TIMELY TOPICS. Oalibftffca weighing twenty-three an J twenty-three and one-half pounds wo on exhibition at Stockton, Onl. It has been proposed to the Khedive f F'gJVt to convert into paper the cloth of the mnmmies, of which it is calculat ed 420, 000, 000 must be deposited in the pits of Egypt 1876, Turkey has had two sultans, five niuuHiribB, iorty cabinet ministers, one ronstitntion, one parliament, one war. lost three-fourths of its provinces, and una uBun jorceci into oankruptcy. Auy person in Massachusetts who permits his fowls to pass over or remain on a neighbor's premises, after being forbidden in writinc i. ononnli n ft kr a recent excellent law, liable to a fine of Sin t i nr xu ior t-aoa ouence. The proposal to block up the straits o! Belle Isle with the view of shutting us vans ice-Dearing ioroe of water, whose chilling influences are felt far in land in the lower portion of the Domin ion excites great interest in Canada, Acoording to recen; estimates wine is annually consumed as follows, per head: Spain, 130 litres; Franoe, 115; Italy, 109; Portugal, 108; Oreeoe, 84; Austria, 65; Switzerland, 58; Great Britain, 8; Bussia, 4; Prussia, 4; Sweden, 2; Nor way, 1. The litre is a little less than a quart Close imitations of silver dollars are made of block tin, bismuth, and pulver- ized glass. An immense number of these bogus coins are in circulation in the West They imitate exactly the true color and ring, and are about right in weight Et-Governor Seymour's recent letter to Senator Windt-m, of Minnesota, on water routes, contained about one thousand words, only eleven of which were words of more than two syllables. Such simplicity of style in a public speaker or writer is as rare as it is com mendable. William O. Butler, who ran for Vice President on the ticket with General Cass, still lives in Carrollton, Ky., and is about ninety years of age. His wife died several years ago, and having no children, he lives alone with such re trospections as are awakened by his his tory and usefol life. The Point Keyes estate in California is credited as being the largest dairy farm in the country. It keeps an aggre gate of 4,500 cows, whose milk is worked up by the thirty dairies. Among the items credited to this "ranch" is 550,- 000 pounds of butter, valued at $175, 000. It is quite a "cow pasture." A woman who has lived for some time in Nevada, disguised as a man, was married to another woman last autumn. The bride has just revealed the secret, explaining her Bilence by saying that she did not know what course to pursue; she was ashamed to acknowledge that she had been so imposed npon, and shrank from admitting the truth. The project of opening a new mint at Hong Kong, China, is now being agitat ed by the British government The English rind that the American trade dollar has complete possession of the commercial field as a medium of ex change, and think it will be a paying in vestment to open a mint to coin a similar piece of English money. The cost of the proposed new enterprise will be 250,000. General Trepoff, the head of the Rus sian police, was in Poland thirty years 1 go, when the Grand Duke Constantino received from a man on the street a box n the ear. The man fled but could not & found, but the rainor spread rapid ly. Trepoff went to the palace and -roposed to publioly announce that he, nd not the Grand Duke, had been track. The offer was accepted, and :-cpoff was created a lieutenant That egan his career. Mr. EdiBon, who it will be remember 1 is somewhat deaf, writes to a Boston atleman that he has invented a new phragm which, attached to his ear, 1 so gather and condense sound vi ations as to enable him to hear with a the slightest sound, even that of the iping of a pin. It is his intention t he future to apply this to the phono ph, so that speeches or debates may registered at a distance from the . iker. At present one may apply it Lis ear in a crowded assembly and lob. the words of a speaker at an al t incredible distance. "As tight as sardines in a box" is a jramon expression. Its appropriate- H9 becomes apparent when we know iere the sardines are packed, the oil in : ich they are cooked and canned is re expensive than the fish themselves. ,v uce it is to the interest of the packer j-ut as many .as possible in the can. . .j small and most valued sardines are ry delicate and require great care i handling. As they are a migratory h, eanners sometimes have several 'stories at various poiuts on the coast as to be near the schools. The period f canning in Franoe ranges from the iddle of May to the middle of August. i French paper earnestly deprecating luesting, says; "A bird's nest con- on an average Ave eggs, which 11, in the natural course, become . little birds. Each little one eats y fifty flies or other insects, and this ..lumption extends over five weeks. t.ing it at an average of thirty days. hhttll find the number of flies des yod by each nest of birds to be 7,500. every fly eats daily a quantity of :!jwers, leaves, &0., equivalent to its Height, until it attains its maximum of rowth; in thirty dayB it will have eaten tlower a day, a flower which would ve become fruit Each fly the term e I, we presume, for insects gener t.Uen having, we will eav.J eaten fruitu in thirty days, the 7,500 't a nest of birds would have use a loss to us of 225,000 , apricots and peaches. We v .f thtj matter tn the FARM, GAUD EN ANI UOUSEHOLP; Farm a ad Mnrdra Nwtva. To maintain a herd of cows success fully it is well to have one-sixth of them two years old, one-sixth three, and the same number of the ages of four, five, bii ana seven years. mere is no reason why green peas should not be eaten during the entire summer. The majority of the people, however, who have gardens content themselves with one or two plantings of tins wholesome and delicious vegetable, Frequently we see grape trellises made wholly of wooden bars, which the vine tendrils cannot clasp or climb on, Vertical wires, eight inches apart, are neatest, and carry the weight of shoots loaded with fruit without yielding, but light rods or neat twiggy brush answer well for the vine to climb by, and such support is essential for free and perfect growth. Some sensible writer truthfully says that most diseases of cattle are pro duced uy wrong treatment too mwsa feed at one time, too little at another: too ricn at one time, too poor at another, etc. If all horses and cattle were fed and watered and used properly there would be little disease, and all ailments could be cured by simple remedies, whioh every man has or may have at hand." Ploughing green crops into the ground to act as a manure was long practised by the anoient Romans, and is done in Italy and in many other countries where the soil and climate are favorable. This mode of fertilizing is specially suited to warm countries where vegetation is rapid and luxurious. In the southern countries of Europe the harvest is early and the crops removed in time sufficient to allow the maturity of the green plants the same season. The best time to cut wheat, according to a Missouri farmer, is " when it is passing out of the stiff dough, or when the kernel is plump yet Boft enough to mash with the hand ; but when so cut it must not lay many hours in the hot sun to cure, but should be bound immedi- atelv and Bet up' in shocks very Boon after. If wheat stands on the haulm until ' dead ripe ' it will make less ami inferior flour, because the bran will be thicker and harder and will ' out np ' in grinding, thus giving the flour a darker Buade. The shear should be made of medium size and should be laid by the binder either to right or left as need be, so that four or five swathea are thrown together, whioh will save much time in shocking. " This timely item appears in the South ern Husbandman . To destrov hues on squashes and cucumber vines dissolve a tablespoonful of saltpetre in a pailful of water, put a pint of this around each hill, shaping the earth bo that it will not spread much, and the thing is done. The more saltpetre, if you can afford it it is good to vegetable but death to animal life. The bugs burrow in the earth at night and fail to rise in the morning. It is also good to kill grub in peach trees only use twice as much,, say a quart to each tree. There was not a yellow or blistered leaf on twelve or fif teen trees to whioh it was applied last season. No danger of killing any vege table with it a concentrated solution applied to beans makes them grow wonderfully. Protecting Cornfields from Bird. The crow, the blackbird, and the bluejay are the only birds that molest our cornfields, and this for a period of about two weeks, starting from the time the corn is up. To protect the fields against their depredations many devices are resorted to, two of which at least are effectual, the rest doing little or nothing in averting the mischief. The first is the running of a twine around the field, elevated six to eight feet from the ground on poles; but this requires time and is somewhat expensive. The other is to sow corn over the field to feed the hungry birds. It is not necessary to extend this sowing over more than a small portion of the ground at two or three different places, at the head lands. The depredators would soon discover the charitable donation, and be perfect ly satisfied with the arrangement, leav ing the young plants unharmed. In pro viding the remedy the time spent would be trifling, and the whole cost from a half to a bushel of corn. But it should be remembered that the crow never eats hard corn. If found hard it is car ried off, six to eight grains at a time, and buried until it becomes soft There fore, the corn, before being scattered, a portion at a time, should first be well soaked. With this precaution, we think we can promise any cornfield to be free, from the depredations bo much com plained of in certain seasons. German town Telegraph. , To Tell A Fully Ripened Water-Melon. When the melon begins to change color inside, and its seeds to turn black, a small black speck, scale, or blister, begins to appear on the outer cuticle, or rind. These are multiplied and en larged as the fruit matures. A ripe melon will show them thickly sown over the surface. A partial development only indicates half-ripened fruit. A full crop of blisters reveals its perfect ripeness. When hundreds of melons are strewn along the sidewalk you will have to look pretty sharply to find one that exhibits a satisfactory "escutcheon," to borrow a term from M. Gueuon. But it is un failing when found, ord by following this guide you may walk awaj with your melon with the most entire confidence. The blister is only to be seen npon a close inspection, but is plainly visible when that is given. P.nltry Rote. Powdered hellebore and sulphur, mixed, is good to sprinkle around the nests of sitting hens. Arrange for placing chicken coops among your garden vegetables, for the chicks will keep in check the insect pest. Gapes in chickens or turkeys can be cured by giving them a mixture of hen's oil and camphor two drops of camphor mixed with three drops of oil. Open the chick's mouth and drop the mixture down its throat, then rub oil on the out side of the neck. Red pepper mixed with the food, weekly, will keep the fowls in healthy condition. To bring a chilled or wet chick or young turk to renewed life, hold it over a smudge or smoke from a wood fire. This remedy will resuscitate a chick v ben no f ir f,one to appear lieless. Vegetable and Animal Life in the Tropics. In recrsrd to the vegetation of the tropics Mr. Wallaoa in his newly pub lished work, '"Tropical Nature," finds that although the primeval forests of the equatorial zone are grand and over whelming by their vastnesa, and by the display of a foroe of development rarely or never witnessed m temperate climates. yet the comparative soarcity of flowers will prove surprising, and the absence of animal life for great distances will also impress the traveler with astonish ment. Hardly does the traveler see the same tree repeated in close neighbor hood; he goes toward one like the tee he is seeking, but it proves on examina tion to be distinct But if flowers and animals are few and far between, insects are not; butterflies especially are bril- liant features in the tropical laudscape. The largest and showiest are those which move in the most leisurely man ner; they owe both the preservation of their colors and the slowness of their flight to immunity from the attack of birds and beasts. Ihese will not eat them. Other kinds that are not dis tasteful mimio exactly the coloring of the uneatable butterflies, and thus pro tect themselves. Wasps, ants aud bees furnish an extraordinary variety both as to appearance and habits; leaf insects and stick insects copy leaves and twigs so exactly that they deceive birds. The brilliant colors of the birds are only reoognized after long search for them among the srpnrently deserted woods. the most noticeable and most abundant belonging to the parrot, pigeon and woodpecker families. Next to birds, and perhaps, to the less observant eye, even before them, the abuudanoe and variety of reptiles form the chief charac teristic of tropical nature. Lizards "fere by far the most abundant in individuals. and the most conspicuous; they consti tute one of the first attractions to the visitor from colder lands. They literally swarm everywhere. Snakes are much less prevalent Speaking of monkeys, Mr. Wallace asserts that the prehensile tails of the American varieties are used as a fifth hand, "and is constantly used to pick up small objects from the ground." He idso confirms the old stories about vampire bats. Several spe cies are blood suckers, and abound in most part 8 of tropical America, being especially plentiful in the Amazon Val ley. Their carnivorous propensities were once discredited, but are too well authenticated. Horses and cattle are often bitten and are found in the morning covered with blood; repeated attacks weaken and ultimately destroy them. Some persons are especially subject to the attacks of these bats, and as native huts are never sufficiently closed to keep them out, these unfortunate individuals are obliged to sleep muffled up in order to avoid being made seriously ill, or even losing their lives. The exact man ner in which the attack is mode is not positively known, as the sufferer never feels the wounds. Mr. Wallace states that he himself was once bitten on the toe, whioh was found bleeding in the morning from a small round hole, from which the flow of blood was not easily stopped. On another occasion, when his feet were carefully covered up, he was bit ton on the tip of the nose, only awaking to find bis face streaming with blood. The motion of the wings fans the sleep er into a deeper slumber, and renders him insensible to the gentle abrasion of the skin, either by tooth or tongue. This ultimately forms a minute hole, the blood flowing from which is sucked or lapped up by the hovering vampire. The largest South American bats, hav ing wings from two to two and a half feet in expanse, are fruit-eaters, the true blooded suckers being small, or a medium size, and varying in color in different localities. They belong to the genus Phyllostoma, and have a tongue with horny papilla at the end; it is probably by means of this that they abrade the skin .and produce a small round wound. Two Poetic Curiosities. By first reading the following lineB separately as though they were two verses, and then reading all the way across, they express opposite meaning " I always did Intend To take to me a wife: Hingis uiy life to spend Would grieve my very life. it mucb deligntetn me To think upon a bride, To live from woman tree I can't be Battened. The female to my mind, The Joy I can't express, I ne'er expect to find . So great In singleness. A bachelor to live, I never could agree. My mind I freely give, A married man to be." A similar result will follow in the verses below by first reading the lines in regular order and then coupling the first and third and second and fourth lines: " The man must lead a happy life, Who is directed by a wife; Who's free from matrimonial chain, 1 lure to gaffer for his pains. " Adam oould nod no real peace Until be saw a woman' face; Wheu Eve ws given for a mate, Adam was In a nappy state. "'Tie in tbe female heart appear Unwavering faith and love sincere; Hypocrisy, deceit and pride In woman's nature ne er reside. " What tongue is able to unfold The female virtues we behold? Tbe falsehoods that in womau dwell Are almost imperceptible. " Hanged be the foolish man, I say. Who will not yield to woman's sway! Who changes from his singleness, Is sure of perfect blessedness." The Original Purchase or New Turk. The following is an exact translation of the report of the original purchase of the island of JNew York: High and Mighty Lords Yesterday arrived the ship The Armitof Amsterdam. She sailed from the River Mauritius ( Hudson), in the New Netherlands,on 23 September. They report that our folk there are prosperous and live in peace; their women have borne children there already. They have purchased from the Indians for the sum of sixty guilders (824) the island Manhattan, which is 11,000 morgen (13,920 acres) large. They have already sowed grain by the middle of May and reaped by the mid dle of August. Samples of summer crops have come, such as wheat, rye, barley, outs, buckwheat, canary-seed, beans and flax.- P. Schaqhen. Amsterdam, 5 November, 1026. What is the difference between'a man struck with amazement and a leopard's tail ? One is rooted to the spot, and the other is spotted to the root. Latest Styles In Hair Dressing. The variety of styles in coiffures (we moan bair dressing) is asgreats ever, While following the fashions in a gf n ersl way, the first thing to be consider ed, whether in a dress or a coiffure, is to consult one's own taste and sense of what is or is not becoming. It is impos sible to give rules for this purpose The eye must be the guide. After con sidering whether your face is round, long, or oval, gentle( gay, or sad; whether your stature is tall or short; whether you are slender or gracoful, or stout of form or vigorous in carriage and gesture: whether your complexion is fair or dark, your hair blonde, or black, or brown, curly, wavy, or straight, you must make the question of becomiugneps or not the principal object in your se lected style of coiffure. Then take from the fashions whatever may agree with this sure rule, and you Will look well, if not beautiful. Lieave eccentricities and attempts at the introduction of new styles to ladies whose beauty, marked individuality, fortune, or position in so ciety gives them authority for bringing out new fashions and making innova tions. The prevailing idea in coiffures at present is to make the head look as small as possible. An abundant fringe of hair covers the greater part of the forehead and temples. This may be curled, waved, frizzed, or arranged in lovelocks to suit the peculiar style of your face, whatever that may be. A coquet of Mercedes can be made to form the fringe. Another fringe falls on the nape of the neck, and this may be curled or waved or rough or smooth to suit the fancy. Long curls dangling from the chignon are exploded in this style of coiffure. All of the hair is then combed together, with or without a parting, and arranged in a small knot just at the back of the head, in such a manner as round off its shape as much as possi ble, while not increasing its size. Such is the general aspect oi this " ooinure D ana," as it has been named. By way of ornament two Greek bands of gold or silver filigree are added for evening wear, and a few diagonal puffs on the top of the head, with a small comb, when the face requires high dressing. For dressy morning toilets tortoise shell bands are used instead of gold or silver ones, and for full ball or reception cos tumes a jeweled tiara or diadem, in Greek form is substituted. Nothing droops or trails at the back with this coiffure. Save the short fringe, the nape of the neck is left entirely free. But all ladies do not adopt this bare, severe style of head-dress. Some are even returning to tne nat, waved ban deaux drooping over the upper part of the ear, and quantities of bock hair flowing over the shoulders from under a long, flat chignon, tied with a flat bow of ribbon just above the nape of the neck; but a woman must be young, ele gant and exceedingly beautiful to adopt so very trying a head-dress. As before j remarked, however, the latitude of choice in really fashionable coiffures is as ample as any one could desire, and any quantity of false hair is added with out increasing the apparent size of the head. False fronts and false fringes for the nape of the neck, false switches and false puffs can be utilized to make up any of the fashionable head-dresses of the day, as well as the Diana coiffure de scribed above. Fashion Notes. Satin is to be worn all summer. The new redingotes are only short princess dresses. Bright red silk pipings are used on brown dresses. Two shades of brown are much used in walking costumes. Costumes of black India cashmere have vests of white satin. Some Frenoh dresses have three vests, one above the other. Flower head-dresses rise to a point at the center and have drooping fringes. Cotton materials embroidered in gold thread are among the things to come. A bride who sends cards to friends in deep mourning should make the first call. Dark mastio gray silk is the most stylish material for a wedding traveling dress. Black silk stockings are again worn. They have bars or dots of embroidery on the instep or are clocked. Cameos on black ground-work, .the fig ure in a flesh-colored layer of stone, are much liked just now. Thick pinked ruches of silk of many colors will be used to trim white India cashmere dresses this year. Lawn dresses have a folded scarf in stead of an overskirt It lies smoothly across the front breadths and is plaited fan-fashion at the back. Women with light hair should never wear gilt or gold pins in it. Their tresses are really drab, and the glitter of the .gold makes them look dull and dead. " The favorite engagement ring in New York is a thread of gold supporting a solitare diamond, but a sapphire and emerald, or a combination of all three stones, is sometimes used. Three pecrls, pink, white t nd cream-color, are some times.set together for engagement rings. Why Gold Changes Color. It is well known that the human body contains humors aud acids, simi lar in action to, and having a like tendency toward, baser metals, as nitric and sulphuric acids have, namely, to tarnish or dissolve them, varying in quantity in different persons ; of this theory we have abundant proof in the effects which the wearing of jewelry produces on different persons. Thou sands wear continually, without any ill effect, the cheaper class of jewelry with brass ear-wires, while if others wore the same article for a few days they would be troubled with sore ears ; or, in other words, the acids oontained in the system would so act on the brass as to produce ill results. Instances have occurred in whioh articles of jewelry of any grade below eighteen carat have been tarnish ed in a few days, merely from the above named cause. True, these instances are not very frequent ; nevertheless, it is as well to know them, aud they are sufficient to prove that it is not in every case the fault of the goods not wearing well as it is generally called but the result of the particular constitution by which they are worn, The Jeweler, A rowprrnl Telecop. Sometimes Mr. Fair's class is turned upon the sun, and the intense rays of the latter make a focus a short distance irom the end of the tube whioh is capable of setting anything combustible on Are. yesterday Mr. Fair was exhibiting the instrument to some friends, when, turn ing his back to it, he remarked : Gentlemen, sinoe I began my astro nomical duties, contemplating the vast universe, observing the sidereal move ments of the stars, the moon'B eoliptio, and the axial rotations of other orbs, I have been a changed man. What I once rend in books I now know by actual ob servation. Take the Bun, for instance: 853,000 miles in diameter, over 1,253, 000 times the size of the earth, and ex ceeding the combined mass of planets 750 times." Ilore the Colonel backed up into the focus of the instrument, aud a jet of flame rolled up from his coat-tails. Those present, not wishing to interrupt a gentleman while speaking, said noth ing, ana the Uolonei continued: " I see spots on this planet over 6,325 miles in diameter from the umbra to the penumbra. There is a mean Suf fering Jonathan I What the deuce is the matter with my clothes 7 Here the flume, getting through the Colonel's trousers, forcibly reminded that the sun, although millions of miles away, excites a powerful influence on inflammable bodies. There was a shout of laughter from the guests, and Mr. Tritle, turning on the hose, put the Are out The lecture was not concluded, but the Colonel says he still thinks he has tbe most powerful telescope on the coast. Virginia City Chronicle. Co-Operatire Funning in England. The Bishop i f Manchester lately made a speech at the co-operative congress in England, recommending cooperative farming. He gave an account of a co operative farm near Assiugton, which lie visited iu 1867, after :t had been in oper ation for Ihirty-seven years. It was started by John Ourdou, the squire oi the village, in 1830. He rented to fit teen meu sixty acres at nine dollars an acre per annum, and lent them $2.0h) for tools, stock, manure, eto. Iu 1867 they had long previoudy paid the loan; hadiucreoed their shareholders from fifteen to twenty, and the amount of hired land from sixty to one hundred and thirty acres, for which they paid 11,000 a year. The farm was managed by a committee of four, chosen by ballot, portion going out every year. The bishop found the land in admirable or der, and the animals and poultry in ex cellent condition. In 1854 Mr. Gurdon, finding the experiment very successful. started thirty chosen men on a second oo-operative farm, each contributing 817.50. He also loaned them 82.000. They began with seventy nores, but by 1877 were hiring 212 acres at a rent of $1,625 a year, and had $0,000 worth of stock, besides having paid off the $2,000 loan and supported their families. The bishop thought that a class of co-opt r i tive agriculturists would be a most im portant and stable element in the enm mon wealth, and the Earl of Ripon, in a subsequent speech, said that he hod also visited the farms and fully agreed with him. A mammoth peanut grown on the farm of J ule Charleville, near Plaquemines, La., when opened by a young lady in New Orleans, who had been requested by the owner, was found to contain the bones of a minnow. The only explana tion is that the minnow may have caught in the vines during the overflow of the form, which was caused by a crevasse. mother! Mother!! Mather!!! Dan'l fail to procure Mrs. Winslow'i Uoothtng Byrup for ail disease incident to the period of teeth ing in children. It relieves the child from pain, ooree wind oolic, regulates tbe bowel, and, by giving relief and health to the child, give rest to le mother. It is an old and well-tried remedy. Brswa Brtskfut Cake. One cupful each of graham and white flonr, one teaspoon Dooley'it Veast Powder, one pint sweet milk, one egg, a little salt; separate white and yolk of the egg. aud beat thoroughly. Bake in heated irons, and in a quick oven. If any of the readers of this paper are grow ing deaf, let them get at once a bottle of Johnson's Anodyne Liniment. Rub well be hind the ears and put a little into the ear with a reamer. It would be sotm that the commonest kind of common sense ought to prevent a man from buying trab, simply because he can get a big pack for 25 oents. Bheridan'a Oava'rj Condi tion Powders are strictly pure, and are w rtb a barrel of such stuff. Frank Leslie, Esq., of the "Illustrated Week'"," says : " For some time past I have been using Burnett's Coooaine, and think it far preferable to anything I have ever nsed for the hair." CHEW The Celebrated " Matchless " Wood Tag Plug Tobaooo. Th Pioheu Tobaooo Oompaut, New York. Boston, and Ohio ago. The Oren-teel uiacaTery af th Ac la Dr roblaa celebrated Venetian Liniment I 10 years before tha public, and warranted to core Diarrhea, Dyeentery. Oolio, and Spaama. taken internally ; and Group. Onronig Rheumatism, Bora Throata, Oute, Bruieee. Old Scree, and Paint in tha Limbs, Back, and Oheet, externally. It haa never failed. No family will aver be without it after onoa giving it a fair trial. Prioe. 40 oeota. Da. TOBIAS VENETIAN UORtiB LINIMENT, la Pint Bottles, at One Dollar, ia warranted superior to any other, or NO PAY", for the cure of Oolio O nta, Bruieee, Old bores, ate. bold by all Drnggista. lpot I O Park ARFOIPK FOR OURTNO CON-ITMPTION yn gratia by D H H.J a m 1033 Rsce bt , PhiU, AC-ENTrt-Hand for catalogue rednced prioea new stock. Continental C'h ooio Co., Wa ren rU , fi. Y. flTT'rJQ KITVOiVKKM. fnoe List tree. Addnaa uUilQ Great Western Oon Works. Pitiebnnc. P. $1 0 8 $25 XArtZ Novelties Illustrated (-tt 4--f 4- 1?yoa b' mail on L)ataloa. A W LI U 11 U 1 1 UU application to J. U. BUKFORD'H HONS, M anof act orlng Publishers 1 4 1 to 1 47 Franklin htreet, Boston, Mae a. Kstabliahed nearly Dfty yeara. HE THAT JUDGETH Withi.ut Knowledge ia a fool, and Wisdom is not In hlin. Yon .an ,et knowledge of lh. IS Mi Fir.. Tod Wageo Heal., ao!d on trial, freight paid by na, no money aaked till aa isfied, by aending for FRKB PRICK LIbT. JONH8 OK B1NOHAMTON, Bing hamton, N. Y. SITUATIONS For active, capable, trustworthy Men to canvass in their own county and take ordera for Nursery block at Cood Monthly Salaries for tboae who auoceed Previous .xuerieno. not eaen- l al. tor full lexuia, address CHASE BKOTHERa.Rocheater.N.y, Bboww's WnoitomAI. TnorwF, tor ronM mil onMs. linitini r-!M price if'liu onn mIaiI nrto Mi I O nnli it I !1A fl. nr. . TVMninsloil, PI. J. A OTeoth. Ant winttul. 4H twit Mil Ins arttolM tn Itm wnrlil. (me umnll frm Allnn J A V ItKONMON, Dntrolt, ttlab A DA Y to Ant cnTln for the Ktrxalile Vltlr. Trrn snrt Onlfll .Km. Aricli-on P. (. VICKKHY, AnumtJt, Mln. ELECTRIC BELTS. rfoot cr for prftmiitnr rlftblHtf. Bwnd for elr nlr. im, Ij. KAKK, Hrpx1wy, Nw York, , AGENTS. READ THIS I W. will DM Arit MHlnrv of MltMl per Month nd KiimnuM to noil our Nw and Wondwfal I ftrfal Inreik Unnn. Add SHRKMAN A t)U. Murxhiill Mloh. K. IIM.KAIIAM V TO.'ft 8uprior in diicn. Not ftqnaloC to quftlHy, or timkvir. Auk yonr Jnwlnr for (hum Agonoy-H Oortl-jndt Ht, N. Y SIO. $20. $50. $100. Inmrird JncHolonnlt In Rtocki (Option r PnfllwM). if sur ro1 to rapid fortune. Kufl rtnt-ail and Otnofni .Stook Kiohftnn KeporU fr-. AiIiUmm T. POTTHR WHIHT UU. " ni, j,i) rrtii ntrtWEt nww inn, Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sour Stomach Sick Headache. ConsnmptiQn Can Be Cnrel . PULSION A i. a etrtain rrmtdw tor th. .are I'ONMi'iM I'TIO end .11 di. ot th. I.n. od Thronl. It invliro-itm b. brittn, toniw op th. t.ni. mftfcna tb. wnaii anona, and ! plou.nt to US. Pric. On. Ikllr par bottle t Ltruiririau or aom 07 o. PropnMor on iooipto( price. A pmphl.t onntinin Imhla advio. to HoaHmollTNi mull cartlHoAt. ol AOTnAL OUR.., and full dirition. for oin .uoora- f itnl. Mh ho(llo.or will b nl (rto nj wldrM. ).SUAK O. MOM Kn, I H OonUndt Htrtwt, Wow York. TRADR MARK. DR. DECKER'8 CKLKBRATED EYE BALSAM Id A SURK VVRK INKLAMFD. WKAK EYKS, w V STYES and Nl LV Nslstl.B BY At -tr DI'.POT. IMJ .A KNT BV M STYES and S( It 1C 1 VI LIDS. Lh llIUKiUIHTS 1IOWEIU, N. Y AIL rOit 3. it YflioVants Machinery? W. hv. for Hal ov-r I.VOO new hi d Moondhand naoi.tna. at prioea far below II tit tra. valne, s mptia- HVV.MIL,I. and tlENKKAI. WOOD. WOKKIM. .HACIUNKltY of .ier, d.wiptl n. P.rtuble niid NiMilonnry TKA.I t-NtilNKM aad HOILKUMfrora 1-8 to BOO b. p., WAT K- WIIKKLM, UHI.Sr MILL .IAII1I KKY. MAt lllNIHTH' nnd 11 1. A f K M l I T II M TOOLS of v.rr variety. PIJ M PK, PI UK APPA. It TIIH, t'OTTON and WOOI.KN M4 HIM. KKY, HKLTINIi, t lltUULAK KAWN,' MllArriNU, Pl'I.I.KYW, etc., nr.. all fully daaoribod in our print ed List No. 17, with prion ann.x ed, whioh w. will mall to th. addrou of any party daalr- ina nuehlnary npon reoeipt ot il-mp. Stat. Dlain'r lut what machi .or machine roa er. In want or. and don't buy until you have uarfnlly read onr lit of th. areateet bargatne ever offered li the way of n.w an I aeooid-hand maohtne.. Ltw epeoial tr Ight ae obtained tor our ouatomera to any swiilon ol th. umtaoj stale or uanaoa. Aaareaa S. F. FORSAITH & CO., MiicliiQists and General Machine Dealers, MANCHESTER, N. H. N. B Villa and Ton Fire Enmnri, Hoaa Oar-rtaa-.a. Ladder Truoae and Kir. Kq.uipui.nta a ipcoialty. Band for Fir. Knsin. nroularn. A GOOD PLAN. Tb bi and mott popular plan for operating stocki la thai of oorabinina oapttal of various umii in whioh bara ara taauail. which baa bten midi to oocaMful bf tha firm of Meaara I -awrano A Go., Bank art and Brokara, W Kiohauaa Place, New York, tha pmAta of whioh ra divided pro rata among tha baiaboldara at ttia tipirationuf thirty days from dta of orti.loata. By oontro 1 n a )ar otpital. tha oiieraiioni oonaa quanUy ban of yrat miRnitudn, prottubla rtMuItt aia uniform and mra ertatn. For example, within a month you made fJ.OOO noon an investment of lluo, upon ti& i he profit would be $j00. An iuvestment of $10 would py 5U, making ft per cent, during the month. An In V eat men t of flut) wnuld pay 91,U protit, miking 10 par cent. ; an investment of &H) w nnd pay ftl.btiu proht, mtking 6 par oant. ; and so on, according to the market. The ttun'a eiroulsr eipUins everything, hend for it. Tie Hditor of tha Brtntklyn Journal tB: "The vary aatlafMctory results arisma from invetttmenta marie in ' rmiis oomtiinations by friends, led us to order IW shares, and we forwarded our clinck I- r t to Messrs. I-awrenoe Jk Oil. b Kich ge I'Mc-, Nt-w Yo k, with a rtquat to lnvft In .n of thvir ombu.aiins. By return mail I e ino osed a car ittoate rprwtenting JU shr a. We rw sated this oen tio te and had almost forgotten tha irtnt ctl n, for s few days, when uneipeotediy a nol.oe by lue-l waa reoeiied, atst n that they had made a tarn ti h the romtint ion in which wn weie interested. Buying Delowsre, I.sctawanna A Western at MS and a II ng t ftM, ealiaina a proflr of one per cent., being qitivaleot t $lil i roftt on each liiO ahaiea in I ha oom b uttiuM Fjiluwing thia fri-m time to time until tha espir-tton uf tha combination, we received similar twiicesou vaitoua other stock), and atthe final result wa rece.ved the sum total of $121 Hi, after deducting ail coinmuaions and our oriffifnl invHsiment of $M, leaving a net protit to us of $101 26. Considering tha small mount invested it proved a vary satisfactory traiuteo tion, and wa onlr raft ret that the original bad not bean larger as tha result hsd turned out to be so protltable. " This new plan for operating stocks bids fair to bav rnma tha mst popn'ar of any iu the Hoard of brokers. Tha esaot result a are given with our experience, and wa cheerfully assert that there is no reason by tha hrm of Lawrenoa A Oo. should not be reoommt-nded by na aa la every reepeet woithy of the utmoat confidence. They also aoltoit correspondence f.om all parties hav ing any kind of bonds or stock for sale, band fur their explanatory olroutar. JVem th How and Garden, May, 187ft. Onr friends who deeira to make money in stocks will And this firm reliable and ready to afford Information naoeassry to a perfect onaeratanaing uf tha plan of their operations in stocks,. Tha combined plan of Lawrenea A Oo. ia flrat olasa, and tbe house is reliable and prompt. WAL1KR J. MARTIN, 1U4 East 18th At,, N. T. A correspondent eavs in writing to than.; Your ramie tanoe for my profile aw 7b, is received, N amarooa tesuinociiaia are oontaim are oonlainad in th.li oirem lay. baud lor ih Mm Tke CHEAT REMEDY for OOH.3PXTIli3I3 3STOH3- ALLAX'S ANTI-FAT la purely vogtablo anl perfectly liarmlrss. It artt upon the fd In the stomach, piwetu iiift Ha t.'in convert'! Into l;it. T.ik n lib ncn.r inure with ti reetloiis. It will reduce a fet pursue f'roea tws te Ove veuMtls per week. Corpulence is not only a .li". Its If, but the harhlwrfr of other." So wroto lUpH'r.ttes two thousand years ago, and what was li no llu-u Is noue the t6S so to-day. Hold bv druKpUta, or sent, bv express upon rt elpt of a 10. Quarter-dozen $iuu. AUdrt s, BOTANIC MEDICINE CO., Irn?rtr.tors, HuTnlo, H. T A bafeaud Keliub substitute for tulii n The only 25 cent AOUE -REMEDY IN THtl WOULD aud ail MALAUI1L l)lltAsi:. Sou,, all Drogiuti. M.M.d FKItt en r.lpt of.rlua. tea., (or ih.ir Ua cat book, u..:ia t lL. 114 eaiur FREE"" eillteiiuii. " CLOCKS AMI FAT HYHU
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers