A French Poultry Farm. The French excel in poultry. Inoed inc. There is something in their active, sanguine, vivacious teinpera nv nt akin to the fussiness of fowls, and, as like seeks like, the French peo ple raise more fowls and produce more eggs than any other nation. The ex port of eggs from France to England amounts in value to several million dol lars' w orth yearly, and the home con sumption ot poultry largely exceeds tint of any other nation. Poultry in some shape or other, openly or dis guised by their inimitable cookery, is upon the Frenchman's table every day, ami the omelette or an confiture an fines ht iltes is a standard and delicious part of ihe usual meal. It would do an American farmer a real good to see how well and delicately a Frenchman lives on what the former either wastes or n.'gleets. The fat. boiled pork usual in our farm houses, is there rarely seen, and where it is, it is brought up in such a form and of such a quality as to make it un objectionable to the weakest stomach! Poultry and eggs are in realitv the cheapest products of the farm under the best management, and we might well take a lesson from the French both in mauaging poultry w hile alive, and in using it to the best ad vantage after it is slaughtered. We owe some of our most popular breeds of fowls to the French. The lloudan, the Crevecour. aud La Ficehe. are purely French, and have len found so satisfactory that we have not as yet undertaken the usual Ameri can process of "improvement" with tlwni. But to see French fwwls in per fection one must see them in their na tive homes, for the best of us must ad- rait that in their excellent methods of raring for their fowls we are far sur passed. Among other methods of management, that of colonizing is peculiarly French. A peasant woman who has but a dozen or two fowls will have her separate coops, each shaded by an apple tree or by a vine or plum trse; aud the largest professional poultrvman or amateur will still have his colonies. Here is a great advan tage at the outset, because all the evils which come through, crowding are avoided, and good health a grand re quisite to success prevails. Wo find in a French journal a .de script ion of a French poultry establish ment, that of M. Lemoiue, of Crosue Department Sine-et-Oise who was awarded the "prize ot honor given for poultry, for his exhibit at the great Parisian show. This gentleman began to keep Doultry in 1S72. His first ex pedience was one that is usual with all successful poultry men. lie began with the common tarmlowls ot mixed blood, out soon abandoned tnese tor pure breeds, as being the only .profitable kinds to be kept. Careful selections were made of perfect specimens of each breed, and these were bred with care and crossed with each other in such a wav as soon to obtain superb birds. Twfnty-spven different varieties ol fowls are kept by him. 1 hese are kept in "parquets'" of SO to UK) square meters each a trifle over as many American yards in which they have freedom, and fiud grass, insects and gravel. Each yard has a garden or plot of green turf, shrubs. fiUit trees and sanded paths. The low shrubs give cool shade.and the, earth beneath it hem absorbs and decomposes the drop pings, and furnihes dusting places for the fou ls. The young chicks early in the season are raised iu a long building in which they have warmth aud are conveniently attended to. As soon as the heat of the sun makes this house too warm, the chicks aud brooding hens are removed to coops placed in ihe "parquets" under the suade of fruit, tree. , A peculiarity of the system followed by Mons. Lemoine, is to raise hi hiek from large eggs and to produce the heaviest possible birds. The result has been that his fowls have always been awarded first prizes. He has ibuud that a superior sire and an inferior dam produce a second-rate progeny, and that to procure the best ofls-pring t lie dam must be the very best, while the sirp may be of secondary character without injury. As to the scarcity of lare eggs, M. Lemoine says: "This is not astonishing when we consider how frequently fowls are permitted to de-1 generate through negligence in killing oil' the liens indiscriminately, sacrific ing those which lay large egjjs equally with those which produce small ones." "Those who know their best iuterests will guard carefully and kep for year these producers of large eggs and weed out their flocks, adding, by purchase of eggs 6f ' the best types, new blood through which the most profitable re sults may be obtained." In conclusion, M. Lemoine mourns over the extreme scarcity of the best quality of poultry in ho French market, observing that "it is only by accident that one can tiud a satisfactory fowl offered for sale." If this is said of the French markets, which are so far ahead of ours in this respcet, what might be thought or said of ours, where to procure a decent fow l would be impossible without a long continued search which, after all, might be unavailing? And yet it is not for want of w illing purchasers who do not grumble at high prices bo long as they can procure what they want. Jinml Neio Yorker. gomistic. Black and White Marble Cake. The White: Three cups of white sugar, the whites of eight eggs.beaten to a froth, one cup of butter, one-halt cup of sour cream, one teaspoonful of soda, and two of cream-of-tartar, one cup of bweet milk, one ten spoon ml of lemon extract; flour enough to make it rise nicely. The Black: Two cups of brown pugar, one cup of molasses, one cup ot butter,' one-half cup of sour cream, yelks of eight eggs, one half cup ot sweet milk, one teaspoonful of soda, two tjiblespoonfula of cinnamon, one te spoonful of clovo?, one teaspoonful of allspice, and one of black pepper. Put in adayer of the black and white alternately till it is all in. Draw a fork through it two or three times to. mix it a little, or leave, it as you put it in, if you like. Boston" Brqavx Bread to ra Bakud is'a Buick OVEN.-Iakea quart of rye-meal and the Ba me of . .. : warm water. wbite nour. juix mn Take also a gill of molasses or sviup, a small teaspoonful of soda, a large teaspoonful of bait, nnd half a gill oi yeast. Such bread is improved oy ine addition of a gill of boiled pumpkin or winter squash. Make it as stiff as can . i t it easily be stirred witn a spoon, urreasc a deep brown pan thickly, and put the bread in it, and dip your hand in water and smooth over the top. This will rise faster than other bread, and should not he made over night in tne summer. The quantity can be doubled for two loaves. Bakelougin brick oven and long accordingly in stove. Rice Pudding'. To five quarts ot milk allow one and a half cups of nicely washed rice; three-fourths of a cup of "A" sugar, or a little more it you want it sweeter; put in a pan cold with as many raisins as you like, and bake one and one-half hours, stirring two or three times carefully while it is baking. This should have a pretty hot oven and not be stirred for the last half hour of baking, so as to form a nice brown crust or covering on the top. This pudding is a little nicer when cold, and 1 always bake one large enough for two dinners in cool weather. Breakfast Disii.-Scrape and clean thoroughly a pig's head; boil for four hours, or until the meat will slip from the bones; remove all the bones; skim the grease from off the liquor in the kettle and return the meat, which should be chopped fine; season highly with salt, pepper and sage, if liked; thicken with Indian meal until of the consistency of soft mush; let boil for an hour or more; pour into dishes and set in a cool place; slice and fry for breakfast in winter. Sxovr Balls. Boil rice till tender; press into small tea-cups, and when npifect.lv eold turu into a dish; make a boiled custard and pour over a half hour before serving. Procts of Mannacturimj liuhhers. The first operation, after receiving the crude gum from the importer, is to cleanse it! To facilitate thi process the rubber, which comes in lumps re sembling in size and shape a soldier's cauteenis cut into thin slices by means of a large circular knife, revolving with great speed and constantly wetted. Theu these slices are cut into small pieces by means of a chopper a ma chine which resembles in its action a common hay-cutter and afterward the pieces are reduced to minute particles in another machine, which, at the same lime, washes out all the dirt and sand. Beside the accidental admixture of foreign substances with the sap, the natives are in the habit of throw ing in sand and ashes to increase the weight. This grit, unless completely removed from the gum, will slrow itself in the shoe, impairing its smooth surface; aud hence much of the tine finish depends upon the care taken at this stage. The small particles of rubber, all clean, are now shoveled into another machine which rolls then together into rough sheets. These sheets are then taken to the dryiug-room, wlwre they remain about three mouths to admit of the complete evaporation of the mois ture. It is an important poiut thor oughly to extract the moisture of the gum, for if it is made up into shoes before it is sufficiently dry, the watery particles will expand under the heat of vulcanization aud cause blisters. After the gum is sufficiently dry it is carried iuto the. grindiug room, and fed into machines called grinders, where pas sing between heavy iron rolls, heated with steam, it is softened so as to per mit of the admixture of the vulcanizing material. The call for low-priced goods has led to extensive cheapening, by which less expensive material than rubber is added to lessen the cost. oal tar, lampblack and other cheap and bulky articles are thus sometimes used. The gum is then run inio long siieets between calenders. The sheets, as delivered from calenders, after beiug cut into convenient lengths, are carried to the cutting machine aud cut into uppers aim soles by means of patterns and sharp wet kuiVes in the hands of skilled workmen. The uppers and soles are now ready to be lasted. Mean while, in another department, the linings whether of purple stocking net for shoes, or of woolen fleecy cloth for "Arctics," or of heavy felt for boots are coated on one side with rubber, by passing a batch of gum in company with the cloth between steel rolls in another calender, and, after being cut into various sizes, many thicknesses at once, with dies in a drop press, are dis tributed to those who make up the boots and shoes. After affixing various strengthening pieces of cloth stiffenings, etc. the rubber upper is carefully laid on sticks fast to the rubber on the cloth, with a light pressure and smoothing move ment of the hand. No pegging or sew ing is required. The edges are then trimmed, the sole is put on and rolled down firmly, so as to adhere closely in every part. The shoes are now col lected and carried to the varnish l oom, where a coat of elastic varnish is quickly applied, and the shoe, now of a greenish brown color, is hung in the heater. This varnish, beside imparting the luster and finish, protects the rubber from beiug injured by the intense heat of vulcanization, and further protects the shoes when in use from the effects of the atmosphere. It is found that goods which are made up with a dull finish, and not having the protection of the varnish, do not last so long as the varnish goods. The heater is a large fireproof room, heated by means of a large number of steam-pipes. In the evening, when the heater is full of goods, the doors are closed, the steam turned on and the baking begins. The heat is gradually run up to nearly three hundred degrees, under the supervision of experienced bands who remain all night carefully watching the progress of the baking, as indicated by thermometers hung up in side but visible through small windows in the wall of the heater. Too much heat renders the rubber brittle and rotten, and not quite enough heat de tains the sulphur in the shoe, and causes its appearance afterward when they become what are called "white" go. ds. These white or sulphurous goods are really better to wear than . hose completely cured. During vul canization the gum becomes very soft and runs together into one homogenous mass, and finally, when a higher point is reached, it hardens again. After remaining in the heater a sufficient time about eight or ten hours in all the shoes are carried, at an early hour in the morning, into the packing room, where, after being removed from the lasts, they are laid in long, glittering rows ou the table. Then comes along the inspector, who examines every pair very closely and passes judgment ac coruing to the character of the work manship. Trade Circular, Dam on the Ohio. The United States engineers are busily at work on the dam on 'the Ohio just below Pittsburg. Two hundred men are now at work on the dam, but when the shore wall is. begun, in the neighborhood of 1,000 men will be employed. Alter the dam is finished the shore wall for the lock will be be gun. This wall will be 17 feet high, 8 J feet thick, and 685 feet long. The dam will slack water up as far as the first dam in the Monongahela, and as far as the Garrison ripples in the Alleghany, with a minimum depth of six feet at the breast. The great benefits which will accrue from thia source in saving of coal, of transportation, etc., are scarcely calculable. The importance ol this work to the country at large is in the fact that it is the first attempt in this country to use a dam with movable bottom or of such a character that at high water the dam may be lowered so as to give an uninterrupted channel, while at low water the dam can be raised and the locks used to pass boats through. The dam has movable wickets, which can either be raised and lowered by means of a shaft and engine or by one or two men in a boat. This system is now in use in the Seine, in France, the llhtne, and other rivers in Europe. ijtmwrotts. The toot assemble a. bugle call. Philadelphia Bulletin. In driving a hen a woThan is slow but shooher. Boston Globe. A son-net your neighbor's pretty d an gh t e r. Boston Tran script . Now did Job Baxter get his pretty- wife? you ask. Why, Job Baxter, of course The cheapest way to settle back rents is to buy an ulster. Cincinnati Commercial. Every dog has his day, but the nights belong to the cats. Philadelphia Chronicle. A Boston man has stolen S,000 worth of water from the Mystic Water Company. lie had the best milk route iu the city. T'urners Falls Reporter. A pretty girl down East is a "mind reader." She said to a bashful beau the other night: "La! I believe you are going to kiss me !" She was right. "That boy will make his mark in the world some day," said a parent of his du.lest child. So he did. lie never learned to write. Edinbury Herald. John writes to inquire how the Ark was propelled. We would say to John that the Ark was a row-boat and was propelled by an Noah." Whitehall Times. Unexpected gratuity Waiter " Beg pardon, sir, but I think you've made a mistake. This is a halfpenny." Old gent, grandly " Oh, dear, no; not at all ! I never give less." Punch. Xew wars come up in Europe before the old ones are settled. Soldiers are scarcely allowed to sit down for a moment's peace, and that is why they keep standing armies. New Orleans Picayune. 2 lovers sat beneath the shade. Ami I un; the other said: How 14-x that you he'J Hath siulied upon this suit of mine: ii a a neari, u pnips yon Thv voice is inuti melodv "It's v to tie Hi) loel l. Say oy nymph, wilt many me?" Then" lisped she soft. "Why. 'Sly" St. Louis Journal. Puck has plunged into politics. Here is one of his splashes : "Don't be afraid to challenge a voter. Challenge him to fight a duel at live paces, and kill him before he votes. Get out the vote! Then get it in! Do you want billiards to advance two dollars per bill? and opera tickets ten dollars per tick? and ulsters sixty dollars per ulst? Then vote the oppo sition ticket. Do you want to live in a four-story cottage with a big back yard, and no back rent? Then stand on the ground all day and vote the whole ticket. I'.' S. Don't scratch unless you have personal occasion to." The Michigan tramp does not sit still and let moss accumulate on his back, while all the rest of the world goes ahead. Yesterday a genuine specimen of the iron-plated traveler of highways called at a house on Second street and asked for dinner. "No food to spare," was the reply. "Can't you give me an old coat?" "Xo." "Or a pair of old boots?" "Xo." "Can't you spare me even a pair of socks?" "Xo." "Nor a piece of bread?" "Xo." "The fellow's chin fellas he fumbled in his pocket, and his voice had a lone some sound as he pulled out a small autograph album and said: "Well, if you can't do any better, I'll have to be satisfied with your otter graff I Please use blue ink!" Free Press. Some Instructions Goes with Them. A shrewd Granger came into Fremont the other day, with a span of horses which in appearance were para gons of animal beauty. A horse-trader caught sight of them, and offered to buy them at once. The Granger was willing to sell, consequently the bargain was soon closed, the money paid over, and the horses delivered to the new owner. The Granger then looked at the horseman with a wicked twinkle in his eye, aud remarked: "Mister, there's some instructions goes with them horses." "What are they?" inquired the horseman. "Well, sir, when that critter lies down on his right side, you has to turn him over before he can git up. He's a left-handed brute, and can't use his right side. The t'other animal was born backward, and he doesn't pull well any other way. When you hitch him to a wagon, just reverse ends, and he'll pull a mountain up by the roots." After delivering these instructions the Granger walked off, chuckling like a loose cog-wheel, and the horseman was sorry that Beecher had abolished Hades before this Granger's time to die had come. But the horseman was resolved not to be beat in this way, and began to look about for a victim. He soon found oue in the person of a promiuent lawyer, to whom he sold the team at a fancy price. After get ting his money, he delivered the " in structions" as he had received them; and now there's a lawyer on the ragged edge, who is casting his eyes wistfully around for some other 0an wishing to buy a beautiful team. He'll sell cheap, and throw the "instructions" in. CURIOSITIES Of THE AMERICAN EXPORTING TRADE. American enterprise in the struggle for supremacy in the world's' market has been handicapped by six serious drawbacks. These nre, lack of means of transportation, high rates of interest on capital, high rates of marine insur ance, carelessness in packing, waste of material in manufacturing, and an omission to make concessions to the local prejudices of outside barbarians. A good time will probably come when these will all be removed, and then adieu to Communism, pauperism, half time, over-production, and all the other real or imaginary evils of the day. Greenbacks will advance to a premium, gold will be a nuisance, subsidies to steamship lines will be regarded with contempt, and many other equally in credible things from the present point of view will come to pass. Meantime, Yankee pluck, even with all the odds above mentioned against it, is making a gallant race, and is fast closing upon its antagonists. This is especially true of the past few years since 1875. Taking the figures of 1875-0-7 as a basis, we have advanced at the rate of .4'ti 000,000 iu two years. Our exports to-day are more than double those of 1800, in- which year there was a very heavy export trade, the one article of cotton alone amounting to over $100, 000,000, more than twice the cotton export of 1855. In the fiscal year end ing June o0, 1878, the increase over 1877 was nearly 05,000,000, .or about 11 per cent., and this notwithstanding the greatly lessened demand for war material consequent upon the cessation of hostilities abroad. The possibilities of the future are enormous. To say that our progress promises to equal that of the pat three years is to claim too little. The least we may look for will be an expansion on the compound interest plan. Our dry goods are superior to those of England, and are preferred wherever they are entered into direct competi tion with them. Xot to put too tine a point uK)ti it, English cotton goods are composed of one part cottou and three parts clay or other filling, while those manufactured here are without make-weight of any kind. American iron is naturally of three or four times the tenacity of English iron, aud so on to the eud of the list. In variety or excellence of raw ma terial, no country on the face of the globe can begin to compete with us European mechanics bear no compart son iu skill or intelligence with ours. An American will turn out four times the quantity of work that a German or an Englishman will in the same time. and he will do it much better. Wages and the price of liv ing have become so reduced on this side of the ocean that in many instances they are lower than in Europe. We have the aid of an un limited variety of labor-saying ma chinery, a great deal of which is not known abroad, and nearly all in use there has been imported from this country. A German gentleman informed the writer that, wishing recently to estab lish a branch house in his native city, Berlin, he employed the carpenter wiio has the patronage of the court, and is t heretore supposed to be of unexceptional skill, to put up lor him a wood and glass partition similar to those used in counting-houses in this country. The job occupied six weeks, whereas here six days would have been sufficient. All the mouldings had to be made by haud with clumsy, old-fashioned tools. and the workmen seemed to be more machines running in a gjroove, and ambitious only to accomplish as little in a given time as possible. An American lady in Vienna, in a hurry to catch a train, went into a saddler's shop trunk stores arc un known there to order a strap for her trunk. She was told that it could uot be made in less than a day. In Xew York, supposing there were none iu stock, a special machine would have turned it out in two minutes. Incidents might be multiplied indefinitely to illus trate this branch of the subjeet. Every American who has ever trav eled abroad can furnish several from his personal experience. Should proof be needed that all that has been said is true, it may be found in abundance in the columns of the English news papers. These are filled with com plaints of American competition aud consequent loss of home trade. One paper the British Mail tells of a house in Birmingham which is manu facturing "Yankee pattern household sundries, such as egg-whisks, nutmeg graters, etc.," and placing them on the market as American goods. In another we learn that severalextensive padlock makers in the South Staffordshire dis trict are 4 'busy at work upon an order for padlocks made upon a favorite United States pattern," and American manu facturers are warned to immediately register their trade-marks in Great Britain under the new treaty. Could any plainer acknowledgment of defeat be given than this? In all American exports including breadstuffs since the foundation of the Republic, three commodities have stood forth prominent in amount and value cotton, tobacco, and cheese, and of these cotton has been the king. Yet will it be believed that in 1784 an Americau ship which carried eight bags of cotton into Liverpool was seized on the ground that so much cotton could not be the product of the United States? In the fiscal year 1860, during which the largest crop was raised and the greatest quantity was exported, 1,707, 686,338 pounds were sent abroad, over 1,265,000,000 going to Great Britain. Tobacco to the amount of 55,000 pounds was exported as early as 1621. Since 1790 we have sent abroad 9,529, 123 hogsheads, equal to 13,000,000,000 pounds. To transport this vast pro duct would, it is estimated, require 19,058 ships, carrying 500 hogsheads each, or a yearly average of 216 vessels of that capacity. Will somebody put this in his pipe and smoke it? Last year, according to the official report of the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue, a greater quantity of manufactured tobacco, and more cigars and cigarettes, were removed directly from the manufactories for ex portation than during any previous year of which an account has been kept by the Internal Revenue Office. The excess in tobacco over the year preced ing was nearly 3,090,000 pounds. Of the total amount, England takes over 1,000,000 pounds; Australia comes next, Germany next, and the United States of Columbia next. There is scarcely any spot in the civilized world to which we do not export our manufactured, tobacco direct. In Germany the clippings or refuse of the cigars made in this country have recently found a profitable market at from t.wo to five cents per pound. Formerly theseclippings were allowed to accumulate In American manufac tories for months, until some speculator happened along and took the lot for a song. Now agents have been sent out through Canada to buy up all they can find, with a view to shipping it Jo Europe. Immense quantities of American made ctgars have, within the past year, been sold in England, where they are eagerly purchased as cheaper and more suited to the popular taste than any cigars heretofore imported into that country. On one day in March last a single shipment was made aggregating 141,000, and it is estimated that the trade already returns at the rate of $4,000,000 per year, equal to an annual profit of $120,000. r One firm in this city has even started a factory ex clusively for the making of cigars for export to England. The foreign demand for American cheese exhibits a growth unparalleled by any farm product, except, perhaps, cotton. As recently as forty years ago the exports amounted to but 411,338 pounds. Last year they reached the enormous aggregate of 107,364,666 pounds. If this were loaded ou drays, each carrying one ton, and occupying eight yards, the line would extend 244 miles, or a greater distance than from Washington to New York. If the shipment were regular during every secular day in the year, the daily move ment to the wharves for shipment would exceed 172 tons. The quantity of milk used in the pro duction of 107,000,000 pounds of cheese may be computed by those having leisure and sufficient agricultural knowl edge. Nine-tenths of this vast amount finds a market in Great Britain, which formerly stood pre-eminent in the re putation of her dairy products. Our dairymen have succeeded in imitatiug the size, general appearance, and even the flavor of the English production so closely, that being able to sell at a much low-er price, they have actually beaten the Englishman on his own ground. New York State, by the way, deserves the major portion of the credit for this triumph, over seventy per cent of the cheese manufactured in this country- being the product of her factories. In Germany a demand for American cheese has also sprung up, but it has been too recent to permit of the presen tation of the results accomplished. Ou the subject of breadstuffs there is no need to enlarge here. Every child knows that this country has been for some time the granary of the world. Nor will the ordinary newspaper reader require to be informed that American fresh meat and mutton, both slaugh tered and on the hoof, have, within a comparatively short time, to quote an English newspaper, "deprived the Eng lish farmer of his last resource, his stalwart ox," and made the national roast beef a common thing in many a Jin tish household w here it was a rarity before. Our refrigerator tonnage, whfrh was but 8,0(i0 tons in 1876, is now 28,000 tons. llus covers oysters, butter, fruits, eegs, canned goous, and a thou sand and one other per isi table articles ot food, the export trade ot which is increasing enormously from year to year. If this thing keeps on it will not he long before America is the butcher's shop and grocery store as well as the granary and manufactory ot the world. What will be thought of the United States shipping plum pudding to Eng land, potatoes to Ireland, oatmeal to Scotland, toys to X'urenberg, and lager beer to Germany t let such are the facts, and they are no more astonishing than the now thrice-told tale of the regular and profitable sale of American cotton goods in Manchester, and Ameri can cutlery aud hardware in Birming ham. The business of making aud canning plum pudding lor export is regularly carried ou at D over, Del., and else where. The trade is not a new one, aud exports are regularly made to Eugland. A Philadelphia firm sell large quantities of mince-meat in the same count ry . Steamer agents say that potatoes to Ireland are the commonest thing iu the world, and the business of shipping them has been of long duration. On April 23 the Devonia took 1,100 bags of oatmeal to Glasgow, from which it must not be inferred that this is by any means an isolated instance, but the first one the writer happened upon in his search for an example. The export trade in toys, wh'ch amounted last year to over 1,000,000 began some five or six years ago through some presents sent abroad. Now nearly every steamer carries large quautities. The priucipal articles of export are the mechanical or "clock work" aud the steam toys, but there are also large shipments of tin and wooden toys, most of which class were formerly exported from England or Germany. Wood is much cheaper in America than in Europe, and machines work taster than hands. Very few mechanical toys are now imported, and only the finer French and Austrian work for show-pieces in windows. American ingenuity has also multiplied the varieties of mechanical toys, and the American manufacturers of the clock mechanism have met all overtures for the purchase of the de tached works by European dealers by demanding prices which are practically prohibitory. In May last a firm of German brewers sent a cask of American lager beer to Count Bismarck, and in due time re ceived a letter from him through the German Consul thanking them. Since the reception of the letter the firm have received several orders from German houses for samples of lager beer, and the head of the concern has sailed for Europe to make arrangements for its regular export. The Englishman has longhad Ameri can turkeys regularly at Christmas, and he likes them. In January last a famous English house sent an agent to this country, with orders to ship regu larly every week fifty barrels of the finest quail, prairie hens, grouse, wood cock, wild turkeys, canvas-back ducks, and other American game that he could procure. The . enterprise has proved a great success. Buflalo and antelope' meat, venison and salmon are also among the innumerable articles of food sent from this country, not only to England, but to nearly every other civilized nation. It would be unpardonable to close this paragraph, incomplete as it neces sarily is, without a mention of the fact that a Boston company are turning out 8,000 cans, equal to 24,000 pounds, of baked beans and codfish balls daily, and that it finds a large demand for both specialties in England, France, West Indies and South America. Room is lacking to pursue the sub ject to the extent it deserves, but there are numerous other points in the American export trade that must be both novel and curious to the general reader. Take the item of coffins, for instance. Coffins and caskets in the latest styles have long been among the regular articles ot shipment, abroad, aud they command a large sale among the subjects of the effete monarchies. A warehouse containing 2,000 of Amer ican make was recently opened in Lon don. Think of exporting hoop-skirts at this late date. -Twenty-two dollars' worth went abroad last year. Berlin has sent a large order for corsets to Worcester, Mass. , and another for American silk to Rockville, Conn. Will any one question the good taste of the German ladies after that? Essex, Mass., exports steel pens to England. An American firm have made a com plete outfit of locks for the new Impe rial Post Office in Bremen, where the American system of lock-boxes has been introduced. Two cargoes of American coal were recently sent to Italy, and were sold readily at 7.72 per ton, which covers cost and freightage and leaves a fair margin of profit. Heretofore, over 200.000 tons of English coke per annum, at 11.58 per ton, has been used in the Mediterranean basin. A staple article of export to South America and the West Indies is patent water-closets. Another is American confectionery. Peanut oil, from North Carolina, sells well in Italy, and cotton-seed oil has almost taken the place of olive oil throughout Europe. The export of this latter commodity jumped from 281,000 gallons in 1S76 to-1,705,000 gallons in 1877. American jewelry goes everywhere, and American watches have nearly if not quite driven Swiss and English made watches ut of their own markets. The British government purchased 200 stem-winders in December for the use of conductors and engineers on one of the State railroads in India, and in February an agent of the Rotherham Watch Company, of England, visited this country, and ordered a number of sets of the tools and machinery used here. A Newark, N. J., sash and blind manufacturer tided a large order for shipment to Tui key in June. A Troy bell-founder has recently fitted out churches in Constantinople and Bang kok. American locomotive manufacturers are hard at work filling orders from Russia and South America. Our car riages, street cars, and vehicles of all sorts are lieing sent in all directions. Our petroleum lights the world. Statu ary and paintings are regularly ex ported from this country to Europe. Think of it! Among other important items of ex port are books, scientific instruments, wines, pianos, carpets, furniture, toilet soaps, line and coarse boots and shoes, glassware, scales, stoves, leather, writ iug inks, slat-is, marbles, pins, and tools and machinery of all kinds. And the best of it is these things sell on their merits, and not on account of their cheapuess. But the list is un ending. jY. Y. Times. Two thousand Spanish pilgrims recently arrived at Civita Veechia, Italy, in a steamer from Barcelona ; but iu view of the general yellow fever fright, the health officer of the port quarantined them for four days before allowing them to proceed to Rome. It is not a misfortune for a young lady to lose her good name if a young man gives her a better one. To Let a Cold Have its Own Way, is often to assist in laying the foundation of Consumption. To cure the most stubborn Cough or Cold you have only to use judiciously Dr. Jayne's Expectorant. aidverfmmmtu. In writing to parties Advertl ;?tg in these Columns please men lion this paper W HMIE 111 No more Gout! No more Gravel UseSehlumberger's Harmless and Infallible French SALICYLATES. Relief warranted within twelve hours. Total nire Willi in four days. Price ft per 1 x, post-paid. Be ware of imitations. I,. A. PAKIS & CO., Only Aaeiits U. S., 4"J1 Broadway, New York. J38TA mKSHEI) 1H4S For the Sale of all kinds of PRODUCE ON COMMISSION. To which we give our personal attention. We employ no Agents. E. & O. WARD, 279 Washington Street, between Warren and Chambers Streets, NEW YORK. -Keference: Irving National Bank, New York 1878 Holiday RE A TTY51ANO Fuperb -ExtraOrarirl Sguare Itcewood Case, new pnd valuable improvement , elegantly Hnistied. Three Strings. Weight, when boxed, over 1,000 lbs. Seven one-third , 1-3) oetiive. full agraffe scale, rose wood case, all round corners, beautiful carved legs and lyre, heavy serpentine and top mouldings all around the case, back finished same as front. All improvements with Beatty 's very latest full iron frames, bars and extra branes, im- F roved new scale, overstrung bass. French grand act ion, ret desk, carved pedal, solid rosewood moulding, ivory key fronts, capped hammers, agraffe treble and every Im Drovement which can in any way tend to the perfection of the instrument has been added. This instrument is a magnificent Pianoforte. Regular Retail Price asked Dy tne Jtonopolsts about $1000 I Will noil till Instrument dlreet $255 during the HOLIDAYS, for only No snch offers as theoc were ever made before, but know ing that their introduction will repay me on future soles, I offer them to readers of tlds paper at these prices during the Holidnvs. Order dirert front this advertisement. wmen win net appear again, ana no i art tier reductu can be made. Havuitr met with unparalleled the past year and extended my sales over the world by nn extended tour through the Continent of Europe, I have re turnpd determined that no tow n or village in my native country shall bo unrepresented hv my instrument, and oil encrglas. nlded with amplo cnpifnl. will ue exerted to ac complish this object, hence the above offers, that can rot be made by any other responsible house in America or the Ol ! i. Dim't miss these verv val'ir.l.lr offers. Order now. !!3Stt k n w. tr 11 ii iu i jr-. OlOOO PIANO FOR.Q255 PJ O,- 1 2 VAa0 ??.,r.ew,B.n,aS go?.d as,the iT." m" capacity, for only tCli. Prlnndid J!0 to ftT5 to.MiV. ' J?..6 ' By ftptl Octave Coupler, 850 to 4A ,fans. a tin 'and 180. Kl.gant pipe Ptoe a cane b"Pht f any other house. fromTl to K ,'.n fr on,y M - 1""re and Uprieht Pianos lfH JJ2 5L"lH!L5:j-Lff?m J! instruments shipped on 5 to IS day'a test trial. Money uim nrwonnifiinM itiinnnrmiw in n rnM r 7:r"-I."V-"JP" -""J? " uu.imcrorTO jne DUVer. Warranted six rears. Vorr, tinsoilrtted testimo- rwVJiW fyiSAlV'rifiL AZ " wwnt ony ouTseir. owe r ene and make your friend a handsome ChrTstm.so? Hew Yw 9 Preenf. A.dre, DAIflBL F. DBATTVj Wti-flton, New Jcraejr.li. . A SEE THIftl -boy or girl in every town In Amer ica m I.iwa hlni'onmp ft nmna 91 AAi illustrated paper 3 months In order to introduce it, for only 10 cts. to pay mailing expenses. Useful presents SIS to (iu. 'World' Box 6341, Boston, Mass. Sellable. ARTHUR'S Home Magazine for 1879. For so many years a guest in the homes and hearts of the people, with whose household cares and duties, and social life, interests, and pleasures it has so closely identified itself, the Home Maoazine conies agaiu. as the new year approaches, and asks for the old place among you, aud the old cordial Iconic VIRGINIA F. TOWfJSEND MSFMfc our readers, will commence a new serial Story in the January numler. This will be followed !y TENDER and TRUE SriTMM DflCCI I A DIPC wiu "uti'ioui h series ot nllOCLLM ItlUb articles on Western 1'ioimer Life, under the title of "Vt&lng Footprint, or, the Lowly Liven of Lonar Aro-" DID6CV DflTTC under the title of "Our rlrOtl r U I I O Neighborhood," , g0jng , give a series of papers in her peculiar vein, wliich will be spiev and good, of course. PI! ATI V RQnfllf wiu talk to our young If II A I If DltUUIVO lady readers in Her easy! sensible, and pleasant way. under the title ol "Wrinkles and IMinpte. or, Mtnelf nnd My !rln." MANY NEW WRITERS SfiSSSUr ready large list of contributors, while supplies of choice literary matter will be drawn from all avail able sources, in order to give the Home Ma;azik an interest and value second to no periodical in the country. TERMS FOR 1879. 1 Copy, 1 ypar. $2 25 13 oiie, 1 year, $5.50 6 Ciiif, and 1 to Club-Getter, $11.00 The Premium to Club-Uetter for either f these two 'lubswillbeSl.(X) worth of Butterick's Pattern for Ladies' and Children's Dresses. 10 Copies, and 1 to CI ib-G tter $17 50, 16 Copies, and 1 to Club-Getter $26 00 Premium ox (f 17.30 Club one pairfi.aij Three-But- ton Kid Gloves, aud 1.00 worth of Bntterk-k's J Hit terns. Premium ox ?2fi.OO Club two pairs 1.50 Three Button Kid Gloves, and .1.0-j worth of Buttcriek's Patterns. 1 APRCQ PI I IRQ For these we offer as Prem LRIiUCn ULUDO imns full Dress Patterns of elegant Black Silk or flue English and French Cash mere. j&f Full particulars in regard to these large and valuable Premiums will bo found in our special Circular to Club-Getters, Wich will be mailed on application to all who desire to make up Jluin For mrsrEviMEX number, 10 cents. T. S. ARTHUR & SON, 227 South Sixth Street, PHILADELPHIA OUR WESTERN BORDER ne Hundred Years Ago. A Graphic History of the Heroic Kpoch or Ameri can Border Life. Its thrilling conflicts of Red and White foes. Exciting Adventures, Captivities. Forays, Scouts, Pioneer women and boys, lmllau war-paths. Camp life, and Sports. A book for m and Vonng. Not a dull page. No competltloir Knormous sales. Agents wanted everywhere, nr culars free. Address, J. C. McCl'BDT A CO , 26 S. Seventh St., Philadelphia, Pa. Ujk I f The greatest and latest novelties for s A mm I the holidays. Catalogue free. Sam ple 25c. Hodgsox & Wood, 90 Henry St. N.V.Clty, A MAN WANTED ""ffirT Business new. We will pay good en men Kipcrct.rifNales and OUpei,0, Address T.M. Bkeeden&Co. Cincinnati, Ohio. P. & K MASONS, SeneraURituaUliiCYPBEtt to make KCSTY Mvg ons liUlGIIT. For CaUloeae and uefl Inlormiiinn-.-; or Master Mnnons, oddreu, with suirv MASONIC1 3QOK AGENCY, Cor. Broadway end Warren SL,N. V.S PLAYS New York Drama. All the latest and standard plays. The best published. Three full plavs iu one volume, sent anywhere on receipt of fifteen cents. Send stamp for catalogue. ERNEST HARVIER. 12 Union Square. N. Y. T lie Lowost Prices. , HE NATIONAL TYPE CO., Catalogue, six cents. PHILADELPHIA, Smooiii Faces and Bald Heads, Attention. For a sure & rapid growth of Hair use OSMETIC- i'iir-1' A RA TION, the results of alife-long study. Wehaveyettolear-olONK out of the many thousand treated where i t failed .to produce a so f t, h ea vy 1 11 xiiri ai t beard within 6 or 8 weeks, on the smoothest face, no injury, (satisfaction guarau- toori. MntlAfl frAA. lirlre HO cents. U. H. WITHERST1NE & C., llorkimer. N. Y. COMPOUND OXYGEN. FOR Consumption, Jl.Sth.mn , Jironchitis. Catarrh, Ii?TTsia, Headache, Debility, and all Chronic and .V.not Disorders. 1 but Nature's own life-giving element. It does not cure by substituting one d i sense for another, as when drags are taken, but by a xati - RAL TROCESS OF RKV1TALIZATION. HAVE Iir.EN MADE , IX CllKOMC AN1 Nervous Disea ses, "WniCH ARE ATTRACTING WIDE ATTENTION. v TinnmnnrniT toRt.Rev. jx. J. KEAXE, Bisn onof Richmond. Va.; Hon. Wsr. I). Kelley, Gen. Fitz Hexiiy Warrex, T.S. Arthur, and others who have nsi-d and been largely benefited by this treatment. By simple inhal ation. This ran be done at our of fice, or by the patient at his own home. This Is sent by pxprv In a roniT:;ict iack;.i;'. Lift I ill Lll 1 1 TWO MONTHS' SI' I'- PLY, with inhaling apparatus and full and explb i directions. Brochure (212 pp.) with many It I testlmonlalsof most kf.m ahiv- - ' - - vi nr-r. Drs. STAHKEY & PALEX, 1112 Girard St., Pliilatl:l)hi;i. Greeting ! 1879 0073 Ox-go, for E07 J TIE A TT Y ORCAN Btyle Ho. 8100. , . b. L. - Celtic Arth:tectu desicm. Upright Bellows. Solid Wa I -utCae. Pcistty's tnipioven Knee Swell, and lieatty's TN-w ExrfclsiorCrnnd Organ Kne Swell. The meefinnfom. rieicm nnilmc.iie .8aft n-- Swell The merhnnlsm, design ami n this iiriran renrloj-o ittho .net i.oi,.i.io.i-.r-iu.firr urar-tured for the parlor. OoldrnTongveKeeds. JtegulT bef ore tnan- r-eT" ' fr nn ftc.kedbv the Mt. rolit.t.. about win r win sen this instrnment direct during the HOLIDAYS tr only AM MINT Magnificent re. H-ighi i in.;aeprn.)m.,ienirth,4f!ln. Three Sets of Reeds. Thirteen l3stpps. (ijlm'iV2-oT"e"ti "Eh" ; (.V "Pjoaaa. M ioliiia; () Vox Humana; 7; Principal; (J Hautboy: (n Diapason; (10) Dulcet; 1 Grand Organ: K) Principal Forte: (13) Flute. Flve'5) Octaves. Freiwh Ve neered Pnni.l r-o t,sv,i- V.iS.iV XI-i TjTJiitlfnl ni.of. Out M