lurat NtEITIMg, PLANTS FOR H ,BASKETS. What plants are most suitable for hang ing baskets ? is an inquiry we- have berore us. We have no special love fOr hanging baskets, unless they are well got up and kept in good condition. Most of the bas kets we see around are unsightly things, and look as though hanging wasn't much better for baskets than for other folks. In forming ornamental ,baskets, it is well to remember, in the first place, that they will not bear neglect.* A quart or two of earth placed in a basket will very soon become as dry as powder, even if not exposed to the sun- Watering must, therefore, be attend ed to frequently and regularly. The amount of water and the frequency of ap plication depend a good deal upon the plants grown. A basket of Portulaccas will endure drouth without suffering, that would be sufficient to destroy many other plants. What we want in hanging, baskets are plants of fine foliage and ai:Odhstlint sttpply of flowers. For graceful foliage there is nothing better than. _the trailing Money Wort, Tysimachi Mumamlaria, with dark, glossy leaves, and plenty of yellow flowers' at blossoming time. The Thunbergias are not excelled by any plants we are acquainted with for baskets and all like deconative.pitfpcises.' Theynie trailing plants, foliage sped, flowers abun dant, white, orange, with a dark eye. There is, only one difficulty with them, and this is not serious—the seeds germinate rather;sloiyir, and: alMtri)e4 is warm places. Abronia Urnhellata is a beautiful plant, with clusters of sweet-scented flowers, rosy lilac, in oluitters like- the Verbena, which the plant in its habit resembles very much; flowers freely for along season. The only difficulty with it is a lack of foliage, but this defect is 'easily remedied by' other plants that abound, more in leaves and less in flowers. The Lobelias, all the, trailing varieties, are splendid for basket work, and, in fact, all in-door ornamentation. They will, not bear the sun, but this is not expected of basket flowers; and require a good deal of moisure. When well treated, they give a profusion of flowers. All the Ipomeas and Convolvulus are desirable for baskets, and as they are'not exposed to the sun or usually to a bright light, the common Morning Glory will have expanded blossonni nearly the whole Any. All such strong running , plants can' be pinched back, and thus made' dwarf in their habit for basket and oiler ornamental work. The Tropeolums - may,also be:treated in the same manner, and will give good satisfaction. The Loasas are very curious plants with singularund pretty flowers, but the brancheh are armed with atinging hairs that will speak more emphatically to intruders than any sign, "hands off." The above are all trailing plants, and sufficient to suit all tastes, though others could be added. Many no doubt would prefer the Verbena to some mentioned, and the Maderia vine may be made to run up the wires by which the basket is suspended, with fine effect. For the centre of the bas ket, plants of more erect habit will be needed to give a full rounded appearance. These should be depended upon mainly for a show of brilliant flowers, while the trail ing plants furnish the drapery. The Nemophilas are very desirable ; pre vailing colors, white and blue. Petunias and Phlox Drummondii are unequaled for brilliant show. Fenylia Dianthiflora, a most delicate free-flowering little plant six inches in height. Flowers reddish lilac with crimson centre. Leptoriphous are excel lent. For fragrance a little Mignionette or Sweet Alyssum will be necessary. Although we have giVen a pretty long list to select from, we-would not advise crowding plants. -Plenty of room should be given for development. -Exchange. ABOUT PEAT. " Peat is the spongy substance found in almost every country, filling up cavities in the surface, and constituting what is called bog. It varies in color from light brown to black, and in consistency from that of a bran paste to that of clay in the bank." It is supposed to be formed by the decay of a kind of swamp moss. Its onurrenoe is fre quently indicated by the growth ,of dwarf ish evergreens:and rank swamp, herbage, and by the elasticity of the. crust which supports them. To test a supposed peat bed one has only.to dig a' little below the roots of the herbage or trees, take out • some, dry and burn it. If the swamp be covered with water, a pole, having • a deep groove along its side, may be thrust down, and enough will be brought to the sutfice for a sample. The best peat is that which, other things being' eqaal, is the most dense. Some kinds are almost as hard combus tible as coal; others are like dried turf. Much, however, that would not pay to work for market, would answer for the far mer s own use. In working a peat bed, the first thing to be done, if it is necessary, is to drain it. If only a ittle is wanted, it , can generally be taken out without drainage in the dryest part of the summer. After removing the surface, the peat is cut out in blocks, with an instrument called the Wane. This tool may be made by , a blacksmith; it has a haitdle like a spade, and a blade about eighteen inches long, bent down at right angles through the middle.. This takes out the peat in blocks very nicely, and - it is Only necessary to dry them and store under corer for use.- Sometimes the peat is so brittle that it will not admit of being taken out in plook a with the alone. In that ease it is,sliqveliid out; roots, stones and sticks •picked ant, slid it is dried on the greeusward. It !workede and trodden, like mortar, and when dry it attains consistency enough to admit of cutting into.blocks; Peat is extensively used in Europe for . fuel, We have no doubt but that it will be profitable to resort to-it in many parts of the West, where it may be abundantand other fuel is scarce ; but it is not yet "estab lished that 'be 'eitensfirely or econ omically used kg fltel,ou railrpsols steap boats..__R i y• ' t er ' urci eto or . USEFUL PLANTS, A German author states that the number of useful plants has risen to about 12,000, but that others will no doubt be discovered, as the researches yet made have been com pleted only in portions of the earth. Of these plants there are 1350 varieties of edible fruits, berries and seeds; 103 cere als ; 37 onions ; 460 vegetables and salads . ; 40 species of palms; 32 varieties of arrow root, and 31 different kidds of sugars. Vinous drinks are obtained from 200 plants, and aromatics from 266. There are 50 substitutes lot- coffe.e;i land: ;129 , for tea. Tannin is present in 140 plants, caoutchouc in 96, gutta percha in 7, ropin•and balsamic gums in 389, wag in 10, and grease and essero l lf, .1111 330. 88 plpts7enal potash,'god ;'650" enfitaii‘dte* 47 soap, 250 weaving fibres; 44 fibres used in paper making; 48 give roofing materials, and 100 are employed for hur dles and:copses. In . building, 740 plants are used, and there are 615 known poistib um plants. One of the- most gratifying developments- is that, out of 278 known natural families of plants, there are but 18 species for which no use has yet been dis covered.--Ledger. VENTILATE ; YOUR CHILDREN'S ROOMS. Most parents, before retiring to rest, make it a duty to visit the sleeping room bf their children. They do so in order to be satisfied that the lights are extinguished, and that no danger is threatening their little ones. Biit if they leave the room tith — elicia dbors, trershnt in as great an enemy, as "fire, although his ravages may not' 'So readily detected . Poison is there, but slow and deadly. Morning after morning do many little children wake weary, fretful and oppressed. " Wbat can it mean ?" " What can it be?" the' mother cries. In despair she has re course to Medicine. The constitution be comes enfeebled, and the child gets worse. The cause, perhaps, is never traced to over-crowded sleeping-rooms without proper air, bat it is nevertheless the right one, An intelligent mother, having acquainted herself with the principles of ventilation, will not retire to her own room for the night without having provided sufficiency of air for her children, in the same manner that she providea and regulates their night eoveringi onany other requisite for refresh ing slumber. Sometimes by judiciously lowering a window and at other times by leaving„a.,49f wide,open, this end may be attained. In many houses, the day and night nur series communicate. When this is the case, the wind:ow, i of the further room shona be left 'open,' and ' the.d6ors bat* the rooms likewise open. Even in severe weather, children' can bear, this arrange ment if they are not exposed to a direct draught.—Exchange. tiEuhfu, DISCOVERIES AT SARATOGA. In the Troy (N. Y.) Whig weAnd the following curious account of investigations which have lately been made in the bed of one of the\Saratoga springs: "High. Rook spring, Saratoga, which hall long been regarded as a great natural cu riosity, has recently been investigated during the progress of excavations carried on •to induce, if possible, the water to flow over the opening in'the rock. The water, without doubt, originally flowed through the round orifice in the top, during the formation of the rock, and• probably for years subsequent to that. But ever since the spring has been known, the water has failed to reach the top of the rock, having found some subterranean outlet. Since the spring , passed into the hands of its present proprietor, efforts have been in progress, as stated above, to penetrate the mystery, and cause the water to again resume its ancient flow. 'The first has already been- accomplished, and some very singular facts been brought to light. " A slight excavation has shown that the rock only extended a few inches below the surface, and it was easily removed. Within it was a, chamber about two feet in di ameter, and' below a pit formed by the bubbling water, about ten feet in depth, in which were foun,d a large number of tum blers lost in dipping water. All around, the soil was ' filled with encrustations formed by ,deposits from the water; but immediately beneath the rock lay the body of a tree, eighteen feet in diameter; which still retained its form, and was suffi oientlin to- be sawed in sections' and pulled ;ant. The tree, must have leen befefe the 'formation of the surface-rock commenaed, and had probably lain there thousands of ,years. Several feet further down; the body of an oak, eight inches in diameter, was found, which had' suffered very little decay. " After reaching a depth of twelve feet, it became apparent that a few inches more would bring to view the crevice from which this fountain unceasingly flows. Here the work was stopped to procure a tube which will bring the water to the surface of the ground." AN EXTENSIVE SALT MINE; The ,New Orleans Times gives an ex tended account of what is considered the purest and most important natural deposits of salt in the world, located on the coast of Louisiana, at Petit Anse Island. The, de posit was known ,as early as 1698-9, but all knowledge- Of it appears to have beee lost until' after the commencement of'the recent war. During that period,., when the supply from other sources was out off; the mine was discovered by residents of the interior, who had resorted to the island for the purpose of procuring salt by boiling, and for two years . nearly'the whole of the trans-Mississippi region was supplied from that source, no less than two hundred thou , sand pounds having been taken from it in ,three months. When the island passed into the hands of the Federal forces, the winks, bAildings, ;eto.,-were destroyed, but it has recently 'been purchased by a New York capitalist, who, in - developing the property, has found the sale-rook 'froth thirteen to twenty-two feet below the surface, extending oveir great number of spree; Pita of forty feet' ANy E • 7 • r 'll .66. E 1 0 1 M 0 JP( Tr i Th r AVAX , 1 - • LI MILAMInierain g, ,OIRTIROMMaII _ • in depth have been sunk through the salt +without finding any indications of reaching bottom. The salt formation is almost per fectly pure, chemical analysis showing that it contains about ninety per cent. of pure salt. The development of the proper ty is being rapidly-pushed, and the product has already reached two hundred thousand pounds per week, with a force of ten hands. This mine is regarded as forming a proini nent part of the material resources of Loui siana. TRIBULATIONS OF THE INVENTOR The Paris correspondent of the Liver pool Journal gives the following narrative of the toils and disappointments of the in ventor of the gun:— " The needle-gun is well known to be the product of the long study and wee . - verance of an English officer, who, while stationed at a solitary outpost in Canada, amused his leisure hours with experiments in the rough construction of a substitute for the rifle which he, had damaged by let ting it drop down a precipice while in pur suit of a bear. It pas almost by,aecident that the discovery became palpable to the solitary hunter in the woods. But no sooner did it become manifest to his senses, than he resigned his commission in the army, returned to. Europe, and, as a matter of course,. hniried, to the War Office with his invention. Por,more than a year was the inventor kept in suspense. He was bandied.aboitt frOm oneofficial to another during all this time, merely to be told,' at lasOhat the Government did . not feel -dis posed to alter the principle of the arias employed. ' tlien . thati disgust, he brought his invention to Paris, and obtained an ; interview with the Emperor, wholistened with the greatest apparent in terest to the,description of the gun, exam ined the plans and sections brought by the officer, much questioned the superiority of the invention over.' others which had been laid before him, declared' it seemed to him liable to the great objection of being too delicate for field use, and abruptly sounded the little gong which . stands upon his' bu = reau, and slightly rising when the usher entered at the summons, dismissed the visitor to admit ,other importnnates. It was then that he betook himself; armed with his needle.gun, to Holland. But when lie arrived at the Hague he found that. his Eesouroes had dwindled. away to such an extent, that , he was compelled to delay his Tresentation to the king for want of proper costume to appear in. "'Meanwhile he became accidentally ac quainted 'With' one of the gentlemen it tached to 'the Prussian Legation at the Hague, and, to whom he recounted "his bit - - ter grievances. This time he was listened to with interest. The brother-in-law of his new friend held some appointment at the Court of Berlin, and he lost no time in re= pairing with the Englishman to Berlin. The needle-gun was tried, examined, and accepted in the shortest possible space of time, the inventor handsomely rewarded, and encouraged to establish himself in Prussia." The Birmingham Post, on the other hand, says The Prussian needle gun resembles, in all essential respects, an arm invented by two Englishmen, Messrs. Handeon and Golden, of Huddersfield, and patented by them in this country on the 2d November, 1841. It is said that Mr. Golden received an order from the King of Prussia for two of his guns, and from these models the so-called Prussian needle gun, with trifling modifications, was made." An English establishment has under taken the manufacture of a new and valu able kind of rope. The tests of its superi ority have been made il hy means of an im proved hydraulic mac"!, ne, and froin the very satisfactory. manner in which it bore the test& applied to it, appears likely to come into general use. The principle con sists in making a rope of hemp and wire combined, which is found to give even geater degree of strength than wire rope, with the pliability'of that made of hemp It is manufactured by placing a single wire inside of every rope yarn, securely coating each -wire with hemp, and separating each hard ,substance, making a , sort of cushion for eacli - ivire 'to bed upon, so that when any, heavy strain is applied the wires do not cut each other as in all wire rope: Its superiority over hemp rope for mining pur poses.ii its taking the same breaking strain at less than:alf the weight of hemp rope— and, compared with chain, at less than one quarter the weight of ordinarY chain. This description of rope has now for some time been in use in the English docks, in haul ing vessels in and out of the docks, and the , manner in which it has borne this severe practical test has fully proved its efficiency. The Tititei 'correspondent who accompa nies the Atlantic telegraph expedition, says that not a day has passed since the fracture of lastyear's cable, that its insulation has not been almost hourly tested at the Irish end. These tests show its condition up to the broken' end, 1260 miles from shore, to be absolutely - perfect. There is always a cer tain amount of resistance to an electric current entering a cable; which called' retardatioh, and is measured . by millions of units. A submarine wire of a certain length can, therefore,- always be measured off, as it mere, and its. insulating , and con ductive powers ascertained to within a mile of a fliult'by the time the eurrent takea in entering the wire. These tests, as we have said, have been carried on hourly with last year's cable; and the result as 'to Millions of units has corresponded, darby day, in the most , remarkable manner., Of coarse, both E rts' condnetiiiiy" , 'and resdahce• have varied/as earth .currents arose or mag netic storms prevailed; but nine times out of ten the resistance test has been the same even to a millionth unit, day after day, and those testa are identical • with those which would be obtained from a perfect submarine rope • 1260 miles long. The readin gs of the haionieter at thii station also afford the most curious dati,'Which, until now, have been almost entirely overlooked 'in electricabocience ari as connectedwith the' snbm ne sables.` It, is found that exactly OF THE NEEDL:E-OUN., HEMP AND WIRE ROPE. 'TESTING THE OLD CABLE. in proportion as the barometer roes; the fe sistance of the current increased, and vice versa. In plain terms, a low barometer meant a good cable, and a high barometer a bad one. Another curious circumstance, which has sometimes been noticed, but never carefully recorded till now, is that between twelve and two in the day, and ' on ly at those hours, the cable is always at its worst?' STRENGTH: OF IRON AND STEEL. The tensile strength of iron and steel is :a pointlo• deterMine' which various series o f exparimetts have been instituted by scientific and 'practical' men among others, ; those made at Glasgow by An Napier are 'deemed of special importance and value, on account of the, great care exercised in every operation. The mode of testing was simply ,to fasten the lower end of the bar securely, attach the upper end to the hook of an enormous steelyard, and load the end of the steelyard until the bar broke. Va rious sized bars and plates were tried, which, however, were carefully measured, and from the weight required to break them, the strength of a bar or plate of similar material, an inch square, was ob tained by calculation. The number of experiments made , was Fix hundred and twenty-five; and from these it appears— among other results—that a weight of seventy-four tons May be suspended by a rod of the very htxst •fustrsteel, an inch square, while a rod of the same size, of .the poorest quality of steel, will support only , about tarenty-three ton's. Jt also appears, from `thelife, nutrAher eriperirnents,' - that steel bars considerably stronger than in plates, and' it is almost ail_tenacious acme the plates as lengthwise. WHITENING OF PAPER. That some paper manufacturers are ac customed to increase the weight of their products by the introduction of pipe-clay, plaster of Paris, and other heavy colorless substances, is notorious, though the act is not usually spoken of in terms of com mendation. But a technical chemist in Europe no w proposes, without any reserve, to do away with the usual prdoesses of bleaohing with sulphurons acid or. chlorine, and to whiten the paper simply by addi tion of white substances. He proposes, in short, to 'introduce by chemical means a quantity of sulphate of bFytit (barytes) directly into the texture' Of the paper. This is effected by adding to the paper pulp solutions of alum and.of chloride of barium, together with a quantity of slaked lime. By these means sulphate of baryta, to gether with a quantity, of hydrate, of alumi na, is precipitated in and upon the fibres, which, in the subseqtlent process of felting, are converted into paper. The sulphate of baryta, being of a brilliant white color, will, of course, tend to Font,* the coloring mat ters of the original fibre. As the sulphate of baryta is very heavy, and as paper is sold by the pound, the method in question will, no doubt, have a fair trial.—The Nation. litiftsgraptit. WENDEROTH, TAYLOR & BROWN'S FINE ART GALLIUM, 919 and 914 CHESTIFUT STREET, 1019-17 AGENCY, 353 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. ATELIER PHOTOGRAPHIC. A. 1, DE MORAT. S. E. corner Eighth and Arch Streets. PHILADELPHIA. The public are invited to exame speohnes s of Life Sin in Oil. Water Colors. Ivorytype. India Ink. and Pornlian Pictures of all sines. CARD PICTVRES, $2 50 PER DOZEN. Entrance on Eighth Street. M. P. IMIIONS would call attention to his LIFE SIZE PHOTOGRAPHS. Those living at a distance oan have Daguerreotypes, Photographs, &0.. copied any size. and colored any style, by mailing the picture and description of oompleztion, hair, Ato. All pio tures are warrantedlo give full satisfaction. • M. P. SIMONS_, 1060-U , 1920 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia Pa. MANIIF/OTIIEKR OF LOOKING-GLASSES, PHOTOGRAPH AND PICTiII HUMES, PLAIN AND FAXON WINDOW CORNICES, MT BUNGS, NO. 929 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA. II PAINTINGS. AND A GREAT VARIETY GP ENGRAV- Ii INGS ON RAN). tc OLD WORNE. REOILT Equea. TO NEW. LIGHT HOUSE COTTAGE, ATLANTIC. •JONAH WOOTTON & SONS, Proprietors. The Moat Desliable Lbeatiori on the Island. Being the Nearest Point to the Surf. The proprietors rest.ectfnlly solicit the patronage of their f iends and the public generally. NO BAB. SPECTACLES. BAII.BER, Mannfeebarer of Gad, Silver. Nickel. and Steel Speo t„3,3l.os, Eye Glasses. dre,, has neatly banished a room in connection with the, factory, for RETAIL PUS.- pOSES. wherespectaolee of every deseript.ien may be obtnined..scouratelv ad rested to the req uirements of vision on Srobi nTRICTLY o.mciALsoi 413 ales and factory, ass NORTH metasirwist, !peewits, r o urtilaittpuz . . RESTORE YOUR SIGHT! USE DR. J. STEPHENS di - CO.'S PATENT • CORNEA RESTORERS OR RESTORERS OF THE WSIGHT. They will Restore Impaired Sight. did Preserve it to the Latest Period of Life. SPECTACLES RENDERED USELESs. The most eminent Physicians. Oculists, Divines, and the most prominent men of our country, recom mend the use of the CORNEA RESTORERS for Pres byopiii. or Far or Long• Sightedness, or every person who wears spectacles from old age; Dimness of Vision, or Blurring; Overworked Eyes,. Asthenopka, or Weak Eyes ; Epiphora , or Watery fires ; Pain in the Eyeball; Amaurosis or Obscurity of Vision; Photophobia, or Intolerance of Light; Weakness of. the Retina and:Optic Nerve; Myodesopia, or Sneaks or Moving Bodies before the Eyes; Ophtbal nna, or Inflammation of the Eye or Eyelids, and Imperf cot Vision .from the effects of Inflammation, arc.; Cataract Eyes ; Hemiopia, or Partial Blindness; Sinking of the Eyeball, he. They can be used by any onewith a certainty of suc cess, and without the least fear of injury to the eye. More than 5000 certificates of cures are exhibited at our office. Cure guaranteed in every case when applied according to the directions inclosed' in each box, or the money will be refunded.. - Write for a circular— sent gratis. Address DR. J. STEPHENS do CO., Oculists, (P. O. Box 926 4 For sale at "RUSHTON'S Fainily Drug Store, No. 10 Astorllouse, corner of Barclay Street and Broadway. New York.- . ST DR. J. STEPHENS do CO.'have invented and Patented a MYOPIA or CORNEA FLATTENER, for the cure of NEAR-SIGHTEDNESS, which has proved a great success. Write for a circular. 111.48-1 y LAW, COMMERCIAL, INSURANCE, FANCY PRINTER, STEAM POWER. IMPROVED BRONZING MACHINES, ORIGINAL STYLES OF COLOR PRINTING, CHAGRINED BUSINESS CARDS, Wedding and Visiting dards Similar to Engraved Plate. Itusiness Envelopes with Card, 02 50 per Thousand. Haying furnished a Large;Room in Sansom - Street Hall, . . with the latest Improved Machines and New Type. I am enabled to execute the Finest Class.ef Printing. OFFICE, FIRST FLOOR. t / . *-v PRif , ITERS AND STATIONERS. PAPER. BLANK IfOORS, STREET. (0) a "" I 1046-6 m RZ&D the Testimony of a - ntw of the man Eminent Clergymen and their Families of New York City, who, having used the liosodont for a long time past, are convinced of its excellent and invaluable quali ties, give it their cordial commendation : Rev. THOMAS DEWITT Pastor Collegiate Ref. Dutch Church.,Lafayette Place. Bev. T. W. ALEXANDER, D.D., Presbyte. ilea Church, Filth Avenue. Rev. 3. B. WA IIim I PIT,D.D., M. E. City Mis sionary. Bev. W. F. MORGAN, D.D., Rector St. Thomas' Church, Broadway. Bev. E. H, CHAPIN, D.D., Paster Fourth Universalist Chureh, Broadway. Rev. SAMUEL COOKE, Rector St. Bar. tholonnew , s Church, Lafayette Place. Env-SAMUEL 08000D,D.D.,PastorChurch of Messiah, Broadway. Res. Btreet. M . . ADAMS, H. B. Church Duane S Rev. lIRMAR BANOS, late Punter Centel. nary H. E. Church, BroadmilY. Rev. W. S. ininra.s, Pastor Baptist Church. Sixteenth Street. • Rev. GEORGE POTTS D.D.. Pastor Presby. terian Church University Platte. Rev. E. E. RANKIN. Pastor Presbyterian Church. Forty-second Street. Rev. T. E. VER AU XE, D.D. Pastor of Col. Dutch Reformed, Fsdayetlie Place. FROM G. P. .1. (EMMEN. DOCTOR DENTAL SURGERY. NEWARK. N.. 7. The popular Dentifrice known as VAN BUtatialeB " SOZODONT," besides being a very Pleasant addi tion to the toriet, contains ingredients that, if used according to the directions, will prove of the greatest utility to the health of• the mouth and teeth. Mir BEWARE OF IMITATIONS ! "OR Sold by all Druggiata sad Perfumers NEW CROP TIJRNIP SEEDS. Early White Flat Duteh Strap-leave& Purple Top Flat Strap-leaved. Purple Top Rata Bag& or Swedish. Yellow•ltuta Bags or Swedish. All grown from Selected and Trinsplanted Roots Price 80 cents per pound. 10 cents per ounce. Mailed without additional charge. HENRY A. DREER, 1048-tf Seedman and Florist. 714 CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia. TRUSSES. To avoid all cloth, leather. and rag-covered filthy Trusses, with their parboiling, blistering, rusting and breaking, go to r ~^ J.B. SEELEY'S "Hard Rubber Truss" Establishment, .147 CHESTNUT Street, Where you will find the cleanest, liithtett, easiest, best and only ,TRUSS /KNOWN, that will never rust, limber, break or soil, mod in bathing, fitted to form , requiring n'o , strap, andinade of any power required. Constantly on hand. a large assortment of Suppor ters,.Shoulder Braces, Silit'Elastic Stockings. Suspen sions. Urinals, &0.. Lady in attendance.. Pamphlet free. 1048-3 m .CAI HART'S BOUDOIR ORGANS! CAREART'S CHURCH HARMONIUMS CARHARTS NELODEONS! Aire;.l.l,*l ll momr:::: • - Unequalled by any Reed Instrumento in the world Also .Parnielee'S Patent Isolated Violin Frame Pianos. a new and lmantifol instrument. Sole agent, •MOBRD3S. iitMarket street. . HALL & RIIML, NEW YORE. Entait Cailiatit. This is a personal in vitation to the reader to examine our new styles of Frsz CLOTHING, CAS simer Snits for $l6, and Black Suits for $22. Fi ner Snits, all prices up to $75. WANAMAXER & BROWN, OAK HALL, Southeast corner of SIXTH and MARKET STS CHARLES STOKES & CO.'S FIRST-CLASS " ONE PRICE " READY-MAP CLOTHING STORE, No. 824 CRESTS - 0T STREET, Minder the Continental Hotel, Philadelphia.) DIAGRAM FOR SELF-MEASUREMENT For Coat.— *---"? Length ofback ..---- from Ito 2, and ,It from 2to 3. a_ Length of , sleeve (with , arm crooked) '; from 4to 5, and. around the most 1 promi -14. .i. . , neat Part o t ip ‘ i the chest and waist. State \ whether erect or stooping. ! For Vest.— Same as coat. For Pants.— /Inside seam, , I and ott tae from hipbo ne, around the ' - waist Agood an fi d t hip. gua ranteed. Officers' Uniforms, ready-made, always on hand.ot made to order in the best manner, anti on the most reasonable terms. flaring finished many hundred uniforms the past year for Staff. Field and Line Offi cers, as well as for the Navy, we are prepared to exe cute orders in this line with correctness and despatch. The largest and most desirable stock of Ready-made Clothing in Philadelphia always on hand. (Theprioe marked in plain figures on all of the goods.) A department for Boys' Clothing is also maintained at this establishment, and superintended by experi enced hands. Parents and Others will find here a most desirable assortment of Boys' Clothing at low prißole oes. Agent fot the "Famous Bullet-Proof Vest." CHARLES STORES & CO. CHARLES STOKES. E. T TAYLOR. 968-tf W ..I. STOKES. CHESTNUT ST. TEA HONG. WEST & BROWN, No. 809 CHESTNUT STREET. WEST dr. BROWN .ighh[e&4:~:~t:~ LARGE STOCK OF TEAS AT HOLISM PEES. THE CHOICEST TEAS AIM ALWAYS TO BE FOUND AT THEIR HONG CALL FOR A PRICE LIST. TARRANT'S EFFERVESCENT SELTZER APERIENT Is &gentle. cooling Cathartic or Purgative medicine, in the form of a Powder. pleasant to take. and is re commended and used by the beet Physicians in the country as a moat reliable and effectual remedy. EFFERVESCENT Cures I:sysPensia. Cures Heartburn, Cures Sick Headache. SELTZER Cures Indigestion. Cures Costiveness. Cures Piles, APERIENT Cures Sour Stomach. Cures Nervous Headache, Cures Liver Complaint, A POW•DE.R Cures Bilious Headache. Cures Rheumatic Complaints. Cures Jaundice, It is a most efficient medicine for Females and Chil— dren whose stomachs frequently reject ordinary pur gative medicines. Read our pamphlet of testimo nials. and as you value your life and health, lose net an hour in procuring a bottle of this most wonderful remedy. MANUFACTURED ONLY BY TARBANT & CO. 278 Greenwich Street, New York. SP For Sale by all Drirggists. 1049-1 y %)1141Zrs E r.r*.N,.. ,GHEN s;w CUAL CCIALTT LEHIGH AND SCHI7YLICILL COAL of the beat quality, selected from the Approved Mines under cover. Prepared ExPresets , for More and Family Um. Northeast corner of Passayunk Road and Washington Avenue, Thiladelphia. ALBERT REMENTER CALL AND EXAMINE. J. & F. CADMUS, Ho. 786 market St., S. M. corner of =ChM' PHIIADIALPgLL, Manufacturers and Dealers in BOOTS_TRUNKS. CARPET BAGS AND VAL/BED of avers variety and able. ido-1,7 I= l