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Tw JIJB.i I).:T-ITI ! A Summer Morning. The storm i*o'er ; o?lm as an anil's breast ! ? th*> inlrouWed lake ; while far on high Soft, snowy cloud'efs rest in the pure sky, Li e spirits blest. T'<e very air around seems fraught with bliss ! Mus:c is singing from yon green retreat; The early zephyr is as. pjare and sweet cfci dh' od's kiss. Ftrget thy little griefs, O heart of rri^e G'a^ btr's g ve t tanks to Him in tuneful 'ay? ; While m riad creatures breathe their grateful praise, Oh! mingle tbine. *:uiTtc . i Farmhouse Fores. Ke'jpin'o Bars -*-itisbv no moans impossible to keop-bees in villages or even cities, if one owns a moderately large garden. Many persons are deterred from ketS^hg^Hee^an ?uch c'o-te quarterfrom the fear of being stung. Nov, be i' known' th l>ees never sting if car*> is t ikon to handle tbem gently in th 4 various mini filiations that m iv be neeessarv. Tt'ls" vouch handling that final ly gets th^m into the habit of flying nt cv?r*yT>tie who conies near. Theysbonn never "be ftis nrbed until yon have caused them to 611 themselves with bonev; then they miy be han lied with impunity, if cir^iifi^d n<*t to^iurt them. There are no letter forage grounds t mn city and *if! Mjo gtirdeir. with their pro'u8'on of floweis a-nl the out lots covered with various wild fl twering plants. Any one vrtji bayavpi'ce where the bees mav He sbsde4 ?rsnrftii'f, may ke *p Hees; indeed, s >rae villagers keep swarms In rc ?re<, ami Teap profit thereHy- Once accustomed o them, anv ladv miy handle them withoiftfear, and a rice plate of comb hone\ now and then is by no m ans to be despised, and is positively eujijyshte "When it is produced under our owtrtrire.LU Bon?isk Tall' Chimneys.?When a chimney is built on the wing of a dwelling-house, the top must a'wavabe carried up a few inches higher than any I>nrt of the roof. Then, if the draught is not. strong, thj cause must be looked for in the shape of the flue. A proper httentiontofundapjen al principles at the out-ef,rnmen saves in the end mueh un necessary expenditure. A church was r centlv erected in a village a few mite* front YitrV. H:i vine ft Rfpftn rrtof i witHn*rf chimney topa, neither of which w:i4 ?uitcie?l np as liieh as th ridge of the ro?jf?jA.v f?ur or five feet. The re suit *ya$ that *is soon as a fire was ma le irr'ttoe-stored, if there was any wind, smoke would soon fill the house. The bui'der of the edifice and the masons contended that no reason could be given why the iJnuTght ppujd be strong if the chimney-tops were carried upas high as tftfe itfthpsfc pavt of the roof. Some of the .pyua in the society assured tbem that their chimney tops must be carried np as high as the ridge of the roor> that the wind cannot plunge doyfiwcd jntrtLttic flue, and drive the smoke back into the house. Pasturing Pigs,?The chief detvndoncc in fattening pork, says lhe Rural World, should be on good pasturage. Clover pistil rage^s considered the best, but aTl kinds <?f pasturage are relished bv 8wine, aDd they thrive ?n it as readily as other stock. It is not economical to k* ep hojjs up in pens and yards and fc&i&iMPldPVftfldet^y mouthful they e\t ; tlaet Mionhl have pastures just as c;*W& Ar sh^ep or horses They must be taught to take care of themselves, an-< they will cLully do it if the pa-tare is gortnflfnn supplied with water. An acre o#^9 ^^pr^tirweafh head is. however, fastening hogs a greatd<?l,<?t' uuneeesoftry labor is given. Iustewl Yifecoing to tlie fields and gathering, husking, and hauling the coin t?> hogs in the p. n< and yards, they should <h> their own h irve ting and I 1 Xl 1 _ .UK i<? erti.m'jus ivea. xuriauie or un?va Me fene? s should be rea 'y on any farm to partition off ?iich portion ol the corn field the owner'thinks can be most profitably used by tbe liogs. In this the bogs are turned as soon as tbe corn is gluz- d. and tbeu tbey will take care ot thnmselve? Mgmy think a great deal ot waste \v?Jl thus occur, but such is not tbe case?the.U<>g3 wiji wa*te very little. to knock do.vn only what ihey want to eat. a?a tbey will tke f ^ahi cjejtV). Tbe stock bogs xrrf rtffer^ d ^e tftrned in so tlmt every thing can be saved. drl { M ' u r. i \ ~ ~ - what fs it ??All values rest H IMltiV UJ on tli? power of production. An acre ot land that will produce fifty bushels of wlieatos VorilMJwjce as much as one that will produpe twenty-five bushels. Values are mea-nrnl by production. A dollar thatl>riig* in nine cents a year is worth Jflt'y^sasjQuch as a dollar that bring^PhTi Production fixes all * * rj : i nNIuvs. ?Pmil net ion then is the gre-t de OHX.vj r. *>a , . . termining power of trie whole range of our ria^iEa! life. It tells the value or . {anus, of .mills, of forests, of ore and coal beds, of factories, and railroads, of wages fit /I rant j i?f* n o -1 b.it iii u la^iiui nu i ifii'in. n iiai will if produce? This tells the whole story, to *harf business ears. Interest is the product of dollars?not h national product, for a dollar is incapable of production, hot a product fixed by law. Now real values do not depend opon dollars: dollars are created by law to measure and exchange these values, not create them. Thepit fyljows that an interest or use for these dollars that is greater than the produ?d*m alt real v*lnes is unjust?it is rob berv from the production. Is this not a - plain case? \ \ \ r\~ Sixort.AR Stabbixo Cask.?There was a strange case of mistaken identity in A1 ^ Tegl*eny City, Pa. A man had forbidden his daughter ^0 keep company with a young man who, for some reason, he did not like, htit it seems that bis order was not u^eved. "VThily sitting in bis door, in tbeT^vfj|ir>g, he saw'.vyoung conple passing along, and Kupriasing "that tiny were hr* <hm<rhter and f??e objectionable lover, . ]>e became enrngcd, drew a penknife from h;s pocket, and Stabbed the young woman in the bark. Tbe young lady screamed and hunted, and the indignant father discovered that it was not his daughter, but a Miss R irck he had stabbed. lie was arretted and placed in the lock tip. Miss R trick's wounds are not considered dangerous. . * k f ft? y PoiTLATtoxor CtncAGo.?The new city directory of Chicago will contain 180.0CO tptmes, or 2(X0'0Q more than last year! to Qtie ptiiiutfietse^intfttea that this will give the city 45$,ftQO.- It is SafeAo say that .?v e t *4 $$000 people there. On Ti^nonH side, where Jess than 10,000 were living the day after the fire, there we now 60,000. The Or gin of Camp-Meeting*. The origin of camp meeting is thus stated by a writer in the New York Even- I < inq Post: Though not attended with any Bu idea such as originated the modern camp- tiv meetinir, the out-door and secret gather- Vf intrs of the Hmrnenots in France and of ne the Dissenters in England probably gave ter the first rise to all subsequent movements soi of this nature. In America their begin- th< i.ing is said to have been occasioned by a ne1 want of church buildings. Two brothers of named Magee, one of them a Presbyterian poj preacher, and the other a Methodist, who au< ereated during the summer of 1790, a th< j irreat religious excitement in that part of mi Kentucky in which they lived, are said to ao< be the founders of catnp meetings in this hig country. Their congregations soon be- me c une f ir too large for the limited churcli grt accommodation at that time provided, and inn a union out-of-door meeting was decided kit upon. To this the people flocked from ne? nil parts of the State. The success of the ha< meeting was great, and at once apparent, uni The number of converts w?s something ela that approached the marvelous. It wa- <*as determined to renew the experiment the tru next year. From all parts of the State., wli is well as from bord. ring territory, im- of inense numbers of people gathered. Re- |>rt ports say that there were assembled as he! many as 20,000 persons, which was a lan wonderful number for that time. :?d< Since then the movement has continued int to go on, though until within the last six 'ur or eight years it w;as thought that camp net meetings were growing out of date. With- su< in that period a new momentum has been riven to them. It is the purpose of the roJ Methodist Episcopal Church to give to crc this movement a dignified, systematic and 'ui permanent position in the religious com inunity. To that end associations are ' formed, grounds purchased in the name of K01 corporate bodies, cottages built (which ner are slowly taking the place of tents), and a crops of regular aud distinguished divines are provided to superintend the ser- ?r vices. the Under this system these meetings have ' grown in the respect and sympathy of the ,n? community?so much so, indeed, that ' there is some talk of imitation on the part 001 of the Presbyterians. The Young Men's ''ol Christian Association, in which that de thi nomination takes an active part, joins ' with the Methodist brethren in out door 0,r. meetings, which, though by no means e<^ revival meetings, tend that way. ov< 1 Japanese Groo Shop.?The grop shops r*'( <-f Japan are neither more or less than tea ^ shops. All along the public roads at fre- , il h qneut distances, are planted tea houses. They "tea," according to a correspondent, when they must stop hv the wayside, aud ( in such little bits of cups that one could ^ drink the contents of twenty of them^ ( and then want more. Pretty tea girls stand by the entrance, and (their teeth ( not yet blackened) with pretty ways and ( courtesies so fascinating that tea even ^ without sugar or milk becomes agreeable. ^ On pretty lacquered waiters the tea girls ^ hand little tiny cups with a mouthful in them, and you squat down on the nice clean mats, if squat you can, and you sip ^ and sip that mouthful of hot. tea, as if the ? , , , , tat gods nectar was going down your throat infinitesimal drops of microscopic invisi- ^ bility. The keeper of a Japan tea house picks out. as pretty a place for the tea ( house a^ he or she can get. The keeper ^ covets, if possible, a view of and the air 1 rns ot the Bay of Ycddo, along which most of the way here runs the Tocaido. The j erand tea house is cut up into numerous little rooms, with paper partitions to part them, running on slides, but all removable at will, tort store the whole into one grand room. Cakes, sweetmeats and candies are brought in with the tea, all put on rei the clean matted fl >or (there are no seats), tei and all squat or stretch out on the floor. is trt Who is Old?A wise man will never *01 rust out. As long as he can move or Pn breathe lie will he doing something for hi ins*. If, for his neighbors, or for posterity. m< Almost to the last hour of his life. Wash mgton was at work; so were Howard. 80 Young and Newton. The vigor of their on lives never decayed. No rust marred their an spiiits. It i? a foolish idea to suppose that we must lie down and die because wt* are old. Who is old? Not the man of ll' energy; not the day lab rer in science TT* art. or benevolence; but he only wh? " suffers his energies to waste away, and the *o1 springs of life to become motionless; on whose hands the hours drag heavily, and to wTiom all tilings wear the garb of gloom. " Is he old ?" should not be asked, but tlIs ?r he active?" There are seres of gray- W! headed men we should prefer, in any im. portant enterprise, to young inen who fear Ht and tremble at approaching shadows, and turn pale at a harsh word or a frown, as an at a lion in their path. n< foi The Differance.?One who knows, nu says that Germ m women prefer the inan who is agreeable, and keeps his word 1111 strictly. French women choose a man 81,1 with open brow and smiling countenance. en The Russian females prefer a countryman In: of their own who looks upon Western nations as barbarians. The Danish remain closely at borne, and desire to bear nothing of travel abroad. The Spanish woman stlects a m m capable of avenging bis honor and her own. The Hollanders ^"I wl one who is peaceable in his ways, and desires never to hear of strife and war. : a I And the American ladies marry the earli- j est good offer they get, taking the first . . ... an I man who will take them, caring noimng tor his rank or social position, and still ')e less whether or not he he halt, lame, deaf and dumb, or Mind? if he but has plenty tu rf money. IIow fortunate for us that we live in such a country ! | ba They Met.-r Two Troy milliners who hated each utile* as only rival milliners cm hate, smarted for Europe, each flatter- at ing herself that the other w.ts ignorant or ol h r intention, and found tbeui-elves co the occupants of the same state room on Et the steamer. The way they avoided, sw | each other was a study for a philosopher, i im John Van Buren. In a previous number ot " The Galaxy" ' described a scene between John Van sa' iren and Chief Justice Taney, illustra- d'* e of one of the peculiarities of Mr. th< in Bnren. He was a character, as 19 wspaper men say when at a loss in at- th< npting a pen-and-ink portrait of a per dai 1 of celebrity. He had a keen sense of th< 3 ludicrous, told a 9tory admirably, and no' ver spared himself in giving an account Soi a trial ot wit, when necessary to give ^ int to an anecdote in entertaining an ste iience. In many respects he was one of de< } most gifted men of his day. His an* nd was filled with beautiful imagery, urn 1 his reasoning faculties were of the lea diest order; a combination of endow- flit nts indispensable to the making of a rhe -at orator. He was full of wit and hn tlit ?r of the most playful and charming sbf id, and he wa9 rarely excelled in readi fro ?s of retort or effective repartee. He prt 1 the art of thinking on his leg9 to an As usual degree, but he wa9 capable of wo borate and careful preparation on nc run ions of importance, and he rarely tak sted to the inspiration of the moment ma ien called upon to meet the arguments ind - ? * TT l a poweriui adversary. rie was an mi- ??k ssive speaker on the stump, and lie an; Id the undivided attention of a miscel- vie ieous auditory as long as he chose t<> an< Iress them. He was inclined to court life erruptions, as it gave him an oppor- mo lity to turn the tables upon an imperti- dei at querist; and he availed him* If of pot ih occasions with great success, and al- caf ist always to the confusion of his inter- are t tor. While addre sing an immense str >wd at a populous interior town of Ohio rel rinir the campaign of 1856 a boisterous ses publican called ont; is < 'Say, Mr. Van Buren, what are you are ng to do about Brook's attack on Sum- lou ?" vie What am I going to do ahont Brook's fro ack on Sumner?" he replied, with to sat deliberation, as though revolving sul s matter in his mind. arr 'Yes? what are.you Democrats go- bel ; to do about it?" the 'Well," said he, " we've pretty much fall ieluded to do as Sumner has done? po< n't like it much but shall not do any- rifl ng." ant Speaking on an elevated stand in this ma y in a previous campaign, an evil mind- pei advers try called out, "John, let's go goi tsr to Windust's and get a drink." the ' B./b, can you get something good of ?re? ' was the reply. hir Leaving a supper party at Congress his ill, in the winter of 1840, rather sta stilv, he was asked, "Where are you is i ing?" wo To Washing'on," he answered. in ' What are you going to Washington drt ' ?" Soi "To help the old gentlemen." in, " To do what ?" sor ' Pack up," said John. art Shortly after the nomination of Van wo ren and Adams in 1848, an old gentle- tht in, a personal friend of the family, thi ne into the billiard room at Congress am ,11, where John was playing a game of del liards. "Mr Van Buren," said lie, " I su< i delighted at the petition which your her and yourself have taken on this es'ion. It is a great moral question. lich will never he settled except by the tinetion of slavery." It is a great mo-al question," an ered John, continuing his gatne and H,l< t tii king a difficult carom?"agreat moral estion, undoubtedly; and as I nevet ers d hold of one before, 1 mean to stick rtl" it like a puppy to a root." ini fo( Lightning-Bod Swindles. j||f A correspondent asks us to caution our I)c iders against what he sententiou lv six ms "the lightning-rod swindle." It ye well known that men are constantly tin iveling through the country in hand- a i me wagons, loaded with material f. r wi tting up lightning-rods. One of the ui* arpest ot the party makes the arrange- ari mts for jobs. On the verbal assurance ge at the cost will be very trifling, per str ns unacquainted with the thousand and ' ] e tricks daily resorted to by swi. dlers. fai e easily induced to give an order to have fet e rods put up. The sharper then leaves a i e neighborhood as rapidly as lie entered to and bis" aids" immediately go to work comply with the order left behind, ben tlie job has been completed, a bill |ia r one hundred and twenty five, or two (jr indred dollars is presented, instead of (]rt - * fi ??A /??? tl?i It? ir_fi I'A /1/kllora Qg I IWCIIIJ"UVC \;i llim J IM v UlMIUinj UP jjj ttt J by the sharper who secured the n(l der. As a matter of course there is alIVs a point blank refusal to pay, and a ar od deal of honest indignation expressed j[tj the cheat. The " aids" then threaten f}l< at a suit will he immediately instituted, j.n d picture to the rural miiul the addi- an >nal expense that is sure to be entailed sf( r lawyer's fees, and other charges too merous to mention. To avoid worse t0] :ik, the b.ill is paid and the rascals per- ]0( tted to continue their tour. Perhaps |10 me one will be found with courage 111{) ough to resist payment, no matter how ir.y suits may be threatened, and then e swindle will be checked. lat Ix TnE Chain Gaxo.?The chain gang rC( Los Angeles has among its members j,e >bert Gordon Milne, a graduate of Ox- fu] d University, England, class of 18f>7, 10 is serving a sentence of twenty five t|r ys for the petty offense of appropriating jU, mlf gallon ol native wine value 25 cents lich he claims he desired to purchase, ilM d afterward threw away. A city pa- fic r publishes a fine scholarly production >m his pen. replete with classical quota- jnj >ns, taking grounds against tne system fr< degrading criminals by compelling ]ef em to work on the public streets with ev 11 and chain. i A Frenchman who parsed himself off go Paris as Prince Alxlallab de Gu<>nna nil y, rightful beir to the throne of Motoc- an , and succeeded in marrying a rich lai jglish widow, ha9 been convicted of tli indling, and sentenced to one year's ba tprisonmeni He Hew York Conoert Saloon*. Speaking of the New York concert none, a correspondent says tbey are a grace to civilization. In keeping with 3 attire and demeanor of the females the entire get-up of the interior of i salooa. The walls and ceilings aie abed with the most glaring colors, and i scenes attempted to be depicted are t more than one remove from filth, me of them are adorned with fountains I flowers that seem only to emit a nch of vice and disorder. Music is ad1 to the other attractions of the dens, 3 it if- usually of a quality that would tier ordinary circumstances, destroy the st sensitive ear. Tables are arranged > length ot the halls, with chairs besid. *iy, and at these tables the visitors seat mselvee, and what they want in the ipe of drinks is brought by the women m the general bar, behind which the >prietor and several bartenders stand ? * 1 xl soon as the first order is nuea. tne man, or several of tliem if there i-? re than one man in the party, will also ;e seats a; the table, drinks are de nded for them, and they continue t<> uce the men to keep on ordering the e stuff sold in the saloons as long as y money remains in the pockets of the tims. M hen the men are provincials 1 not accustomed to the ways of city s, or fast young men about town, with re money than brains, the women enivor to make them drunk as quickly as 'sible, and when they are no longer >able of taking care of themselves, they > led out by a hack door into a dark off eef, and there comfortably and quietly ieved of the loose property they pos s. This operation of " weeding," as it jailed, is performed by yonng men who j in league *ith the women, and who nge about the saloons until their seres are required, when, upon a signal in the woman, they betake themselves the rear of the place, to await the rets of u the little game." The women ange the rest of the programme, and ore long a drunken man is flung into s street, throagh the back door, and He Is helplessly on the sidewalk. The jkets of the unfortunate individual are ed in an incredibly short space of time, ' ' * - * iL - u J 55 i not a vestige 01 uie weeueia trio upon the ground. Very goon after haps a policeman will pass the way, ng his rounds; finding a man lying on i sidewalk, he cracks him on the soles the feet with his club until he wakes n, and then, if he is too drunk to find i way home, the victim is taken to the tion house, and only finds out that he robbed the following morning. Every unan, without any exception, engaged these concert saloons has some scound of this description attached to her. rnetimes they are gamblers, " roper?" for " skin1' games, or employed in neway about "faro banks," but they > generally thieves, and thieves of the rst and vilest description. Sometimes i women are employed by " panel eves" to decoy strangers having a large lonnt of money about them into the tis they keep always invitingly open for ;h birds. Poor Tnderd,?Scores ot sad cases of jtitution are disclosed every day by >se who are seeking to relieve sick ildren in poor families. In a tenement use in Five Points?old, broken-down, il shabby?there was found a room conning three families. One of the mothi held an infant a day old in her arms, il was not only unable to provi- e med.1 a9-i*tance for herself, which wa>. ich needt-d, but could not even obtain ' f/? I'A/.n neai.l f on/1 tlio little ru eiJ<ni?U Uf ncrj; iigiorii auu tuv uv?.x nut from starving. In a rear house in lancev street was found a widow with : children, the youngest, about two ars old being sick from the heat. Ai 9 time the visitor called there was not norsel of food in the house, nor did the dow expect to get any until the next ;ht, when she would take home the tides of clothing she had to " wash and t up." In another house, in Baxter eet, where 280 persons are literalB packed," was found a widow with a nily of six children, two of whom suf from sickness. The mother pays $8 nontli for the room in which they try eke out an existence.?JV. Y. Paper. How Hf. Got Over.?In Scotland ?hoy ve narrow, open ditches they call sheepains. A man was riding a donkey one y across a sheep pastu e, and when Mr. mkey came to a sheep-drain he would it go over it. So the man ro e him ck a short distance, and turned him ound, and put the whip to him,thinkr, of course, that the donkey going so <t, would jump the drain before he ever ew it. But not so. On they came, d when the donkey got to the drain he >ped all of a sudden, ar il the man went ? XT 111 er Mr. Jack 8 Head. i>o sooner nao ne nched the gronwl than lie got np, and >king Mr. Donkey straight in the face, said, "Very weel pitched; hut then j w are ye going to get over yersel' ?" Newspaper Decisions. 1. Any person who takes a paoer regu ly from the post-office?whether dijted to his natne or another, or whether has subscribed or aot?is responsible r the pay. 2. If a person orders his paper disconined, he must pay all arrearage or the blisher may continue to send it until yment is made, and collect the whole lount whether it is taken from the ofe or not. 3. The courts have decided that refus; to take newspapers and periodicals )in the post-office, or removing and iving them uncalled for is prima facia idence of intentional fraud. Getting into Debt.?The imports of od* into the United Stafes during the e months ending March, 1872, muuted to sixty-three millions of dnl s more than our total exports. For e same period the previous year, the lance was eleven millions in onr favor. >w are we going to pay for all this ? fl?* RAILROAD BONDS.-Whethe < voa wish to buy or sell, write to Charles C!.n W. Hasslrr, No. 7 Wall Street N. Y. * 8 C Apportionment Bill. JJJ The additions authorized by the new apportionment bill will make the house t of representatives consist of 292 mem- gjj bers. Adding the senators from the cm thirty-seven states, there will be an electoral college of 366 members, appointed * as follows: Alabama 10 Missouri 15 Arkansas 6 Nebraska 3 California 6N?vada 8 Connecticut 6 New Hampshire.... 5 Delaware 3New Jemy 9 Florida 4 New York ? 35 Georgia ll North Carolina 10 Illinois 2lObio ... 22 Indiana 15"rgon 3 ,n1 Ioua . 11,Pennsylvania 29 ^ Kansas 51'thode rslnnd 4 Kentucky.. 12 S mth Carolina 7 -vh Louisiana 8 r. imessee . 12 Uaire 7 Texas 8 tin Maryland.. 8 Ve mont 5 ass'chusetts 13 Virginia 11 ?0' Michigan 11 tVest Virginia 5 ^ Minnesota 5 W.sconsin 10 ^TI Mississippi 8i ? Ho Total 366 poi The presidential vote of 1868.of course, affords no btsis of comparison at this mr eailv du.v ; but the tables will be useful for reference. In several of the statethere has been a c >mplete overturn in both the petsonal and political construe- a "ion of the governments. A large n^m ot-r of provisional politicians have be? n rotircd nnd of thos^ who remain some have changed their principles, and other> hi re waiting to see what will turn up. The three states of Mississippi, Vir- v, ginia and Texas were not in a condition o vote. The poou'ar vote that year ^ imounted to about 5.700,0?>0,out of which u the Republicans had a majority of 300,- Ul 90ft. The following figuies indicating majorities in the feveral states may oot ** ?e strictly correct, but are very nearly so: ufor grant. Vabama 4.230 Missouri 25,383 v* \rkansis 3,e74 N? braska 4 299 coi f!alifo nia 514 Nevada 1.263 Connecticut.... 3,045New Hampshire 6 967 ** Florida otth Caro ina.. 12,186 ll-nois 51,150Ohio 21.418 Indiana 9.572Pennsylvania... 28,899 ro a 46 962Rhode Island... 6,445 >. Kansas 17.030 South Carolina.. 17.064 vi Maine 23 030 Tennessee 30 446 ;0 Massachusetts.. 77,069Vermont 32 122 if Michigan 31 481 West Virginia... 8.719 ? Minnesota 15,570 Wisconsin 24,447 for seymour. Delaware 3 357[Maryland 31959 / G orgia 45 68: New Jorsev 2,886 Kentucky 76 82?!New York." 10.0C0 tbt Louisiana 46.962 )regon 16-1 sat ???? ??? apt We Regard Burnett's Flavoring Ex- m< tracts (for Ice creams, <fce.,) as the best 18 pgf in the world.?Fifth Avenue Hotel. o Symptoms of Catarrh. ^ Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of fro n-isal passages, discharge fall ins into throat. wa somet;mcs profti=e, watery, acid, thick and in? tenacious mucous, purulent, muco-puru of lent, bloodv, putrid, offensive, etc. In aw others a dryness, dry, watery, weak or inflamed eyes, ringing in ears, deafness, roi hawking and coughing to clear throat, til- i ceralions, scabs from ulcers, voice altered. < ?:. nasil twang, offensive breath, impaired pn< smell and taste, dizziness, mental denres- l,kl sion, ficklmg cough, etc. Onlv few of the above symptoms are likely to be present 1)dl in any case at one time. No disease is i more common or less understood by phy >? itctnns. The proprietor of Dr Sage's Ca- thl tarkh Rf.vdey will pnv ?500 reward for 'h< i ease of Catarrh which he cannot cute ^ Sold by Druggists at 50 cents. 608. rpj o*c< Miss Sallie Shannon, the belle of Knn- III sns, to whom Alexis took a tremendous 1 *hine, is to be married in September to a St. Louis gentleman. J A New Epoch in Medical History.? ' Reason and chance." says Piiny, "led ?r< np to the discovery of the virtues of med- 'oi icine herbs." In these modern dav?. re -earch and experiment have perfected the 1 work that reason and accident began. Dr. Walker's Vineoar Hitters, arp the latent retulr of hotanieal investiiration and ^ pharmaceutical science. The ex raordin c?. irv medicine, composed entirely'of vege- i table ingredients culled from the soil of onr Pacific. Territory, is pronounced a ' J remedy for every dijease?not organic? 1 ?t the stomach, the liver, the bowels, the j respiratory sy?tem. the kidneys, the mtis- " dej, and the other organs which mike no the machinery of life. All who have ' . witnessed its etfect are in favor of its uni- " verbal adoption as the safes' and mo-f reliable tonic known. Free from the alcohol, it. is nevertheless a stiinuhint 'bough not a dangerous excitant. One thine is certain?no curative heretofore introduced to the public rhrongh the pre?s. . has ever obtained in sr^ short a time, the * celebrity of Dr. Walker's California Hitters, or been snpported by sucli nn impeachable testimony. From that testi i mony it is evident that this preparation is a specific for Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility. Intermittent and Hilion? Remittent F-vers Diarrrhuja, Dysentery, Rheumatism, Gout, and all disturbances of the secretive and || excretive function*.?f om Ed-'ard Bayer. Esq., Horton, Kinys Co., N. 3.. writes that an astonishincr euro has hot ?i effected on lus dnnphter by the use of Johnson's Anodyne Liniment. The whole spine became diseased. she lost the use 'flier limbs and her hack wan ronn led up like a ho*, in consequence of takimr cold after ha- inpheen ini'oeulated for the kiue pock. She is now well.?Com. The purest and sweetest Cod-Liver Oil in the world is Hazard A Caswell's, made on the sea JL shore from fresh, selected livers, by Caswell. |l Hazard A* Co., New York. It is absolutely jrur- " and sored. Patients who have mice taken it pn fer it t < all others. Physician* have decided it superior to any of the other oils m market. ? foil). The Folded Edpes of the El?wood Col'ar marks a n-w era in ti e manufacture of paper "** collars. It does not show ti e sharp raw cdpe -j of other collars and is a perf ct iniitatic?n of linen. Examine the Flmwood at the Gent's ' Furnishing Stores.?Com. We pledge onr reputation on the assertion *? that any educated phvsician, alter a careful examination of the re<pp->, will say that Parson's Purgative Pills i>"ss?-es more merit than any other pill now offered for sale.?Com. ri dl tn H. H. Shufelpt A- Co., Chicaco, alone in I 1 America di-til IMPERIAL GIN bv the Hoi.- sn land Process. Send for circular.?Com. An Essential of Loveliness.?To be entirely tinir uhnnld h?? abundant and lllKtrOlla. This is absolutely essential to n mplrte loveliness. The most regular features. the most brilliant ? ni- 1 plexioti and pearliest teeth ail oi their due effect if >" the hair be thin, dry. or harsh. On the contrary , the plainest face, if it be but surmounted by luxuriant and silken tre-ses. Is apt to impress the be- /J holder with a sense of actual beiuty. That crown- M ing ornament of her sex is, happily, wittalt. the reach ^ of lovely woman, and being as discriminating as she is lovely she 1 ng ngo discovered that Lton's Ksthaihon was the sure means of securing ,t No preparation for the Hair ever enjoye-" a tithe of its popular tv. and no wonder, since it produces such gratifying results. Applied to the waste and barren pla es of the scalp it fructifies and enriches them with a new and ample growth. It is not. of course, pretended that it will do this if the capacity for reproduction i extinct, but so long a? it remains that wondenul tehabiiitant will assuredly propogate the germ of the balr Into life and activity.?iCom.| Beat and Oldest Family Medicine ?Sa.vi roRn's Liver IftviooBator A purely Vegetable Cathartic and Tonic?for D' spepsia, Constipation, | Debility. Sick-headache, B1 ions Attacks, and all , derangements of Liver, "stomach and Bowels. Ask vour Druggist for it. Bewark oEimTAiioNs.-|Com 1 in' he Wlthla the Whole Kstiff of tome and altera- wt ! t ve meuiciu- a tnow.i. none U rutitled to more consider- on | ation thsn th P?ravi>n Syrup In ad cases of enfe? ic< bled and debilitated constitution it is the ve7 remedy ph ! needed. The meet positive proof of thie can be addooel tlx I ?(km. - I Consumers should use from one-fourth t e-half less of Dooley's than of other Yeast c iking Powdera. It is put up full weight.-C01 .'BISTADORO'S EXCELSIOR HAIR DYE istt wt sure and complete preparation of ita kind in tl rid. Ita effects are mieical, ita character harmlea tints natural, its qualities enduring.?Com. .IKE LIGHTNING are the miraculous cures effect* h Hage's Instant Relief. Aches. Pains. Sprain srel Complaints, etc.. cannot exist if thii great med e is used. Relief Warranted. Or Monev Refunded. ?Con The Markets. NEW XORK. it Cattle?Prime to Extra S .14 First quality 12.13 Second . . .ll'^a .11! Ordinary thin Cattle.. .10 a .11! Interior .OSl^a .11 (job Cows . 3).0O a70.oo as?Live 04^a .05! Dressed - .06%% -<'62 SEP 05 ^.a 07 rro? Middling 21H * 2 ] tiro? Extra Western f 80 a 7 35 Slate Extra 6 75 a 7 30 ? - ? , a,i ? i nn ik at?nea western x "u v. ? SUte 1.60 a 1.6A g_ Western 74 a .74 jlet? M -It 1 55 a 1 fiO is?*'??) Wo?tfirn t'2 a .62! r?- Mixed Western 44l4'i .44 Y .. 1.3* a 1.56 70 a 1 05 tl'B 25 a 60?'7C'a 18 n . <0 ik?Mess 11.0') a 14.(0 an 8*4'' ' 8 ntOLRTT*?Crude 11 Refined .22^ J iteb? State 23 a .30 Ohio, tellow V2 a 24 " 8 amy 15 a .18 Weatern ordinary 10 a .13 Pennsylvania fine 24 i 32 KK8Z?State Factorv 12'i3 .12! " Skimmed 8 a .10 Ohio 07 a .10 r,B - State 22 * .23 buffalo. EF Cattle 4 62S? 6 50 eep 4 no a 5 M 08?Live 4.'0 a 4 7'> jub 7 "5 a 9 50 ikat?No. 2 Spring 1.43 a 1 50 rk t 2 a .521 rs 37 a 37 ." 5*8 a 1.00 blct .70 a .75 09 a .19! albany. ikai?White 1 87 a 1.87 E?State 85 a .85 Rd?Mixed 62 a 64 rle7?State 1.03 a 1.04 r*? State 47 a .47 philadelphia. 0UB-- 6.25 alOOO >eat - Western Red 162 a 1.65 rn?Yellow 63 a .63! Mixed 61 a .61 toolkgm?onjrte 15l4refined 21j over Seed 9 00 al^.OO Timothy 3.60 3.62| baltimobe. rroN?Low Middling 20 \a .20! otte?Extra 5.00 a 9.50 ieat?Amber l.iO a 1.80 its 64 a .65 r?. ... ?1 i 43 N"otiee?H. What We Need when Debilitated. tppetiteand digestion languish at this season. J ( vey time when the body most needs renovation ar iport, the stomach, its commissariat department, 1 to prove delinquent. Under such circumstances tl tessity for a wholesome stimnlant, tonic and corrects self-evident, and consequently the demand for thi rless combination ot the three required element stetter's Stomach Bitters, is never more urgent th? midsummer. t is true tuat a few medical bigots?fossils "left ovei m the dark ages?recommend violent purgation an ter gruel as a cure for indigestion acd its accompan; ; ills ; but they makg few proselytes. The majoril the community are sane, and all sane people a: are that a pure and powerful vegetable tonic wit erative properties. like Hostetfrr's Bitters, ia tl ycure for dyspepsia, biliousness, constipation, ne isness.and the "consequential damages" they inflic 'he human intellect, unless hopelessly diseased < egiously humbugged, declines to a-tonish the weal ;d human stomach with fierce cathartics that, rushir e an avalanche through the intestines, threaten I :e the inner membrane with them. To use a signif ? .?I 1 .V- I. 1. j._. I O m.tl 11 caicu-piiranc, tut- miwr-uuha-auu-uiu^ uuw iuw< j of treatment are ' played oat." t is clearly understood that a medicated stimulant ential to the renovation oi an exhausted frame ar it you cannot strengthen m.in or woman by dosir >m wiih prostrating preparation . This is an eranmon sense, and c uinnon sense approves of Hoate 'sHi'tersos the best article extant for invigorating (ulating and purifying the system and defending linst poisou in the air we breathe, or the water v nk. I'O CO * N L' M FT IV KM. TO ( OSHUMPTIVEt. 'he advertiser, having heen permanently cured of th, >ad disease, Consumption, by a simple remedy, is on is to make known to his fellow sufferers the means re To all who desire it. he will send a copy of t! fscriptioo used, (tree of charge), with the directioi preparing and using the same, which they will find UK I 'lTBE for I 'OVKT'Wpt jnv. AsTH-MA. BRnNCHIT] d all thro it or lung difficulties. aarties wishing tne prescription will please address Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON "It IVnn. vfrciS tVilli.imrli'ifvli % . (?KN ' ?i Wanted.?Agentsmaue mi .o uiont.^ i wnrk ior nsth in at jnything else. Pan i-ulars fre S-jv-on A Co.. / '(?? Art l'uhli*hert, Portl ind, Main O E\T?.??on per ce t, profit. Sash Lock. Tern i tr. e. Ten cents will refu n sample. A. GRIFFIN. Meshop^en. Pa. /\/\/\ tOEX TM W1>T1'D to aell O' # " P Popular Camna gr. Charts and N Mi Union and Wor d P. BR AD WAY, Diinvi'le, P D-IV H i TT I It* 1? *?<*~ P F x N ST '? EET iu )i IIi I 1 1 Mi) Pittsburg. Peon. [,o* gesi engaged, and m ostsncee-stul physician of tl e. t "onsiiltsiion or am hlet f ee. Call or write. ny Fa ate having artuajl tsi*trno, can be coll eti \ in e toe Engl ind, Ir I n-t. cml-md, Germa.i dlatel. r France by J. F. FRUEAUFF, Attorney at l...w, C dunihia. Ltncaster C'o., Pa. iTlTtr'T T?Yrl spn,J i'?t?P ,or priret of fit J/H, 1/F/ 1" different portraits "f GRAN' I WIL?OV. GREF.H Y A> ANr> 1 ' ROWN*. to WW. I nt) 4 \TtTi ,JOX Ft, P inter, i? Broi U Jl Alt I. | Street. New Yot It. k GREAT OEPER! Horace Waters. 4H1 Kroudwnv, \. Y., i! dispose Ot one hltndfcf.n plantls, M el f >i>e< ins, ,h ioans of six first-class makers, including Waters'*, remtly lw j> it* /)'/ cri./i, Aurln't tbi* mouth : or will ta' an ft to f'J1 monthly until paid : the same to let, ai it applied if purchased A new kind of Pari/ uian. the mn-t benntifuf style and iiorfect tone ev ide. now on exhibition at 4#<1 Broadway New York. A. Wellington H<rt & Co., ADJUSTERS OF ('LitMS FOR risolvents & Bankrupts /10 Leonard St., N. Y. 9Hr Rkkkbkxce- or Hiuhkst ('haium'tpr. Srnil lor ? I rem nr. I0THFRS! MOTHERS! MOTHERS!!! Don't tall to procure MRS. WI\>I.OW M>TilI.\0 SIRUP FOR <1111.DUI. KETII I \6. F!i- value hie preparation l>.?- hern ti-?*<! with NKVK \I|.IN(J SUCCESS IX T HOI'S AN IIS ??? < \S| s. It not onlv re iew'H the chil.l from pain. ' it invigo f-i the -tonjarli ant) ' o??-I?. correct* actiiity. an<l giv no ?nd energy to th? whole nystrtn. It will also j mtly relieve a Orlplnar In the Rowela and Wind Colic. VV. t r'ipvo i' the BFST and SUREST REMEDY I IK WORI.D. in flll cases of DYSENTEl Y AX [AI'RHEA IN CHILDREN, wh?tler tri-inc fro thing or any other ciu-e. r)..ppr,t upon it mothers, it will five re*t toyoi rse (1 Relief nnd Health to Your infant*. < -nr? and call for " Mr?. Wlnalow'a Soothing Syrnp." f.i .'ing the fne-"itnlle of " CURTIS A PKRKIN> the out.-u|c wapper Hold hv l?r..jrtr??#? thronuhont ?he " orf - ?. -*-w- -c-w. var tTPte trVKRYROl) ^ 1 -'W Of/OB' K hicii or In' JO \y a ^^^iti.i'i' ii r lorn .all1, nick ur we rich or rioor. Serd a thre it pont-iir- -1?rn?> for fin- ' Adrlrr--* ii ?Y\rs a CO., Nt. I.aala, Mo. Air^t-M wantei ^k* 11?' The Rlffhta of the Mek.-It it the right of are valid to know what hia midicine i?, and why it ia pr ibed. Ia iny -offerer from dy?pep-ia. lirer comp'aii adace. ooeurene-a. or hear burn, deetrou- to knc iat Tahsaxt'h Si lt*e? Apekixwr ia. and >?h? 1 abt to take it ? The a< ewer ia simple. It ia the ehei u equ ralent of the 8-ltaer Sua water, and thegieaU jaioiana the world baa ever ?eer? have pronoos* j-wm : .Ailwfrtijif 1Sjtlil& y Vinegar Bitter* arc not a vile Fancy Prink, made ot Poor Rum. Whisky. Proof Spirits and. Refuse Liquors, doctored, spiced, and sweetened to please the taste, called ' Tonics." " Appetizers.'? " Restorers," Ac., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and rnln but are a true Medicine, made from the native roots and herbs of California, free , from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the Great 4 Blood Purifier and a Life-giving Principle, a Perfect Renovator and Invlgoratur of the System, carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring the blood 10 healthy condition, enriching It, refreshing and invigorating both mind and body. They are easy of administration, prompt In their action, certain ^ In their resuks, sale and reliable iu all tortus of disease. Ko Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long uuwell. provided tnelr bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond ,, the point of repair. " Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Tain In the Shoulders, Coughs, Tlgntness or the Chest, Dizziness. Sour Eructations of the Stomach. Bad Taste In the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, PaUi tn the region of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. Iu these complaints n has no equal, aud one bottle will prove better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. ? For Female Complaints, in yonng or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an Influence that a marked improvement is 4 soon perceptible. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism and Gout, Dyspepsia or ludlgestiou. Bilious. Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood. Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful, such Diseases are cansed bv Vitiated Blood, which Is generally produced by derangement of the Digestive Organs. They are a Gentle Purgative as well a* a Tonic, possessing also the peculiar merit cf acty ing as powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs and / In Bilious Diseases. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salty Rheum, Blotches, Spots, I'lmples, Pustules, Boils, * Carbuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-llead, Sore Eyes, l- Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Dlscoloraiious oi the Skin, 4 llawors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system in a short time by the use of these Bitten. One bottle in such cases will convince the _ most incredulous of their curative effects. - Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find Its impurities bursting through the sktu In Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when yon llnd It obstrueted and sluggish in the veins; clcanst It it when it is foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health ot the system ld will follow. u Grateful Thousands proclaim Vijjegab Bit ters the most wonderful luvlgorant that ever bus,e tained the sinking system. w Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking In the system of so many thousands, are effectually lt destroyed and removed. Says a distinguished ? physiologist: There is scarcely an Individual on the ' race of the earth whose body is exempt from the m presence of worms. It is not upon the healthy elements of the body that worms exist, but upon the diseased humors and slimy deposits that breed " these living monsters of disease. No system of ?t ~ -a . A?.olfn/*oa ?m anfliolminiri/>a will J II1CUICIUC, UU ? CI Ulll UJlill liv WIVUVMUII.U.W, .. ... free the system from worms like these Bitters. Klechanical Diseases.?Persona engaged in ty Paints and Miuerals, such as Plumbers, Tyjcre setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance ;h in life, are subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To ' guard against this, take a dose of Walker's Viheoar Bitters twice a week. r~ Bilious, Remittent, and Intermittent $ Fevers, which are so prevalent iu the valleys of ir our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, t0 Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many e 1- others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our >1- entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat j8 and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdomiual viscera. Iu their treatment, a 'k purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these of various organs, is essentially necessary. There is t. no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walker *8 Vinegar Bitters, as they will speedily romove the dark-'-oIored viscid matter with which 11 the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating ,e rlie secretions of the liver, and generally resulting the healthy functions of the dlgestlvo organs. Scrofula, or King'* Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Intlanunatious, Mercurial ?t Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore s. Eyes, etc., etc. In these as in all other constitutional Diseases, Walker's Vineuau Bitters have n shown their great curative powers in the most 5e obstinate and intractable cases. Dr. Walker's California Vinegar 1111? ten act on all these cases m a similar maimer, is. By purifying the Blood they remove the cause, and by resolving away the effects of the intlammation ,'the tubercular deposits) the affected parts receive v ..ealth. and a permanent c?rre is effeeted. ? The properties of Dli. WaLKEK's Vinegar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, 1 Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Bedatlve. Counter] irrluint. Sudorific, Alterative, aud Anti-Bilious. The Aperient and mild Laxative properties ? >f Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bitters are the best u'e-guord in cases of eruptions and mahguant v rs. Their balsamic, healing, and soothing pronr rties protect the humors of the fauces, fhclr ip 'dative properties allay pain in the nervous sys> ? in, stomach, aud bowels, from intlammation. , ind, colic, cramps, etc. Tltelr Counter-irritant iritlnence ex ads throughout the system. Their Aiiti-BiUoui - iroperttes stimulate the liver, In the secretion ot fd ?ile, and its discharges through the biliary ducts, y. ud are superior to all remedial agents, for the cure of Bilious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc. Fortify the body nguiusf disease by t*..i ?1! 1#., <tni<ln u'illi v t v k'<: t> Ui m'dv Vrt 2' Untying #11 iw uui'in mm ? T, pideinic can take hold of a system thusforc-anttcd. ;i? Directions.?Take of the Hitters oil got tut to F; bed at night from a halt to one and one hall winc" daasful. Eat good nourishing food, such as beefsteak, mutton chop, venison, roast beef, and vegei tables, and take out-door exercise. They are ] .composed of purely vegetable ingredicnta, and contain no spirit. k. h. Mcdonald &. co.. " Druggists and Gen. Agts.. San Francisco, Cal., A oor. of Washington and Charlton Sts., N.Y. ? sold BY ALL ar PK.\ r.KRS.__ P, JI V N U gjo 8S _ for hr-t-class pnn?v No .liacount. No " f Xgenta. Addrea* U. S. PlAKbeO,, HAS Hroadwsv. N. Y. or whittikr ?m pe** ?trebt, It a, D III I I I Ij IV, rinstiiric, I'mn. I Longest engaged, ami most succewfni pliymcian of the ige. Consultation or pamphlet free. C .11 o. ?rite. Fk. piiofxix, Bloomingdalo Nnrsery, ll';?0 ncre-;21-t year; l2(in,e,-HoiiW"'; Trws. Bt'LBS, hedge 1'i.ants Nursery mook : i r&tal cup*. 20 ' < ->?* ("I O \ \TT Send stamp for pries of V0 1 dilT*ren' portrait* "f GWKF. vn . f.FY. BROWN t:k NT and A>" WIL?DN. to IV M. F. r*l?Wl 17 V JOX ES, PittsTnt. 4* Broad unrjoLh I . rr.. t. New Yo fc | fron in the Blood! b The PERFTTAN SYRrP mnkesthe arrak strong, and expels disease by supplying the bloi d with p. NaTTKK'8 Ows YtTAMZtSO AOFNT? IRON. n" CautIon.?Re sure von get Peruvian f>i/nrp. PaannhleLo free. J. P. DJNSMORE. Proprietor, No. SfiIW St.. Now York, gold bj Draggrixts generally. ,V MThea.NeCtar -Yith t!i?? fir'tn T-n Flarar. The be*t Tea Imported, for m vf^fiHESnf -r/'.' A "<1 tor utile whole-ale only bv r;? (3re;it Atlantic and yX W Pacific Tea Co., >n, 191 hut- n V? r^)vlWEffpj|y *?t. it 'Z .t I ('hutch St., New York* ^ Smtd frw rt<n ifertw (jrnyif* > ^ Tie Records of Tests M V at LOWKLI,, Ma**., prove* ^5^* :t z2. N- F- BURNHAM'S JR. - NEW TURBINE superior to all other*. It pave jBE?2<!s20?f d. a blither percentage than an\ -' c'her wheel of cotmno i ni-h Pan't'hlet end Price Lio. hi Vt^fefiigMrr ^ N. F BURNHAW . ^ erk. Pa # 4 n n ft reward : I For nn; ca? of Blind, M /I Bleeding.Itcbinr.oi Ulocm /I rated Pile- thatDkBing's m ' I Pilk Rkmedt fail ? to M I care. It is prepared ex4 B 3 pre** y to curt the Pilee U I a L. ^ ^ a d nothing else. Sold by " , * * w ___ al'Drtutgi*^ RrtcetLilO. The Gettysburg Katalysine Water, Nature a great remedy for Dy-pepsa. Rbeui itbm. Gout, Neuralgia. Kidney. Urinary, Ne<-von? Heart, and T other Chronic Dseaaes, it 1 otted and sent direct from ?- the spring at G-ttyaburg, Penn., to invalids wh-rever .t, residing. Pi ice per single c?u-e of two doten quart botiw tie*, W-'O- V> percent dircount in favor of clergymen be and pbvxicians on water for their own n-?. Medic.i'' ml u- clerical profession mu?t be certified by the( near**; wt Postmaster or other rtspocMblc peruana. Whgredrnrsd girt* do net Veep it uivaLds 3iaye?clo-e a ?ertfl*i check or Poet-Offlcs money order to WHITNEY! BROS. % at bcutb Want Street. Philadelphia. Pa. f A I