loitustic (exotimmi. 
CONDUCTED BY MARY A. E. WAGER. 
ENTERTAINING COMPANY. 
Every woman has, most assuredly, a way 
of liar own, and the ways of some, and 
those of others, are as diverse as Is the East 
from the West, and thankful are we that it is 
reconstructed if I’m ever fit for Heaven, 
provided it is such a proper, nice place as 
some folks tak about.” 
“If it is such a place, I hope you’ll be 
there, and in my division t" we answered. 
“ Do you, though ?” and he looked pleased, 
and then, as if comprehending the situation, 
xiftttific anti ftscful. 
UNPATENTED WELL VENTILATOR. 
Publications. 
44 AT THE HEAD OF TIIE HIAGA- 
XA. lines Of the day,”— tfaruialk Gazette. 
“ Pre-eminentamong the monthlies.”—Buffalo Com. 
Advertiser. 
added, “ You ain’t very sorry I came home now occupy, on which was a good well of 
Tehee years ago I purchased the farm I PUTNAM’S MAGAZINE-1870. 
Nero publications. 
II E REVOLUTION, 
FOR. 1070. 
then?” 
-- ■ ----- 
COLORING RECIPES. 
Drab—A good color for woolen yam or 
go. We do not propose a dissertation sim- C0tt011} ma y be made by boiling the bark of 
ply upon entertaining callers, although that g reen beech in water for an hour, and dip- 
la quite as fine an art; but brief calls, if not p - ng die g 00C j g . allow them to scald for an 
pleasantly consummated, are not such de- hour longer, then dip in a strong alum water, 
plomble occurrences as a week’s visit taken rinS0 ant i d r y. Colors a good drab or dove 
upon invitation, and where the hostess pre- co } or 
liminaviei with, “ Now make yonrselt per- Claret.—To color a claret, boil green liem- 
feetly at home,” and interlards every tw en- j qc j. l)ark t b egam0 way as green beedi, gives 
tieth sentence with “ Are you quite corn- R daraWe color for every-day stockings, and oitdgeliaiFin'inch apart, with hole’in cen- 
fortaljlc? “ Won’, you tarelooks much better .ban .be oM ; f M bi„ned n % .bem.lside ri.n so .bat 
more ? and ti called out of the pallor, sends Wue r do not weigh the bark, but bod a lh(J tc wm be in two part g ( in order to 
some one In to e ntertain you during her ab- good annflil for Uv0 pounds of goods.— Ber- pm " flround the punip . 
sC ‘ K ' ( '’ . . . . . , •. , Q RV Biuar. Notv, when fresh water is wanted pump 
It ct era poor mor a is P ’ f Black —Being a practical dyer I could that which is In the pump, and it. falls diract- 
w hen lc m su *m o u, p give a number of recipes for coloring black; iy into the well through the grate, without 
an iiidniv ua w 10 i ua y en c ^ but the following is the surest in unskillful waste of water, and then your water lias 
death. * bipn , m '. ret ' ^ . . lf , bauds, and is worth more than a year’s sub- plenty of air, which i* just, as essential to 
vu ua w io canno en e i j . , senption to the Rural to any family, for pure water as it is to animal life. This well 
\ei> m > iman mu ,e ,e 1 „ coloring carpet rags, soiled clothing, wool, reminds me of the old oaken bucket that 
joy being left to himself occus.onally. One = l ^ of wool or woolen uted l() U «uig in the well. There is no curb 
fib/* nvitfmu rtf WaDIA 1 C t.llf* 1 WmIOITI OI 1 P ^ 1 .... . ~ 
water, in which was a good wooden pump. 
The well was covered with plank nicely fit¬ 
ted around the pump, I suppose to keep 
the water clean; and this ia the condition of 
most wells in our whole land in which are 
pumps. Now, my purpose is to explain 
how I very much improved the water In this 
well. In the first place, I took up about 
three feet of the top of the wall, and laid it 
down in lime mortar; on this 7 put a square 
frame made of four-inch scantling well bed¬ 
ded in mortar. On this frame I put a rack, 
or grate, made of inch by three inch stuff set 
on edge half an inch apart, with hole in cen¬ 
ter for pump; cut the outside rim so that 
sence. 
If ever a poor mortal is to be pitied, it is 
When he or she falls into the possession of 
an individual who literally entertains one to 
death. Stupid, indeed, must be the indi¬ 
vidual who cannot entertain himself, and 
very inhuman must lie be if be does not en¬ 
joy being left to himself occasionally. One 
of the luxuries of home Is the freedom one 
has of pereoual privacy, aud the Indulgence 
of a general relaxation from what fashionable 
etiquette demands. It may not be in the 
mortuary calendar, but we are sure women 
die every year from being victims of social 
customs—women so anxious to make it 
pleasant for other people as to sacrifice 
themselves to that end. 
It is a common practice with physicians 
to advise their patients to go away from 
home for rest; the change will be beneficial,, 
etc. Generally it is the worst possible thing 
an invalid may do. We bad an experience 
once ourselves, which will illustrate the 
method of one woman’s entertaining com¬ 
pany. The house was a large, elegant one, 
with every convenience for comfort. There 
were books and pictures, and beautiful 
goods take six ounces of bichromate of pot* t o catch leaves and dust, and when it rains 
Published by the Putnam Maga¬ 
zine Company. 
[Among tho Shareholders are Mr. WM. Culi.en 
Bryant, and several practical business men.] 
THE CONTRIBUTORS INCLUDE THE ABLEST 
AND MOST POPULAR WRITERS IN 
EVERY SECTION. 
Wo intend that this Magazine shall be 
“WIDE-AWAKE, PURE,PRACTICAL, EN¬ 
TERTAINING,” 
And such aa an Intelligent family "ennnot afford 
to d<> without." 
jy SOLID INFORMATION on all matters enn- 
nocted with the World's f^mgrtu in Literature, 
Science, Art. Domestic Economy, the Art of 
Living, the com roils of Traveling, Social Sci¬ 
ence. national Interests and Individual 
Rights — will be specially cultivated and devoloped 
In tho pages of this Magazine. 
Distinctive Features of Putnam’s Magazine, 
Popular Ph pel'** on SCIENCE and NATURAL 
HISTORY; mul PRACTICAL INFORMATION lor 
14xery-Uay Life, will bo prepared specially fur this 
MOK'i/.lnn by Prof. Scnm.E UK Vkhe; also. t>v Prof. 
JUt’llY, MUftS. FKN [MORECOOPER, EDWAltll SPEN¬ 
CER, Dr. J. J. UA1 >:», Russell KXUHms, Jr„ oto. 
Stories and ItghDir article*, by Ml»a Ai.co'rr, Mrs. 
R, H Davis, Mrs. J. U. At'rtTLV, Mrs. M. r. amk.-l 
the authors of “ Ton True. *• t he Sflsunbrl *7ii/>. 
ounces of extract oflogwood and bring it to 
u boil. Sue that, the logwood Is all dissolved 
before the goods are put in; boil the goods 
two and a-half hours longer. If a jet black 
is desired add one pound of fustic with tho 
extract of logwood and you have a nice 
clean black that will not crock. 
Laper, Mich. In A Queen. 
-PM- 
CONTRIBUTED RECIPES. 
Corn Bread— Take three pints of Indian 
meal, one-half pint wheat or rye flour, two 
tablespoonfuls molasses, one do.of saleratus, 
a teaspoonful of salt; mix with sweet milk, 
grounds withal. Everything was so clean a teaspoonful of salt; mix with sweet imiu, 
and so orderly and precise that we fairly (not too hard,) which makes about, n two- 
breathed under restraint. The hostess never quart basin full, which basin put in a kettle 
spoke above a very low tone, never laughed, or pot, over a flro, and steam thiee horns, 
only made little constrained grimaces meant 
for a smile, aud daily gave, as her firm be¬ 
lief, that if we would only get up at the first 
break of day, walk a mile before breakfast, 
and diet thoroughly, wu would immediately 
place the basin on a board or sticks above 
the water, and add water as it boils away; 
keep the kettle covered; then cook in oven 
till brown.—M. G. D-, Susquehanna Oo., Pa. 
Grape Jelly .—In answer loan inquiry bow 
get well. It was in summer time, and three to make grape Jelly we send our method, w0ldd be favored by its extremely minute 
times a day she would enter our room to see known to be good. Pick tlic grapes from the pulverization. Its mamm&l action would, 
if there was a fly in it. It was not so much stems, wash them, break them up with the however, be very alow at the best, ayd would 
make is to make this grate of cast iron. 
There is no patent on this invention, and all 
lovers of pure, fresh water arc invited to try 
my plan. Austin B. Culver. 
-—- 
NOT KAOLIN. 
A Virginia correspondent sends us a sub¬ 
stance which he says he lias been told is 
Kaolin, asking our opinion of it. We sub¬ 
mitted it to Prof. James A. Whitney, Presi¬ 
dent of the New York Society of Practical 
Engineering and Professor of Chemistry of 
tlic American Institute, who writes us as 
follows concerning it: 
“ The substance is more like disintegrated 
soapstone than anything I know of; but it 
may be tlic product of either micaceous or 
felspathlc rock. In the former case its value 
for manure would be very slight; in the latter 
it undoubtedly contain ’ y small quantities 
of potash and other r tJf .u r 7bis of plant nutri¬ 
tion, tho dissolution of which in tho soil 
would be favored by its extremely minute 
pulverization. Its manurial notion would, 
HoHmI Topic* Individual Rights, iieai.tii- 
Ft'L ruiinuutt, ate., liV I'RAMI.S 1*1 IV, M> I oRlti:, 
ill** Cooper, Prof. M.C. Tvi.iat, Urol. De Vere. 
European Altai™. Literature and art. a 
comprehensive record In each No. by I$a v aii.i> t \ v- 
lor. Ainu special contribution* l»y <*. M. Tow i.ic, 
Mrs. Hawthorne, P. <l h \mi:iit<in, F. B. Good¬ 
rich, Karl Bund, Ci auenck cook, uud other 
special contributors now in Europe. 
a matter of comfort to us as a continual fear 
that a fly might mark the ceiling of the room. 
To her it was of its much consequence as 
checking the march of the Asiatic Cholera. 
Of course, every window must be blinded, 
and a sepulchral darkness prevailed through¬ 
out the house. At tabic everything was 
quiet and low, and we could hear ourselves 
swallow, and expected every moment to let 
a dish fall, or tip over a cup, spilling the 
contents upon the spotless table linen. Such 
a dreary, dreary, unhomellke place wo had 
never been In, We felt so contracted and 
corded and bound and hemmed in, that to 
have seen the house in one sheet of flame, or 
torn in pieces by a whirlwind, would have 
been hailed with the keenest delight. 
On the fourth day of our “ visit," (and 
there seemed no way to get away before the 
end of our prescribed time,) a grown-up son 
of the hostess came home on a visit from the 
city. He came as a godsend, being com¬ 
pletely the reverse of his mother. Ho went 
stalking through the house, thrusting cur¬ 
tains aside, flinging open windows, and 
pushing things generally at “ sixes and sev¬ 
ens.” Marching to his sleeping room, where 
he found the same sanctified, touch-me-not 
hands, put In a preserving kettle or pan, and 
let them gradually come to a boll, stirring 
often. Let them boil ten minutes or more; 
strain through a cloth ; weigh, and add three- 
fourths of a pound of sugar to a pound of 
juice; then boil until it becomes ns illicit as 
you wish it.—R. A. 8. L., Vernon, N. Y. 
Indian Bread. — Take two quarts Indian 
meal, add one large spoonful of butter, one 
of sugar, a little salt; mix all together; pour 
upon the whole one quart of boiling water ; 
then cool with cold water sufficiently to add 
one-half cup of good yeast. Let it rise for 
two hours, when add wheat flour, (if the 
dough is not thick enough,) so as to give it 
the consistency of “ pound cake.” Put it in 
to deep dishes, let it rise for one hour. Bake 
in a stove oven. You will find it delicious. 
—Mrs. L. B. Arnold, Ilham, A. Y. 
Papering Whiteirashed Walls. — The fol¬ 
lowing method is simple, sure, and inexpen¬ 
sive: Make Hour starch as you would for 
starching calico clothes and, with a white¬ 
wash brush, wet the wall you wish to paper 
with the starch; let it dry; then when you 
wish to apply the paper, wet the wall and 
paper both with the starch, and apply your 
he shown the most or. land deficient in alka¬ 
lies. The best use it can be put to is to em¬ 
ploy it, dried and pulverized, as an absorb¬ 
ent of liquid manure, for which, properly 
managed, it will bo better than u much 
larger quantity of swamp muck.” 
-- 
USEFUL AND SCIENTIFIC ITEMS. 
Chapped Hands. —Many people find much 
trouble with their hands becoming rough 
and chapped in the winter season, and are 
accustomed to use various articles, such ns 
honey, and glycerine to prevent it. At the 
same time one very simple matter is over¬ 
looked. To keep the hands smooth they 
should be always rinsed in fair water, after 
soap lias been used. 
It is well to use soap, and soft, warm 
water, avoiding, however, the use of yellow 
or bar soap, and also die colored Castile, but 
to prevent roughness it Is absolutely neces¬ 
sary the hands should be rinsed iti soft, fail' 
water, and then made thoroughly dry on the 
towel. And it is well to avoid going out 
into the cold directly after washing.—Mrs. 
George Bartlett. 
Mad Itch.—A gentleman from Georgia 
he found the same sanctmect, toucn-me-noi paper- I have papered walla in this way Mud Itch.— A gentleman from Georgia 
atmosphere, he looked around mischievous- bad been whitewashed ten aud even makes inquiry, through a late number of the 
ly, and his eyes rested upon his bed. The twent y ycara successively, and never failed Rural for a remedy for mange in dogs, and 
great bolster aud the huge pillows, and the t0 j iave t |, e p upc . r s ti C Jc. When you wish to says that the disease ia quite prevalent in his 
entire surface of the grand French bed look- re .paper tho wail, with your brush wet the part of the country. This dog mange is 
ed majestically at him. paper with clear water and it will come off nothing more nor less than the “ mad itch ;” 
“Mothert Mother!” he shouted, and readily.— r. a. h. and the best and surest remedy—a well 
“mother” answered his call. Wldt&rwhfor Walls —In answer to V. F. loa(letl 2 un in thc hands of a good marks- 
“I can’L and won’t stand it, with that G., we give the following recipe which was man - Theimad itch is only a forerunner of 
thing looking so; the majestic spell must be recommended highly to us years ago, and hydrophobia. Should this vuit.a >e u/y 
broken in your majesty’s presence I” and w bich is good Slake clean lumps of well cold and clr >’. the disease hydrop.iobia will 
suiting the action to the word, he measured burned lime in hot water, in a small tub; break ou . t * als0 > nc ‘* t 6limm ® r , wben UlG 
himself on the immaculate counterpane, COV er the tub up to keep in the steam. Pass weallier is warm and dry.— C. C. Cooley, 
boots and all, driving a fist into each pillow, the lime in fluid form through a fine sieve to -Manchester, 0. 
and then sending one after the other across obtain the flour of lime. Add one-quarter To Detect Gum Arabic vi Gum f’ragacanth. 
the room, while his distracted mother held 0 f a pound of whiting or burnt alum, two —Make the gum into a clear mucilage, and 
her hands aloft In domestic agony, with a pounds of sugar, three pints of rice flour filter carefully; pour strong alcohol upon it, 
series of “ Oh! oh 1 iny son!" made into a thin and very well boiled paste, and if it retains its solubility and trnnsparen- 
If ever a poor human being was blessed by an d one pound of glue, dissolved over a cy.no gum arabic is present, but if i t be- 
a human heart that boy was by ours. He slow fire. Put on, while warm, with a paint comes opalescent and opaque, or deposits a 
spilled his coffee at table, would upset the brush. It is called a brilliant stucco white- powder at the bottom, it contains gum arabic 
stools and chairs, and staked his croquet set wa sh, and is very durable. or some allied substance, 
on the choicest plot of green in the grounds. Brittle Pie Ontst. —One cup of cold water, Oxygen Without Heat. — According to M. 
" I’ll tell you what," he said one day, “ I two cups of cold lard, one tenspoonful of salt, Bcettger, oxygen can be obtained in a very 
ain’t such a bear as you may think; I do fl our enough to roll; rub the lard into the pure state by employing binoxideof barium 
know how to behave, and believe in having fl 01ir first; wet with tlie water and roll quite and peroxide of lead. Take equal parts of 
things nice, but, confound it, I can’t go thin. A more healthful pie crust can be these substances and pour on weak nitric 
mother’s notions no how I I feel, the minute made with one pint of rich, sour cream, one acid; the re-action commences immediately, 
I enter the house, aa If I wanted to smash teaspoon of soda, and flour enough to roll.— and the gas can be collected aa usual over 
thiugs generally. I shall have to be awfully Mbs. Otis Miller. cold water.— Cosmos. 
Each Subscriber remitting $1 will receive one of 
the receipts prepared for 
50,000 SUMSCRZSIIRS, 
Willi a Coupon attached, (rood for 
ONE UJOLIiAlt on account of orders 
for any Book or Periodical published 
In tlio United Stales. 
V Remittances should he In Registered Letters or 
by Post-Office Orders. Address 
PUTNAM M VGAZINE CO., 
061 Broadway, New York. 
11 The admlraMt plan oj this vindication takes in all 
(epics (>/ in oilern tlumohl and slndu. vStiie every subject 
is invariably trailed with ubility. "—Albany Even¬ 
ing Journal. 
WMSTEBN STOCK JOURNAL. 
A Nkw Volume Of this Monthly begins with tho 
January number v. lt!i uimny laiprovemetits, includ¬ 
ing ri nail and attractive cover. 
This being 
The only Paper in the United States devoted 
Exclusively to Stock Breeding, 
It commend* itself to nil interested In that subject. 
Rs column* uro open to a thoruuKh discussion of ther 
PltlNClULKH Rl‘ STOCK BREEDING, unci in addi¬ 
tion to employing many of the ublcal writers on this 
subjoet, in the country, tho Editor uitns by careful 
selection to '‘skim tli«cream” of the Htocii Litera¬ 
ture from the lauding ittfriuURurul parlortlcalM, giving 
In tho eourso of tho year u MA»S OK INEOUiMA- 
TiON ON BREEDING TOPICS, in u form conven¬ 
ient fur prescrv al ion and reference, more extensive 
and complete than can be obtained from uny other 
sou run InriLiiy price. Each no inner coiiM ms l« largo 
pages of three columns otvuU, uoiittj stitched and 
trimmed, nod in a form convenient lor preservation 
nnd reference. , , 
it will be the constant aim of tho Pnbllshejp to 
make each succeeding number better, wore attract¬ 
ive and more practical limn It * predecessor in short, 
SO GOOD THAT NO STOCK RAISElt CAN A K- 
I'OIIDTO DO WITHOUT IT. The utihllyhers wish 
It distinctly understood that the V\ nnYETiN STOCK 
JtitniNAL Is tv it published iii the Interest of ally par¬ 
ticular breed of stock, nor a* an advertising medium 
for themselves, but to supply « want long felt for 
an open, candid and fair Journal devoted to Stock 
Breeding. 
Termb One Dollar a Year. Send ton cents for n 
specimen copy. Address 
J. II. SANDERS «& CO., 
PuI)I1hIici’m, Sigourney, Iowa. 
fj^O CAPITALISTS ami JRJVIICiRANXS. 
North Carolina Fully Described. 
The South offer* splendid opportunities for Capital 
and Emigration, ami 
THE “OLD NORTH STA-TIi: ,, 
especially holds out rare inducements, A Full De- 
i scriptlun of its Counties, together with Letters from 
Prominent Citizens of the state in itulatlon to Soil, 
, Climate, Productions, Minerals. See., arc given In 
NORTH CAKOIiXUTA, 
A GUIDE TO CAPITALISTS A.\D OUGRANTS, 
l An 8vo. volume of 136 pages, which every Individual 
meditating investment or settlement in the South 
J should peruse. 
l Price—I n Cloth....H 25 
Paper..... 75 
3 Sent post-paid on receipt of price. Apply to or 
address RURAL NEW-YORKER OFFICE, 
41 Park Row. New York, or Rochester, N. V. 
The Revolution 1b a weekly Journal advocating 
BuffniKO for women. 
Thp demands for woman everywhere to-duy 
are for a wider range of employment, higher 
wages, thorough physical and mental educat e u, 
and an equal right before the law in all tlmso 
relations which grow out of the marriage state. 
While wo yield to nouo In the earnest robs of our 
advocacy of all those claims, we make a broader 
demand for the Enfranchisement of Woman, 
the only way by which all her Juat rights can bo 
permanently secured. Ily discussing, as v*o 
shall, incidentally, all leading questions of polit¬ 
ical and social importance, we hope to educate 
women for nti Intelligent Judgment upon public 
affairs, and for a faithful expression of that 
judgment at the polls. 
While we would not refuse men an occnsiomil 
word In our columns, yet as masculine Ideas have 
ruled the race for six thousand years, we spe¬ 
cially desire that the Revolution shall he tlie 
mcnith-pleco of women, that I hey may give Hto 
world the feminine thought in polities, religion 
and social life ; that ultimately in the union of 
both we may find the truth in all things. 
On tho idea taught by the creeds, codes nnd 
customs of the world, that woman was made for 
man—his toy, drudge, subjoet or even mere 
companion—we declare war to the death, mid 
proclaim the higher truth, that, like mini, ho 
was created by God for individual, M'oivl 
HE fli’ONStUlLlTY and progress hero and forever, 
nnd that the physical conditions of her om-tlily 
life are not to be taken as a limltaiiOtt of the 
evidence of the Divine intention respecting her 
as an immortal being. 
Our principal contributors this year are: 
ISABELLA BEECHER HOOKER, 
HARRIETT BEECHER STOWE, 
ALICE ami PHfEBE CARY, 
ANNA E. DICKINSON, 
OLIVE LOGAN, 
MARY CLEMMlilt AMES, 
ELIZABETH R. TILTON, 
CELIA BURLEIGH, 
M. E. JOSLYN GAGE, 
CHARLOTTE B. WILBOTJR, 
LAURA C. BULLARD, 
ELIZABETH SMITH MILLER, 
MADAME ANNKKA, 
MADAME JTHEKICOURT, 
KATE N. DOOGETT, 
ISABELLA GRANT MEREDITH, 
ELEANOR KIRK, 
PIIEIIE COUZENS, 
LI LIE PECKIIAM, 
LIZZIE M. BOYNTON, 
FANNIE IC. RUSSELL, 
HELEN EKIN STARKETT, 
MARY W. BAWTELL, 
ELIZABETH T. SCIIENCK, 
MARY E. AMES. 
hydrophobia. Should this winter be wry 
cold and dry, the disease hydrophobia will 
break out; also, next summer, when the 
weather is warm and dry.— C. C. Cooley, 
Manchester, O. 
To Detect Gum Arabic in Gum Trngacanth. 
—Make the gum into a clear mucilage, and 
filter carefully; pour strong alcohol upon St, 
and if it retains its solubility and transparen¬ 
cy, no gum arabic is present, but if it be¬ 
comes opalescent and opaque, or deposits a 
powder at the bottom, it contains gum arabic 
or some allied substance. 
Orygen Without Heat. — According to M. 
Bcettger, oxygen can be obtained in a very 
pure state by employing binoxide of barium 
and peroxide of lead. Take equal parts of 
these substances and pour on weak nitric 
acid; the re-action commences immediately, 
and the gas can be collected aa usual over 
cold water.— Cosmos. 
ITENRY WARD BEBCHER’S 
ESSAY ON 
The Potato Mania. 
FOItEION. 
REBECCA MOORE, 
LYDIA E. BECKER, 
MADAME MARIE GOEG. 
In announcing this brilliant array of contribu¬ 
tors for the coming your, wo wish to say to our 
readers that, as the Revolution is an independent 
journal, bound to no party or sect, those who 
write for our columns are responsible only for 
w)mt appears under their own names. Jlonco If 
old Abolitionists and Slaveholders, Republicans 
and Democrats, Presbyterians and Univeiuftjlsts, 
Catholics and Protestants find thomaelvi^ side 
by side In writing up tho question of Woman 
Suffrage, they must pardon each other's differ¬ 
ences on allothcr points, trusting t.lmt by giving 
their own views strongly and grandly, they will 
ovorsbadow the errors by their aide. 
Entered on our third year, it gives u> pleasure 
to say that the Revolution started with a good list 
of subscribers, which was more thou doubled tho 
second your. Equal increase of patronage this 
year will placo us on a permanent basis, and 
make a woman’s paper in this country a lhumcinl 
success. 
ELIZABETH CADY STANTON, Editor. 
PAULINE WRIGHT DAVIS, Cor. Ed, 
i SUSAN B. ANTHONY, Proprietor. 
WRITTEN EXPRESSLY FOR 
BESTS POTATO BOOK* 
This book also contains Experiments in Potato 
Culture, Engravings and Descriptions of 
New Varieties, &c.. &c. 
Sent to any address, postage paid, on receipt of 
50 ■CENTS. 
G*EO. W. BEST, Utica, N. Y. 
M Ap i E i’ *' A v 
is the Best, the Most popular and the Cheapest 
M agazine published. 
It contains Sketches. Tales. Useful nnd Scientific 
Articles, Stories for Boys and Girls, Puzzles, Illus¬ 
trations, etc... etc., etc. 
ONLY 50 CENTS A YEAR. 
Send In your subscriptions without delay. Speci¬ 
men copies and premium list sunt on receipt of six 
cents. Address 
O. A. ROORBACK, 
102 Nassau St., New York. 
Bay In what paper you susv this advertisement. 
Maple Leaves and the Riucal New-Yorker 
sent for one year on receipt of *3. 
CASH COMMISSIONS TO AGENTS. 
Those sending us from 25 to 50 subscribers 
may retain 75 oents per copy; from 50 to 100, 
a copy. 
Ail communications should be directed to 
SUSAN B. ANTHONY, 
Itevoluliou Office, 
49 East 23d Street, New York. 
TERMS: 
One year....$3 00 
Six months. 3 
CLUB RATESs 
Ten copies. .£*& 00 
Twenty-five copies. 50 00 
KATES OF ADVERTISING t 
1 Insertion. 20 cents a line. 
4 » . 18 “ “ 
18 “ . 10 “ “ 
