order to effect a thorough core of malarial fever, whether intermittent or remittent, or to render the system impreg nable to its attacks. Hoe tetters stomach Hit lers should be used daily. T.iat Una medicine is a searching eradicant of disease generated by miv" , and a reliable safeguard against them, is a fact so widely recognized in this and other countries that to adduce evidence m sup port of it is unnecessary; but were it either essential or desirable to do so. it may well be supposed that from t le testimony corrobora tive of its claims, which has been Accuniula tingduring the last twenty-live years and over, sufficient proofs might be gathered to con vince the most inveterate akepua To C'cbc Dtsfwia and Indigestion, or to restore to healthy activity those organs of tbe bodv which by disease or over-exertion have become debilitated, use ochenck's Seaweed Tome. Aein6'le bottle will demonstrate its efficacy. KeUable lrjr Goods House. If you want Silks. Black Ouods, Dress Goods or Dry Goods of anv kind, below market prices, and have the advantage of all the great trade sales, and of losses mails by importers, send your orders or wnta for samples to li. F. Dewees. 725 Chestnut street. Philadelphia. One price to aU, aud that the lowest. DR. C. W. BRWM5I1S rELREV MSIIL, Pli.ua srv prpitrlfiprtl7 u cur SK-k Uolaclii, Smo BasOarlM, Dyasrslic Hutscb Nmrall. Nervmsuvfts ao.l Slfw.pin.MDe4 and. wil eurvany cane. Prlcw Atlc., jtontnv fr. S.M by si Drouuu. offlc. So. lu 8 . aula l.. Baltiison Holbrn, Botners, Mother. Dent fail to procure MRS. WIN8LOW8 SOOTHING HYRCP for all diseases of teeth ing in children. It relieves the child from pain, cures wind eolie, regulates tbe bowels, and by giving relief and health to the ehild, gives rest to the mother Compound Oxygen Tbe Advertisement of Dru. Staxkey & Falen, which will be found in this number of our pa per, at one that presents unusual claims to all v. bo are auff umig from chrome ailments of any kind. Tbe introduction of this new reme dial agent which has come into their hands, nisrlu, assuredly, the beginning of a new era in the healing art. Already it has given back htalth and comfort to hundreds of suffering men and someu, who have vainly sought for relief in all tni means of core heretofore within their reach. Among these is lion. W'm. D. Keiley, who, in a letter to Dr. btarkey, says: "My experience under your treatment lias convinced me that no future dispensary will be complete that doea not embrace the adminis tratiou of your agent, or its equivalent, to tuoee who, from their vocation or othar cause, are. as I was. unable to assimilate enough of some vital element to maiulain their systems in uealthful vigor. Thanking yon for renewed heaith. streniitu, anj the hope of years of eomfortahltt life, 1 remaui vour grateful inend." bend for a copy of their Treatise on Com pound Oxygen, a little book of over JUU pages, m which you will tuid the mode of action aud results of this new remedy dearly set forth. It also contains a large number of testimonials to most remarkable curl's. It will be mailed fbkk, on addressing Drs. Btarkey Jl Paien, UU Uirard street, Philadelphia. A Turnkey Jde Happy. Hark Hamilton. Turnkey at Fifth District Police Statiou. Philadelphia, says : "Having suffered with Rheumatism for live years, find ing no relief from remedies or physicians, dis gusted with medicine, and despairing of being cured. I tried Da. HaaxDos's Gtpset's Girr, and was entirely cured by a single bottle, and feel a well as ever I di 1 in my life." Isold by all Philadelphia druggists. The Great Spring Medicine Is Iloofland'a German bitters. It tones the stomach and assists Digestion. It axeuaea the Liver to healthy action, aud regulates the bowels. It purities the Blood, and gives vigor and strength to the whole system, dispelling all Dyapeptie symptoms, with its loss of appe tite, &ck Headache, languor and depression. It ui fuses new hfe and energy into the whole being. All suffering from deranged digestion at this time should take HoodauJ's German Bittern, They are sold by all Druggists. Johnston. Holloway & Co, Wi Arch street, Philadelphia. Rheumattam Quickly Cured. "Durang's Bhenmatio Bemedy," the great Internal Mnlicinr, will p sitively cure any case of rheumatism n the face of the earth. Price 1 a bottle, six bottles 5, Ho d by all Drug giata. Hend for circular to Helpenetiue a Ben! ley. Druggists, Washington. D. G. TW foliowlTkf h a lit of tlMdirTftrant ktwIv of our prxarln, with pricM eujiwiM. which bT bt. com Msvjsdiiiff ibe lavrkeH s. bobusmt of t&r, and by their uniform excl.nc, acuri forma w.it.y inrrowiiiij IvaUroMtf Mid coiwtaal tevtUMQifti of mssfit. -UciiiosT hart of ar Uvorri. with a smartvat of fcrtw-rlftj co4Mln ia Trr rrwct, w remain. Tour, tral-, Hl'EY e CHH1MT, Bol FruprMwra. HI &orta M bi., tiulmimipium BAILET B PUR I KTB., X " XXJC xxxx .... "rrftBirPNLLtU Ullllll COPPER DISTILLED WUIHKK Sl iTta I DR. ST.KVEB S TONIC H K KB BITTER- 1 a hint Lists' Xmrn Fint Imruut timU. If ros d-ir damplea of an 7 of th abov. wa aha taka plaaaara IB aaBduag Ihasa, AU goads bovad rea. u. A C. FSlABLISHEO 1849. s. m. petteiTgill & CO. ADVERTISING AGENTS, 37 Park Row, Hew York. 701 CMiri Street Pkiladelpiua, aad 10 Stats Street. Boates. Beceive Advertisements for ssl'lieattos Is all tha Rawsaaaara ss4 Pavlmlksls is any part of tbe globe, at Um rsauaaaaa Low. set aATaa J T.I tiai. tka valoe ol kt.aruainf aiedimna, tttobaat manner an.1 lima of doin it. and aa u aarTtaiB(.UaU 1 at will srosms the ettecess of u auvaruasr ESTIMATES Zjzszz tianint ui suj auuLar of fssais lor ward.au. ea ss REWSP&PER DIRRCTORT. BOBtajB M . Tr 01 mora wardad lraa of cbarea to all our csatooMre OS appii suos. sad to aU otSera oa resalM at Iks rfce. tl. ii. OTTR C8I2'9.eHlwCtsF0. . avstswi U I V tooBdad as aa aiaanancs of Bora tba onaaarar oisceBtnrr.eosiuuusstaa oetfsot afcla sdTaaras wok tss But eeoBesmial eisaadj. t - JESS tBHE lipl VEGETINE Purifies the Blood, Eenovatee and Invigorates the Whole System. . fTS MKOICISAL PROPKBTIK9 ARE Alterative, Tonic, Solvent and Di tiretrc. VSGH.T1NB Is ma exclusively from the Juices of carr fully-selected barks, roota and herbs, and so strongly concentrated ibst It will effectually eradicate from the njnteui every taint Of Scrofula., Scrofulous Hume Tumor. Caamr, Caatarau Hisar, Kryi slpelas. Salt-Kheam, Canker. --.-,, tke Stomach, and all disease- Hist snae trvm impure fo'l. sciatica, Inliammatory sad Chronic Rheamatlara, Neuralgia, bout, ha 1 Sviaual Couaplalate cSa oaij be saectuaur e .red through the blood. Tor Ulcers and Eruptive Mssasss of tha kin. Pastnlee, Pimples. Blotches. Bans, Tetter, Scaldhead, and Klngwarm, V so arias has never failed to effect a permanent cure. For Pains In the Back, Kidney Compbuats, Dropsy. Female Weakness, laatanasa, art lng from Internal uicerat oo. and Menae disease and General Debility, Vsoamta sets d rectly upon tha causes of these eompiaiata It Invlgurata.andatrongthenathe who. systeia, acta upon the secretive organs, allays lntUmmA, tion, cures olcvrat on, and regulates the bowels. Vot Catarrh, Uyspepala, Habitual Costive, tea, PalpttatloB of the sleart. Headache, Piles, Bioracaaasaa, and Geaoral Prostration f tho fiervous Cyatem. no med.cine bas ever Ktwa such perteci, salktfactloii si the Yioinxa, It purines the blood, cleanses all of tbe ortfaus, and pouacjuca a ooauolliiux power over the ner vous systenv Tbe remarkable cures effected by Vsea-mra have Induced many puyslclansnntlapotiiecanss wBom we know lu jireac lb and use It la inatr ewa famille-t. la fact. Vaomira M tbe best remedy yet f t. covered rnr tne above diwanes and hi the only reliable BLUUU Pl'IUt'lUl jet placed bsbwa the public. VEGETINE. UHlCIIO SqCABI PHARa-lCT, ) lirM B aub st above Laurel, V Philadelphia Penna., June u, 1STT. j jfs. H. R- Stsvss : Hav .sir. Having- during' tbe past Bve yaaj sold your Viuk-riMB. wbtca baa been praised by my customers blgfily f.)T the various d aeasea requiring a blood puria r. and a I nave beard very tavoraole reports or Its use. 1 e rduily in dorse It at a ico. m1 remedy, an I believe it 10 be what yon claim It is. 111: -Tbe or. at Blood Purifier of tbe day. Hvsuect rn'ly yours. J. W. ABaL. M. D , Druggist. PBViciA!r Sat It. Veire Ine gives as equal Circulation of the blood. AU puyslulans will asrree that there Is "Scarcely a dlseas- but Uul coul'l alin.Ml lusmntly be disposed ot If purs blood CO'. Id be circul ited gnepjusly through the parts affected. Now, lb Is tbe way ia which Vegetlne performs IU wonderful cures. Vegetlne Is exclusively a vee able compound, mule irum roots, herbs and barks. VEGETINE. HswroaT. Kentucky. B. R. Stsvins. Esq.: Dear .ar. 1 l.l vour Vegetlne for a number of years, and I rind It gives perfect aiUsfacUuo 10 my customer. HKNRT WBRTfllMRR. tirugglal and Apothecary. Newport, kr. V Eg an ts mw ackaowled:ed by our bet pliyil lans to be tUe oniy sure and saie re i.e.ly f .r all diseases anting from Impure blood suca aa sjcrolulaaud scrofulous Humors. VEGETINE. Prepared oy H. R. STEYEXS, Bottton, Jinan. Ttf etiae is Sold by all DruggbU. Ttaoso aafwanng an Advertlaemeat will confer favor upon the Advertiser aad the Publisher by stating that they saw the adver tisement In this journal inamlng the paper) P AGENTS WAN1 ED F0H THE ICTORIAL HIST0RYVV0RLD Bmbrsetne Ml as sothaorle aeeeaan B.iL.n ol anci..t and V??-' 2 Ii 1J h!.,rrof th. rlaaand fall of tha Ork "" Empiia.th arowtb of ih satirniaof m.rfmo Enrol-, the mMrtla a. ! rod. tba -'. J"!-"-'" r-formath. ths dlaeovarj sad artUaawst ol tba Mao Wneunm.''lne MatoHeal enfravrnr. serf HI u.rr of tba World avar aubllahadl sella al FOR ONE DOLLAR, srw mt ariitrs . MUft pa efcM- M4.wnihTa ee flan tat. ait WtTlkf fcllavais favrtertia, yitssarij lsVBslia aa sasatait aacaesl. fTIHeetw. far LaataaaO 4 Lute, far ft PaatMrs.) PtHroei-. ftmcf, (a rataata, DoaMa, (or It P luAua, 2!itgl.j Phlog. Hard, (arl n&ka, atoswa, Motrth'T. (rBeMa, Ufdj Miandj t Tabmaa, Fm (ar U VsTtMaaa.) 10 .U PLaau, ar i sVaaV dinc Ptaau.) sVtoaia, ar f Cslasllw. Fas',) Caraaue, Haatbl. far ! ChraaAtlivraiUafaS,) i CaWvt. ar & Dabllas. Daabla, I rrM, (art! rhUsve.) emails, ScftMla. (wrfGa-1 raaiatM, Davubio.) Grroiuav, Hcmtvsf, (or (irvatahouN Plant ) i Hera- FLaaia, tr BeU " TJJr f T"nxrr TT rsiiitlsi nf Tilllils 1mU Or ftr KXPKK&t. tMvrr paving ebArr-m, SaatltkrUoa to i: slarii; fc ; 11 to $C Dftrrrs oakd? ri.ifra. gttug r inim m ii n fetf - aboa, 1U4 af nrirteca, ata asilei Cram. HENRY A. DREER, 714 Chestnut St Philadelphia, Compound Oxygen Treatment What is Compound Oxygen? It i a combination of Ozymn and Xitrmrt-n. m &mrh r'-wliaw oj to tmuJtm U Tct in '& rtutl tUmnt. How does it cure? !ZX"r, nafurv? .ii tikr yHtm th rima of carhon whn-h tvuwmtumi If CONtsT.t,CKXCE OT IMPKMPECT SsPIKATI()M. In ConsrmiTJtiort,;;rr:l',na. niarkahly rowwifia. If urwd in tha early uc- uf tills tlMetuM. a rstrr u tttmmtl ettan. Catarrh and Bronchitis ZZZZlZ "fttn radically enn-d. TlxroTUBnesia yU i-vdilr to Trpatmiit .V J optjpoia Aa improve-1 prti. anJ an fnTraate-fi puerw l mltmj'mi lw m fUWa ltd ttm. Nervous Headaches, ?ZZ&. bava be. sn-Miiesfy rwwi bjr Uim Dw trMDifUL Are You Asthmatic? tfUDltZ. tnir mm in rnrnm a tin h hare Mef W nil r.rv.. Business and Professional Men who, frmn orrwnrk or an? other can, flnri uiiu- fct 1 mfrrimf J'mm hrnim amii aor posts' usiaaiibw, til iti-l intf!i-w TrvaUii- fU ihr h-li' ihry n-vti. All TVT T.: J fli Ail ItaVUUS U15UIUCI9 tvlir-f orders 2,ZZ thm rwitnimf ir1rr of rmpounr1 Oxytnn. Don't go to Florida or Colorado! Htar at hi -ui, anI um rnmimm. (Hytrin. anl you y!' nm timm mi mnmf. avnU train a lrv- twnrlit. Who have been cured ? I'J'CT; WU-kwttfn am ft tmtnrnl yrmtm: HiinS FlKI-D Jl'V''"' V. H. S'ipreiiio vurt: Jn-ltra Ma air el Hmitm, Sw York ; LMi. MnTrUFRT Bi.aih . fcniov. Bkeuix, W Va.; Hoti. Wn L KKLl-kT. mad T. M. Akthlk. How is it Administered ? ,UXt f OUT Otftoc. r mi (Aa pmJtrmt'm t-v Inrnt. Home Treatment lZTJ Prtt-e far Iws nia aunplv, tr.'A -.'" Vpi't' f A Trt-ati-w 0i i. no Oouipt.unii ( txyp n. X A I, f j e lo whK-h arRaiii-rnlvd a larw nunilVr trvatvnnniaia to muxi rv-uuirkaMo curva. will ba matX itvtMikoniaia to muxi iviii.rkaM c fr ay aw., to all who writ fur it. Starie y & Paien, 4. JL iv.wi, t'K. 1112 Girard Street, Philadelphia, Pa. p. . KWINO. lnr CHEHTHUT ST.. FHIL1. "W'WOLI ITDim'L Dllltt is THKWiLUnx a nimis- vrw .r-THHATK" ' THS ONLY btttLNU MACULSSOr IT-"'l - and tha a1 "irW BVAWB- if.lW STITCH I. TfT Ttr.T BKwlnoi MACH1MOF IT rf.-J XMI. DKXORErr rVt.IABLI FAIirUO.V ATTIRNS. S-rvt for Illiu.lri4t.-f1 ratatotras. D. S. l.NO, 11X7 CHIislStT ST., PHILA j PIANOS K'tail arte. Sc.dI) Ssc far la 0a..rlrrSi.V..nl Sis. Para na. Bavalel V. atcaUr. aaSiaS FREE TTTII T" e",wt!'. fpcE srrs. r n . la. r. A. aaia. 81 Matthews' Garden Seed This Drill Is very eomplet m all Its arratvre- aeota, and Is the OHLT DRILL THAT HAS AH rXDlCATOR, With the names of different seeds thereon. Price, 812.0O. I beral dlseoant to tbe trade. D1T1D LA5DKETH S0.XH, bVbIo Assail, tl and tl SOUTH blXTH fit.. Folia. Broad-Catt Seed Sower, For Bowing all kinds of Grain and Grass SccA Price as. Foraalebr D.LAJIDKCTHAKO.VS, 11 end 13 Sonth SUtk Sc., Palla.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers