lure griming. MEAT AND MILE OF SWILL-FED COWS. Attention has been called at different times, by sanitary and medical boards and writers, to the injurious effects, and deaths po t, a few, from the nseinf the flesh or milk of cows fed on distillery waste or swill. The subject has beenlireught forward afresh by Professor S. R. Percy, of New York, in a prize essay on the qtmitioh, -What 'effeet h a s the meat or milk from diseased animals upon the public health ?" It is well known that, fbr many years past, wherever distille ries have been erected around- large cities, t hey are either surrounded by cow-sheds adjacent to them, or else the swill has been furnished in large quantities -to cows kept by persons in the vicinity. Thus the dis tillery waste is used up, and the owners of ste ws hope thereby to increase the quantity of milk. It is alleged, on good authority, that there are at the present time abmit' seven thousand cows fed upon this distil- . lery waste in that small portioiz. of Long Island immediately adjacent to New York. We have no similar statistics of the extent to which this deleterious practice is carried on in the neighborhood of Philadelphia, but it is certainly very great. Dr. Percy describes the manner in which th e grain employed in distillation loses its nutritive properties arid acquires" noxidus nes. We have not in this swill or distil lery refuse what. is =usually present in ground corn and other grains ; they havol' undergone vinous, aoetons and putrefactive. fermentation, making. Abeth insiifficient in. support the life of an animal in a healthy state. Bach of these different kinds of fermentation deprives' the grain of ita nu- . tritive qualities, ansitliaclast . ftwo-make un healthy additions., Thls bad' 'food of the . cows changes the quality of the milk 'froth its proper standard. Infantile diseases are often causedtand t afgravated - by the use Of such milk. The meat from these , swill-fed animals is peculiar in its character—an ob servation fully corroborated* by butchers I and others. All agree in saying that it is unusually soft and flabby ; that the fat does not harden readily; that it has a peculiarly acid, distillery odor ; that it shrinks 'very much in cooking, and is more tender than other meat. Dr. Percy adduces his own personal experience of the noxious effects of eating this meat. He ate of it sparing ly, having noticed its peculiar swilly odor and taste, with which he 'was familiar, ow ing to his student life at the Bellevue Hos pital, where the fact of supplying " swill beef" to that establishment was not pre tended to be concealed. He was affeeal in consequence with a most profuse and persistent diarrhoea and a feeling of depres sion. On the third day after eating the meat he was taken suddenly sick while in the street, and felt ;great ;'pain in the left shin, which, on his return home, he found to be inflamed in one spot, about three inches in diameter. This was followed by two ulcers, which remained unheated for sir weeks. Distillery-fed cattle are nearly 'all afflict ed with pleuro•pneumonia. This is a most malignant and fatal disease, and one that prevailed to a great extent in 'Massachu setts some years ago. We may advert here to the fact, that the millr...of goaded or in furiated animals is deleterious, and that if the flesh of these animals is eaten, it pro duces violent dysentery and great feverish excitement.—Pkiladqphia Ledger. SORGHUM SUGAR, Much importance is attributed by some of the Western papers to a new invention by which sorghum molasses is almost in stantly converted into sugar. The syrup is driven off by centrifugal power and granulation effected. The St. Louis Demo. cat speculates upon the results as fol lows: " This discovery must, of course, work a considerable change in the saccharine trade of the country. Sorghum flourishes in pretty mach all the States and territories of the Tinion. Wherever corn grows it may be made to grow, and farmers, through this simple-process, will now be enabled to supply themselves with all they need in the way of sweets. As the machinery is by no means costly, we presume the improvement will generally be made available. Sugar must become cheaper, and its consumption greatly increased. Fruits, large and small, which now, on account of the cost of sac charine matter, are greatly wasted, will be preserved to a much greater extent, and healthy and invigorating food thereby se cured. This invention may be considered as one of the greatest , of, the age, remarka ble as the present era is for its utilitarian application of scientific discoveries and principles. The forces employed are with out cost, and require no ,edacation to gov— ern and direct them. After ,the molasses is prepared in the usual way i , which. every one comprehends, the turning of a crank completes the process, and consummates the entire work most , Nck heating is necessary in evaporation, or delicate ma nipulation, or cheuileal mixture's. The cold sorghum is converted in two or three minutes into refined sugar and molasses." SLOVENLY -FARMING. The editor of the Farmers' Piarl, Mo., in lecturing his patrons for certain short oniiogs in their farming. , practices, gives it portion of them this warning We in tend soon to. make a trip out among the forcers of Missouri, vv and where,e see the house, barn, barn-yard and pig-sty, all in eoe yard, we will tell of it. Where we find the gates swinging open for want of a lateh, or leaning against the fence for want of hinges, or the barn door full of rails, for leant of a door, or the fence torn down whenever there is a team to be driven in or out of the yard or field, we will tell of it. Where we find pigs rooting up the garden, the sheep and rabbits barking the orchard, or the cattle or horses tuned in to browse upon it, we will speak of it. to we see your farming tools laying out all winter to, rot and rust, and your w agon not under the shed, when you have a shed to put it in, we will speak of it. It is not right." THE AMERICAN PRESBYTMAN, TELVADAY,, F SEPTF gg4, ,1.3„.066. TRAINING COLTS. T. S. Ingersoll, Berea, Ohio, a practical man, now more than eighty years of age, but who has broken a great many colts, writes as follows : Cqlts are taught in the first place, while I am their friend, I must be thelli master and they must obey. T 114) NiffsktfLefite times hard for them to learn, especNlly I used to break colts in former years, when a young man. Then if the colt did not come " right up to the chalk" the first time, it was abused by the whip. I was unmerciful in my dealings, exercising no reason nor good judgment, which are the most neces sary attributeaof character to be called into requisition by the trainer of colts. These two talents, together with patience, I have made' use of in my later years in training colts, until I think I have them in pretty good use, When required. Many friends often say %) me, " You are too old to break colts. Why, a man near eighty years . of age to , think of breaking such wild colts ; it seems quite absurd; you'll get killed by them. by-and-hy." My reply has been, I am better qualified to break colts, as you term it, than when I was young. It is not half the work now that it was forty years ago. -I don't break any colts now; I train them; I don't like the term of breaking colts now; I use the term of training or educating them—treating them something . as I 'woidd,a, child; never ininishing , them forignoiance. I seldoin use a, whip in nit early training. The first exercise with a colt Lefter he has Oarriedthe harness till he` is not afraid of i n t o put: lines bits and over; the bAttecica! and mitimng them through"the brebaiiiirg, - Eio ailirkeep them up, I go behind and attempt to drive him;', This sonieliitica !makes -aWkward work ; but patience and reason and good judgment now must, be exercised,:for the colt will cut up all manner of pranks,some times rearing or kicking up. Do not hold `the reins too tight; humor him till t hefinds he canno tget away or 'ridlimielf of his harness; and as he gets. •a Attie tired ,he 'will begin to yield. I get my colts ac customed to the bits by drawing them around with the harness on, always letting the traces dangle about their -legs as much , as possible, to get them used to have any thing hit their heels without being fright ened at it. They will soon learn my lan guage. If they seem inclined to babk, I gently pull on the lines and Ray "back, back, Charley," if that is his name. When they choose to go forward, I say " go on:" When I want them to turn round, I gently pull the , line on the side I wish them to turn, and say, " come round," Charley, always speaking his name. When I think it is safe to put him between a pair ef thills, with two wheels, I first let him see it and smell of it, leading him round it, 'lifting up the thills and letting them fall till he sees that it will not hurt him. Then I put him between the thills and let him stand awhile before I attempt to drive him. By driving awhile in this vehicle until I think it safe, I put him before a lumber wagon, and he will soon be manageable at ordinary work. A NEW ENGLAND SUMMER, Rufus Choate says :—" Take the New England climate in summer; you would thiak the world was coming to an end. Certain recent heresies on that subject may have had a natural origin there. Cold to day; hot to-morrow ; mercury at eighty degrees in the morning, with wind at southeast, and in three hours more a sea turn, with wind at east, and a thick fOg from the very bottom of the ocean,. and, a fall of forty degrees of Fahrenheit. Now so 'dry as to kill all the beans in New Hampshire ; then floods carrying off the bridges of the Penobscot and Connecticut; snow in Portsmouth t m July, and the next day a man and a yoke of oxen killed by lightning in Rhode Island. You would think - the world was twenty times coming to an end. But I don't know how it is; we go along; the early and later rains fall each in its season; seed-time and harvest do not fail; the sixty days of hot corn weather are pretty sure to be measured out to us. The Indian summer with its bland southwest wind and mitigated -sunshine bring all up, and on the 25th of November, or thereabouts, being Thursday, the mil lions of , grateful people in meetingl.houses or around the family board, give thanks for a year of health, plenty and happiness." SEA ISLAND COTTON. The August number of the Southern Cultivator contains 'two long and interest ing articles on the cultivation of cotton. One is confined to that known as the " Sea Island" variety, which is peculiar to the tide-water region to which its growth and cultivation are limited. The first experi ment, in the cultivation of this variety was made in Georgia in 1786, and then' called Persian cotton / The first bale was export ed from St. Simon's Island in 1788. Owing to the delicate and peculiar organization of this plant, its sensitiveness , to great and sudden changes of temperature, the necei3- -sity of a salt atmosphere for the.length and, perfection of its ,staple, its culture is re stricted tolhe parallels of 30° and 33° north and westward from the Atlantic as far as salt-water navigation extends, and hence its name—Sea Island. It is stated, in - the communication referred to, that, owing to the unsettled state_ of the country during the late civil war and the bad man agement ,of,the cotton growing business con sequent upon, that struggle, the Sea Island variety has greatly deteriorated, and is now very little, if any, better than the upland. THE KING BIRD. They say the king bird 'takes only the' drones of the swarm of bees. We have watched him snap a bee on the wing, shot him and examined his drop, and must ex prest 'the'oPinion that many a worker falls into his voracious maw. Lsok out for him 'around, the hives.--Ifassachuseits Plough; man. • AN English farmer recently rrarked that “he fed 'his land before - it wasAiin gry, rested it before it was weary f , and weeded it befdrea was foul." Seldom, if ever, was sco- k mPeh l o 6 l l PM l df il l4 o P condensed into , Etgingr teA9Pae. grtitittifir. PROPOSED ETHNOLOGICAL CONGRESS. The question of races of mankind is one of paramount interest to every American reader who is watching with no little eager ness the labor question . , as connected with the negro population of the, Southern States. The following n,otice of a new-association bearing on this subject is from the Londo4 Medical Times and Gazettec The - Asiatic SoCiety, of Calcutta, under the inspiration 'of a distinguished' surgeon *of that city; haVe ,giien the world a new idea. Cattle shows,loWer sheWk,'potiltry shows, even baby - alloys, are known in Europe, but a live ,man show is certainly a novelty. It is proposed -that one , . shall be. held in the neighborhood of Calcutta, - in the years 1869-70. Anstralians, Negroes, Negritoes, Bushmen, Mineepies, Mongct Indo-Enropeans, htedek,' Elamitea, andthe dwellers Mesopotamia are all to be there. The prospectus' we have seen published by the Asiatic Sodiety; sets forth the advantages -of Calbuttli for , holding such an'exhillitiOn, and. of vantages to science of the exhibition,When held. The various speCinienkcf man, NO*/ „ agseMbiediitre to.b.e,meaknired,,phOogragh-: ed,i and east in plaster of Paris, and...the leading'ethnologists anal-luithropoldgiatsi of Eiikope - aie to'beiii7iited-'=iyhethit alifolor exhibition we' are not iliforineir ';llTAta=f throiolegieal SOF4y;ait'd k t4ft ie`tei. atl we puppose, r a special steamexhr, the , journey ; but ea ,accurate comiaaisnnia, of external peculiarities: are itobefinade i think that' some 'Of the savans onglit i te7cOnz. suit wives lieferethekiitibjeet their visages to 'such an ordeal ' l ` Who' are Wile, the, iadgek? 'Are Aire 6100 jadges the cattle shoal 2 , Willa ladies', coinniittee sit on the specimens ,? What about canni balism ? Are Figians and otheninteresting tipkeimens, with peculiar' , epienrian views of human nature, to be chained whilst . they are; heinemeasured ? Will the - women be allowed to ogle and flirt?' Can' the leading ethnologists and anthropologista - of Enrope be taken as favorable specimens of Can easian variety? These are some of the doubts or queries which lie at , thatitirface. Bat the idea is magnificent.—Phild: L;dger. MUSIC Or SOLOMON'S TEMPLE. The disentombing of Assyrian scnlptures and the decyphering of Assyrian and Egyptian inscriptions, have opened new fields of investigation in almost every de partment of knowledge. Among the branches of science which=-have shared in these discoveries, that.of music has , been benefitted largely. The account& of an cient musical instruments were vague, and our ideas, especiallY of Hebrew, music, were confused, till recently sculptures and paintings have been brought to light which delineate the musical instruments of the early Oriental nations, and in a number of cases veritable specimens have been die entombed. Such, for example, is an Egyptian harp f'ound in Thebes, with its strings yet Perfect enough ; to. Tibrate again, after a silence of three thousand years. The more recent investigations prove that the parent of all known mn•lical sci ence was. Assyria. From the Assyrians, the Hebrews and the Egyptians, and, in deed, all Eastern nations, derived their, knowledge of music. The unveiled menii ments show that"in the time of Senna cherib was a highly cultured art,' and must have existed through generatiebe. This polished nation used a harp.of t*enty one-strinis, the frame of whit% was four feet - high, which accompanied minstrel songs, or, was borne the dance. The lyre of tortoise shell,-the,, double .pipe, the Irumpet drum and , Fere, common. Even of the bagpipe representations htt'Ve, been discovered, though none of stringed inStruments like the violin' played with the bow. In all delineations of social or Worship: ping assemblies, musical instruments 'very like - our modern ones= have a prominent. place. The Hebrew ' , music, at' the. time of the Exodus, WU,' purely Egyptian; but it Wall'niuch modifiedsubsequently by asso ciation pith Asiatic nations. In the Tem ple of Jerusalem,, according to the Tal mud, stood a powerful organ, consisting of a wind-chest with holes, containing ten pipes, each . pipe capable of quitting ten different sounds by means of finger . lioles, so that.ti hundred.sounds eould be prodiCid by it. It was provided with.two,pairs of bellows and ten keys, so that it could be played with the fingers. According to the Robbins, it could be heard a great distance from the Temple. THE MANUFACTURE OF SODA. By a new process, soda can be manufac tured to advantage from comnionealt, and the patentees in England laie begun to put it in practical operation. Briefly, the new process consists in submitting common'salt, carbonate of magnesia, and a small quantity of water to the Action of : caybonie acid gas. - The chemical changes resulting Produce bicarbonate of magnesia, which,disse4res in the water; chloride of magnesium, which also remains in solution;; and : bicarbonate of soda, which falls in a powder andvan be collected. By a moderate heat the blear ' bonate can be converted into carbonate of soda (common soda), sally evaporating the solution containg the; chloride and bi carbonate of magnesium, and heating 'the residue, magnesia can lie obtained. The coat of the piocess is very little ST. _ELMO'S FIRE,> OR LAMBENT LIGHTNING, A good account of this phenomenon' has_ been given by` -Captain Captain Briggs, of the steam er Talbott, n the- hish Channel. I found," he says, " thpl t the light, which, appeared large at a distance, was made up of a number of jets, each of which expand ed to the, size of a halt crown, appeared of 'a beautiful violet color, and made a slight hissing noise. Placing my hand in con tact with one of the jets, a sensible warmth was telt, and three jets attached themselves as to as many fingers, but I could;observe ,no smell. The jets were not permanent, but something went orit t returning again - iben the snow was ,lieavieet..:ltf,appearea!to me . they came o between the wood and lion of the ship." RECTIFICATION OF FRANKLIN'S EXPERIMENT. Everybody knows of Franklin's experi ment, placing cloths of various colors on snow, from which he concluded that the lighter the color of the body the less its power of absorption. But the conclusion was fallacious, for as it is the daak or cal oric 'rays of , the sun to which the effects were due. Tyndall's eiperiments have shown that` the abser'ntion 'of them is sometimes most with white substances, and 'sometimes greatest with black- - Now, 'Snow itself, which is perfectly white, absorbs those rays with greater greediness than any other substancei hence Franklin's white cloth, *hi& absorbs'%han the snow really in terceptedthoie rays from the snow under neath it, and hence the cloth itself sunk but little. It is thus the later rectifies the earlier science. Itotograptit. TWINO46Ii; TA*1:011&s -- iiiiiii FINE _ART •GALLERY, airs and 2U CHESTNUT STREET, , - AG4C4Y, 383 , , ROADWAY, NEW YORK. A f T*lik. PHOTOGRAPHIC. • - • . D E. 411 DILA T 3E: ,eorpe r *Noah ami,Areh itreete. 4 . • .•/1 11 ; 6 4 1 /<04 1 4* The public ere invited to exams specimg s of Life 9iie in Oil, Water. Colorer IvoritYM Iroilpi Ink, and liereelign piotur,.efi of all sixes. o..c4oo 3 ;ecrelizs, $2 50 PER , ., nozcn. trance on 33 . 410101 Street. X. P. FOLSIONS.wouId call attention to his Lai SIZE PHOTOGRAPHS. Those living lit a distance car have Dkguerreotypes, PhOtographs, &c:, copied any size. and colored any style, by mailing tke picture and descriPtain of compleation, hair, &a All, pio tires are warranted to give full satisfaction. , • P. SIMONS, 1050-ly 1320 Chestnut Street,'Philadelphia. Pa. GROYER&BAKER'S HIGHEST .•PREMIUM AND LOCK STITCH SEWING MACHINES WITH 'LATEST IMPROVEMENTS The Grover & Baker P. M. Co. manufacture. in ad dition' to their celebrated GROVER & •BAKER STITCH Machines. the, most perfect SHUTTLE or "LOCK STITCH" Machines in the .uutrket. and a.f. ford'•purchasers the opportunity of selecting, after trial.and examination'bf both, the one best suited to their wants.. Other companies manufacture but one kind of machine each. and cannot of'er this opportu nity of Selection to their customers. • A pamphlet containing samples of both the Grover & Baker Stitch and Shuttle Stitch in various .fabrics, with' lull explanations. diagrams; and illustrations, to enable purchasers to examine, teat. and compare their relative merits, will be furnished, on request, from our offices throughout *he - country. Those who desire machines which do the best work, should not fail to send for a pamphlet, and tact and contpare these stitches for; themselves. ,OFFICE, 730 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. PHILADELPHIA. Janitary 1. 1866 Data SlR:—Thel ce 'business heretofore carried on by us under the name of " Moliere Ice Co. " will here after be known as the " COLD SPRING' ICE AND COAL COMPANY." We respectfully solicit from yop a continuance of your favors under the new ar rangement. and assure you-that, hereafter you will be supplied by the Cold Spring Ice and Coal Co. with Ice of the best quality; always atithe lowest market rates, and with regularity..and promptness: WOVBRRT 8c BROTHER • (INCORPORATED APRIL. 18€4.) COLD SPRING ICE•.AND COAL CO. THOS. E. CAHILL, Pres. JOHNROODYRAIt; Sect. HENRY THOMAS, Sivedintendeitt. - WHOL'E'SALE AIMtiETAIL 31110FALERSABIDSHIPP.M144 01%/CE*COALL. BOSTON:ICE nowlieing supplied daily in all paved limits of the Consolidated -city. Twenty intuit Ward. Richmond. Mantua. and GerinantOwn. LEHIGIi and SOUCY LKILL COAL carefully Selected for fatally use,,and aslow as; the lowest for first-rate article. BLACKSMITHS' COAL of excel ; lent Anent*. HICKORY, OAE , and PINE WOOD. and - KINDLDIG . WOOD. DEPOTS! • Southeast isomer Twelfth and Willow Streets. North Pennsylvania it. R. and Master Streets Twenty-fifth and Vornbard'Streets. • Pine Street Wharf; Sohuyttll. OFFICE. No. 435. WALNUT STREET. 31: ffi nil )A.-int 31 m L. GARRETT No. al South 2d St. above Chestnut. East Side, lies constantly on hand a large assortment of Men's Boots and Shoes. Oat( Made. Ladies'. Muses, and Children's Balmorals. &c. Be sides Trunks, Traveling Bags. etc.. in great variety and at LOW PRICES Men's Rubber ° sole Boots and the best quality of Gum 01 01 bhoes of all kinds. 1012-Iy W. G BEDFORD No. t 3 NORTH TENTH STREET,PHILADA. . . My central location arid - tile many' means of cern mumoation with the suburbs enable me to lake the Agency for sale and care of Real Estate, the Cense `ion of Interests. Kround and house rents in every the city. n d ua esir rt ed f eferenees will be furnished when . "HON'T BE F 01011." Y 912 can MOMSix.DoSa.rs and Fifty. Cents., Oat and examine an inVentioll,nzaentirneedisd liy,eirerY ; WY.. Or a sample sent freekyiiiiail`foi .50 "Niter t&b.7-4 4i11Y194,q0,,,n.17009495aa Nei THOMF'SON BLACK & SON, Blzoikp AND CHESTNUT STREETS, DEALERS IN T M EVERY VARIETY OF CH,OtttlArt4l;LY GROCERIES. "r'lll - delivered, m any Part of the City , Or Packed securely for the Country, '2l; attant (Was. This is a personal in vitation to the reader to examine our newfstyles of Furs: CLOTHING, Car rimer Snits , for $l6; and Blank Suits for $22• ., Fi ner •Suitsfiill up to-$751 :` c ; WAIINULVOR BROW) °AIR. 411.14: Sout,lLeast,cprner of : snow olialitidEZZT; STI3. MULLES STOMP& CO? "1r •- ' • f' Van -CLAIM " ONE PRICE'? teeny -MAD CLOTH:Met - MOM liro.A24Ai* STREET, . (Under the .Conthiehtal Hotel./Philadelphia.) 011."..88LF.-11BABILB - BMBNI For + Coet•—• Length ofback from 1t0,2, and from 2to 2:-. • ' • - ..• r r Leugfh of. , -., ~ sleeve, .(with , , ' ----- arni orooked)' " ' 1 — r................5....1 ,froni4toersed• - : aroundi f the, . .i Most :promi nent' part of Ake chest-aunt waist.,.,, State -whethebiect ''' or stooPint:"• , ' .. "- For Vest .—, . ", fianakaa coat.. . kt f ....:ii. For Pants.— a Insidesdaia. ' and% outside . , from hipbone. around - the waist and .hip. • A modfitgles.- 1, , ranteed: • • . • .1•,:i J..: 11 .. •' LI Officers' Unlibrnit. ready - made , un s band.ut made to order in the beat ' ihanner,iand -on' the ince( reasonable terms.. Hmingiiiniihed many hundred uniforms themast year for Staff,, Field and. Line OBl colt, as well as for the :10 are"Yreiifed . tir exe cute orders in thid line with arreotneaVarid despatch. The largest and most desirable stock of Beak-made Clothingin" Philadelphia always ton hind: ' (Theprioe marked in plain figured 012 , 411'4H the goods.)' '• • • • A department for Boys' Clothintisjdae maintained at this establishment.'and superintended by experi enced hands. Parenta and others will find-Ince a most 'desirable assortment' Of Boyetiothing at low Sole Agent fot, the !' Famidis Bullet,-Preef Vest." • 02BANIBis iiriiiiNiiiW co. - j '" -I ' °MIMES' STOSIM B: T TAIMOBVI 968-tf W. .1. S TOKES. ...... ante guntAing anu m L SIIOULIIEII SKAMHIRT ATORY 1035'Cheetritit Street.' -,JF7 _ , Mclntire gligrotneT, , tv- - 4tor GENTLEIEVS'IMINUMG; mrAtm Ma, • HANDipnicutrers, CRAVATS, PORT .11IONNAIESi OtOVES, . AstrseENDlEgs, - ' HOSIERY. - 113.30344, SEM SHE NM= 'MITZI! MERINO VETS; AND PANTS. LISLE THREAD VESTS AND PANTS. GAUZE COTTON VESTS AND PANTS ! LINEN DRAWERS; : " JEAN - DRA.WEBS; DRAWERS:.' • !ERN PINFAI5111114: J.: •.. :Bxupxraa --- • ... ~ R . A .r",.:!;,c01f!,-, : . -, T SUPERiOSHAtt- .:4:11:.: '1411t,'.7 After more ,tban tivelve years of constant this highly eoneentrated , Fertiliier bee attracted a wide- spread reputation as !.. •- SUBSTITUTE GUANO;! being found activein its operktion. =dot: great,duxwt bility. It does not eihaus,t'tlie soil, but oir thetiont. trary, permently inipitrtes=it. u ieresaingl Imam annueftabniisittly4Mproyelheligh.Ampularfiralue of this .Fettilizer,, and, establiisl the fact orits•biiing relied upon by . a wide-ehale liirliricultiniatite 'lep r ail wants tir the: diremkongd Manure for every pop. BAug-it & Sole Manuittottrers and Proprietors, Office, 20 South DelaX4 ll l ) Aven ue, PHILADELPHIA. Price• $56 per 2000 lbs. Cash. JUST PUBLISHED. the Thirteener Edition of our "nevi Pamobl et., Bow to ..hfaintoin the Fertiol li ty • a American Farms and Pianastionfarnielied free, aeon aNdioation to 118 or our Agents. BAUGH', SONS, 20 South Delaware Avenue, parieeiti,PeLi. The Rev. George- , liood Of Prineetost,lC:3;--Vipeettii*V edttetithrez.reeeive into,their faig n fAr - Mime to litiate* *athlete& owe. Tep ee-moderate ovigee gpee , end jawee4tateet ItefeitineeCoettgo Fiel . 110; 8- Vall - I (4' a: 71! guoskttping toAs. I have a stock of Furniture in great variety which I will genet reduoedprices. Cottage Chamber Setts, Walnut Chamber Setts, Lounges, and Mattresses. A. N. ATTWOOD, 10:38-e• 45 SMYTH. SECOND ST.. PHTILA. =MEI WIT.T.T AIN YARNALL, IMPORTER AND DEALER IN HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS No. is= VUfSTNUT ST., S. E. com.IIITIL. SUPERIOR REFRIGERATORS. WATER COOLESS EWE TABLE , ouxbRRY. FAMILY HARDWARE. IRONING TABLES. &c. ka. 1014-ly WALL PAPER asu.w. C•Clar.. 10"1".13 sit GREEN. CURTAIN , PAPERS, BORDERS, &C. Chood Workmen for putting on paper, and all work warranted. 1046 6m' JOILN . H. PLIANT. IT SAVES TIME traPET 8 4u, 4 0111 iMS & DIETZ. 4irt N. 4$ STRAWBZURY STRUT, Strawberry street is between Seoond and Benk streets. CAFteMIM, - OARHA.RT'S BOUDOIR ORGANS! • :CARHART'S CHURCH HARMONIUMS ! CIMIART'S MELODEONS! _ _ - Unequalled,by my Reed InstruMents in the world Also Parmelee's Patent Isolated Violin Frame Pianos, a new and beautiful instrument. Sole agent. H. M. MORRISS. *.:lhiarket street. BANKING HOUSE. No. BS g. THIRD ST. PIEELALBELPHIA, (Two doors below Mechanics' Bank.) GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, 's, 33 OPil3 S, 49t C. , BOVEIT AND SOLD AT THE BOARD OF • - ititOKKRI3. FURNITURE. Velvet Parlor Saito, Hair Cloth Suits, Reps Suits, Sideboards, Extension Tables, Wardrobes, DANIMEL'S WASHING MACHINE. Best in the City. SAVES LABOR SAVES CLOTHES WHEY FAMILY SHOULD HAVE ORB. For sale at the Tharniture Store of Agents wanted. J. EICA....A.S, 1047-61 FL Ni. 887 MAREIZET Street. „, frtg 4%, Becloud door'abOve Chesnut abed, PHILADZIZECUL. OIL CLOTHS, N3nr„f3'rfLl3lB. MODERATE PRIORS. WINS -Bc , DIETZ, 43 STRAWBSRBY Street. Phi Leda. pe : 4L Carpet Store. A. ] ' .. 4 S - & '.l)lS3' VI AMP )4 OatAitillt ' MAR BLEWORKh ••••GIifENII.SBOVE HMV GEORGE' J. BOYD, DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF 5-240,10-40 8 , 7-308,.612 of 9 81. AND ALL OTHER Mn - =igi3T .ALLOWED OZ DEPOSITS MATTINGS, &C.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers