American Coin. "There is really do end," said an ama teur coin collector, "to the list of articles collected in cabinets. I collect only Amer ican silver coins, and I know that there is - a whole world of absolutely unsuKpecliid details about this branch of collecting. There, lor instance, is the mystery about the coinage of 1804. A small number of dollars was struck, and of these coins not one has ever been found. There are two specimens in existence of the 1804 dollar, but there is every reason to believe that these were rest r ikes made in 1823 by some one in the mint at I'hiladelplua in a sur reptitious and unlawful way for some col lector who had influence. Vvbat can have bccone of those dollars thai have disap peared so completelyl From time to time at auction sales one of the restrikes ap pears, and at each sale fetches a greater sum. As high as f 1,600 has been paid for one of them. But what shall be said of the half dollars of 1804? Of these no less than 156,519 specimens were coined, yet none ban ever been discovered. A certain number ot half dollars bearing the date 1805 will, if examined closely, discover that the five has been struck over a four. This only shows that a certain number of the 1804 half dollars was never issued from the mint and was converted into 1805 pieces, but it docs not explain the total vanishing of those that were issued. There can be no doubt that some thing happened of a mysterious character which caused the dollars and half dollars to disappear, for the quarters of that ear ate not particularly scarce; a fine specimen casts only $10, and a fair specimen can be had for Si Yet there were only 6,738 pieces of that denomination struck in that Annus Mirabdis for us collectors, and ot dollars there were 19.570. There were oniy 021 dollars struck the next year, and these were in all probability for the cabl nets of collectors, for no dollar was issued in 1805. Then the coinage of silver dol lars ceased, and did not begin again until 18C6. it would be easy to frame the hy pothesis that the larger Amenon silver coins were ovtr-weight and that merchants bought them up and sold them for melt ing. But although the tacts in relation to the dollars bear out this theory, yet th annals of the mint about the half dollars are opposed to it, for in 1805 there was a very large issue of this piece, and so on every year until 1815, when there was comparatively a small issue. In 1816 there wss no coinage at all of half dollars. Coins of thus denomination for 1815 are rather scarce, so that a fine specimen is worth from ten to twenty dollars according to its appearance. Corns are graded as proof, uncirculated, fine, good and fair. The thorough-paced collector has nothing to do with dealers cr with auctiou sales, but hunts for his game with an eve ever watcLlul for a chance. When be passes the cribs where the ferry men take the toll, his eye glances rapidly over the heap of coins spread before the official Cerberus, (Should he see a dime, of suspicious appearance, he says, in a hurried way, 'Excuse me. I'm a coin col lector,'' and with tnis brief apology be picks up the coin, and after a brief inspec tion he replaces it by one of the same denomination and departs with his prize perfectly heedless ol the cutting way in which the toll gather insists that be will not have his money harciled by strangers. After a few kirmihea of this kind the ferrymen come to look upon him as an amiable lunatic, and whenever they re ceive an odd loukiEg piece make point of giving it to him in change. lhe gicat o'jjcct of a collector is to complete a series, that is to say, to have one of every variety of any given den. mi nation thai has been coined. 1 he most desirable in Anieucan t lver coins are hail dollars and dimes, because there are fewer breaks in these than in any other Ameri can issues. The earliest piece, of course, are not in circulation, ajd the collector who sticks to his programme an excellent one of never going near a dealer. nr fre quenting any auction sale, will not be likely to have any specimens of th&e in his cabinet. But it is well to kuow that before lie mint was organized there was coined somewhere a small supply oi me aismca ana hail-dismes men oncd by Washington in his fourth annual auurcs?. i ue warn ot small coins w.u keenly fe'.t, and the first Tres;dent was so evidently at one with the popular feeling in the mailer that a legend is extant thai these small pieces were coined out of his silver plate. But in what ni.ut they were coined is a question thai has been aski-d but not answered, bonie persons believe that they were coined ia England, but patriotism repels such a thought. .Nor is ll necessary to frame such a coniectur. because there were two locahtis in the hnd where ample preparations bad been made for coining silver, but had been r rested by the fonuatiuu of the Federal L'nion, which took from the States Hie nht uf coinage. The two points where the "disn'C!." and ha.'l diHins could have ltn coined weie Annapolis, in -Mart mud. and Ledham, in Massachusetts. The work wis in ail probability done at the Jatt'-T place, tor there has always been a strong local tradition that the first coins of the Union were struc k there. The dime of 1792, or Washington dime, as collectors ca.1 it, has on the obveise a young man's head wilh flowing hair, facing to the kit, The date 17'J2 touches tne lower part ol the bust. Around is the legend: Lilerty, Parent of Science aud Industry." On the reverse is a small eagle flying to the left, with the legend, "United Slates of Ameri ca." Beneath the eagle is the word risme." The first regular issue Irom the Philadelphia Mint ot dimes was in 1796, whereas dollars and half dollars and half mines were c-jined in 1794. Iu 1794 and the succeeding year the bead of Liberty on lhe coins has the hair flowing without any res raint, but in 1796 when the quarters and dimes bemn, this had been chai ged, aud all the coins have the hair confiueu wilh a fillet. This lasted uutll 1&07, when m the latter part of the j ear was issued the bead of Liberty with the Liberty cap. This is eousidtreJ with reason the most beautiful of Ameiican coins, and continued witnout change down t 1S37 f w dimes and to 18:i8 for quarters, and to ltv-,9 lor naif dollars and lSoS-lS-fi fur dollars, when the beautiful head ot Liberty was displaced lor a figure of Liberty seated. Tne dollars struck in 1830 and succeeding years until 1840 were tenia ive efforts only, the first large issue beinir in 1840. You can understand that it is very easy to recognize a dime or half dime with lhe head of Liberty among others; the reverse bears an eagle with a heraldic shield. This has been retained for the larger silver pieces, but the small coins have a reverse which is simp'y in sipid. Dimes as far back as 1814 are in circulation, but they seldom rank above good. Dimes cf 1822 are very rare, and one in good condition is worth $3. t or fine specimens tte value mounts higher, but it is injudicious to think of the auction value ot a piece as tending to a pot-huut ing spirit greatiy to be reprobated." 2 he experiments ot ur. iianuaei, a German ha van t, Lave awakened much interest. Be lias succeeded, after many experiments, in photographing several flashes of lightning. The photographs took in part of the lundbcape, ard made it possible to estimate with accuracy the locality where the lightning struck. It also proved possible to compute the JeDgth of the course traversed by the current. These experiments are to be continued with the aid of stereoscopy. It is denied by Schmidt liuhlheim that the formation of part of the milk obtained lrom a cow begins with the process of milking, and that the udder is too small to give room for all the fluid to be obtained at one milking: Oa the contrary, the most thorough effort will leave some milk in the ducts, whence it ia driven into the milk reservoirs by the newly-formed secretion pushing from behind, and which may be obtained af ter the lapse of an hour Irom the time the milking began. AQBICULTUBF. Stoktso Potatoes. There are three methods of storing in general use, each of which baa its merit and its champi one Three general principle! underlie these several methods, viz: Protection against frosts and ttmperature,free.lom from moisture and avoidance ot heating caused by storing too deep. The ad vantages claimed for storing in barrels are that the roots are easily handled.do not suffer from abrasion, can be easily examined, and if disease appears it can tw readily checked and remove 1. The chief objection to this method ia the time and expeute involved when the crop ia a large one. Bius are largely cominir into nse, especially in localities near large cities, for the potatoes can at any time be readily reached and pre pared for market. A cot 1, dry, well ventilated cellar, with the light exclud ed, is an admirable place in which to store potatoes. The argument in favor of storing po tatoes nnder ground ia that there is lit tle if wy loss by evaporation. Objec tions to the plan are the labor involved in opening the banks when the roots are required and the risk involved from the extremes of too close or insufficient cov ering. When pits are employed it is important that arrangements be made for ventilation. When stored in cellars, barns or root houses it is a safe plan not to fill the bins with roots to a depth exceeding three or four feet. It has been claimed that lime sprinkled in barrels or bins at that rate, say one pound to each barrel, tends to prevent decay by acting aa an absorbent and neutralizing the earthy odors. The importance of excluding light from potatoes and keeping them as cool as possible without fiecziiig,can not be over-estimated Sate thb Cokskoddeh There will be as good a crop of corniodder this year as in mo?t years, hence it behooves every farmer to look to its careful pre servation, which ia not always done as well as it should be. It is true the od der is a heavy article to handle, unless the husking is deferred to a period when the lodder Itevomes somewhat dry, sometimes a lit Id monldy.and then it is frequently left in the field until the latter part of November or beginning of December, gatlo to its injury, The corn itself, when the husking is deter red, treqaently becomes mouldy, and its value deteriorated. It is belter to husk it as soon after the stalks are cut and the giains have become hardened, and crib at euce. This allows the air to pass through the mass lreely and dries it gradually aiid safely. All farmers, who have any exf enence in feeding good cornfouder, must ad mit that cattle prefer it to the best clo ver Lay, and it is fully as miik-produc-mg, and more so when the stalks are slightly salted. They will then eat up all that is thus prepared for them and thrive upon it. We know this as well from our own experience as the experi ence cf others. Comfodder is not, therefore, merely worth being cured in the best manner, but it should be an object of real concern with all who keep citile, equally as mnch as with clowr hay. It is lot pleasant, then, to ate so many fields ol fodder everywhere over the country moulding aid spoiling late in Xovember, or even the forepart of December, merely for the sake of a lit tle additional labor to preserve it as it should be, by storing it away to help out the winter' stock of cattle food. Docs have done more injury to sheep husbandry than all other causes com bined, and, considering the importance of the evil, it does not recive that no tice at the hands of the agricultural press that it rightly deserves. As a rule the larger number of dogs that de vastate the flocks are worti. less and val ueless, and should not be tolerated in any community, bnt that they do exist is t'emonstrateJ by the conii hunts that come from all quarters rejaruing their ravaie. T3E man iu charge of a herd of cattle or buoep that cauuot tell when some member is absent without counting the whole lot, hail let ter go iuto some other business. We Lave heard the owner of a drove of near a thousand herd of cat tie at the West sty be could tell if a sin gle animal was absent simply by allow ing the herd to pass him. We would be inclined to take any man's sta'e- ment to thut eflect with a degree of al lonance. A rBACTiCAL tanner, and one who has thoroughly tested the matter, says that wooden posts will last in the ground even longer than iron if treated as follows: Take boiW linseed oil and stir in puluerized coal to the consistency of point, l ui a coat ot tins over the Um ber, and there is not a man that will live to see it rot. We can readily understand how our neighbor who rises at 7 in the mornine and spends three or four hours of al most i very fair day aud all ol the rainy days in the town or village, gossiping or talking politics, does not prosper at tarming.and lie does not deserve to suc ceed. Mix chopped onions with the food once a day lor several days and ground ginger two or three times a week and yon may check early symptons of chol era in poultry. Afterward give both once a week. Do koi leave any enocenpied land to grow a ciop of weeds. Wnen an early crop is removed sow at once any crop that will keep them down. Buckwheat or peas are good and rav oe turned under before frost. Keep the poultry busy if vou wish to keep them in health, and make tiiem scratch if you wish for efTim; but keep them quiet and Well fed if son wish to make them fat. As agricultural experiment station has been established iu Wisconsin.The work of the station is to be conducted by the proiessors oi tne agricultural depart ment of the Wisconsin university. Stork potatoes in shallow bins in a cool, dark, and dry cellar. As near 50 degrees as possible is the proper tempe rature in which to keep them through the winter. The successful farmer and house keeper are the reading ones in nine cas es out of ten. It is only by reading that one can keep up with the times in which we live. It has been aptly said that an agricultural community without books ana papers relating to famine and housekeeping are like a ship at sea without rudder or compass. An Improved Sose-Vieee. An im proved nose-piece for eye-glasses has been patented by Mr. William J. Suttie of New York city. The object of this invention is to provide a nose-piece which will be less easily broken when being secured to the eye-glass or when dropped than the ordinary nose-piece. The invention consists in providing the eye-glass nose-piece with a covering layer of some non-conductor of Leat,snch as rubber, varnifeh, japan or other gums which material is applied to the nose piece in a liquid or plastio state and then dried or hardened. This covering liyer does not interfere with the elasti city of the roie-piece and protects the skin of the nose from being disfigured or maired by the metal nose-piece. The old industry of glass making lias bad such a revival in Venice that 15.000 people now make beads, while many others are employed in glass-blow-ng and mosaic. DOMESTIC. Bow to Kemovx Fiocx Taper fb Walls Flock papers are painted with a specially prepared oil gold size, upon which, by an ingenious process, the ground cloth, which is the flock, is dusted, and to which it sticks, the su pet fl nous flock being afterwards brushed out As will be supposed, there must be good body of gold size put upon the paper to make it hold the quantity of flock it does, and it is this body oi size which gets very hard that makes these old flo.tks so difficult to get oft Obviously, the principal aim in remov ing these papers should be directed to qmckly destroying this gold size and kt the water get to the paits under neath. There are several oompostions which will effect this purpose. It can be burnt off with beat, just as paint is removed from wood. Boiling water, used very hot, will soften the gold size and paper as well, and will he!p towards the desired end much better than cold water. A mixture of common soda, used very strong, with a little quick lime added, is also a good mixture to use, but rather dirty. The quickest and bett method ia to nse a solution of cam tic soda, pnt on with a brush made with fiber, aa it will destroy bristles. This is a very powerful dissoiver of oil or paint, and care must be taken in using, as It wil burn the skin and of course destroy paint wherever it touches. QncK Rising) Yeast Bread that can be made with one mixing and ru ing ia often desirable. Soften one yeast cake with one pint of luke-warm water, and stir in one cup of sugar and one cup of Hour; let this rise. Have ready by (he time this is risen one dozen medium sized potatoes, boiled and put through a colander; add these, with a quart of hot water and a quart of cold water and a little salt to the first yeast made, let it rise again. When risen keep in a cool place; it will be ready for use the next day. To make a loaf of bread, take two cups of this yeast, with a little salt and stir in the flour, kneading rather stiff; put it ia the tin, let it rise, and bake it. This yeast will keep two weeks in cool weather. Ectteh Dressing. Four tablespoon fuls of butter, one of sugar, one tea spoonful of mustard, a dash of cayenne, one cup of milk, half cup of vinegar, three eggs. Let the butter get Lot in a pan, stir in flour until a smooth paste, without browning, add milk and let it come to a boil; beat eggs, salt, mustard, sugar and pepper together and add the vinegar; stir this into the boiling mixture until it thickens as soft cuotard: take off immediately or it will curdle. ' Set away to cool; Iiottle it if you wish and it will keep for two weeks. To wash printed goods which have a black ground with a white pattern : dis solve two ounces of common salt, two ounces of red chromate of potash, and two and a half ounces of sal soda in a wash-boiler of water heated to boiling point. Put the dress into this hot bath for five minutes, and frequently turn and stir it. Then wash it thoroughly in clean water. The black ground will not be dull and "foxy," and the white portion of the goods will appear per fectly bright and clear. Baltuoee Pcdmxq. One cup of molases, one cup of milk, one of chop pel suet, one cf chopped raisins, three and a half cupfuls of flour, one tea spoonful of saleratus, one tables poou ful of cinnamon, one teaspoon! nl of cloves, one of mace, one of allspice and one of grated nutmeg. Beat the mo lasses, suet, raisins and spices together ; then stir in the milk, in which dissolve the saleratus ; then the flour, Steam five hours and serve with sauce. Stewed Tcbsits. reel a quart of young turnips, slice them half an inch thick; then cut them in half -inch dice, and put them over the fire in salted boiling water; boil them for about fif teen minutes, or until they are tender; then drain off all the water, add two table-spoonfuls of butter, and a pala table seasoning of salt and pepper, heat the turnips quickly, and serve them hot. Maple sybcp caramels. If up in the mountains, where the real article is easily procurable, take either a pound of the block sugar or a pint of the syrup. Set the saucepan containing it in pan of boiling water. As soon as it melts add a half pint (one bieakfast- cup full) of cream. Bill for ten minutes, pour into a pan and mash out in small squares with a knife before it grows cool. Indian bcet pcddlso. One-half pouud suet, chopped fine; one cup molasses, one pint milk, one egg, meal to make a very thin batter, teaspoonful ground cloves, teaspoonful ground cin namon, one teaspoonful salt, a little nutmeg, a few currants or chopped rahv ins. Boil or steam three hours. Serve with sauce Dctch sauce. Thicken a little drawn butter with the yolks of two eggs; take care the yolk does not curdle. Add a little lemon juice the last tiling, some grated nutmeg a little pepper and salt. About a teaspoonful of lemon juice to two yolks of eggs. How to keep flowers. Mix a little carbonate of soda with the water in which flowers are immersed, and it will preserve them for a fortnight Com mon salpetre is also a very good preser vative. How to cure mccoroa. Hiccough in children was immediately stopped or checked by giving them a lump of sugar saturated with vine jar. The same rem edy was tried on adults with similar in stall tan eons effect. SuBr-fusK-CAKe. One egg. one cup of sugar, a scant half cup ol butter, one cup of sweet milk, one and a half cups of flour, and three teaapoonfnls of bak ing powder. This is a good recipe for doughnuts. Corn Bread. One pint meal. 3 tablespoons flour, 1 egg, piece of but ter siz9 of an egg. 3 teaspoons bakine powder sifted with the meal end flour. and not quite 1 pint oi sweet milk. Stoves and iron-wear should be heat ed gradually the first time they are used, itub the rusty spots on a stove with sand-paper and then with kerosene. A wet umbrella should be left with the handle downwards to drain and dry. It will last much longer when cared for in this manner, as it will dry quickly. Boston Bbown Bbkad Two cups each corn meal, graham flour and sour milk, 1 of molasses, 1 teaspoon soda, steam four hjurs. Season r-a Sausage Mmat. For one hundred pounds meat use salt twelve ounces, pepper six ounces, sage four ounces. Saffraiun, one of the new aao colors. is recommended as cheaper aud better than alkanet for coloring oils, pomades, cerates, etc. One part of saffranin is dissolved in a mixture of twenty parts of alcohol and eighty of water. The color is permanent, and is not destroyed by borax, or similar substances. HUMOfiOtm. Ax old rnn was arraigned before an Arkansas court for some trifling offente, and among the witnesses was an old woman who, in giving her testimony, made such efforts to shield the old man that the judge asked : "Madam, have you known this man very long ?" "Yes, sir," the old woman replied. "I have known him a very long time. When I wm a young girl this man used to visit me. In fact,' Jodge, we were sweethearts,' and she twisted her apron and loozed down. "An, I see I" the Judge replied, "used to be sweethearts, aud think so much of each other now because you did not many each other then 1" "You are mistaken, Judge, for we did marry each, other then, and are husband and wife now." "Indeed I" the Judge exclaimed, "this ia a remarkable case. Liberate the old fellow, Mr. Officer." A New York broker, who left the street three or four years ago, one day received a call from a man up the river, who announced that old Blank was dead. ''Old Blank. Yes, I remember him ; so be ia dead ? "Yes, and his heirs are trying to break the will." "They are?" 'Yes, and they are going to prove be was crazy. They want you as a wit ness. "Want me ? Why, I kncw-nothlng of the old man. except that I once invested $10,000 for him." "Well, that's all they expect to prove by vou." "What, eh I" "Why, if youll come into court and swear that the old man kt you have $10,000 to invest for him the case is made out. When can you come ? He never went. A shobt memory : Woman with dog jumping at her, to professor, owner of the animal--"For heaven's sake, man, call your dog off or he will upset me." Professor, standing on one foot and scratching his head "One minute, madam, one minute; (to himself) as soon aa 1 can remember the infernal brute's name." "Xow, Johnny, if you don't go right away to the post office I'll give you a good whipping." "Well, if youll give me a 'good whip pin' I guess I'll not go right away. I have had so many bad whippin's I'd be mighty glad to get a good one, if it won't hurt. Xolhin that's good hurts, you know." "Ma. is Long Branch an awful dirty place?" !'Why, no, my child what made you think so ?" "Why here is an advertisement that says that it is washed by the tide twice a day." Lemon pudding. A half pound of bread crumbs, a half pound of suet, the jruoe oi a lemon witn the prated rind, quar ter of a pound of brown sugar, two eggs ; mix well ; boil half an hour ; pour into a mold. Fob washing hands that have become cracked or blackened, there is nothing better than Indian meal rubbed on with soap. It not only removes the dirt but sol tens and whitens the hands as welt. For men and boys doing farm and shop work it is excellent and should be kept always at hand. Is high dudgeon : "I cannot under stand what offended Mr. Daday last night at the party," said the High School girl ; "he and his company took their departure in high dudgeon very early, however." "Why, 1 thought they left in the same carriage they came in," replied Amy. In season : She was a sweetly inex penencea young nousexeeper, as one mav gather from her remark when some one suggested that she should purchase spring mattresses. ''Yea. she replied, "if they are iu season we'd better have some. A Vermont editor in publishing one of liyrou 8 poems changed the words. "Oh, gods I" to "Oh, gosh I" because the former was too profane for his read ers. "Yes." said the doctor. "1 wanted that patient as bad a tramp wants rum, but 1 sent him over to Dr. Tombs just to make Tombs think I had more busi ness than I could handle." Photographing Wild Beaut. An en terprising Parisian photographer.M. A. Pettit, visited Planet's menagerie re cently, with the object of taking photo graphs of the wild beasts in their cages. lhe existing photographs of these am mala, taken as they are from the space outside the cage, necessarily show the bars, which spoil the enact, AL. Planet the proprietor of the menagerie, accom panied the artist in his adventurous round, and the animals, as a rule be haved very weLL A splendid group, consisting of a bon, honess and two cubs, was particularly successful, the "sitters not moving a muscle during the operation. The leopard, too, prov ed au excellent subject. The tigress. however, exhibited a specimen of her temper in two vigorous dashes on the photographic apimratus.in one of which M. Pettit received a savage blow of her paw on the leg. This, a French paper states, is the nrst tune that wild beasts have been photographed in their dens, and it is believed that the results of M. Pettit's dangerous experiment will be of considerable service to animal painters and sculptors. A substitute for coffee is growing into an important article ot commerce in London. The kola nut is largely used in tropical Africa to make an invigorat ing beverage, and some mouths ago it was subjected to a careful analysis, the result ot which was that it was found to be richer in caffeine than the best oof- fee, while it contains the same active principle as cocoa, The negroes are said never to touch coffee when they can obtain kola nut. Dr. Darnell, an authority on such matters, says that it will soon find its way into European commerce. Samples have been sent to medical men in London for experiment. and to farmers and planters for agricul tural purposes. It is believed to aid ui gestioa, aud also to render people capa ble of withstanding the depression con sequent upon prolonged labor. More en thus las tie advocates still say that it relieves melancholia, and not only sub dues the craving for alcohol, but pre vents its intoxicating effects. A Musical Electrical IVhee' Aa experiment by Professor H. 8. Carhart is as follows: A aisk of sheet irou was pierced with two circles of quarter-inch holes concentric with the disk, the num ber of holes in the two circles being 32 and 64 respectively. On one side of the disk was placed a horseshoe magnet with its poles very near the rows of holes. On the other side were arranged two corresponding induction bobbins. The circuit was completed through a telephone and either bobbin at pleasure Upon rotating the disk rapidly, a clear musical sound was produced in the tele phone, the pitch rising with the rapidi ty of rotation. Moreover, the bobbin opposite the circle of sixty-four holes gave the octave above the other, and each gave a note of the same pitch as was produced by blowings stream of air through the corresponding holes. The following is a new German meth od for preparing a pressed enamel upon class: A mixture of dry enamel, thick pine oil, and dammar lac is laid on the glass in a semi-dried state. After dry ing the drawing is pressed in. The enamel is then burned. In this way it is possible to reproduce the forma of figures in slight relief, the feathers of birds.tbe hairs of animals and the veins of leaves. Penetrated to tha Bone. Alderman John Baxter, Toronto, Cana da, avers that L Jacob's Od will pene trate to the booe to drive out pain J know it, for I have tried it; it hits the mvk every time. To remove fish-bones from the throat Profeseoi Voklini, at Breslau, recom mends a gargle composed of m ana tic acid, 4 parts; nitric acid, 1 part; and water, 240 parts. The teeth have to be protected by lard or oiL The fish-bones become flexible, and they disappear en tirely after a short time. Walnut ml Hair Beatorer. It is entirely different from all others. It is aa clear as water, and as its name indicates is a perfect Vegetable Hair Beatorer. It will im mediately tree the bead from all dandruff, re store gray hair to iu natural color, and pro duce anew growth where it has fallen ofi. It does not in any manner affect the health, which sulphur, sngar of lead and nitrate of silver preparations have done. It will change light or faded hair in a few days to a beautiful glossy brown. Ask yonrdruggistforit. Each bottle is warranted. Smith, Klisx St Co.. Wholesale Agents, Philadelphia, Pa. and C. N. C kitten TON New York. An apparatus for registering earth currents has been made by a Berlin physicist. It consists of a very delicate galvanometer enclosed in a case with a clockwork arrangement for giving a pho tographic plate a steady downward mo tion. A fine ray of light is focused from the galvanometer mirror on the photo graphic plate. The latter moves at the rate of about three inches per hour, and the mark traced by the point of light shows the observer the variations of the galvanometer from minute to minute. The Feebla Grow strong When noatetler'i Stomach Bitters la used to pro mote assimilation of the food and enrich the blood. Indigestion, the chief obstacle to an acquisition ot strenath by the weak, la an ailment which infalli bly succumbs to the action ol this peerless correc tive. Loss of flesh and appetite, failure to sleep, and crowing evidence of premature decay, are speedily counteracted by the great tatfgorant, which braces up the physical energies and forufle the constitution against disease. No such protec tive against chills and fever and other diseases of of a malarial type exists, and It relieves constipa tion, liver disorder, rbeuo-ausm, kidney and blad der ailments with certainty and promptitude. A change, as gratifying as It Is complete, soon take place in the appearance, as well aa the sensations, of the wan and haggard Invalid who nse this standard promoter of health and strength. Mr, Thoma I'niuh'trt has made a careful comparison of the cost of wood, anthracite coal and petroleum refuse as fuel for locomotives on tiussian railways. and finds that the petroleum is at least fiity rer cent, more economical than either wool or coal. The oil presents the further advantage ot giving rise to much less smoke and dirt than the oth er kinds o! fuel. Ua Tlilrty Day Trial. The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., will send Dr. Dye's Celebrated tlectro Voltaic Belts and Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days to men (young or old) who are afflicted wilh nervous debility, lost vitality and kindred troubles, guaran teeing speedy and complete restoration ot health and manlv vigor. Address as above. N. B. No risk is Incurred, as thirty dsvs' trial is allowed. Carrier pigeons are so liable to de struction by birds of pray that Joung ravens, which are attacked mncn less. have been tried as substitutes at Co blcntz, Prussia, from which place they made very satisfactory trips of about forty miles. Thousands upon thousauds of bottles of Carboline. a deodorized extract of petro leum, have been sold, and from all over the land comes one universal cry, "Carbo line, as now improved and perfected, is the best hair restorer ever used." bold by til druggists. Dr. Iiabitsch has used with success in some affections of the skin, and alco holic solution of salicylic acid, having the strength of ten pir eent. (ten parts of salicylic acid, ninety parts alcohol). Sometimes the affected parts are merely sponged with this solution; in other in stances bandages, moistened with the solution, are applied. "I was most dead with heart difficulty, can now do a days work, and sincerely re commend Dr. Graves' Heart Regulator as the ren Jy. Geo. Gladding, ilartagrove, O." SI. per bottle at your drug store. Brooklyn's debt exceeds $08,000. 000. Dardixkixk, Ah. Dr. M. M. Croom, aavs: bpowu's iron Bttttr I tue best medicine In the worm auu is enecun miraculous cure." Justice Matthews has been visitint: his home in Ohio. Emory's Little Cathartic Pill best mede for Liver Complaint and biliousness. Tasteless, harmless, infallible, lie Dispatch is the soul of business. Chiolithion collars and cuff are cheapest in the long run. . They wear longer than any other, and you save cost of washing. Learn to control your temjier. TRADE MARK. able, free from ail mineral and other potnaus Mhstaoces. They are a certain cure for Conatt. palion. Sick Hradache, Djsp,ia, B.liousDfta. Torpid Liver, Loan of AppeUu, ana all iinnum arising from tha liTer, Stomach, Bowels r Kidney. Tney remove aH ob traction from the channels of tke system and purify the blood, Uiereby im parting health, atreugtHsnd vigor. Sold by druf (lsia, or aem by mall tor lis ceola in stamps by P. MTSTAEDTEB A CO., 83 Mercer St., New York, SoleMannfAcrnrennffrT. RI'RVIU Itvmv IASLK PILLS. Bead for circular. OO HOP This puroaa 4-uter l teoKHia for it quick tuid bmrtjr v tioa La carina; Lama Back. Pnawm.ll-, HrMsxtiaaw. PLASTER Crick to tlw Back, Bid or Hip. Nvairu, Htlff Joints and Maackea, Bora CbcJ, Kitlney Trout!- and all pains or acbe HUmy Local ur dftrp metd. ItSootir-s,8ti-eata- ans and immolate tne parts. Tb Tirtoe of hop eoaa btned with itbiis ck-an and ready to apply. Superior to Uniraaffita. lotions and salve. lnca cent or (or BoKi t dnw I ja a. nasi a aam rd A GREAT eaipt of priro. Hop floater Compmn Fro prtrtors, Boston, Xanl SUCCESS sX t" rhetaat family pill aisilii nawleyauaMcaaad M"W ... OsOKDra, dancing around, and very mad "O. ma I ma I every lick you hit me makes me badder and badderl lhe flogging goes on. Geordie ' O ma I evary lick you hit me makes me gcoier and gooder P "Threw Away Her Supporter. Dr. Pierce: A neighbor of ours was suffering from "female weakness" which the doctors told her could not be cured without a supporter. After considerable persuasion my w ife induced her to try your "Favorite Prescription." After using one bottle she threw away the supporter and did a large washing, which she had not done in two years before. JA3IES MILLER, 4246 Jacob Street, Wheeling, V. Va. Expebience : "Yes," said Mrs. Brownsmith, "I want a good girl and possibly you might do, but have you had any experience V "Ixparience, ia it ?" replied the damsel, resting her hands on her hips and tossing her head in the air. "Ixparience is it? Faith, and haven't Oi been in no less than twinty families d urine the last month ?" Women and tier Disease is the title of a large Illustrated treatise, by Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, K. Y., sent to any address for three stamps. It teaches suc cessful self-treatment. In a recent lecture Prof, Flower, F. R. S.. remarked that the whales of our time are the largest of krown creatures, past or present. Instead of living in an age of4 degeneracy of physical growth we are, therefore, in an age of giants; but it may be at the end of that age, for the whales like other existing great animals are fast approaching ex tinction. If your lungs are almost wasted by con sumption Dr. Pierce's "Uoldeu JledicaJ Discovery" will not cure you, yet aa a remedy for severe coughs, and all curable bronchial, throat, and lung affections, it is unsurpassed, bend two stamps for Dr. Pierce's large pamphlet treatise on Con sumption and Kindred Affections. Address Wokld's Dispensary Medical Asso ciation, Buffalo, N. Y. It is calcclated that more than 50,000 soldiers fall victims to malaria in Italy every year, and great numbers of work ing people are attacked. A map pre pared by the Italian minister of war shows that of the countty's sixty-nine provinces only six are free from malaria and in twenty-four provinces its ravages are very severe. The Blood Would Bun. For five jears I was a great sufferer from Catarrh. My nostrils were so sensitive 1 could not bear the least bit of dust; at times so bad the blood would r-D, and at night I could hardly breathe. After trying many things without benen. I used Ely's Cream Balm. I am a living witness of itatfflcacv. Peter Brcce. farmer, Ithaca, '. Y. (Eisy to nse, price 50 cents.) Be sure and give the cellar a thor ough cleaning out before you begin to store your fruits and vegetables in it. A gcol wh;te-washing will do to finish with- Dr. Kline's ureat Nerve Restorer is tne marvel oi the age for all nerve diseases. Ail Dts stopped tree, bend to tai Arch ttreet, Piuladelphla. fa. - Ladies and cnuaren's Doots and shoes cannot run over if Lyon's Patent Heel Sliffeners are uaed. Science is pronouncing against cover ing the walls of houses with paper. The paper itself gives off deleterious parti cles, and the paste, by the dampness, undergoes organic decomposition. Or namental tiles, impermeable cement and thin galvanized iron are suggested as substitutes, AU porous walls absorli ing vapor are objectionable. C. Farlev, city marshal, ;4.TPrKdway, X. Y.,says: "1 had rheumatic gout JU.vears;triel everything; now take 1 r. Elmore's ll.-ii. It bas cured my crippled l"eet.and beataallotber medicines aud treatments in tne world. Tbk ntxt shorthorn herd book will contain! the pedigrees of 4,800 bulls and 6,000 cows and heifers and wdl be pub lished in two volumes. Saitiirsi?, Ala. Or. June B. Mills, Hit "Several uf my patients have uel Brown's Iron Hitlers lor cnruuic inuiitestioa wun oeneui." it&8UR'o : Bick man "natia lady physician? I want a doctor, to make me well not a woman, to make love to me." Woman physician (bash fully) "I promise not to do neither. A a Bale Yt ev Eatlonw lrupr!e'arj KemeOiea. Bat "Anakexls" as a remedy for piles, the dis covery ol a cultivated nl experienced phsh-ian fully approved by Doctors of all schools and in auccetisiui use oo 9 continents lor a quarter of i enturv. eeuis to os to lie of exceptional merit. It H really all that is ciaiti ed for it and tlx ccki riLKS. Any suflrrvr may be saiisOed without cost by sending lo P. Neostsdter a Co., box S41S p. o iew iota citj lor tree saiupies. Sckxs on a hotel piazza : Child '-Nurse Mary is a bad wo man." Mamma "Why?" Child "She wanted me to brine; mv doll down here before it was dressed." Fo DTsnrsiA, rxnioBmo!, depression of spir it and (eDer.il debillty.ln their various hirn.s:al a. a preventive against lever and sene and other intermittent fevers, the Keiro-Pnosphorsted-lumr of Calisaya" made by Caswell. Hazard a Ck, New York, and told by all Imnrffisu. la the best ionic, and for patients recoveriuk f rt m fever or olner IcaJOess, it eaa no equal. A MniWACKK weman, who had just married her third husband, rolled him op in a rag carpet and packed him with. a shovel because he let tne kitchen file go out during her absence. ForrellevtncThroatTroableaaDd Couch. "Known s Bbom BULTaoi'HKs"bavesworid-wide reputation. .Nofrf amy in our. Price XS eta. A Bangor bride banged her hus- Sind's head with a broomstick because he rx faced to buy her a gallon of ice cream. Dr. Graves' Heart R auia'or cures all forms of Heart Disease, ncrvoitness and sleeplessness. A Gaxvsstox groom pulled his wife's ear on account of her weakness for flirting with handsome men. For aired men. women, weak and sirklv chil dren, wnnout a rival. Will not cause headache. Brown's iron mtiera. To be simple is to be great. Obliged to Leave Work. Read the evidence of a worthy mechanic who was obliged to leave work, who has been cured, and is now able to auwin attend to his labors and support his family. sit. lienry Ullams was recently spoken to about his general health. He replied by making a general statement, which is insub stance as toilows: 1 was formerly employed in the sewing macbiue works at Kast liridt;e lort, Conn.. until i was taken sick and obliged to leave work. Afteracoaple of months of hard battle 1 am about weli and ready to return. 1 feel impelled, from a sense of dutv, to make known my case, with the hope that it will be made known to every suUi-rnie man and woman with diseased kidneys,that there is a medicine called Uunl's Kerned y capable, as I believe, of curing any case of the must extreme form, and when no other relief can be obnuimL l will givo you some of the details of my case, observing at the same time that language could nardly describe iny sufferings. About two months aao 1 caiiiflit a heavy cold which settled in my kulnets, and the pains in the small of my back were sotue- Uiinir feartuL 1 wa-unable to work, and suffered the most when walking or standing lor any lengin oi time; nau two doctors, nut received no benefit from either. I had a natural antipathy against pa.eut medicines, but I tell you that isall goue. 1 saw Hunt's Kemeilv advertised, sent aud got a bottle. audwiihthefirstdoselbegantogetwelL I continued the use of it, and am now around aa you ree me, ana am perfectly well, and am about to go to work. I consider it the greatest medicine lor Kidney complaints ever yetdiscovered. If my statement will be of service you are at liberty to use my name. TH GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Rrilerf and cores RHEISATIS: Neuralgia. Sciatica, Lunbsgo backache. HfiDtCHE.T0OTHiC3i Sf-flE THROAT, OUIY.8WElAIUb ratAi, 9 tanmt. CU.Bnwiea. FROSTBITES. Beta. aCAa.. And all otrer bodily adi aw. pallia, firTTCHTSa BOTTLE So Id by aU DTOCTW" Dlrn. mrecUon IB 11 tOZr ;l5 Tha Cfcartes A Cs a w.Ba.S.S, The only known tptiJU for Epileptic Fits.-J NrvooweaKneMqiui..j - -c E.lt.alled by none in delirium of Neutralizes germs of discs nd .ickncsJ. Curos dltIJ blotches and stubborn .blood wres. Cleanses Wood, quicken, .lush Eliminatc Boils, Carbuncles and bcaU a -1', rman-ntly nd promptly core paralysis, "s U is a harmiii!! and healthful Apcnent. Kill. Scrofcla and Kings Evil, twin brother. Change, bad breih to good, removinc came. tfRouts biliousness and clear complexion. Chinnine resolvent and matchk- laxative.- It drive .-kt Headache like the wmd-- "ConUin. no drastic cathartic or opiate. Promptly cure Khcnmatism by routing Restore, llfe-eivine properties to the b oo -a U irnaranteed to cure all nerrom disorder.-. tr K. lioble when all opiate fall.-. K' freshe the mind and intij-omtes the body. Cares dyspepsia or money refunded r ry-Endored in writing by over llfry thooan 1 trading phrsicians in V. 8. and Europe.- Leading ciersrvmea in tj. 9. and Eoropc-69 Disease of the blood own it a conqueror. - For sale by all leading druggist. $l.iu-S The Dr. 8. A Richmond Jledicai Co., Prop. 1 rt. Jojeph, Mo. I-'I For testimonials and cirrnlam send sfunp. C. S. Crittcuton. Agent, New Vorkv ATA BOH 13'8 Croambalii. taA I A, ft fl II wbB applied by the ai,a"aTPWvaaataajawaw ihc mim. iw1C. I r.i7oAMl tril, will be absorb ed, effectually dean tog the head ol ca tarrhal virus raumi healthy a-t-retiona. It allava inflammaW'ff, prab-c: U mem brane of the nasal passages Iron) aitdi borui e Ids, o ra pieteiy heals tec re and re-tore teste and siueh. A lew applM-auon relieve. A (Aorouffc tmu- W'tMUYI Br- ,rl II ' CM'C miiww m LI AY rEVED nse. Send lor cin-o-rl " 1 Ur. l-ric. o ixal bv ma'! or at drngTlst. fc.LYBKOriIl.lU, Urneflsta. Owego. N. Y. VALUABLE TRUTHS. "If yon are saffertng from poor health nr lanmisbjng no a bed of aitknesa, lake cheer, lor Hop Bitters will core you. "If you are imply ailing, if you feel 'weak and dispirited, wun out clearly knowing why. Hop Bitters will Revive you. If yon are a Minister, and have over 'taxed yourself with your pastoral duties, 'or a Hoi ber, worn out with care and work. Hop Bitters will Bestore joo. "If you are a man of bom ness or laborer weakened by the .train ol your every -dav duties, or a man of letter, toiling over your midnigbi work. Hop Bitters will Strengthen yon. "If you are tmrTering from over ea'ing. orilnnking, anv uid.scretioo or dutsipa- lion, or are young and growing too fast, as i often the cae. Hop Bitters will Relieve you. "If yn are in the workshop, on the farm, at the desk, anywhere, and feel ' that yoursystem needs cleansing, toning, or stimulating, without intoxicatJig, Hop Bitters is what you need. "If you are old, and your blood thin and 'impure, pulse feeble, your nerve un- steady, and your faco-tie waning. Hop Bitters will stive you new Life and Vigor. "HOP BITTERS I an elegant, healthv, 'and refresh. ng flavoring for lck room 'innka, impure water, etc.. ren lenag 'tbem hamiieiM. and sweetening tne 'mouth, and cleansing the atomacn-7 Cleanse, Purify and Enrich the Blood with Hop Bitters, And jou will have no lick new or mffermg or doc tor' bU!a to pay. HOP BITTERS to an Elegant, Pleasant, and Refreahlnr Flavoring for Sick-room, Drink, and Impure Water render ing tbem harmless, sweetening the mouth, and dean -Ing the stomach. $66 f r" own town. Tarav and a outfit me. AddreasH. auunku. foniauLaif FREE iJnuMftCuuLu n..nvk. .-:.Ji Wmvm Wavnr l-.ll. a. if y j& Battle of the Books. 500,000 Taltunes, the choicest literature of the world. 100-rajre CaUlogne S!!rnWet,rl0f,eTerk,,O,ra- J0T ..Id by dealer. Sent for examlnaUoa -T mw.mm a . V. iWI wMIhienmsit aSYMTR The Greatest Blood Purifier Known! RHEUMATISM CUBED. RoctresTxa, N. Y Apr. ,. Sievnrtie .yetrp Co." .irr I have bee a treat n feret from klien 8CB0rULA Ton Btboic. H. yean, and heart nn n tlie imee. . ... .... vji i rrr I or four year, with dmerent pav- Ultan. InvMiirfiil. .. lllf Will tT'ml hi nm. - - - rut I ebeertitlly ny that I have been urearly heneatteu by It nae. I en r u with entire r,eelom trum pain, aod my general health M ery iiiu h imprivel. It at a rlenilid remedy tor to Mood I icommenced taainw ed It. tknt frmnjl n.. .tf " 1 Vvntl num. i, - " " ' h ivw. - . .. All 1 hlund nnHIW ui-vui-auj snwm. F. CllfOTKH PA KK,. a - - r I no equal. WTUJAM STRANa ManuTd by RHEUMATIC SYRUP CO.. Tiat a puzzle the little child is in the domestic economy ! How the mother gives of her own III tn.1 ct.u . y of her blessed little younger ! to sun Ule 'i:e How the child kicks, and laughs, and crows! H thf V??' and 3 heavier and heavier every day And vet she lifts him. ami v: j .W' . care of him by day and by night ' " WlUl b"n t lkcs Is it any wonder the mother breaks down? Her bick aches. Her SnSffln lJ 'llLVe7 V1- Give n!ther bottle of iMW i! tlSiie needs the iron in her blood. which that will iro-j.ii s iron hillcrt helps worn and weary women into new li'e cheerfulness, and vieor. Tell all tW mothers youkno 1:Ujntw lui- For Two Generations The eootl and staunch uhl stand-by, 31 E X 1 1- A X M UN TAX (J LIMMENT, hasdoap more to avsuae pain, relieve sufferin?, and save the lives f men and beasts than all other liniments pnt together. Why'. lkrause tlie Mustang pene trates thronzh skin and flesh to the very bone, drivins; out all pain and soreness ami morbid seeretions,aud restor ing the afflicted part to soand and supple health. ft. f. k ! awlekas. ". ,ur m n 1 bwt rmtm Ay tot i dinr i..r. at taieb. bU-I.:- il bio jiminn. aad alr r-M ca-au. 4.MM,rai torn acvta b 1 croot C umuIl . H.ea t bo "Btw'i di and djpe!' to 3 wa J ... .H-r. r. 1 la L r-.nw aVUaw.te 1 V" ''' ' bla Bant ew a n-w - - - ..a. tart it- If h .leVllx" FnW IO O For $65 a VfOf T fffl h..r fir 8 live Tiure T.-.IM in wdi eoatitr aiMhm. W. SlEtU.Efct C ttuladrlpb!. I-a. BUY A FARM IN VIRGINIA! Every m n .do - u k nupiui i. Real 1 Ileal Eia'Ajrauta, Ourdooaviile, Va Lust troo. CMS. OSUB 1W OILS t K..VI w w. - Sn-prte-t TtpUO.I ,r;..llruab. rWu. Boi aud inrtruction. all lor Luu. J Rr)l) 111 mOm At-.. Phtd.-.p'iia DRS. J. X. & J. B. U0BKXSAI K. rnosft arrLicTED with ths BKfKi Or sBLP-ABCSI! ASD wEKCflUALiZATno. noald not aeibite to consult 1. N. an-1 J. S. H BSNsaCK. of SO North secon.l itreet, PnuaJe. nus. either v mail or b person, ilunng the aourv from I A, M. to i P. 1.. "n'1 - I P A. I we free. wvever vmiM know tu .: aoa and the to unpr.ve tl ,fi '1 rea4 -Wl.sbo.w IN A SCTsaKiX.-' Sent oa receipt ot -cent atanin. STOPPED FREE . fnun Kront Raster! I Dr.KLINE 8 GREAT " NcovcRfatobfa Mrmti "aV4i tar r --'"- - I ftTALl.laL If tatrm w-fdL ft futmf.m I fr-ra-aaWv wtfW. Trt sWT W I Fit puew. ry --it "r - 7 1" " i ' i ci .. O arwi -rort-i aajriraaa of I .-t rw hf i INF.tu Ar-h S .foilaa'nftu.P'B. iW-tT-M. MM WAJLA iUITA TIN fJUHM TRYTt ft rm4iTrmm.tnncTvm. Flit ClUTCd Hands or LiT Vm- BiiiDorin. S,nJ.J. Brar. Sorvru-i of tvrt, bamis k-yTskttwC. . .Tninjr rrum snT'ui-. nwaaSToui au 2Mb, or mtou u r 4mm -mpw. -. L S72 tVFFK. ateaaavat nnme east! V made. Coptiv ootatfrea. AJdroi.TaCBacoAiwuata.il. 33H Of 1HK ETM hue wrttmir paper. In blotter. Q with e.ilemlar, ty mall for .e?. Amis wasted. Jlconout rm.vn.su Co 2ewiurv ;yvT. yawn. AGENTS WANTED I EVERTHriK to -el tli- lwt lamilf knit tfMtr vfatrhlne vr uiVfiiU 'l Nfc ii. mill a iir of t4't;jthn until HtiKL aud TWR mt in it DUiitiUA. It will alHo knit a am-at vr.-ty i Jjuii-v-work tr wh;rh tr-rv i alwa a r-a-lv mjir---t. n-i forciniiiar mud ternu tu the TwmI.v Kb ill a. Maeklai 1 -. lKi IivibuuK uvei. btita. tM. Campbor Milk w tae be Liotmenc Prlw - trencs Cr.iv GuarnU.i in all -r. by Dr J. B. Mayer. Tn-l?r hi ;ni nitnt - m at once fbt tm.l and j-r-aoti cau at:-nl u-t'i-ir buHintjt uxmie-'lifitiy attT trvatiu-'nt- Ka'i.nnfion trw. Sn-t Dtarun fr ry- Vly. Main uttitw, 3I Arch ntr.--t 1'hila.Hphia. ill N ul tf kcyrt- itr- H"u-w, Ke-ailn kr. Ja .f vry iaruril.y; Hv-rhvy 14--u. Harr i-iui e. Pa, alh aul tb . St. Ciair 11 ot. 1, i'iUr.JjurKii. 1'.. .lh uU em u( ej-b niotitU. TO SPECULATORS. ft. LINDKDlS A.M. .. WILLKK A t(. Cmuieri. Tj'.iiciwni. Jrtrk- aw oroadwuy. CRAIN AND PROVISION BROKERS. Mvmbt-n of all .Tm:Tj?nt Pro-lnce ExchautiS in New ork, hicjAro. lit. Louhii. MJwatUt. We havv r-iciumvei-nvau- u-l-rar'ti wim between Chui-rointl New Y.irn. iL eKvcutoritt-r .m our dbM)t when n-MuexttM end f .r -m-nlan txo umiiur imrtwuiaiT. KoBT. JU.NDliUjil to. Chu'a-raL FRAZER AXLE GREASE Bt la the wnrlcl. iri ike treawiwo. E very parkiuce h ur traule-mar ki '' ar.trai I'raier'a, UttLII liEIYTHt.Ke. YOUNG MEN "wn T-""",EVherenJ . ' will mve vimi a Nicii.ri.iti. circuur. frxo- VAJ.K N T I Nt. U iu m Jjuiwyq... u. - ST v l Tl:D forthelvm ar.fl Faateat-K-Uirur ricbmal . anil Bih:-, lT-,f n. dueeda rer.. m. ATioNii. ixa. ix MuUa. 1. FtMenn P'toeal w.ll enre yonr oinara. Price ia eta. S5 tO J20T1r!,"yLu"nM!- """Plewortii v Ail.'.re. hTloi Uo Portiau d Mr. ' II frt '-1'! E or W-ST HtVlKS ma AliFN K til 1 u" ' U","''mi ". H a, mm olO. UwuivHiUi.y. iB.TEr-ATlubai.hcr.iiewi .rk. W) WiJ - 11 ilia, TO MOTHERS!! i '"" hi ' ...; i- it,.,, k't- iT? m i :.art in i:- ...-ep. suit nu,.! :t.teefi li S VVORM SYRUPS CUSD. T. Feb. vn w-i HEUEALQIA CUBED. FataroaT. JT. T- March 12. o. Ithrvmnlic ,vntji Co- RVVT. U K... 1 . . , . ' - v u ..vi,rui -ri, itb, I hive beet a count tut mTerr from neur!ia ri.l kuv- . j -: . . U . . U 11 1 1 1 i nr H.mM known wnu it was to be fr.-e Baun nrae, to r"i s mimnirnf wimmcDcei the n4 off V . iTY...i i "Traa to neip me. , . icw wees. f mrth bottie. I think It the be-v ii mm err. 1 t. . - . . mum m mmm mrci; i nave ever near I or rot purifying the blood and for te rare of rheamatimi and net ir:gia. yy. B. CHAi-K. . P.ymouth Ave.. at Y. V aa a is mm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers