Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, May 14, 1879, Image 4

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    KenriDJ WlldBirtU.
I found it essential to succeM lu rear
ing birds from the cest to watch the
parent bird and And what food It select
ed for its young. That of all the finches,
aparrowg and wrens was naked-skinned
. worms and grasshoppers. The indigo
finch, which I at first failed to rear, I
found was fed solely with whito grass
hoppers (t. ., with grasshoppers which
had just molted), after which I found
it very easy to raise, and that it proved
to be a very excellent cage-bird. All
the birds fed readily upon small grass-
hoppers and large-sized worms, and in
every ca died after being fully grown,
from my inability to make the proper
change in their food. The finches and
sparrows would tike to seed-eating as
soon as they left the nest and their bills
were hardened. Wrens, under my ob
servation, fed their young almost exclu
sively with small, smooth larvae, taken
from the undersides of the leaves of cur
rant bushes, brambles, etc., and I have
set for a long time and counted the
worms brought to a net, the average
being five worms in two minutes. This
was a nest of the common houe wren
when the supply of food was abundant
in a neighboring row of currant bushes.
These also were easily reared in the nest.
All the young birds took naturally to
water when fully grown, except the
ground or grass finch, which would
bathe only in fine sand, but would keep
itself in excellent condition and was a
very Interesting cage-bird. The com
mon rice-bird or bobolink was very eas
ily raised, fed on young grasshoppers,
took to eating seed readily, became as
tame and playful as a kitten, and when
full grown was liable to become excess
ively fat, and would then often have
epileptic fits, recurring at frequent in
tervals, death always following. Tue
cat bird was an inveterate mimic, at
tempting to do and sing whatever it
fcaw or heard done by the other birds
in its compartment of the cage. The
wren was a thorough busybody and
studious of nature, investigating with
a very knowing and inquiring look
every corner and crevice of the cage
and every act of its associates. A pair
of blue birds kept themselves inviolate
from all the other bird, and were mod
els and full of lover-like attentions to
each other. They selected a place
where the pair could perch themselves
closely together, and spent a large part
of their time in attention to each other,
The nuthatch, when full grown, de
lighted to find a grain of Indian corn.
which it would push into any crack or
crevice where it would fit closely, and
then would amuse itself by hammering
away at it until it was broken into frag
ments suitable for its food. Tht cow
bird was an inveterate gormandizer.
It could not be fed enough to stop Its
clamor for more, and often so fully
crammed was it that the last worm or
grasshopper stuck in its throat; but it
would still be for more, as if starving.
Taking the offered food and finding it-
stlf unable to swallow it, it would
throw it away with a sudden jerk of
the head, but still ask for more. Any
thing in the shape of animal food that
it could swallow was gobbled down;
and this affectation of starvation, and
its large size, sullioiently explain the
dwarfing of the other occupants of the
nest in which it is a foster child. It
would eat or waste all that any two
birds could gather.
A 1'anUier Fight.
Colonel Seth A. Abbey, the veteran
printer w ho in 1SJI issued 10,000 copies
of the old English Header, has just re
turned from California, Oregon and
Washington Tcrritorv. lie is full of
those hunting reminiscences now so
rare, among which is the following:
I went to W'atertown, Jefferson coun
ty, New York, in January, 181'., with
my printing establishment and com.
uienced publishing a newspaper. Jai
rus Kich was a kind of half-way law
yer; he had started a newspaper a year
or two tefore and failed, lie and his
wife then started a little whiskey tav
ern near the Court House, and they did
not succeed in that very well. He said
to me one day; "1 think I can get a
better living with my rifle and traps in
the woods than I can by hanging
arom.d here in the village." Kich was
a Vermonter by birth; a small, muscu
lar man. The north portion of Jeffer
son county, at that time, was an almost
unbroken wilderness, and thither Kich
with his w ife and traps, bent his way.
A nnmber of months elapsed before I
heard anything from him.- At length
a rumor came that he had been killed
by a panther. Nearly a month after
titis I got a letter from him describing
It id encounter with a panther; he was
hardly able to write then, liis story
ran thus: "Iliad fastened one of my
traps to the root of a large hemlock
tree and near by was a dense thicket ot
low" hemlocks of about half an acre.
When I visited my trap this morning 1
discovered one panther iu my trap and
another clc-e by. I tired at the one
otiinide of the trap and wounded him,
and he made immediately for this thick
et. 1 had a little whiffet dog with
me. and 1 put the little dog into the
thicket where the panther enter
ed, and I ran around the thick
el w here I thought the panther
would come out and met him just as he
came out of the thicket. 1 tried to altoot
him hut my gun missed fire, and there
we were, lace to face, and I had to run
or light. I threw down my rifle and
drew my hatchet from my belt and
made a pass at him and he knocked my
hatchet more than twenty feet from
me. We then clinchet! in and were
up and down in every shape; he tear
ing away with his teeth ani chewing
my hands. He would sometimes have
one hand in his mouth and sometimes
the other. We were wrestling and
tearing in this way until I was nearly
done lor. In one of the falls he hap
pened to come under, and I claped my
knee right in his flank, forward of his
hind leg, with my left hand in his
mouth. I then slipped my right hand
into my pocket and pulled out my jack
knife and opened it with my teeth, and
made very short work of it then. I lay
there by the side of my victim a long,
long time. My clothes were tore off
from me or hung in shreds; my face
and limbs a gore of blood. The near
est settler was two miles. I came to
myself alter a time, so that I killed the
other panther. It took all the rest of
the day to make the house of the near
est settler." I knew this man for many
years after this encounter, and strange
to say, he still continues to hunt pan
thers and wolves. I saw a panther
skin that was green, killed by him and
just taken from the body, that measured
from the nose to the end of the tail,
nine feet. I would like to tell you one
of Rich's wolf stories. He did not tell
it for several years after U occurred
the " reason why, you will probably J
guess at, after hearing the story, lie .
"... . I
said he was out among the rock ami
discovered a wolf; he shot and killed of ,.rMIometr which will approxl
it, I'ptta examination he found it to , mKttly mea-iire geological time, and
be a she wolf, and suckling young ones, j thus give u some clew to the antiqui-
He finally found her den and crawled
into It. and found ten vounsr miDS.
lie took them to bis shanty and built a
log pen for them and reared them on
deer meat they were too young to get
the bounty on. There was then a
bounty for grown up wolves offered by
town, county and State, in all amount- j t(je eHrlieH known geological periods,
ing to about $50 for each wolf. They j DUt t WOuld appear that the later
were the large gray wolf, one of them formed strata are more calcareous than
nearly black. This one, he said, he the earlier, and that there has, in lact,
used to take and play with it the same gradually progressive r increase
. ,T .. . ..i. of calcareous matter, fhe very exten-
as a dog. He said he regretted to kill I givj a lllon of erbonate of lime
this one .very mucJi, nut ju was too
great a temptation. As these wolves
e-rew- int. he would take them into dif-
r.. i-m ti.o... i.i. tj.ir;eer. According to the author's esti-
- -i .v i
scalps ou auu e.a.m luc uuuu.,. .
On Man's view of it.
A forlorn and greasy tramp called at
this ofllce recently ana said :
in tn call ronr attention
to the fact that we stand vindicated." J calcareous and other sedimentary de
..... . j. . , , . ! posits have been formed. The amount
'V ho stanus vindicated? asked a ; f llmeflH.u , waters which drain dis
reporter. ; tricts made up of granites and bas'alts
'We do, sir the gentlemen of the i is found, by a comparison of analyses.
road."
..0.... . i -
1 OU 111 II liailll'-l. a Pllllin .
. 1 ' ,1 i m
1 es, sir, trail ps, so caiieu.
-now uoes ii nappeu inai j "tan..
vindicated?"
'Tublic sentiment did it, sir; I knew
it would. Why, mv dear sir, just look
..... . ,
atit: n nas oecome as popular
en-up.
"You refer to the walking mama do
tou ?"'
I As eir Tim n-fiirlinir nf timp has
" j r
spun usarounu.u ur pr,.e,
ana our occupation is no longer re-
proach. Ihe change of public senti-
ment has made it just as popular in the
hightr walks of life as the iron heel of
. : ...ii.. a r
poerlJ . 7,'Heve that geological time has been
which 1 am an humble representative. enorm,msiy in fxee.., of the limits
"So it would seem." i urged by certain physicists; and that
"The last man to join or ranks is M.
Gambetta. the new President of the
iwi.i-h.mW. whom the cable an-
nouuees as walking eight miles daily
around the delightful lawn of the!
Presidential garden-one of the pretti-
... . " . !.. r ,
est of the nre gauch: I envy M. Gam-
bctta his lovely tow-path as it were.but
irely tow-patu as it were.oui.
in with open arms to our
ii.t- l,i.-ll like us." and the
welcome him with open arms to our
fr.M I tliii.t- l.f-ll like us." and the
dsand patches backed out 'or pspei the sensitive paper, called pa
. 1 ., .... pier cuanvfer, is placed, and both are ex-
, for the reason, we think, Jf , y, VndvT theactionof
man of shreds
of the room
that the front of his garments was
more presentable than the rear. 1 aus-
ttir..i,,ii,l h .l.le.l
, . . .. ...
"Dont forget to mention that e
stand vindicated. And, by tlie nay,
Sergeant Hates is one of our pioneers.
Be good enough to say it italics
that the Sergeant aUo stands vindi
cated." Properties ff Cocoa.
The remarkable properties of cocoa
the dried leaves of a small tree grow-
ing in Feru and Bolivia and especial-
ly its power to enable one to put forth !
Ioug-continucd exertion without fa-'
tigue, have been exciting a good deal ,
of attention among scientific men for;
the last few years. These projK'rties
were known and prized long before the '
npaiusu cunqiiesi, me leaves ucius em-
ployed even as a medium of exchaugc.
After the conquest, thev were among
ti. ...i....i.i ;..i r.f rt
. , , -.m.n.i. i. ,
At Vntfial .tuna ltV CUMi liiiuhala U-r
..v -....i, . , :
consumed yearly. Lndcr the mllu- j
ence of the leaves of this plant, the mi-
ners ran work nifht and dav. w ith '
onlv brief intervals of rest and sleen. :
i.i u. . r i . i.... ir..i t.firador and Newioundlanil the earth is
me Buguicsi .oou a..u . u. -
the leaves enable ihe natives to endure
. . . . , ,
,uu- ,,"rJ' ""v- or a piece of cast iron Is bv striking the
times a day, chewing them and lodg-1 etise wjth a hammer, when, if it make
ing them in the side of their mouth, a slight impression, denoting some de
like a quid of tobacco. In 1S7C, the gree of malleability, the iron is of a
Toronto (Canada) Lacross club, consis-. q-iality provided it be uniform.
. , . , ' . , i If fragments fly off, and no sensible iu-
ting of sixteen players, all of sedeiitry dcntaUon m:4(Jej the ,roil
professions, held the championship ofjhard and brittle. The difference be
the world against all comers, whitajtween good and bad iron is shown
men or Indian, fortified mainly by cc- mainly by the breaking Good iron
wl.i.-h thev chewed durins the game breaks piece of good spruce tim-
swallowing the saliva. One day, dur
ing which the heat of the sun was at
IJ0 degrees Fahrenheit, though their
antagonists, mechanics and tradesmen
of sturdy build, were utterly exhaust- j
ed before the game was nnisnea, tne
former seemed as frea from fatigue as j
ifa ..i.iof ..ti.m i :
w. . ....... fe.
upon the heart, and it is believed l7
some, at least, that it is name io me
same objection as other powerful nar-
cotics. A French writer affirms that
when long used in excess, it affects the
brain, and ultimately induces imbecil
ity. A Cunning Artisan.
Xo bird, or other animal, not even
man himself, can excel the beautiful
workmanship of the tiny little creature
known as the "brickmaker," w hich is
scarcely visible to the naked eye. By
the use of the microscope it has been
discovered that she not only builds her
bouse, but manufactures her own brick,
and lays them up, one by one, with no
workmen to assist. The house Is usu
ally attached to some water-plant; but
they sometimes anchor their dwellings j
to the parent-house. When tbe animal
is resting or is in any way disturbed,
she settles down In the lower part of j
the tube; but when all is quiet and she
is in good working condition, with no
nursery of joung ones around her, she
is pretty sure to reward us with the
sight ol her four beautiful wheels which
she sets in rapid motion, thus forming
a swift'eurrent which brings the food
and tee material f r the brick close to
her head; and she has the power of se
lection, for she often rejects particles
brought to her mouth. The apparatus
for moulding the brick is within the
body. The material is brought through
the action of the wheels to a small
opening, where it passes down to the
apparatus, which is in rapid, whirling
motion, soldering the particle together
until they become, seemingly, a solid
ball ; now she ejects the brick from Its
mould, bends her head over, and se
curely places It on top of the structure.
It takes her about three minutes to
manufacture each brick.
Never pick the teeth or clean the nails
in company.
Man is mvle tier upon tier of fac
ulties, the nature of every one of which
points toward happiness.
Xever 'answer questions In general
company that have been put to others.
"Have yon cologne?" she asked.
"Xo, ma'am," replied the druggist. "I
have no scents at all. She said he
didn't look as though he had.
SCIENTIFIC.
.
utoiogw, u ... ,,..,
alike have hitherto been baffled in their
"1. an ,.tiaotorv kind
ty of our glow, u s iiore
"K t"' ..'- "
erpool has lately contributed to the
Koyal Society a verv suggestive paper,
in which he endeavors to grapple with
the question by employing the lime
stone rocks of the earth's crust as an
index ol ecological time. Limestones
' i. - t ... tn .'mi rou r tTirmurirtii from
over 1()e reaa of the ocean bottom at
lne present day Is sufficiently attested
! bv the recent soundings of theCliallen-
I mate, the sedimentary crust of the
; ,g Rt ejt on(J n)e , .verag(.
1 actual thickness, of which probably
; one-tenth consists of calcareous matter.
j la seeking the origin of this calcare-
. . . . n ....(... i r la jumAl thar thnrim.
. ,t,ve rockg of tbe orjgi,ial cnlst were of
: the nature of granitic or basaltic rocks.
;Bv the disintegration of epch rocks,
I to be on an average aoout a.ti parts in
! 100.000 parts of water. It is further as-
.... 1 , .
sumed that the exposed areas of igneous
rocks, taking an average throughout
slj geological time, will bear to the ex
i posures of sedimentary rocks a ratio of
i about one to nine. From these and
other data Mr. Keade concludes that
1 the elimination of the calcareous inat-
ler nuW found n , the ge,.jim,rJt,ry
i gtrata must have occupied at least 600,'
000,000 of years. This, therefore, rep-
resents the minimum age of the world
The author inters the formation of the
Liurentian. Cambrian and Silurian
. traW ,iave occupied about 200,
oco 000 0f years; the old red sandstone.
f wbonilcrious, and the poikilitic
i systems, another 200,000.000; and all
, the other strata me remaining u.uuu,.
000. Mr. Koade is, therelore, ltd to be
I it has been ample to allow for all the
changes which, on the hypothesis of
evolution, have ocenrrtd m tne organ-
The following process ot reproducing
linear drawing by the aid of photog
raphy is said to give excellent results,
. Jrlwl nluit be or
ooth or Ullcin paper, in order that th
light may pa?s through it where tin
lines do not occur. Under this cloth
; ooth or tracin!j paper, in order that the
light may pa?s through It w here the
lines do not occur. Luder this cloili
tne nK,t the ferric salt of the sensitive
: paper is reduv."ed to ferrous salt, wuicn
; is not effected lv the application of a
; solution of yellow prusslate of pous
' whiie those portions of the Pa,r whl.
,a7e ig,, protected by the lines are
colored by the solution
naDer. therefore, in a
Treating the
prussiate hath
brings up the drawings iu clear, dark
blue lines on a white ground. The
sheet of reproduced drawing is well
washed in water, ami then all traces 01
the urotosalt of Iron is removed in a
bath acidulated with hydrochloric acid.
i Color may be applied to the fac-aimile
in the uual way
As an illustration of the niefeoroloical
effect of ocean currents, Mr. .J K
Lauton lately called attention in a lec
ture to some estimates made by Mr.
("roll of the heating influence of the
Gulf Stream. He calculated that the
surface water of the North Atlantic, if
deprived of the Gulf Stream, would be
, reduced to a temperature very lar ueiow
' the ireezing point, and that the heat
which this great current disperses into
the air ahove it. it c -inverted into pow
er, would be qual to the horse-power
. r
of 400 OtO.OUO oi the largest Iron-ctaa
menor-war. It is this heat w hich,
carried over the northwest of Europe,
makes there green nehls ami op. n nar
"O during the winter, while iu I.at-
.buried wUh gnow anJ the harbors
; blocked with Ice.
The most certain test tf the goodness
ber; bad iron will break like a carrot,
it snaps in two.
For the joining of belts, good lice
leather, if properly used, being soft and
t nlinldA will itlvura trivt hpTror ftntl a-
(nij,!, thiin any" patent fasteuing or
hooks wh.ch have yet been Invented,
In many instances, the tearing out of
lace holes is often unjustly attributed
to poor belting, when, in reality, the
fau"Ues ,n haVing a belt too short and
trvjn(f t0 orce n together by lacing,
and the more the leather has been
stretched while being manufactured,
the more liable it is to be complained of.
From experiments made upon oak
and other forts of wood, it is.loundthat
their strength is proportioned to their
density and weight; that of two pieces
of the same species of wood, of the same
dimensions, the heavier is generally
the strotigej.
Litcntninic Benefit.
When I boarded the
train
at New
York, a man said to me :
"Big thing this telegraph."
"Yes," I said, "it waa big as a grape
vine."
"Xo jqjting," he said. "I came to
Xew Y'ork, oue hundred miles out of
my way to see a man. When I got here,
I went to St. Xicholas, and when I got
ready to go out ana see my man, oy
.jocks, stranger, I had lost his address,
and by George, I couldu t think of his
first name even. And his last name
was only Johnson. Easy name to hunt
for, eh ? I was left. You know what it
is to find any body In Xew York when
you don't know their address. It is
worse than finding an honest man.
Well, this man was a new comer
here; name wasn't in the directory. I
asked questions until I made a fool of
my sell.
"Then I said to the telegraph opera
tor at the St. Xicholas :
" 'It'll keep me here a week. I've
got to write clear to St. Louis to get tbe
man's address.' "
"'Telegraph, " the operator said.
"Well, I never thought of that before.
I wrote a dispatch right away :
" 'To Cottit & Keapit, brokers, St.
Louis What is our man Johnson first
name, and what's his address?'"
"And in due course the answer came
back:
" 'James P., St. Nicholas hotel.' "
"What you think of that, stranger t
I went to the clerk and said :
Is Mr. James P. Johnson in his
room?'"
"That is Mr. James P. Johnson,'
said the clerk.
"Tbe man, stranger, was standing
beside tne, waiting for me to move so
that he could speak to the clerk. And
I bad just sent one thousand and sixty
four miles to find where be was. Fun
ny, stranger, wasn't It?"
AGRICULTURE.
Clover Skf.dwo. At this time I
can scarcely believe any one desires to
dispute tbe value of red clover as an
important manurial agent in enricning
worn-out land : in fact I consider it the
cheapest fertilizer a farmer can apply
to bis land, especially in sucn land as 14
suitable to growth. When clover seed
Liav be obtained as at present, for only
about $4 50 per bushel, every farmer
should plan to seed down as many acres
as possible during the coming spring,
since it seems hardly probaole that so
low a figure will be reached again for
seed in several years, especially it the
ravages of the insect working in the
seeds of clover should be widespread
and as destructive as was the case in
this section during the past summer
and autumn. Many farmers have an
idea that clover should be sown only
upon fall-sown wheat or rye. This is
a wrong impression, as I havs seen
equally as good catches when sown
with oats, spring wheat and barley.
When intending to seed with spring
grain, a less quantity of the grain
should be sown, and if the ground Is
mellow, sow the clover and go over
with a Thomas or brush harrow after
drilling. If in the buckwheat grow
ing section, sow the clover on previous
to the last harrowing, and as the buck
wheat will afford the young clover a
good shade from the heat of the sun.
its growth will be rapid and satisfac
tory. Swf.i.i.ep Lecs ix Horses. Partial
or local debility is generally the cause
of horses' legs swelling over night in the
stable. When swelled legs occur in a
horse that is thin and impoverished, de
bility must be counteracted to promote
a cure, bv feeding somewhat liberally.
it is aided also by giving tonics, such as
half a drachm of powdered sulphate of
iron, and two drachms or powdered
gentian root, mixed in the food once
daily. Smart hand-rubbing and ban
daging should be employed, for which
puriose strong woolen cloths of any
kind may lie made use of, but flannel
forms the best bandage, when evenly
and firmly applied by means of a roller
tour yards 111 length, and tour inches
in breadth. Such a bandage may be
applied every evening, as long as need
ed. ts application should always De
preceded by smart friction of the limbs,
and instead of fastening them with
strings it is better to use strong pins.
The Scarcity or QrixcKS. Wi'hin
a few years past quince trees have
been attacked by a worm, just under
the surface of the ground, somewhat
similar in apiearance and in its effects
to the peach worm, and not being pro
perly attended to and the worms remov
ed, the trees have generally died, and
the fruit accordingly disappeared from
all our markets. The quince can be
just as successfully grown as the peach,
if a little care is taken to head oil' its
principal enemy, the worm at the root,
which requires but little time ami
trouble each Spring and Fall in remov
ing the earth from around the stem of
the tree, probe for the grub 111 his hole
in the bark with a stiff w ire, and filling
up around the tree w ith wood ashes or
slacked lime. The cheap gaslime, from
the gas-works, is a verv effectual reme
dy lor worms in ieach trees, and it
would no doubt answer the same pur
pose around the quince.
Markim; SiiKi.i-. This is Ik-si done
with Venetian red, a cheap paint, only
a few cents a pound, and one ponnd
will mark a thousand. Take a pinch
of dry powder and draw the enclosing
thumb and fingers through the wool,
and draw a bright red mark that the
rains w ill never wash out, and w hich,
without injuring the wool, will endure
from one shearing to another, w hile it
can be readily cleansed out by the
manufacturer.
To keep animals in good condition
or increasing in weight, should be the
object of every farmer during the w in
ter season, 'to permit a loss of weight
after the summer's feeding Is to waste
the food both winter and summer. It
costs more to get an animal lat than to
keep it lat.
Parsnips; are used very mueh in
France lor fattening meat cattle and
hogs. Steaming or boiling them is
strongly recommended, especially for
swine and poultry.
Grass land is very much improved
by the consumption of oil cake, grain
and feeding stutl's rich in nitrogenous
substances.
As soon as the teeth begin to fail the
animal whatever it may be is past a
profitable age. Sheep go down hill
fast. Weed oat the flocks, and keep
only thrifty sheep over the w inter.
Us Was a Diplomat.
A very. tall man wUh sandy chin
whiskers entered the door. The car
was full, and the seat unoccupied by
two persons was filled with a valise, a
bundle, a shawl and a thin woman of
thirty-five, with the latest style of red
hair and false teeth. The man -villi the
sandy whiskers, feeling a systematic
bond drawing him toward the woman's
red hair, touched her on the shoulder
and said :
"Is this seat engaged ?"
"Yes, it is," snapped the woman,
swelling up in the seat, that the man
might observe no possible room.
"Ah ?" murmured the man, in a pleas
ant tone. 1 hen he went and stood by
the stove and mused for awhile. Pres
ently he returned to the scene of his
rebuff, and leaning on tbe arm of the
seat, said softly :
"I beg youi paidon, madam, but as I
was standing by the stove, your feat
ures struck me familiarly. Did you
ever attend a Presidential reception at
Washington."
"Xo, I never did," replied the wo
mnn, but in a milder voice than she had
at first assumed.
"Then you will please pardon me,"
said the man, with an apologetic air;
"the mistake was occasioned by your
close resemblance to a young lady f rom
Philadelphia, who made her debut that
season, and whom I had the pleasure
of .meeting. She was considered tbe
belle of the season."
"Xo I never was in Washington,"
remarked the woman, in a mollified
tone.
"It is strange how much you resem
ble the lady in question," pursued the
man. "The hair is the same golden
hue, and while her features may not
have been so clear cut and Grecian in
their but there, excuse me, I am an
noying you," and the tall man started
away.
"Dan't hurry," said the woman,
pleasantly. "There doesn't appear to
be many empty seats; won't you sit
here ?" And she picked up her numer
ous baggage.
The man with the sandy whiskers
didn't know, but finally accepted the
invitation, and in an incredibly brief
space of time had the valise and bundle
in the rack above, the shawl tucked
around the window to exclude the draft,
and was regaling tbe red-headed wo
man with a choice collection of anec
dotes, that kept her laughing till the
passengers could see her false teeth.
Xever appear to notice a scar, defor
mity or defect of any one present.
domestic:
Some Foreign Dishes. Let us first
take up a most inviting dinner dish
popular in Germany and called nack
Braten. Take two pounds 01 beef (too
round) and one pound of pork, and
chop them together so finely that they
make a smooth mass. Soak in water
two slices of dry bread and press them
dry. Add four eggs, half a pound of
butter, work in dry, one tablespoonful
of water; and pepper, salt, nutmeg,
and the grated rind of one lemon, to
taste. The w hole must be mixed to
gether thoroughly and formed into the
shape of a loaf. Put a piece of butter
over the top and bake for one hour in a
quick oven. Put no water in the pan
nor ill the gravy that drops from the
meat. This dish is at once delicate and
satisfying, and when brought to the
table "the savory brown loaf has a very
appetizing look and odor. The vegeta
bles that should be served with it are
mashed potatoes and stewed tomatoes.
Another excellent German dish is of a
dainty sort of meat balls, called Friea
delln. '1 his is an economical dish, for
any bits 01 meat left over from a pre
vious roast can be used, added to some
fresh meat. Any sort of meat may be
used. It should be chopped exceedingly
fine and mixed thoroughly with sail,
pepper, dry bread, soaked and squeezed,
and a tiny bit ol grated nutmeg. Some
meat broth or gravy of any kind must
be added to keep it moist. Form the
mixture with the bands into egg shaied
balls or finger long rolls, roll them in
bread crumbs, and fry quickly in hot
butter. If cooked too long flesh meat
meat becomes dry. If beef is used for
the fricadelln it should always be cut
from the lop round. A third delicate
dish, ami one which, like the two
others, will please those who sometimes
tire ol roast, is partly rench and
partly German, and may be called, for
want of a belter name, Beef Kolls. Cut
a large, thick piece of rump steak into
long slices, perhaps three eighths ot an
inch thick. Koll them up, tie them
with a thread or string, and fry them
brown in a little hot butter. Then
make a good brown sauce or gravy, add
to It pepper, salt, vinegar and spices to
taste with a few cajters, and let the
beef roils cook in it lor a few minutes
until thoroughly seasoned. Put with
these at the same time into the gravy a
few olives which have first been stoned.
Take the strings off the rolls and serve
ou a blatter with the gravy poured
around them; there must above all be
plenty of this sauce or gravy.
Keep tbeDwei.li.no Dry. A warm
and dry atmosphere is not unwhole
some, but when cloudy or rainy
weather brings a sultry air which
dampens everything around us, the at
mosphere may be loaded with the
germs of disea. and fire is needed to
destroy them. The walls, the ceilings
and floors of apartments should never
be alloweJ to become damp. Some
times, when the warmth ot the air is
oppressive, fire is more necessary to
preserve health than it is at another
season to protect us from the warmth
of winter; and the rooms of a dwelling
should never be left w ithout the means
of warming and drying. Investigations
have show 11 that some of the imt fatal
diseases are caused by the germs of
vegetable and animal Hie, and that a
humid atmo.-phere is most favorable to
their propagation. It is, therefore,
neglecting not to avail ourselves of the
great discoveries of the age, and failing
to protect ourselves from scourges
which so fearfully alllict families, when
we ignore the danger around us.
Apartments exposed to the full action
of the sun, may be less comfortable iu
hot weather than those from" which the
sun's rays are excluded, but they are
more wholesome, and w hen contagious
diseases prevail in closely built cilies.it
is found that the inmates of houses on
that side of the street exposed to the
sun, are lessjiable to be attacked ; while
the greatest number ol sick are always
found w here there is the least exosure
to the great disiufector the sun.
The Greatest Blessisj. A simple,
pure, harmless remedy, that cures every
time, and prevents disease by keeping
the blood pure, stomach regular, kid
neys and liver active, is the greatest
blessing ever conferred upon man. H p
Bitters is that remedy, and its proprie
tors are being blessed by thousands who
have been saved and cured by it. Will
you try it? See another column.
To Cook Beans. The usual way
people cook beans is to parboil them,
put them in a kettle or pan, set them in
the oven to bake with apiece of fat
pork in them. The grease oozes out
into the beans, causing a most unwhole
some and indigestible mass, destroying
the flavor of the beans. The method
for cooking them (which all who have
tried pronounce excellent) isas follows:
Parboil as usual, salt to suit the taste,
then put them in a pan and place in
the oven to bake, putting iu a piece of
good sweet butter the size of a butter
nut will do. Bake until tender and
nicely bi owned over on top. Beans
are very nutritious, and cooked in this
way are palatable, digestible, and can
be eaten by any one. If you w ant the
pork, cook it in a dish by itself.
To Jt'DflK Sii.km. There are two
ways to judge siiks. Note the closeness
and evenness of the rib, and hold it to
the light to judge the better of this.
That shows the texture. Then crush
the material in the hand and release it
suddenly. Notise if it springs out
quickly; that is the verve, and should
leave i.o crease behind. The quality of
the silk is the softest in the world, and
often wanting in stiffness in appearance.
The Bengal silk is the poorest, and de
ficient in verve. And, again, there is a
great deal of silk manufactured w hich
is adulterated with a material called
jute, which is interwoven in the fibre
ot the silk, in is manufacture win De
found very deficient in verve. It is a
silk which, if wetted, stiffens almost
like paper.
Boilino Fresh Fisn. All fresh fish
or fresh meats must be put into boiling
water; salt lish or salt meats into cold
water. Before putting in the fish
throw in about two L-thlespoonsluI of
salt for a large fish, and a w ine-gla-s
of vinegar. This secures the best
flavor of fish, and the vinegar does
not affect the taste at all. The
water must be boiling w hen the fi-h is
laid in, but after that it must only sim
mer. Never boil fish. It is done when
it begins to crack or cleave apart from
under the gills, if a whole fiVh ; if onlv
a part of a fish it will, when done,
spring off a little from the backbone.
Don t let it cook a minute longer alter
that.
Clothes last longer when washed with
Dobbins'. Electric Soap, (made by
Cragin Co.. Philat'elDhia.) becau.-e
no rubbing is needed. Clothes are worn
out more on the washboard than on the
person. Try it.
Ix Saxoxt the farmers manufacture
yery good cheese from small partis of
milk by addition ot potatoes. The po
tatoes are cooked, then mashed, and to
eight pounds of potatoes two quarts of
thick sour milk are added, Salt is
added, tnen kneaded the same as bread
dough. In four days it receives another
kneading, and is separated into balls of
four pounds each, pressed with the
hand as compact as possible into small
baskets, and dried in summer in the
shade; in winter by the fire. When
thoroughly dry the cheese is put into
tin cans, sealed up, and set by for use,
in a cool dry place.
A cold sstxs a su affair. Most people
neglect IU W bo n.in.is tl Yet a ( old mar
turn .0 Consumption, and then follows almost
certain deaib. Take a cold in time, to n: that
is, take Dr. I). Jaynes's Expectorant, the well
known standard r medy for 1 oik lis, ("old-., t"on
snmptkin, Asibma, Bronchitis, and all Pulmo
nary Complaint, and your eo d wiU disappear,
as well as all sfpiebenaion. of danger.
HUMOROUS.
Tt. niher day.
Mayor of wsuu.-.- "JVir. and
while Bijah was dusting off -hairs nd
growling aoou w - ltro
next winter, in .-. -------
dueed himself as Mayor or Bangor. He
spit all over the stove hearth and sa a
he had olten heard ot Bijh.
rui'bed his muddy leet agaiusi ...
board and observed that he had come
live hundred miles out of his way on
purpose to shake the old janitor s hand,
lie had some three-cent cigars and!
wasn't long before he made such a goou
impression that Bijah lent him six dol
lars. He -was to pay it back that eve-
k... u-i.n h was walked In,
about ten o'clock, druni as a sea cap
tain, he had nothing leu.
eveu Mayor of Bangor any longer, on
the contrary, he gave his "ie
Timothy U Uale. and said he had been
in the soap busiuess in Buffalo. Bijan
sat down in front of him and tried to
convince him that he was a liar, horse
thief, swindler and iuiposter. but the
"late Mayor" had his own ideas ana
couldn't be argued out of them.
"I'll have vou sent up for ten thous
and years!" was the oft-repeated
threat of the old janitor, and even
when court ojiened he wouldn't knock
off but one thousand years from the im
pending sentence. When he stepped
foi ward to be sw orn the Court Inquired :
"Mr. Joy, have you been natural
ized ?"
" Naturalized ! Why, I was born in
this country !"
" Were, eh ? Have you ever been con
victed of conspiracy against the gov
ernment?" "Never!"
"Do you know the nature of an
oath ?"
Bijah swallwed three or four tunes
and be said he thought he did.
" Well, then, go ahead, but don t
wring iu anything about Mexico. I
want a plain statement of facts facts.
Mr.Jov."
Bijah was very red in the face as he
began his story. When he was through
the prisoner turned and denied that he
borrowed six dollars, or that he claimed
to be the Mayor of Bangor, and he ap
pealed to the court to know if the testi
mony of a man with such a phiz on
him was any better than a prisoner
statement.
From the evidence pet in I cannot
tell whether the prisoner passed him
self off" as the Mayor of Bangor, or
whether Bijah passed himself otl as May
or of Detroit," said the Court, and he
gave Timothy thirty days for being
drunk.
Bijah fell back with his knees as lim
ber as a clothes-line after a four weeks'
drought, ami he was heard to observe
that he would resign his situation that
very morning if he didn't expect some
relatives from Chicago.
A 1 too 11 to Humanity
is anything t .at will eae pain, and a pnblir
benehwtor one who i lle to leliere human
ailmentM. The mont painful of all bodily ills
u surely piles, autl such bu been the ausnrd,
enipir.cal barbarous treatment ot this terrible
iliwut tor 300U years that Hcieublic men began
to despair, and a'uiotinguiautd modern surgeon
h pronounced it the "opprobimm of the
profetwiou." Alll.cteJ millions tortured with
pain and deceived by the falne pretensions of
pile nostrums, cried ont in the lanuape of the
lii bio: "Who in Una that dvkenetbcojunel by
w.irda without knowledge: canat thou draw out
a Leviathan with a book?" Dr. ttiltibee in a
beuefactor and Anakeaia. the ttreat infallible
pile remedy, the most beuericeut discovery of
the age; a simple, safe, prompt and permanent
cure for this terrible, puuful ami heretofore
almost incurable disease. Half a million suf
ferera pronounce it infa.lible: none use it
w.thont beuent, and doctors of all medical
schools now preoc-r.be it It is the discovery
of a scientific chemist and practicing physician
after 46 yem' experience, mud prououui.-ed to
be the nearest to an infallible remedy known.
Amikifi. Dr. 8. Siilsbeen External I'lie lie
mi dv is sold by all tirst-ciax dru.'Kints. Price
T 1 00 per box. Samples mailed free to all suf
ferers on application to P. Neustaedter & Co.,
L'ox 3140 New York.
A Xkw F.tr.v. Headers of The Ilmr
are posted 011 the fact that Bijah's farm,
in the rear of the Central Station, was
not a success last year. He expended
T-J7 in cash for seeds and extra work,
and the income footed up four string
beans, a dandelion, and about a dozen
old paper collars. The Police Commis
sioners have kindly offered him the use
of the same ground this year, the old
janitor has planned to turn it into a
park ror the beuent or the city poor, it
is to be called " I'oor Folks' i'aradise,"
and plans are already out for a fish
pond wl.are poor, sad boys can always
he sure ol a bite: a gondola for babies
with the measles to ride in; seven
benches on which men can sit and
smoke as the sun slowly sinks away; a
base-ball grounds, and various other
matters of interest. Admission to this
park will be free, and it will be open
all day and all night, the same as a
drug store. Any one found throwing
cats into this park from neighboring
windows will be dealt with as their
crimes deserve. If the public desire to
contribute stone dogs, vases or old
relics, they w ill be set up as ornaments,
and carefully treasured.
If a bank officer would look at a
burglar with a bag of tools as severely
as lie docs at a poor man with a small
check, many robberies might be pre
vented. A license is necessary both in mar
riage and in selling liiiuors. This is
because they are at first intoxica'ing,
and afterwards likely to result in a
light."
A Missorru woman keeps up a bar in
her house lor her husband to patronize
and in this way keeping him at home,
besides getting all his money.
A Coi.t'Miics man says he started
thirty years ago to make Tl,4tK),(XM). He
has got the fourteen, but the ciphers
bother him.
A max never fully realizes to what
extent he is dependent usn others
until at the barbershop he was waited
patiently for an hour and a half for his
turn.
A commercial advertisement for "a
man to travel," was answered by a
tramp, lie said he was used to the
business.
A ladv, joking about her nose, said:
" I had nothing to do in shaping it. It
was a birthday present."
" What is one man's food is another
man's poison," hut that rule won't
work both ways.
Teach fr : " What kind of a verb Is
love?" Young ladv pupil: Fint-
night verb."
It has been said that figures will not
lie, and yet almost anyone can set them
down.
What sort of a voice has the vrnl.or-
womau ? Why, soap-rano, of course.
Thk oecunant cf a villa Is not iipws.
sarily a villain.
A seaside invocation " Let us
spray.
Tne Value of Tisne.
As in a 8re the loss greatly depem's
upon the time required for efficient aid
to arrive, so the result of catarrh
greatly depends upon the speedy use of
efficient remedies. For over a quarter
of a century, Dr. Sage's Catarrh
Remedy has been the standard remedy.
The positive cures it has effected are
numbered by thousands. Each year has
witnessed an increased sale. Its repu
tation is the result of superior merit. If
the disease has extended to the throat
or lungs, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery should be used with the Ca
tarrh Remedy. These two medicines
will speedily cure the most stubborn
case of eatarrh. See tbe People's Com
mon Sense Medical Adviser, a work of
over 900 pages. Price, $ I 50. Address
the author, R, V. Pierce. M. D., Buf
falo, N. Y.
I. , -rld iudge us by
Men 01 mo . . '
'Th:r;.eWhno bones, but the
rparnin youth than
rrUst't of beauty which
-iil.n mathematics-
Stlmlte th. Sln1 Kldneya.
In Edition UfU tonic Zg2l
true.. HoatMUrt iSta- "d"
benencial influence upon W 1
bladder, when e.'DVu8 reope
ting them to renewed IrUa- of im-
der themeeive. are b'"lT pre
etunulna, a. toir macuvi F
limiuarv to tbe.r disease mr;31 tber
Tb ata ' ""tSToni T inriirora
poruona of ? " "T , 7 .. . hv h furthermore
bowels and liver.
Irrorr aa, """"iP
HoorLA-w' Gaam Brrraaa.
WraML we-rame. mrmm.
E. F Ktmkel. Worm Syrup never
H' reS
m.nm tMches if Tape Worm can om
cJbe readdy
Vu at office and store, free. The doctorcan
IT whMhVrl not th. patient has worni.
do not know it. Fit epaam cramt, cbok
Ed suffocation. Ulo- complexion, ore'e.
Sound tba eye .-ellin and ria m the
sumach, restless at nibt. grinding of the
tXpiclluTg.tthe ,ueJUUpt
talat ihe sea', headache, fonl breath, the p
tTent erows pale and thin, tickling and irnta
uon r".f.nu-aU these PE
more, come from worm i- - Kc
nSvaor neve, ft t remove them.
Fnce. tl per 1 ottle. or six bottles for tS-Wi.
FoTapeWorm wnte and consult the doctor.)
FoTaU others, buy of your dmsgw u, the
Worm Syruo. and if he baa it not eend to Ua.
F 59 X. N-nt Philadelphia.
rJ'iSiZZv mad. T-5 "" threes
E. f Ka-kel-a Bitter Wlaeef Ir
Has never been known to fail m the cure o.
weaknena attended with symptom, of odu.po
ition to exertion, k of memorv. d.fli.-uUT m
breathing, weakness, horror of di
nervous frembang, dreadful horror of death.
n,gl.t.weats. cold feet, weakness, dimnese of
vision, languor, universal lass tnde of the
muscular .tem enora-ous appetite with dys
peptic vmptoi-s. Hot hands, flushing of the
bodT. drvness of the skin, pallid countenance
and erupuona on the face, panly.ng the
blood, pain in the back, heaviness in the eye
hds. frequent black spots flyt .g before the
even, with suffusion and loss of eight, want or
attention, 4a Sold on y in 1 0 . bottl. or
.bVforiOO. Ask forE.F. Kunkel.
bitter Wine of Iron and take no other. Ask
tout druggist, and if be has it not. send to
Proprietor. E. F. Knnkel, Jio. 259 North Ninth
s reet. Phila- lelpnia. Pa. Advice free; enclose
tbtee-ceut stamp.
HrRsKcix'a Tetter Ointment will cure Sore
Erelids. Sore Nose, Barber's Itch on the face,
or Grocers Itch on the bands. It never fails.
50 cents per box, sent by mad for 60 centa.
Johnston. Hollowav A Co..
602 Arch St., Phil a.. Pa.
RIIErMATISTT.
This dreadful disease, the doctors tell OS, la
b the blood, and believing th s to be true, ws
advise every sufferer to try Durang's Khen
matie Bemsdy. II is taken internally and
positively cures the worst esse in the shortest
bold by every Druggist in town.
Rieseklx's Trrrea Oistthest will cure all
scabby or scaly diseases of the skin.
Thm anflwering an Advertisement will
eonfera favor upon the Advertiser nl tli
HubltiUier by ntatinKthmt theyititwthe adver
t.emenc In thin JouraaMnamtnc the paper).
XEW MUSIC BOOKS"
THE GOSPEL OF JOY.
By Rev. Smsal Ahms anil S. it. Se. rk. A book rf
si tat i SiStv. l-eing tn stieet "The li e I in
tuii . f g.KMt (. with tn- bit of i-w hy-iii.a and
u.tlrdti. nia it f.T th m. in frs aud..sr!j isauy
Wau lut u. ( .euta.)
THE SUIXIXG HITER,
m nail nf th- pnrmt nd wt1tof Sand?
r?chool S.ng Bovk,iJ6 cutt). LxAiuiu it I
GE3IS OF EXGLISII SOXG,
In one or th Krnkn of th Home MmHcitf 11
prry. vhich ciit..ii n- mry mil the good Sh -ei 1i
tc -r patmnhvti. Fnil of th bvM domta. 2St
p.gf itf busvrOa. J.UOctott,.
P.nofArA continue in .rreat demand, St 00 for
lilidlUIU o ft) copy compete. 75 enn f-T
1 ni tram' ml e.rrar tn tit. THK HR4 Ltik.!i,T
fcUw cuailet. i qim1. gul, at same price.
The Musical Record ?r.;
crmnd fir-
rnlstttoii.eviid i a
rpl-l Weekly Music! Paper, I .U l per yenr)i
etvfor Binuitj copy, containing 3t cnta Wvttu ol'
auic
Oliver Ditson & Co, Boston.
J. E. DITWA A fO
3 t-hratamt St Fhllav.
JOHN WANAMAKER
The most tboroagb organization in America
for executing written orders Is tne Hall Depart
ment for samples ar.d supplies at tne Grand
Depot, the great Dry Goods and Outfitting- Es
tablishment Of JOH5 WANAMASER.
Btqntata for samples and ordtrs for goods ara at
tnalM to with th swat thorough pro aMnsas and
precision. Hothinc sent oat snlest believed to be
jnvt what to wanted, bat if not astUfact.rT 1 cluwv
fully xchaiiffed or Boner tsfnnded.
ETISITHIIfO IN
Sirknand Velreta.
Preftfl liuAfta.
rmlerwear. forget . etc.
Luiiea' a Children p Shoes
Monmins (ioMs.
Luliey A Cuil.jres.Snila.Knl.berU nla. Trnk.."ete
? f ""': l i'iene. Flannel.. .i.lhis
u woooa-ten. Ifc.r C...thin.
H .ervan.l blov.s. ;.,,t.- rnnianin
hit. G..O.I. and Lares. Men a and B..T Hats.
V.lh.n.. K-pbrrs. etc. Mationerj a Sil,vrare
uV. V t Kn,or"'dvies. IIoum Inrni.h.ns liwla.
i 1-th. an.t oak.r.gs. Toja and bum.
I ura atd Millinery.
r!,1 ,rar or " or price, of anv
Ihmf deeired. Begister all tettsrseosiainins money.
Manr Barsaina may bs tats, d sow. bstweena
suna. Addrssa
JOHN WANAMAKER,
GRAXD DEPOT,
PHUUADELPH ia.
The Largest Dry Goods and Outfitting- Douse
lltfJ& CURES wt:.a
svnnii.V ...... .. ..
. . sr..
Mnsra was bars assd this Trsatemti
22? 1 se.1 wtaa saatry
.ISS llMSMsavaat sa,.
rnrr
PHILADELPHIARECORD.
TlIE CHEAVEST AND LARGEST
DAILY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
I TIIETjyiTEp STATES.
IT rUBLlSUES A
FULL REPORT OASSOCIATED press NEWS.
T TUBLISHES
Comp-oto cna .-.courato Market Reports.
THE RECORD. Philadelphia.
NICHOLS, SHEPARO & CO.,
n.Mla C?rsaT. Mich.
ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE
VlBBATOR
THRESH1KG MACHINERY.
utrt.-iviSrs STEe-
Jm KAIV. Ralaen will est nhmlt ts tHs .
a itwl mm ta. slUrreasi.
M m-. . .
rfSZ TI-Ur. Mil, Ckr. 1 IU.
iv T.oro.rh Wsramablp. Etoaat
MABVFLOrs fhr Simplirilv sr Parts, sals
l,".Utt--a' theu cue an Geara. Ixs
Cfeaa Worn. UA se UUerlni. r ScaUCTiaaa,
rol l Siir sf Separator. SadV. RaBrins
eS tUn r"r a mmltm.
rOB Psrtlrslast. fall ss ssr Deslers jt
aril. aa b iil."fc Clre-r. Muck aaaau avs.
HOP BITTERS.
A aiedlrlne, sot a. Jrisiu)
eoa-TArars
HOPS, atrCHC. BMHOIUKaV
DAXDELIO.
Lamb ism Tikes t am Best Mzdicai QDaumsj
or alt, cm an Bittsss.
X'J 1 H V OTXXHJ
A3 Disease, of U Stomach. Bowela. Blood. Ltver
ISMneys. and Urinary Ortaaa. Set ws isn est, latsepj
sad asperJaUr Jamais CemDlalaia.
f- S10OO IX COLD.
Irt Ul be paJ3 for a case IheywHT not cars or he!p. or
for anything lm"urs or Injiu ksia foond ts them.
.Aak roar drag-tfat for Bop Bitters sad try tbeirjS
before job sleep. Take ss scbsr.
fncs-Cocoa Crisis the wertest, safest and basil
am uuiares
rThe Hen Vir for Sroznerh. ijvwr snd Ktneys baj
saswri.ru aiiotoera, fi a l-T"gPT'Si
1. 1 C. fa an abaolnts and ft i ratal roha eusa vm
surouatoeav, use or opium, tobacco aos.
EQwS Send for circular.
Mltoi1dTSiai la "T T r t
DR. M.W- CASE'S
Liver Remedy
BLOOD PURIFIER
Io Tonie. Cordial. Anti-Blttons.
Ct'DlTQ luvuC'onrLAi:T.BntccsEaa.HBAB
Ufttd acne. 81.-K licasacas. Nbcsalou,
)IV(M AND A.JCS. PH.F5TAT1.X. C"SCMrTIOM,
DYSPEPSIA
t-.-i mlt lnm-T9 of the Ploairh, I.trvis !
KlaMtwi. It bUAMl D Ul BTSUOal. i I .eMMlt tO UlA
dueai u t nckeo. fflTe i in. nor latvi xhm Mtaia eua
aut'td, aa othe-r m
ooaiouivM at.
HOW TO BE
Artep ytmr irw wcnm
mnd jTur blooi pare, and
TrATTTJ s-iTirTaT Jf" r?.nr d'?fc
n;y av your aix
i bula Tina Kmnly
X W XV w 9 AS tor-e t
DOCTOR.
Csaa fn'oi his faVTonta ranc i ! iyoon. caed in ht own
ziatdv0 pravcti'- lor over Hi year ttupenor to
I kno-sra rtjliitNiirws. tlm mmyty wH- f.L
IlKSv'irr AGENTS WANTED
1 0- LTR AOK OI A K V i Ol t K.M ENT!
orT-Tvi. t"ni fT Cirmlar indlfrm- to Arrmnux.
HOME tttDICTSE CO., Philadelphia.
tHold br aii lrnm-M, Omwrtml Btorea. and Arvnta
PrirtN 2 .". l.argP Kattl?w kif Lxt
B- ii of H itrrfir )ivJ.7a. aWDt by gTpTr'we.ywyeitdi,
Trial BetUt fraa AmIl immr UvMMmkmi. far Hw
TJTT t? T TT? AC A Kent. anted everywnre
JTUAXl XXjJ.0. ta .ell to f.niilir.. h tel.
and larre con.umer. : larfest .tock ia the c..nnt. v
q.iaii'jr au.l terui. tlie l)-r. r,iinlry arork-erer.
h..ul. chII i.r write THK tl.f TEA in"
1-ANY. Jjl Fa.l.m street. ew fork. P.O. Box !.
PE R M AN E NT "
INTERNATIONAL
EXHIBITION !
CENTENSIAIj GIIOUNDH,
SW OPtM EVEBT DAT.aj
asratailoa S Cents.
Children, 10 Cants.
"pis- did .rrsv of EvWMt. fn depai tnieuts of Set
efacv. Art. Education. Asricaitors, Hscbanacs.
SPECIAL MUSICAL ATTBACTI0S9 DalLi.
Also, tne Largest
KOLLESKATISa BISK IJt TBE WOBLD.
Ores each Weeltay from A. M. bRW..an
from to 4.w P. M., and on vi ednesdsy sad Saiar
aay veumsa from 7 to 1J3I e'clotk.
IHB BUILPISO IS HKATID.
lnltU.rkM-b.lw4 l.uuol.
)!aUuhek M-u.e It.r fuiurea flue.t us
r.shta in America I2.I.U tn ne Pian.4
tJ-S. aent on trial al.lneoe Iree. M 1 D E La
- suss riAAo Col. 21 B. UU. btreat. .S. i.
tSTAKLISOED lSlS.
MORGAN & IIEADLY,
Importers of Diamonds
AND
Kannfictiirers of Spectacles.
IS S AS SOS Street, Fnilatdelphla.
lUnstrated Price List seat to the trad
on application.
c ut 1m A.-u L. s .imr y .i 1. o per ruoulil
-.Vr"''.''','.""''"-"''"""1 "'oa-llour
bamnl. free. A dlres..n, A f o u!T
IW RISTOBt
Olir Wp;torn Rnr-A-
ATjompIetoand Graphic Uiatory f aaSri-- P.
seer Life, w.tk fnli Jcc.s.. f2J ATT"" ,U-
m, AdVta Ca.t..it.- Wo" - sclt-
ass porta. A beck lr Old H
- a--... i iinimn
pane. No ".T,0-. I
bvtsdnil
ss.ais
Pa.
LANDRETHS" SEEDS
. LAjSDRSTH a SONS, ili). HIXTH
PHILADKLPHIA.
- n