I 1 ft ":l , i- In Enfflaml tlic Astronomer' Koyal La laid before the Agronomical Society tue details of an investiga tion lv him into one of the most mi nt rtaut vet most difficult questions or theoretical aslrouoray, viz., the mo tion of the mcon. This is of all -UMialhodies, the one whose move meets are most important to tne march of pcopraphy, and to the rtua ie of histerv. It is !y means or tue tables of the" moon's motion that lon gitude if calculated bv travelers on land or sea; bv these the times and plat es of the Vwriiiranco of eclipses iire foretold: and by an inversion or the problem it has been endeavored Mdetcrmin the exact date of these vents in ancient history that have, by the historians of the time, been associated with eolar and lunar eclipses. It is, therefore, with some regret that we read the conclusion of one of the highest authorities on this subject: "I express my opinion that there is s-till eonio serious defect in the lunar theory." And again, "My confidence iii the certainty of chro nological results derived from luuar calculations is in some manner ahak en." Lest anv. however, should niisannrehond the size and nature of the defect alluded to, we hasten to say that the lunar tables, imperfect as ihi y nrc, enable us to predict two thousand years forward or backward the place of the moon correctly to within less than one-half of its own diameter. In further connection with our satellite, Mr. Nelson, of the Floral Observatory at Greenwich, has been makinjr some highly interesting in vestigations a to the probability of the existance of a very rarefied lu nar atmosphere. lie concludes that the atmosphere having one four-hundredth part of the densitr of our own will produce at the bright limb of the moon a horizontal refraction of half a second, but at the dark limb one of a whole second: and these effects aV most entirely explain the discordence hitherto inexplicable, between the ob servations of occultations of stars. Editor's Scientific Record, in llarf vV Majmine for March. Til Penaaj 1 van ia Germans a Caitaia rU by aa Oatatder. The New York Times of Wedtes day, in an editorial reviewing Mrs. (iibbon's book, says: A second and enlarged edition of a volume entitled Pennsylvania iMitch, has recently been published. The work is princi pal;.' composed of a number of essays on lilierent toiiics relating to tue c!j- of persons indicated by this title, and contains much valuable informa tion, thousrh it does not attempt to pres.-nt a full and systematic view of the entire subject, and indeed, that would have been scarcely practicable except in a book of a good deal larger size. The word "Dutch," m the title, is, ns the author explains, em ployed on account of its being popu larly used even by the people them selves. The word, properly, should be "(Jerman." Until within a few years past, the Pennsylvania Germans were a singu larly isolated class of our American population. We have spoken of the word "German" being a more appro priate designation than "Putch," but in reality they are neither Dutch or Germans, but Americans. In fact, ii w ould be difficult to name any com munities of whom a larger proportion hare been born in this country. The ancestors of many of them came to our shores more than a hundred, and some of them over a hundred and iiitv vears aero, lliere are, indeed, a go. d many Germans, in the strict sense of the word, iu Pennsylvania, and, to some extent, the' mingle with tl population of which we arcspeak ii. , but not very much more, we think, than they do with other por lions of the people. Indeed, the spo ken language of the "Pennsylvania Dutch" is not by any means pure Oerman ; and it is ralber an over- s'rained compliment to call it even a c.alect of German. They can usual ly understand genuine German pret ty well when they hear it, but their own language is a barbarous dialect, exceedingly limited in its vocabula ry, and having almost no literature vi haiever. It is now disappearing ry rapidly, and in less than half a ntury there will, in all probability, be scarcely a trace of it. The Pennsylvania German element i i the population of our country has, i.i some respects, leen very much un derrated. This arrises principally '.'mm circumstances connected with l heir language." The most intelligent jiart of them have for generations 'cn learning English and becoming '. lentified with the English-speaking ;pulation. The greater part of the Pennsylvania Dutch" stock has probably thus been merged in the general mass of the American people. Fifty years hence this will no doubt be the case with all of it, so far as language is concerned and with all of it in nearly every other respect. We have no means of giving a defi nite estimate of the number of persons in the country of the ancestry of which we are speaking, but it is much larger than most people, even in Pennsylvania imagine. One rea son for this is the manner in which many of the family names have been Anglicized. Very many individuals had, before learning English rather indefinite ideas as to bow their name were spelt, and some of those that did know desired to avoid the mis takes which English-speaking people often make in attempting to pro nounce the German spelling. The distinctive jK-culiaritieg of the Pennsylvania Germans have, as would naturally I supposed, been 1cm obliterated or modified by mod ern changes among the agricultural elasn than any other. The old-fashioned "IVunylvania Dutch farmers have generally lieen considered an xeerUingly ignorant act of people, ana a large pan ol tbetu were, in rcaiu to many subjects. At the wine time there were some of the moht irooratu among them, to far as iMK,k wtre concerned, who could, thirty r forty years ago, have taught the rn-ople of New England many thing of value in reference to acricul- iiivu iuey uardiv know yet, or .tauriair, men tbev have on r learned very recently. In no part of ,uc u'"u oiawa Las tanning been carried to greater perfection than among some of the most exclusively "Dutch" ncighlwrhoods in Berks and Lancaster counties. In none, proba bly, strange as it may 6ecm, has agri culture been conducted on more thoroughly scientific principles. How, with the little knowledge of books' that so many of them possed, they made out to accomplish this, is a ques tion which we are enable to an swer. The Pennsylvania finrmon. often spoken of as being very fond of ."Ue, , wut we see no evidence that they are on the whole any more so than other people. Tbey are BcJdom given to speculating and are apt to preier hard work to prospective rise in values. as a means or mmiu.. ..,uK .l .- ..- TWre are few er e populaJon of the Unitad States that calculate their .mjJJ resources so exclusively by actually have, rather than by bat the" ex'pect to have. Still, there is in many things, an immense amount of enterprise among them. tue two counties we have mentioned, ana of which ther constitute probably a larger proportion of the inhabitant than in any others, the roads, the bridges, and above all the railroads are such as few parts of the L nited States of the same extent and popu lation could show anything at all enual to. The Pennsylvania Germans aud their descendants are principally ..n, I in certain districts of the old- settled agricultural portions of the State. There are comparatively few of them 'n the coal regions. A great manr of them are in Philadelphia; but they hare generally become iden tified with the rest of the population. 4 lar number are in the West, though they have usually shown less Hicnncitinn to emicrate man IUU81 of our nconle in the old States. They are, on the whole, an exceed inirlr valuable nortion of thecommu- n;ir wWpvpr they arc. Many of the most eminent men of Pennsylva nia, in all departments of nserulness, are of this origin; and this will no doubt be hereafter still more the case -lpn the difficulties in regard to ed- nootiAIt TV h ieli their neculiantT ol language has occasioned shall have entirely disappeared. flaw TwaCataamaa Met. The Detroit Free Pre says:Chi settlers in Detroit have not been numerous. At no time since the first pig-tail was thrown to the breeze in this city has the number minted over six. and of late Tumgee nH Lunir-Sine have been the Bole repreesntati ves of theCelestial Empire to be found in tue cuy 01 m Xo doubt these two strangers in c Und have their lonesome sdcIIs of homesick ness and no doubt the silent tear has fallen from their almond-shaped eyes and mingled with the laundry starcn ao ihov thmi rVit nfma and P and the great ocean rolling between. A strange heathen struck the town .re cently, coming direct from San i ran eisco; and as he rambled up Jeffer son avenue with a satchel in one hand and a cold bite in the other he ,.nnnt,.rt T.nnfr Sin?. It was like a meeting between two long lost brothers in the great Sahara Desert. "Whoope woop how hoo!" ex claimed Lnng-Sing as h'13 eyes feel upon Ah-hoo. "Hip hoo how!" 6houted the stranger gladly, dropping his satchel and tossing up his hat. They embraced. Lung-Sing strain ed the stranger to his bosom, and Ah-Ho strained back. They got each other around the neck and tug ged and hogged. They got a back hold on each other and hugged again until there was a grunt from both. "How whoope!" shouted Lung Sing. "How-hip!" cried Ah-IIoo. Then the stranger fell on Lung Sing's neck, shoved his hat off, bus ted his paper colar, and tried to chew his ear, and Lung-Sing fell . . t A. against a window and Kept snout ing. " hoope how whodpe now ho ho whoope!" The stranger finally stood back, wiped away a tear on bis old bat, and Lnns-Sinir nicked op the satchel shook the kinks out of his back, and said something which probably meant. "Gome over to rov bole-in-ihe-wall. old boy. and tell me the latest news from China." r Faltaa la a III Haciaa Mr. Fulton, in his paper, the Balti more American, sars: Henry Clay was accustomed to call this portion of Kentucky through which I am traveling "God's own land," and there can be no doubt that it is a highly fa vored belt of country. The Blue Grass region is famous for its stalwart men, fine horses and cattle, and leautitnl women. The soil is rich, the landscapes attractive, the variety of the trees unsurpassed. God has done much for the country, but it does not seem that man has improved his opportunities to the extent that he ought to have done. There are many fine mansions, and some well cultivated estates, but the general aspect of the country is that of im providence and careless husbandry. The cabins of the working people have none of the air of thrift and comlort about them ; the stable doors hang on one hinge the gates are down and the fences patched up or tumb ling over. The difference is so great compared with the other side of the Ohio, that it is impossible to fail to note it On the railroads there are but few station-houses and seldom a platform upon which to alight. The people are, however, most kind generons and hospitable and make the stranger feel at home and wel come without requiring personal in troductions or indorsements. Every one is proud of Kentucky, and its immense resources are the first theme of conversation. I listen ed this afternoon for a half hour to an enumeration of the natnral advantag es that Kentucky possessed over the rest or creation by the Hon. Zeb. Ward, formerly representative in Congress from Frankfort. The state be said had more coal and iron than all Europe and instead of flagging down half way to China to find it, as ther were compelled to do in the old countries, it cropped out of the hillsides and rolled down from the mountains. I could not refrain from asking what Kentucky was doing to develop this great wealth, wheB the jovial Colonel responded, "There, a a it, i was atraid von were going to a6k that uuestisn." The flood of eloquence ceased, and he suddenly changed the subject ! XtCaiBlala. A merchant was one day returning irom marcet He was on horseback, and behind bis saddle was a valise filled with money. The rain fell with violence, and the good old man ws wet to the skin. At this time he was quite vexed, and mnrmurred because heaven had given him such hard weather fur his journey. He soon reached the border of a thick forest What was his terr r on beholding on one side of the road a robber, who, with leveled gun, was aiming at him and attempting to fire! But the powder being wet with the rain, the gun did not go off, and the merchant giving spurs to his horse, fortunate ly bad time U escape. As soon as be found himself safe, he said to him self, "How wrong was I not to endure the rain patiently, as sent by Provi dence I If the weather had been dry and fair, I should not probably have been aUvc at this hour. The rain, which caused me to marmur. came at a fortunate moment- to save my lite, and preserve to me tt y property, Tfea Law af Ae"olatlo.. Everybody knows that money makes money, but it is not everybody that pays attention to the tnorfu operandi by which this is brought about and the practical con sequences which follow. hcboolbovs are taught the rale of compound intere,,but nine out of ten of them forget all about it lor the remainder of their lives. Yet this principal has more to do with the accumulation of large fortunes than any other cause whatever ; and it has bearings on the ratio style of expen diture, both personal and natural, of which the practical character cannot be overrated. We read in a paper a few months ago of the death of an eminent Lon don capitalist, who left the enormous fortune of three millions sterling. This old gentleman was orer ninety years of age at his death and it is prettr evident that be was a man or quiet habits and moderate expendi ture, letting his capital accumulate from rear to rear by its own natural force. Now, it is only when it has been in operation for a long scries of consecutive years that we see what the force of compound interest is. For the first few rears the augmenta tion is almost imperceptible, but when once the power of increase has be come devcIopedit goes on at an aug menting ratio until the results are almost incredible. There can be no doubt that in the case just mentioned the wealth accumulated after the nat ural duration of life had been reached was far more than all the seventy years previous. If money can be invested at eigni per cent, and the interest reinvested at the same rate, it will double itseii in five rears. Allow ten years for this tJ take place, owine to loss of time and reinvesting, and we reach the remarkable conclusion remarka ble, we mean, to those who have not thought about it that if a man can lay by a thousand dollars at one and twenty, and it accumulate at compound interest it will amount to the enormous sum of thirty tuousand dollars if helivestothc age of seucnty to sixty thousand at eighty, and to a hundred and twenty thousand at ninety This is the secret of the larcre fortunes of the creat bankers and capitalists of Europe, whose money goes on accumulating for generations, augments with prodig ious rapidity after thirty or fifty years hare passed on. The process, however, may be re versed. A man wastes or spends a thousand dollars needlessly by the time he is two and twenty. W hat is the effect? If he lives till seventy be will be thirty thousand dollars Eoorer for it ; or wc will say, he will avc lost the chance of being thirty thousand dollars better off than he is. We then arrive at the general truth, that the younger a man is the more valuable money is to him. We have seen what a thousand dollars is to a man of twenty-one, vis: the making of a fortune ; but a thousand dollars to a man of fifty would be of comparatively small amount. Suppose a man begins life with economical habits, and by rigid self denial accumulates five hundred pounds by the time he is twenty -five. That sura will amount to a compe tency by the time he desires to be free from the cares of business, and he can thenfand indeed for years be- forc)have the pleasure of laying out his money freely, and without fear in gratifying his tastes or in doing good. But if he is inclined to gratify his tastes when young, to buy, we will say, expensive furniture, or to min gle frmclj in society, so that be never saved at all nntil he is five and forty what good will five hundred pounds do him then J It is of course, good in itself, but as the foundation of a com petency it is utterly inadequate. It would only amount to two thousand pounds at sixty-five, and not to com petency till long after three score and ten. The points of the whole matter are therefore this: Every dollar saved in youth is worth thirty dollars at old age; every hundred dollars spent in foolery or finery berore fi ve and twenty is simply three thousand dol lars thrown away of provision for the time when work must be a burden. Let our young men in business think of this. They are exposed on entering life, to innumerable tempta tions to spend. Let such be steadily re sisted. 1 be true course in youth is quick saving and careful economy By and by a time will come when this will bear its legitimate fruits. Then is the time for open-handed freedom in expenditure, whentbe judg ment is matured when the knowledge or the world is acquired, and when capital has been accumulated to such an extent that even if there is no more saving, there need be no further anx iety. Merchant's Manufacturers and Jteview. Hlatrafcant Wark far Ike Maatk. Any work that can be done now instead of the spring should not be neglected. Seed corn, not already selected should be attended to. Clean seed barley, oats, peas, beans, and spring wheat, and put in barrels, bins, ar bags ready for use; blow out a Uight grain and foul stuff. Sort over potatoes in the cellar and free the cellar from all decaying veg etables and fruits. Ventilate the cellar every day by opening the door and windows when the temperature is above freazing or not more than a degree or two below. n bitewash the cellar walls and al so the walls and partitions of pig pens, cow-stables, hen-bouses.. Ac- Clean and oil the harness and let it pot in though repair. Make an inventory of everything yon have on the farm and its estima ted value. Examine every implement and machine yon have; clean it; oil the bolt and tighten the nuts, and put in perfect order. Then wash it with petroleum. Go over two or three times and get on ns much as the wood will absorb. Mend bags, mark them, number them, and put them in their proper place. A piece of board say three feet acd six inches wide nailed on to one of the beams in the barn, makes convenient support for bags and for many other things as pails, baskets, tc. An hoar's work at night in the winter season will often save two hour's work in the morning, when everything is frozen up solid or is cov ered with snow. Salting animals requires judrment To let them ro without for several weeks and then give them all tbey will eat is a bad practice and some time! a dangerous one. The tetter plan is to have rock-salt where ani mals can lick it every day. arm corses that are doing little or nothing can be well wintered on chaff straw with a little corn mel) and bran, say 2 bushels chaff) 16 lbs. per &mj. Agricultural ios. oran, ana 4 lbs. corn-meal each A IIaufr Tears Asm. One hundred and ten years ago there was not a single white man in what in now Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana or Illinois. Then what is now the roost flourishing part of the United States, was as little known as the country in the heart of Africa itself. It was not till 1776 that Boon left his home in North Carolina to become the first settler in Kentucky. And the 'first pioneers of Ohio did not settle till twenty years later still. A hundred years ago Canada be longed to France, and Washington was a modest Virginia colonel, and the United States tho most loyal part or the Jintish Empire, and scarcely a speck on the political horizon indica ted the struggle that in a score of years was to lay the foundation of the greatest Republic of the world. A hundred rears ago there were but four small newspspers in America; steam engines had not been imagin ed, and locomotives and steamboats, and railroads and telegraphs, and postal cards, and friction matches and revolvers; and percussion caps, and breech-loading guns, and stoves and furnaces, and gas for dwellings, and India rubber shoes, and Spauld ing's glue, and sewing machines, and anthracite coal, and photographs, and chromo paintings, and kerosene oil, and the safety lamp, nnd com pound blow-pipe, and free schools, and spring mattresses, and wood-engraving, and greenbacks, and cotton and woolen factories, in anything like the present meaning of these terms, were utterly unknown. A hundred years ago the spinning wheel was in almost every family, and clothing was spun and woven, and made up in the household ; and the printing press was a cumbrous machine, worked by hand; and a nail, or brick, or knife, or a pair of shears or scissors, or a razor, or a woveu pair of stockiegs, or an axe, or hoe, 01 shovel, or a lock or key, or .a plate of glass of any sizo. was not made in what is now in the United States. Even in 1790 there were only seventy-five postoffices iu the country, and the whole extent of our postal routes was less than nineteen hundred miles. Cheap postage was not beard of, and had any one suggested the trans mission of messages with lightning speed he would have been thought utterly insane. The microscope on the one hand, and the telegraph on the other, were in their infancy as instruments of science; and geology and chemistry were almost unknown. In a word, it is true that to the cen tury passed have been allotted more improvements, in their bearing on the comfort and happiness of man kind, than to any other which has elapsed since the creation of the world. Ackeaa aa tka Aekaaaaaa. Many people having read frequent dispatches in the papers about the Acheenese, will be glad to learn where they lire. Acbeen forms the northwestern portion of Sumatra. It covers an area of 800 geographical square miles, and has 2,000,000 in habitants belonging to the Maylayan race. The Acheenese are tall, strong ly built and of a violent and haughty temperament, though they are much more intelligent and skillful than most of the other inhabitants of Sumatra. They are mostly Mohammedans. The capital has about 8,000 houses and 36,000 inhabitants. The country generally is mountainous, but exceed ingly fertile; pepper, coffee, cotton, tobacco and vegetables grow freely and produce abundant crops. Gold and precious stones are also found in great quantities. Although part of Sumatra is under the equator, the climate is very moderate. The air ishjaltbyin the mountain districts, but not on the plains or on the coast Acheen abounds with wild animals- there are elephants, tigers, buffaloes, rhinoceroses and orang-outangs. The latter are never killed by the natives, as tbey believe the souls of their an cestors have passed into these ani mals. Among the allies of the Acheenese are the Battas, a cheerful people, who are cannibals, and always take salt and lemon juice when tbey go to war, so as to be able to regale themselves on the flesh of their dead enemies. Faraat Treea. Many of the failures in the attempt to raise our more common forest trees from the seed, are caused by improp er care of the seed previous to plant ing. Ifeuch seeds as the chestnut and the horse-chestnut are allowed to become dry, their hard varnished shell is impervious to moisture, and this alone causes a majority of the attempts at raising such trees from the seed to fail. If they can be plant ed so as to be secure from mice, it is much safer to plant them in the autumn soon after they fall from the trees, ir tbey cannot be planted in their proper position, they may be mixed with earth and kept moist un til spring. Freezing will not hurt them. The elm and one or two other trees mature their seeds so early in the season, that tbey may be planted immediately, and will make consider able growth before winter sets in. In all cases where the seed-bed is so situated that it cannot be worked up in the spring, it will usually be found best to plant all kinds in the fall, as they will sprout very early in the spring, and will make root and growth much in advance of those not planted until late in the spring. Almost anr kind of forest trees may be success fully transplanted by cutting the tap root a rear before the attempt is made. If one or two of the larger roots are cut at the aamc time, it will be more certain to prove successful. A War Matkara. Consider it your religious duty to take outdoor exercise without fail each day. Sweeping and troting around the bouse will not take its place ; the exhileration of the open air and change of scene are absolutely necessary. Oh, I know all about Lu cy's gown that is not finished and Tommy's jacket,' and even his coat his buttonless coat thrown into your lap, as if to add the last ounce to the camel's back ; still I say, Up and out Is it not more important that your children in their tender years should not be left motherless and that tbey should not be born to that feeble constitution of body which will blight every blessing! Let but tons and strings go. Yon will take bold of them with more vigor and patience when you return, bright and refreshed ; and if every stitch is not finished at such a moment and it is discouraging not to be able to sym pathize in your best effort still re member that "she who hath done what she could" is entitled to no, mean praise, l our husband is un doubtedly the best of men, though there are malicious people who might answer that that was not saying much for him. StilL he would nev er, to the end of time, dream of what we are dying pt So accept my ad rice and take the matter in haad yourself. Freel jrarfl va. It is very easy for us to say we will forgive those who injure us, but it is quite another thing to put it into practice. Many peoplo forgive very much as the little school-girl did to whom her teacher said, "Mary if a naughty girl should hurt you, you would forgive her like a good little girl, wouldn't you ?" "Yes, ma'am," she said. "If I couldn't catch her." Another little Sunday School schol ar bad a notion of forgiveness very much like hers. His lesson had been on this subject, and his teacher asked him if, in view of what ho had been studying, he could forgive those who wronged him. "Could you said the teacher, forgive a boy, for instance, who, had struck you 1" -e-s, sir,"6aid the lad slowly after thinking a little; "I could I guess I could ;" and then added, in a husky tone, "I know I could if he were big ger than I am !" These little folks put us in mind of an old gentleman who had a quarrel with a neighbor, and thinking he was about to die, sent for the neighbor, that the difficulty might be settled be fore be died. "I can't bear," said he, "to leave this world while there is any bad feeling between us. But mind you," he said, with all the ener gy his feeble voice could assume, "if I get well the old grudge stands!" Ab, that is not like the teachings of Jesus ! The enemy is not ouly to be forgiven, but treated like a friend. True forgiveness empties the heart of all remembrance of old grudges and hate, and fills it with kindness and love. Sew HaxJeaa IHe-BUIera. The people of New Mexico origi nate some curious societies. In Me silla and Las Cruces they have or it is said they have what are known as "Pie-bitters," composed of persons passionately fond of pies. So strong has the rivalry grown between the two societies that a challenge resul ted, and the contest is reported to have been as follows. "The pies were to be mince and one inch thick, Mesilla to bite first, and no bite to count unless it reached the center of the pie. Mesilla piled up nine pies and shut down on them without an effort Los Cruces elevated the top of bis head and closed his jaws over eleven. (Great enthusiasm among his friends.) Mesilla came to the seratcb, or bite, manfully, and flopped his lip over a dozen successfully (Odds offered on Mesilla.) Las Cru ces, at this point, said. Well, it is time to stop this nonsense; bund me fifteen. They were given him: he smiled, laid the back of bis head on Lis shoulders, and came down on the bundle of pies like an alligator on a mouthful of flies. But his teeth did not come together. He struggled and ierked.but it was no use. Three of his teeth broke, and his hold gave way. On examining, a dog-collar was found in the center pie, and Las Cruces bad got his teeth tangled in the buckle. Jack Martin, the referee, decided in favor of Mesilla, on the ground that everything was fair in a nince pie. Bala iaCallfarala. The Sau Francisco Alia, of Febru ary 16, says that the fall of rain dur ing the preoeeding week had cut off the hope of sowing many thousands of acres in the vicinity of San Fran cisco Bay with grain in time for a crop, the low lands, and especially the adobe soils, being so full of water that two weeks of clear weather would not fit them for plowing. The Alia adds: "Experience has shown that fields sown in March with grain are unprofitable in three out of four years; and rather than make more expert menu in that line many farmers will let their land lie fallow. In the san dy districts the rain-fall has less effect the soil has not at any time been in bad condition for plowing, and the Gelds supplied with irrigation and not vet sown can be planted with cotton or castor-bean, which do not thrive in the cooler climate near the ocean. At Millerton, which is furth er south than any of the important grain districts in the ban Joaquin valley, the rain fall has been fourteen inches sufficient, so far, for all the purposes of the farmer." Attaatlveaesa. How much more we might make of our family life, of our friendships, if every secret thought of love blossom ed into a deed I W e are not now speaking merely of personal caresses These may, or may not be, the best language of affection. But there are words and looks and little observan ces, thougbtfulness, watchful little at tentions, which make it manifest, and there is scarcely a family that might not be richer in heart wealth for more of them. It is a mistake to suppose that re lations must of course love each other because they arc relations. Love must be cultivated, and can be in creased by judicious culture, as wild fruits may double their bearing un der the hand of a gardner ; and love can dwindel and die out by neglect, as choice flower-seeds planted in poor soil dwindle and grow single. At lantic. AccoRPisa to the orthodox creed of Islam, women will be saved with men and all be made young again all exeept one woman. Joseph, when Viceroy of Egypt was riding one day, when an old woman seized bis reins and demanded alms. He turned to look at her, aud was so shocked at her appearance that he involuntary exclaimed, "How terri bly homely you are 1" "Then," said the old woman, "Why don't you pray to Qod, who answers all your Erayers, and ask him to make me eautiful?" Whereupon Joseph lift ed up his hand and prayed for her, and instantly beheld ber standing by him, young and lovely, so lovely that be loved her and made her his wife. She lived long after him, and died very aged, and went to heaven, and is an old woman there now, and the only old woman there, for God makes all good women young again once and she can never be nude young again. A you no lady of Lyons, Indiana, recently said : "Some mon are always talking about patronizing their own town, always harping on that duty, and yet tbey go abroad to get mar ried, while here we allVtand wailing. I do hope that some of these men who marrr Eastern women will get cheated." It would be as dangerous for any fellow to trifle with the affec tions of that yoong lady as to put bis bead in the Lyon's mouth. The Jersey legislature has been asked to prohibit the use of tobacco in the public schools of the state. Dio Lewis, like Pharaoh's daugh ter, is taking a "good profit" out of the water. Miscellaneous. New Firm. SHOE STORE. SNYDER & UHL, Having pnrchaacd the Shoe Mtore lately owned by II.CBeertto, W Lire plnunr In ttllla? the ktUaUnn of tba public to the ftict that kin now aad axpMt to kep 00011011; oa hand aa oumpleto aa auurt meut oi Boots, Shoes and Gaiters, BOTH OF Eastern and Home Manufacture, as can be fbond anywhere. We ale will hare on haml constantly a fuU aupplj of SOLE LEATHER, MOROCCO, CALF SKINS, KIPS, AND LINING SKINS or all kinOn, with a full line or Shoe Findings. The HOME MANI,TALTURE DEPART MENT will he In eharze or N". B. Snyder, Esq., Whow repntatlun for making Good Work and Good Fits It SMoml to none in the State. The public la re eUulljr Invited to eall and exaniiie onr stork, as we are determined to keep goods as good aa the best and sell at prices as low as the lowest. SNYDEE& UHL, detf4 ARPETI. A very large Stock IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC OAKPETS, Oil Cloths &., LOW PRICED CARPETS, Of every kind, Wholesale and Retail. Henry McCallum, SI Fifth Avenue, (Near Wood Street,) PITTSBURGH, PA. apr23 Boots and. Shoes, HATS AND CAPS, Leather and Shoe Findings. J. Iff. Zimmerman Takes pleasure In calling the attention or the elU lieni or Somerset and vicMty to the faot that he has ened a store oa the Ninth-East earner of the uianwau, wir wer. wui always be kept oa nanu a complete aasoruneai ol Boots and Shoes, Of Kaftern aad home manufuctare, a 1 fee awl weU assorted stock oi HATS -A-ttSTID C-A S, Aad a great variety cr Leatknr aMi Shoe Findings Or an kinds. There Is also attached to the store a CUSTOM-MADE BOOT & SHOE DEPARTMENT, With ANDREW ZOOKascatter and Utter, which alone la a rattieient guarantee that all work made an in the shoo will net onlv fit the feet of eueum. era hat that auljr the heat material will he ased ana in Rest Workmen Will be emntoTed. The nubile are reeDeetfallT Inrited to eau and examine Ms stock. ep.S, 't- JOHN P. DEAN. AMD 9 fi-' Cae-pcatcra mmm Blackaanltka Taala havcla. Haaelea, Heytkea, Maatkea, Hsei, rerksaad Bakea,taa:atkrwltk larva aal varied alack ar Hardlwara mmm Catlarjr, aaltakla far tke traa, mi fraatly roe a reel rataa. ok-9 , THE WONDERFUL PET CANARY BIRD! (Patent just Procured.) WILL, slnst for boars can be auwaged by anr child. The latent aad moat woiulerfkll l. ventlon of the age. The eery thing for either par- a1 vt wwwm, bipiiii mm . SEND FOB SAMPLE AT ONCE. Big payto Agents aad to tke Trade. Satiifae Uoa guaranteed or money promptly returned. Sent pre-paid by mail to any addreaa, on receipt r 50 cents, or 1 for (1 00. Address JH.H M. R. ROBERTS A fX)., ITS Broadway, New York. $10 to $20 day, Agentswaatel erer here. Parties Ian free. A. BlairkCkK, tH.Loais.Mo mayH $72 00 Each Week. ssatrteUrle. J. WORTH naeyU rUmmm. Partteakus OU, St. Lalr, MT Miscellaneous. Dr. J. Walker' California Yin- fjar Hitters aro a purely Vosctalio preparation, made chielly from tho na tive herbs found on tho lower ranges of the .Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, tho medicinal prnjwrties of which aro extracted therefrom without tho use of Alcohol. Tho question 13 almost daily asked. "What i tho catiSGc! tfio unparalleled success of Vineuak Hrr tkius!" Our answer is, that they remove tho cause of disease, and the patient re covers his health. They aro tho great Llood purifier and a Iire-givinjyiriiiciple, a perfect Innovator and miorator' of tho svstem. Never beforo in tho history of" tho world lia.t a medicino lwrrit commit! miol posxcs.-iii tho remarkable rjuaiitip of TisKtiAB Littkiis in Ualins Ibo sick of every disease man U heir to. Tbey aro a gentle I'urfrativo a well a a Tonic, relieving Conpcstiuti cr Iaflansmation of the Liver aud Visceral Organs iu Liilious Diseases The properties cf Dr.. Walkers Viskgab Bitters are Aperient. Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious Laxative. Diuretic, Sedative. Counter-irritant Sudorific, Altera tive, and Anti-Diliotn. R. H. MeDOSALD & CO., Draggiats and Gen. Arta San Francisco, California, and oor. of Washington and Chariton Sts.. N. V Bold by all nraajglata and Dealers. This space is reserved for J . F. Blymyer, who has removed his stock into the most magni ficent hardware room in this place. He can be found in Room io. 3, Baer's Block. Seeds and Plants. C Trne !ap Cod Cranherry, best a "heVaTOrt for Ipland, Lowland, or l:ir- Cden. by mail, prepaid. 1 uO per loo, a 5 1(0 per 1.000. A Diieed Otaloime of thie and all t rolls. Ornamental Tree, tver frreens, Shrnh. Hulbm Kosee, I'lanf. Ac, nnd FRKSH FLOWKK AND OARIiKN SEKUS, the choicest collection in the country, with all n. nr. cities, will be sent icratia to any plain xlilnva., 2& sorts of either Flower, (janl.-n, Tree, FruitJ r.Tcnf rren. nr nem neeae. lor ei uu, sent ny niall, prepaid. Wholesale eaUIoirn to the trade. B. M. WATSON. Old Colon Nnrnrrics and Seed Warehouse, riyinoutu, .Mum. Established wi marl IH? l-Jillt IS Worlll UiOV . otlii r llttu-rn. K.r ntic at all Drue stores, Oroerrtc ami en In Medicines: also, wlmlcftalt anil n-t II RI:IS A F.WIStS'H. Wlinlcuilc lni?-i .: rv-ti-II at Tenth and I. IbcrlT streets IMttuhiirs-h. I'a. AMERICAN hToMACII l;lTI K.l:s Ml;. ' S1U an.l l.lbtrtr street. "r. rittsiiurfl). I'a. J. HORNER, Buggy, Carriage AND LIGHT WAGON MANUFACTURER, SOMERSET I.A., Is now prepared to manufacture to unler m .i. scriplioe oi ' CARRIAGES, HIOOIES. S CMC ICS. SPKINO WAOOXS, HACKS. SLEIGHS, Ac, AC, In tbe latest and most approved styles, and at the Lowes Potwible Prices. ALL la WAST on A First Clan Carriage, Or any other vehicle? are rrsp etfnlly inrited U call and ei amine his work. None but the very best material will be asd In the manufacture of his work, and aone but the best woiutniar Are employed In his establishment, some of whom have had an experlenM of over twenty rears In the baslaees. H. la, therefore enabled ta tarn out a flrslelaas vehicle, bath la antet of malarial .i wwa m mi seated when All work warranted to be aa mrm. eented when leaving the shaip. and satisfHetwai rsarantewl. All kinds of RKPAIRINO ANI PAINTING Itea. In a aeat and sabMaatieJ manner, and at tho shortwt aettes. H Is determined to .h all his work la saeh a manner, and at such prices aa to "bvrejt evybodr to patr.ti. ham UaU and naaht his work UferaWrhas iBf elsewaejw. . , . . JnW I. J. riORXER. Groceries and Confectioneries ' Thisniiace Is rerrrcd lir I '. F. Rlil A Bn I who have moved Inlo Ihe m?t magnificent irroeerv j rootn Id this place. They can bo 1'oond In JJuer ' new building, second dour from the corner. ! JUST i t u o a o o a eS o lO io RECEIVED S in in O n AT e-r- if. KIPPER'S 1 3 o GOODS,! fa 02 m U O NOTIONS, ft O h I I 2 Mi O t 09 1M ,O U R Arc. 1 Be sure to call an.l see, ami be cxnivinc- 3 C3 e J, as lliero are t. nwny articles kcjrf Si enn me ration. OPPOSITE e, .'.' AMI!.. IIIlt:. W a.a'k wina.wan swasat 3 Sl'WERSKT, PA. A. W. KSEPPEK. 11 ! W July 17 w. davis &r.Ro-s CHEAP Grocery anrf Confectionery, SOMERSET, PA. .. . mi. imyn; ti mis cvilllllH Bity that we hY putvliawtl tb Uruoerr anil ivn rWt iitnrv l U V LT A,-... . ... . . Harnet Hon, and haT m4e valuaMe SiMtttonn to th alrra1 Cos itix-fcof iooIb. We aclk all the FI-OUR, AND MEAL,, COFFEK, TEAS, SUGARS, RICE, SYRUPS, MOLASSES, FISH, SALT, SPICES, APPLES, FLAVORING EXTRACTS, DRIF.TJ AM) CANNED FRUITS. ALSO, COAL OIL, TOBACCO, CM ARS, SNUFF, BROOMS, BUCKETS, TUUS.AC. ' AH kinds French ami common CANDIES, NUTS, CRACKERS, FANCTi CAKES, PERFUMERY, AND TOILET ARTICLES, COMBS, BRUSUES, SOAP, Ac. MksT "ur,n"'nt f Toys, Ac, fertile little tX&J&SlT Uti ror, and Con. Davis Cheap Grocery, OPPOHITE THE BARN ET HOC S E. nov. f-Jy. I bry Goul., Have ii., w (..,,.,., A l.arire and (ompltp ,.BH Fall and Winter Wea Thhnr,BA.rn.l.... 1:k'h S"nrs, Ir'ss Cmm!s, Foil N la iris, loop Skirt, 35hn! 1c m loves, Ciii ?iai.!alt And Felt Over Sho MKX AXr l:oyv Clothing, Boots and ShceJ HATS AND CAPS, GLOVE3.&C. j j T.liilerf!"ll: wr fijf Vi:t . c f " ! :.. - hAR1)WA1!I; ! QUEENSWAR-, ! Carpets, Oil Cloth,. I A larjj. "J r: S A. L T i I5.v tin Ifarrol or.Na; Prices as Low as PossiN? C. k 0. HOLDKUnu i Somerset, Pa. Men's. Youths' and Bo-,3 r k IFaU and Winter We j t IllkV liitr irriMtlv iucr .t. ! tnr ".. . - . tlie Mm y.ir. isc :ir n w Ytari "i IclHltj Of : FINE EEABHIADE CLGI Hi l Fully e.ual. if n t ur..'ri.T. in ; v.l: jj an! tmih, to thp N't 'irft-rl .n:'b''.-:: $ me-Uunl !-?: hut l rali wh- j-r -r r- $ mots we have an txtinir? Cum Nt-tl rtHLxumilj JMJT'Iillrft With pju-; t,.. CLOTHINC Of Our Ouu Tai::if;:il:.n t WhWi we sniar.irM.e to be T ;vr ; u... ; i cheaper in lrwe than anv otl..-r I. u-c ir ft f For Boys cf Ail Agi ool aiitl ior) !itu;! ONE Pi?ICE! NO DEVIATIO: AH Gocls Mill t tl: 7.r: L: URLINC' FOLLANSBEE & 0 121 Wood St., Cor. Fifth Avs.. Oct. 30. Cook & Beents? FAMILY GEOCES Flour and Feed STOBS; We Wool, I nyint rv"eetfuliy a: " friends nnd the puld ic general!;. ' vicinity f Sumi-rftt. tli:it w; Iu" 1 1 Store on MALV CROSS STUEE- And In a.Ulliioa too lull Hue i th? ' Con f(t loner ie. o!tci:. Tobantis Usnr-vf We will eiHewenr, at all lime, t" it'.v ' c: tinners with lUe BEST Q !' A I. I T V 0 S FAMILY FLOUj; C 6 It X-MEAL, OATS' SHEI.LKU fOU -v OATS .f COIlS I'11' nit a.v, .v''-'v And every tliiDjs pertalnliiiuil tb ment. at the LOWEST POSSIBLE FBI l- i : CASH OSl Also, well eWvJ J OUwwarr: Stoneware. W..lcn al kiwis, an-i Which we a ill ll as chc-ip t -n'4', Ol - ii ..i.a vl'f sll be oti.iue4 Irom J'ur own jl-nwn'. a. ik.'t r..n.ai w. star OnMATVCRlSS Street, 1 X. IT, 4.