(;BHTLTl KM.. Bfk Keeping bt Farmebs. There ar two reasons w uy farmers bhooid keep bees : first, because tbeir occu pancy of land places them in the right io.nl i tics to improve the whole honey li-U ; and second, because their occu pancy of the field entitles them to its iiarvefct. Cn it be made profitable? It would hardly be profitable to make it a principle business ; as au incidental business it may nfford them a large re turn for very moderate outlay and tri fling expense. Four hives of sufficient pize, with surplus honey recep'acles for 400 ponndsof honey, will cost say twenty five dollars ; four swarms of bees would, at five dollars each, cost twenty dollars making an outlay of forty five dollars. The first vear they would give, in a good field and season, 12'J pounds of t-urpius, more or less, according to the season, amounting ct thirty cents per ound at Z'.ii 4". The second wat-on would yield 500 pounds, or $150 amounting in two seasons tc$lS8.40. This gives more than fonr times the cot-t in two seasons ; and the average ii-r many seasons may equal this, with no additional expense save the supply of new honey boxes annually. I gave the above figures from the results of Actual experiment having received the average given above from four hives the first and second seasons, they being the two first seasons in which I placed Fwarms in the Eureka hives, and the honey was so white end fine that it brought me thirty cents per pound. Let me advise my farmer frieuds how to proceed in this mutter. Get from one to four hives ; according to your honey field and faith ; take them to a bee-keeper, who will place a good first swarm in each hive ; and remova them home. Or if the seik'r is pleased to let them stand till fall, pla?e boxes on them and let them stand till then. At the projK-r time in the fall, remove the boxes and take all home. With Lives so constructed as to prevent the impo sition to swarm, and the number lim ited to the capacity of the field, I have no doubt thut they Mould sometimes do better than this," as I have had 200 )tiiid from one hive in one seasou. Ou this plan, there is little to do but to place and remove the boxes iu the proper time, Jf the hive is no con structed as to give ample room in the breeding and wintering apartment feed ing is reudeied unnecessary. If projitr means are used to give room iu the sur plus boxes for all the colony the whole season, before any preparation is made for swarming aud the hives are effect ually shaded from the snn. no watching for swarms will be required ; aud no time necessarily devoted to them but to put ou the surplus boxes in season, uud remove them v. lieu full ; and this may even be done by a neighbor accus tomed to the bufriuess, if one is appre lt.nKiv nf flat. at-r in tir-rformim? these. or any other operations about the Live. . Fattf.mso Fowls. Asapenrml rule, the farmer should not desire that Lis should be very fat, for there is a kind of antagonism between r production and the storing of much fat in the t;s sues. If it was a nure question of whst to do with the material, there would seem to be no renson why a fowl, once having attained her i'iiU weight, fhould not then always begin to lay. Fat in living !eing is generally as foreign to the system as it it were (tried out and slotted away iu a pantry ; and yet a certain pro;rtiou of it emi t. !e the rule witii all Eiiituals iu their ordinary health, the amount varying with the individual. Fowls cannot be made to fatten when only paitly nintnreci, a few breeds i xcrpted, for they need mo-t of thtir bed fur growth, likesparejouths, vtio eat voraciously and grow prodig iously, while remaining awkward and long. This is no reitson why chickens, intended for the table, should not b Ceneronsiy fed, for the more they eat the greater the quantity of their flesh, of course ; the quality is also much bet ter. Adult fowls can be fattened upon i-raiu of various sorts, fed for a change. JJut as variety not only stimulates tj jH-tite, bnt aid digestion, a very little utiimal food of extra nice quality, as Lice beef's liver, or other butcher's meut, should be added diiily, and fresh vegetables also, lint ou no account give mnch of these Lift, for not only is jruin c-heaptx und productive of the l est quality of llesh, but much meat is tto exciting, and vegetables, fed freely, keep the bowels too active, and therefore retard fattening. l'ori-Tr.T Faeasttts Fowls are in fested with several hinds of parasites. There are lice of sufficient bize to lie readily discoverable, which are found either beneath the viugs or upon the head and neck, and very small mites or tu nri which infest sitting hens so mnch as frequently to make them leave their nests, and which also swarm plentifully n the Louses end tipou the rousts. The specimens received are of the lat ter class. They hide in creviceB of the l.wts cr Louses dcrirg the day, and at night sully forth to f. ed, which they do by puncturing the skin and sacking the blood tf the fowls. There is no diffi culty in getting rid of uil these pests. They thrive iu fi'th and aroid neat qnaiters. If you will thoroughly cleanse the rl or of the poultry Louse, lime-wash the walls, Clung up all the cracks with lime, and removing all loose boards and cleats, und thoroughly smear the ereli with lard m.d kerosene oil mixed, to that tlie fowls' felt and feathers will be wi It greased, von will very S' on le relievt d of tLc trouble. Where these bee ai.d mites are very nu merous and infested fowls aie kept close to stables they will gather upon horses and cattle and greatly trouide them. Cast's have brcu known in which horses Lave died from the irrstution thus produced. For this reason ponltry should cot be k pt iu stables. Ji st What Kiioi-ld Be Donk. Har vest is now over and reapers and n.ow i rs sb on Id e put under shtiu r. Tiiey are costly affairs to be left out in ILe weather, 88 we frequently see them. Hun and rain will soon rust and shrink and warp them into comparatively worthless iff tin, llust not only de stroys, but it -anses iicLi-cespary fric tion, and hence requires greater power to move the maehiup. Clean all parts of the metal worktffectually and giease them with fallow. Shellac varnish is a good protection against rust. Clean oiTnuUaud 6crews and grease them thoroughly befors replacing them. This will prevent future trouble if a bolt or nut needs removing. Xe ir'iy every one Las Borne experience witli rusted screws, nuts and bolts, A little grease now may save hours of time here after, besides a world of v. xation. I'xiws, hoes, rakes, scjthes, and ab other tools, should le pnt away in good order, and where you can put your hand on them when you waut them. We know men who los- enough every yesr to pay their taxes by neglecting to taki care of tools. How Drains Act. The water which rnus into drams dug iu tough clay soil, enters from the sides and tha bottom, and not from immediately above the drains. The tonghtest clay is suffi ciently permeable to water to allow it to pass through readily, and after the drains have been in operation sometime, regular and permanent water channels become established in the soil leading from above to the bottom of the draius. In digging drains in tough, compact clay, numerous small veins of water are cut, which show very clearly bow read ily the water will pass through such soil as soon as outlets are provided. The advantage of the deejer drains is thus explained, and it is readily seen that their influence extends further in proportion to their depth. MioTirir. Impoktasck of Salts in Fooi. Mr. Foster, in the London Medical fiecord, has made some interesting experiments ou dogs and pigeons, which show that animals suffer and die when inorganic suits are altogether absent from their food, although the other nutritive con stituents tnav be abundant. In all the animals tried, there was a condition of muscular weakness, tremor, and general exhaustion. In the dog, the muscles of the posterior extremities, from the second week of the experiment onward, gradually assumed a paralytic character, as when the function of the spinal cord is weakened. The activity of the cerebrum was also impaired, as was evident from the bluntuess of the senses and apathy of the animal. Later on, increased excitability often appeared ; the dogs were terrified at any quick motion ; one had a brief attack of mad ness, but soon crouched down tremb ling and growling. On being taken out it ran forward and knocked its head violently against a wall. After the animals had been deprived of salts for some time, the juices of the intestinal canal either lost their digestive power or were not secreted in proper quantity and nutrition was thus interfered with. Death took place, however, from the alterations in the tervons system, be fore there had been time for it to occur from inanition. The quantity of salts necessary to life is smaller than is generally supposed, but the exact amount required is still to bo deter mined. These experiments amount practically to a Bcieutidj exposure of the unnaiur alncss and consequent abnormality of the use of sifted wheat flower the prin cipal food of women and children, aud of too many men. J. lie inorganic salts are almost absent from this artificial food, the chief material weakness of modern pst udo-civilizition. It siems probable that vegetable matter may, under favorable conditions, be converted into c al much more rapidly than most chemical geologists are in the habit of assuming. At least a curious instance of an approach to ward such conversion, within the Lis toric period, has been brought before the German Geological Society by Herr Hirshwald, of Berlin. In one of the old mines in the upper Ilartz the Dorothea mine, near Clausthal some of the wood originally employed as timbering has become so far altered as to assume most of the characters of a true lignite, or brown coaL It appears that certain of the levels in the ancient workings of this mine are filled with refuse matter, consisting chiefly of fragments of clay-slate more or less saturated with mine water, and con taining here and there fragments of the old timbering. This wood when in the mine is wet and of leathery consistence, but on iXosnre to the air rapidly hardens to a solid substance, Laving most if not all the characteristics of true lignite. It breaks with a well marked conchoidul fracture, aud the parts wLich are most alteied present the black lustrous appearance charac teristic of the German "pitch coals." At the fame time chemical examination of the alte red wood shows that it stands actnally nearer to true coal than do some of the younger tertiary lignites. This instance seems, therefore, to prove that pice wood, when placed uuder Ligh'y favorable conditions, may be converted into a genuine lignite within a period which, from what we know of the history of mining in the Ilartz, can not have extended beyond four centu ries. Ether. Physicists recognize beat as a mode of motion, and that it comes uuder the cogniziuce- of our perceptions by the vibrations of atomic matter or ether : of ether, iucoercible, imponder able, which fills nil the immensity of space aud the depth of ail bodies. It is in this fluid that the stars describe their orbits ; in this fluid atoms per form their movements and describe their trajectories. Thns the ether, the radiant messenger of beat and light, conveys and distributes their radiations through all the Universe : and that which it loses iu vibratory energy when it penetrates a cold body, which it warms, it communicates to the atoms of this body and augments the inten sity cf their movements ; and that whi.'h it gains in energy by contact with a warm body which it cools, it withdraws from this body and dimin ishes the intensity of their vibratory movements. And this kind of light and heat which comes from mateiial bodies is transmitted across space to other material bodies. TnE Rriss of Trot. The researches of Dr. SoLhemann, on the supposed site of the city of ancient Troy, Lave recently leen awarded by discoveries which have a worldwide interest, prov ing not OLly the existence of the e-ity, so often aud so strenuously asserted to be purely mythical, but tLe general accuracy botn of the Homeric and Vir gilian, the Greek and Latin, accounts of the Hople, their celebruted citadel, and its ten years's siege. These revela tions prove incontrovertible that the site of the city, supposed by Ib-rodotns, Xenophon, Plutarch, and many other writers to be on the LigLts now called Hissarlik, was accurately laid down by those writers. Indications of a desf motion bv fire, terrible enough to have just) ti -d Virgil's tremendous description, Lave also ineu found ; and the Tit j in goddess (Min ervn) is exhibited, iu the form ot Ler favorite owl, ou Viises and earthenware utei.sils, on metal implements and trophies, and iu every possible form. Tiik rorrxATiojt of CurxA. Abbe David, who has recently devoted some learn tj the exploration of Chinese teiritoiy and the study of the people, sats that the estimate of statisticians that the total population of the Chinese Empire is but 100,000,000 souls is en tirely incorrect. The error is due to the terrible ravages made in certain small political divisions, which Lave rebelled at times, and in which whole sale massacres Lave reduced the in habitants to oue half aud in some cases onefifth their former numerical strength. The province of Kiangsi is, however, the bast populated, and the average of each canton therein is 4,000 people. 'Here are 4,3-15 cantons, making an ij proximate totl of 17,380 000 inhabi tants. Among the IS provinces of the Empire, it is certain that several largely exceed Kiangsi in population ; but taking the above given aggregate as a niit, there must be at least .TJO.OOO.COO individuals in the country. Da. UiLOENDObF. a German anato mist bus discovered that the human cheek bone is not a single structure, but is divided by a suture into two distinct parts. This no doubt accounts for the wonderful growth aud expansion f cheek which characterizes some people the suture of their osseous fiicial structnre is peculiarly flexible. The salts of tellurium, sometimes used for medical purpose, Lave the property of imparting to the perspira tion a mot offensive odor. It is said that Professor Punson, who experi uit nted on his own person, was coin p.'IIed to absent himself from society for four weeks on this account. One of the latest discoveries in the excavations at Home is a magnificent h't, in perfect condition, of the Empress Plotina, wife of Trajan. IxsranEcnos in Eypt The rising of tLe Nile. IMIllXTIC. Hixts fob JJaxiso Cake. Uae none bnt the best materials for making cake. If yon cannot afford to get good flour, dry white sugar and the beat family butter, make op your mind to go with out your cake, and eat plain bread with a clear conscience. Stir the butter and sugar to a cream. Cake often fails because this rule is not followed. Beat these as faithfully as yon do the eggs, warming the butter i i . i ri i t t - very sngiuiy u nam. ouij mh or wooden spoon in this as in other parts of yonr work. Do not use fresh and stale milk in the same cake. It acts as disastrously as a piece of old cloth in a new garment. Sour milk makes a spongy cake i sweet, one closer in grain. Streaks in cake are caused by un skilled mixing, too rapid or unequal baking, a sudden decrease in heat be fore the cake in quite done. Do cot delude yourself, and maltreat those who are to eat your cake, by try ing to make soda do the whole or most of the duty of eggs. Others have tried it before with unfortunate results. If curiosity tempt yon to the experiment, you had better allay it by buying some sponge cake at the corner bakery. Test whether a cake is done by run ning a clean straw into the thickest part. It should come np clean. Dj not leave the oven door open, or change the cake from one oven to the other, except in extreme cases. If it harden too fast on the top, cover with paper. It should rise to full height be fore the crust forms. Except for gingerbread, use none but wh'te sugar. Always sift the flour. Be accurate in your weights and measure. Cream yonr sugar and butter, meas ure milk, spice, etc., before beginning to work. For fruit cuke it is best to prepare the materials the day before. Let your icing dry thoroughly before wrapping up the cuke, raid sift your flour before measuring. The Habit of Savisq. Wastefulness characterizes our domestic economy to au extent unheard ot iu more frugal conntries, cud we must always eat, drink, and be clothed with the best the market affords. There is no economy in depriving ourselves of an abundant supply cf nourishing food, decent raiment, and healthful shelter, but this affords no excuse for the prevalent siu of waste, nor does it justify spending hard-won wages upon expensive delica cies, unnecessarily large habitations, or costly trifles. There is far too lavish a subserviency to fashion among all classes. Economy in this respect would not only create a much needed indepen dence, both in dress and in our whole manner of life. KEEriso Meals Waitixo. Little things often interfere with our comfort very much, and one small anuoyance is for mt n to delay coming to dinner w heu called. Sometimes they Lave an Lour or more of work which they will do be fore quitting and then they go to the house to find the dinner cold, and the cook discouraged. Nothing is more disheartening to a tired woman than a table full of dirty dishes ornamenting the table an-bour and a Lalf later iu the day than usual. Punctuality is a virtue that men should learn if they are in the habit of being uncertain about coming to meals. Any women worthy the name of housekeeper will be regular with her ineaL) if it lies within her to have them How to Clean Soac Srcs. It is well known, says uu Australian paper, that a little alum dissolved is very effective in clearing muddy water ; but a short time since, some alum was applied in a manner which, from its novelty and its valuable results, is worthy of notice. In a place w here water is scarce at present, a little alum was dissolved in hot water, and thrown into a tub of thick soap-suds. In a moment the soap curdled, and accompanied by the muddy particles, sank to the bottom, leaving the water perfectly clear, pure, aud devoid of t melL This water was found very useful for washing clothing again, when poured off the sediment. A Xovei. Bath. Oue of the thera peutic novelties in London, recently introduced from the Continent, consists in the erection of establishments for administering Lot sand baths as a remedy for rheumatism, recent cases of uetvous disorder, affections of the kid neys, and all cases where heat is wanted as the chief therapeutic agent. The advantages of this treatment are, that it does not suppress perspiration like the Lot-water bath, but rather increases it, and does not interfere with the re spiration, like the steam bath or Turkish bath. The body can endure its influence for a mnch longer time, and a much higher temperature can be rpplied. The education of the girl, as a honse keecr, shonld le begun by the mother early, continued until the marriage of the daughter, and no other duty of the mother, and no other study of the daughter, shonld interfere with it. This and school edncation should gt on simultaneously. If anything is to be postponed, let it be music, and draw ing, and philosophy, which, as ex perience shows, are usually unattained to and ucpracticed after the "happy event." The morn and higher educa tion the better. Bat let as have a real and practical instead of a sham educa tion. Flloxs and Bcstt Katul Elder Evans, the Shaker, says : For the past ten years we Lave treated felons with hot water, add with unerring success. No cutting, no blistering, no anything, but immersing the finger, hand, or even the whole arm if necessary, in water as hot as can be borne, until the paiu is gone and the core is loosened and drawn from the bone. When rusty nail have produced wounds, the same course has been pursued. If ou hand or foot, keep it ia hot water. Fnont Chocolate. Put one teacup of flour in a small iron kettle aud set it over the fire to scorch, stir it con stantly to keep it from burning on to the sides of the kettle. When the 11 ur is of a dark brown color, pour boiling water over it, say two quarts or more, if the drink shonld be more desirable to he tnin. Let the whole boil np a few minutes. Add one pint of sweet milk aud stn?ar to suit the taste. Use for drink the same as coffee. Tb jtectios for Plants. Is is often the sun and not the frost that kills the stems of half hardy plants. Protective shading is often needed. Drive a stake lieside the plant. Draw np the branches and cover with straw or matting wrapped around them. Kegs, barrels and boxes may be tamed over such as are not too high and will sufficiently protect them. Air holes should be bored in the north aides of these pro tections. Corn Bread. Take equal quantities of corn meal and flour (or rye flour ;) scald the meal by pouring a little boil ing water on it ; when nearly cold add the flour, the same quantity of yeast as used for other kinds of bread aud a little melted lard and salt; make the dongh stiff and knead it ; put it in a warm place to rise and bake it longer than other kinds of bread. Kice Mcffiss. One half cup of rice, boiled soft, stir in three spoonfuls of sugar, a piece of butter the size of an egg, salt, one pint of sweet milk, one half cup of yeast, two quarts of flour ; let it rise all night ; if needful add in the morning a little soda. HUOBOIS. Two Stories Mixed. Uncle John SbeUiv an old backwoods hunter, one night u.i iertook to entertain a company of bar-ro..:n sitters with the narration of his appearance in "running" down a deer. The ( round, he said, was cov ered with six inches of snow, on which the rain had J-i'len and been frozen. forming a crusi sn fHciently strong to bear his weight. Jn the morning ne discovered the tra--L of a deer, and started after it. with li e determination of running it down. Alter describing the course taken, and Ot tailing me different incidents that occurred during the chase, he said that about noon he felt somewhat weary and hungry, and, standing his gun against a fence, he jumped into a cornfield and pulled some roasting ears, on which he pro posed to make a meal. "What, Uucle John, snow on the ground, and roasting ears ? that won't do," said one of the company. "Hold on boys," said Uncle John, "I've made a little mistuke, aud got two stories mixed!" Dayton ( O. ) Demorrat. A Clerical Diffeuenxk Not many years ago there lived a sweep in a cer tain Somersetshire village, who bad two mischievous boys. Oue day the boys insulted the parish clergyman, and the angry divine went to the father, whom he accosted with : "What do you intend to do with those boys of yours, Jojin ?" "Well, sir," replied the sweep, with a wicked twinkle of the eye, "there's the oldest of 'em's a fine, sharp boy. I'm gwyne to make a sweep o' he. But the youngest is a dull, stupid sort o' lad. 'I don't really know what I can do wi' he, 'cept I make a parson o m." A Case of Goer. "What is the matter with yon, my friend?" inquired a judge, who had called to see his sick neighbor. "Veil, I don't know, chudge dey say it ish de cout bnt vy should I have cout ? 1 lives blain ; I don't eat doo much nor drinks doo mnch ; vy should I have de cout?" "Perhaps," euegeated the judge, "it is hereditary ? "Veil," replied the invalid, with the look of a man who Las suddenly been enlightened on . a difficult subject. ' ell, I guess it ish hereditary ; J. re mumber my wife's uucle had de cout.' She Could Drive. A resident of a neighboring town visited a sales stable a few days since, in search of a horse. After describing the paragon of a horse he was in search of, he stated that it must be one that Lis wife could drive. The stablekeeper asked Low mnch of a horse his wife could drive. "Well," said the man, "I can drive any horse that stands, aud my wife can dnve me." "Oh, well." saiii John, "if your wife can drive a jackass, any of my horses will do. lie nought the nrst one that was shown him. A clergym an taught an old man in his parish to read, and had found him an apt scholar. After the lessons had finished, he Lad not been able to call at the cottage for some time, and when he did, be ouly found the wife at home. "How's John ?" said the clergy man. "He's canny, sir," said the wife. "How does be get on with Lis leading ?" "Nicely, sir." "Ah ! I suppose he will rend his Bible very comfortably now." "B.ble, sir 1 bless you, be was out of the Bible aud into the newspajier long ago." t Grandma, do you know why I can see up iu the skv so fur ?" asked Charlie, a little four-year-old, of the venerable lady who sat ou the garden seat knit ting. "No my de.ir, why is it?" said graudma, bending her eye, eager to catch aud remember the wise saying of the precious little pet. "Because there is nothing in the way," replied the young philosopher, resuming Lis astronomical research, and grandma her kuittiug. An English lady was ou the deck of a ship wheu there was a blight mutiny, aud the ringleader was cut over the head by the captaiu. On recovering from a long tit of sea-sickuess, and coming ou deck after several days, she saw this very sailor at the wheel, and going up to him, asked, "IIow is your head now ?" "West aud by north, tua'aui," was the reply. A Y rMi lady at home from boarding school for the holidays was asked if she would have roast beef, wheu she re plied, ''No, 1 thank yon ; gastrouomi cal satiety admonishes me thut I Lave arrived at the ultimate stage of deglu tition consistent with dietetic integ rity !" The young lady was never asked if she would have anythiug over again. . A ladt took her little fonr-year old down town on the horse cars, and the man who loves children took the little one on his knee. Ou the return trip the sputa were all taken. No gentleman moved, "ibxler," said bright eyes, "ain't somebody wid nossiug in their laps goinz to take me up ?" There was scramble for that prectona one. Er.fiosrs having heard that a process lm Inej invented for manufacturing diamonds nut of benzine, the next time he went Lome tight, he told LU wife that she Lad better lie careful how she fooled alnmt witii that broomtMck, as she mihl knock a q l irt of diamonds out of their Settling. "Have yon Goldsmith's Greece?" was asked of the clerk in a store in which books and various miscellaueoni articles were sold. "N," said the clerk, refloctively, "we haven't Gjld smith's Greese, but we Lave some splendid hair oik" Stdnet Sjiith said every publis man should be provided with a fotdoiucter that, is, the acquaintance of three or four regular fuols, on whom he could try his measures and jndge of the effect they were hkely to produce on public opinion. A mas who preteuded to have seen a ghost, was asked what the ghost said to him. "How shonld I understand." repried the narrator, "what he said ? I am not skilled iu any of the dead lan guages. "None of these things move me," as the tote cat said after a shower of boot jacks, bottles aud brushes Lad failed to dislodge him from Lis moonlight trus ting spot on the back shed. Dean Smith, hearing of a carpenter falling through the scaffolding of a house which he was in repairing, dryly remarked that Le liked to see a me chanic go through his work promptly. "Doctor, what do yon think is the cause of the frequent rush of blood to my head ?" "Ou 1 its nothing but an effort of nature. Aature, ou know, ahhors a vacuum." A yocno mother says that yon may always know an old bachelor by the fact of Lis always speaking of a baby as "it. Which are the four most corrmlent letters in the alphabet ? O, B, C, T (obesity). JIock. itrtlk Kissing before com pany and fighting afterward. Shifting the"re8pousibility" Dress ing the baby. Wall flowers at parties aro generally faded flowers. The oldest Western settler the eve ning sun. Slake Ifante Slewly. It is not at all wholesome to be in a hurry. Locomotives have been re ported to have moved a mile in a minute for short distances. But loco motives have often come to grief by such great rapidity. Multitudes in their haste to get rich are ruined every year. The men who do everything maturely, slowly, deliberately, are the men who ofteuest succeed in life. People who are habitually in hurry, geuerally have to do things twice over. The tortoise beat the hare at last. Slow men seldom knock thair brains out against a post. Foot races are in jurious to health, as are all forms of competitive exercises ; steady labor in the field is the best gymnasium in the world. Either labor or exercise, carried to exhaustion, or prostration, or even to great tiredness, expressed by "fagged out," always does more harm than the previous exercise has done good. All running np stairs, running to catch np with a ferry-boat, are extremely inju rious to every age and sex, and condi tion of life. It ought to be the most pressing necessity which shonld induce a person over fifty to run twenty yards. Those live longest who are deliberate, whose actions are measured, who never embark in any enterprise without "sleeping over it," and who perform all the every day acts of life with calmness. Quakers are proverbially calm, quiet people, and (j iakers are a thrifty ioli the world over. Saf ins i Health. One great cause of the poverty of the present day is a failure of our common people to appreciate small things. 1 hey do not realize now a daily addi tion, be it ever so small, will soon make a large pile. If the young men and young women of to day will only begin, and begin now, to save a little from their earnings and plant it in the soil of some good saving bank, and weekly or monthly add their mite, they will wear a happy smile of competence when they roach middle hie. ot ouly the desire but ability to iucrease it will also grow. Let clerk and tradesman, laborer and artisan, make now and at once a begin uing. Store np some of your yo ithf nl force and v'gor for future coi tixtjency. Let parents teach their children to be gin early to save. B-gin at the foun tain head to control the stream of ex travagance to choose between poverty and riches. Let your youth go ou in habits of extravagance for fifty years to come as they have for fifty years past, aud we shall have a nation of beggars, with a moneyed aristocracy. Let a gen eration of such as save in small sums be reared, and we shall be free from all want. Do not be ambitious for extrav agant fortunes but do seek thut which is the duty of every one to obtain, in dependence aud a comfortable home. eaitb, and enough of it, is within the reach of all. It is obtained by oue pro cess, aud by one only saving. Xew Books. My Father and Hook, by the au'orh of "My Mother and L" The Dead S-iusage, by the author of "The Living Link." The Ark, by the an' Lor of "Taken at the Elood." Mixed Drinks, bv the author of "Through Fire aud Water." Went to bed in July, by the author of "A Rose in June." The First Floor, by the author of "A Story of a House." The lung of h'.eal, by tne author ol "The Click of Gold." A R-gnlar Mick, by the author of "The Dodge Club." The Baker's Bill, bv the author of "Golden Grain." The Power of Cheek, by the author of "Her Face was Ler Fortune." Feruaudo aud Ben, by the author of Won, not wooed." The Misplaced Switch, by the author of Kissiug the K d." Another (nil, by the author of "Abel Drake's Wife." Itlenlins from l.angi, ('atari h. triclili. 4 uuHuiuptioit. A Wouderful (nrr. RocnESTra, X. V.. Jnn. 13. 1874. It. V. 1'macR, M. b.. Buffalo. N. V.: Dtar Sir I had Fufftred from Catarrh in an aggravated form for about twelve years and lor gtveral years from Bronchial trou ble. Tried many doctors and iking with no lasting kenefi'. Ia May, '72, becoming nearly woru out wub excessive Editorial labors on a paper in New York C'iiy, I w as aittckt-d with lironcliilis ia a severe form, suffering almost a toial loss of voice. I re turned home here, but bad been home only two weeks when I was completely prostrated wi.b llemor huge from the Lungs, kicing fo it fvre hUtthny ipe'.h with n iao trttki. and Jinl thrtt nuult of nine datt. In tne September f illowin. 1 improved sufficiently to be able to be about, ihougb in a very fee ble stale. My Bronchial trouble remained and the Catarrh was unfold worse than be fore. Every effort for relief seemed fruit less. 1 seemed to ba losing ground daily. I continued in tb feeble state, raising blood almost daily until about the first of March, '73, when I becime so bid as to be entirely confined to the bouse. A friend suggested your remedies, lgit I was ex tremely skeptical that they would do me good, as I bad lost all heart in remedies, and began to look upon mediciue and doc tors with disgust However, 1 obtained one of your circulars, and read it e.refu'lv.from which I came to the conclusion that you un derstood your business, at least. 1 finally nbtaned a quantity of Vt. Sage's Catarrh Itemed, your Golden Medical Disc very and Pellets, and commenced their vigorous u e accor ding to directions. To my sur prise I soon b"gnn to improve. Tne Iis-covt-ry and Pellet, in a short time, brought out a severe eru tion, which continued for several weeks. I fe't uiurh belter, my ap fctile i-mprot'd, and I gained in strength and Utah. Ia three m m lis every vestige of the I'aUrr i was gone, the Bronchitis ha I nearly disapp ami. bjd no Cough whatever and 1 had entirely cea-ed to raise blood ; and, con rary t the expectation of some ot my friends, the cure baa remained perma nent. I have bad no more Hvmorrbaes from the Lung, and am entirely free from Catarrh, from which I had suffered so much and to long. The dol t of graiiiu l I owe for the blessing I have received at your h ind-i, knows no bounds. I am thoroughly -atiffied, from uiy experience, that jour medicines wdl master tbe worst forms of bat odious disease Calanh, as well as Throat and Lung Diseases. 1 have recom ine.ided them to very many and shall ever speak in their praise. Gratefully yours, MM. II. SPEXCER. P. O. Box 507, Rorknlrr. A". I". 18 E. F. Hunker KUter Wlae ! Iruu. For the cure of weak stomach, general debility, indigestion, disease of tbe neivous system constipation, acility of the atom ach, and all ca-es requiring a tonic. The wine include tbe most agreeable and efficient Salt of Iron w possea ; Ci trate of Magnetic Oxide, combined with tbe most energetic of veg table tonics Yellow P. ruvian ltar. Tbe eff et in m my eases of debility, los of appetite, and general prostration, of an efficient Salt of Iron, combined with our valuable Nerve, is most happy. It aug ments tbe appetite, raises the pulse, takes off muscular flabbiness, removes the pallor of debility, and givei a florid vigor to tbe countenance. lo ynu want something to strengthen you ? l)o you want a good appetite t bo yoa want to build np your constitution t Do you want to feel well T Do you want to get rid of nervousness t Do you want energy ? Do you want to sleep w 11 ! Do yoa want brisk and vigorous feelings 7 If you do, try Knnkel s n ine of Iron. This truly valuable tonic has been so tho rnnghly tested by all classes of the commu nity that it is now deemed indispensable as Tonic medicine. It costs but little, pun fies the blood and gives tone to tbe stomach, renovates tbe system and prolongs life. I now only ask a trial of this valnsble Tonic. Pri-efl perbrftle. E. F. Kunk I Sole Proprietor, No. 25'J N'unb Ninth S'., Phila del bin, Pa. " Sold by all Druggists and deal, r every, where. Tariwoax Rksovxd Alivi Head and all comp ete, in two hours. o fee till bead passes. Seat, Ptn and Stomach Worms re moved by Dr. Kcxkil. Noam Nisth St sect Advice free. Come, see over 1,000 specimens and be convinced. He never fails. 10.009 Rewakd can safely be' offered for a more infallible cure for Pitsa than AN'.- KKS1S. The cures performed by this won derful remedy are simply miraculous. Lo tions, ointments, and internal remedie pro duce more harm than good, but ANAKESIS is an external remedy.a simple suppo-d'ory, supports the tumors, acta is rootbing pouh ice and medicine, gives instant relief, and c ures absolutely. A 1 Doctors prescribe ANAKKslS. Price I. Seut free ty ma I on receipt of price P. Xeu-lawlter Jfc Co, Anakesis Depot, 40 Walker St., Jew lork. 6 THE WEEKLY SUN.tWsStr rt awl IvtrloM imwmikii-. 4 i bnt fummn. W ajai t- MMkr Um Wrrsly the Im-n bwilv a per ia Uw sorkl. Irj u. fl.t v ."". F P"t. aJ'Irr lac St, Sew loii wj. WHAT JONAS JONAS-I want to hand you, NrdgliU.r Gate, something that will he of real interest, not only you, but to you, boys. NEIGHBOR GATES Glad to get anything that has money in It. JONAS Well, I think yoa can certainly save money by consulting this list, which personal examination proves to I correct in every word and figure. NEIGHBOR GATES I saw a list of Wanamaker 4 Brown'a One Price Clothing last Saturday. t JONAS Yes ; but this is a New List, and has a great deal more in it neaTT and Durable Melton Coat Pant, Yggj Whole Suit Overcoat, same material Black and White Mixed Coat Black and White Mixed Panta Black and White Mixed Teat Whole Suit Oxford Mixed D. B. Coat. Oxford Mixed Pants Oxford Mixed D, B. Test . Whole Suit Black and White Diagonal Coat. . Black and White Diagonal Pants. Black and White Diagonal Vest. . Whole Suit Broken check D. B. Coat . . Broken check Pants Broken D. B. Vest Whnla SniL. Very choice Cassimere Coat Very choice Cassimere Pants. Very choice Cassimere Vest . . Whole Suit Good Black Cloth Coat Good Black Doeskin Pants.. . Good Black Cloth Vest Whole Suit Better grade Black Cloth Coat Better grade Black Doeskin Pants Better grade Black Cloth Vest Whole Suit. Fine Drees Coat Fine Dress Pants Fine Dress Vest .,,., Whole Suit Extra Diagonal Coat Extra Diagonal Pants. Extra Diagonal Vest Whole Suit . Everv-1T rants. Tetter irrada Pants. Dress Panta Choice Pattern Tanta Elegant Style Pants. Superior to any in the Market Men's good heavy Overcoats Men's better grade Overcoats. Men's still better grade Overcoats Men's choice color Overeoats Men's finest Fur Beaver Overcoats. Men's finest Johanny Beaver Overcoats The Great The Great The Great The Great The Great The Great Woolen Woolen Woolen Woolen Woolen Woolen "Glengarry' Glengarry' Glengarry' Glengarry' Glengarry' Glengarry' ' Overcoat. ' Overcoat. ' Overcoat. ' Overcoat. ' Overcoat. ' Overcoat. JONAS The way biuluejs is done at Oak Hall is very gratifying. Iiery article U marked with Its true name and price la plala Ajares, and no deviation. When anything does not suit, the mouey U returned iu.tUntcr. It is haudy to get to Oak Hall, as the cars take you direct to WANAMAKER & BROWN'S, on the corner of SIXTH and MARKET. STATIONARY, PORTABLE AND a(;kiui'ui;kai, steam engines. aawl A(.au fc RPSSELl a CO "S Massillon Separators HORSE POWERS. n. r. 1 1 1 i k I I i V lC TaiuiB- lit f r. l wv rv .r.- HAY CUTTERS AND OTHER FIRST-CLASS FARM MACHINERY HARBERT& RAYMOND. lH."ir Mswket Stwt a, pniLaniLpni ,.., AT SilDUeiOH Sffi; S 5 00 Youths' Heavy Woolen D. B. Sack 2 75 ; Yontha Heavy Woolen Pants 2 00 Youths' Heavy Woolen est, . 9 9 75 8 00 Whole Suit Youths' Oxford Mixed D. B. Sack. Youths' Oxford Mixed Pants Youths' Oxford Mixed Vest " 50 25 2 50 Whole Suit. 81 25 Youths' Broken Check D. B. Sack. Youths' Broken Check Pants Youths' Broken Check Vest 800 400 200 Whole Suit. S14 00 Basket Style D. B. (Basket Style Pts S 00 irjgj Sl le Vegt J KA 1 450 250 Whole Suit... .$15 00 Basket Style D. B. 'Basket Style D. B. 9 50 Basket Style Pants . 5 50, ' . 2 75 Whole Suit $17 75 Youths' Heavy Overcoat ! Youths' Better Grade Overcoat SI- .Youths' Still Better Grade Overcoat. . . . 650 Youths' Extra Choice Color Overcoat. . Youths' Extra Heavy Kersey Overcoat. 350 $22 50 'Youths Better Grade Kersey Oovercoat Youths' Fine Sohnabel Far Beaver Overco.it ..S 900 5 00 1 Boy ir8t Ureal Coat. 2 50 1 R7' better grade Great Coat 'Boys' still better S16 50 BoTS gooj Cape j Boys better grade ' Boys' higher crrade S12 00 8 6 50 300 Children's Woolen cjl 00 Children's Woolen Suits 'Children's Cloth Suits Children's better grade Suits. SI 1 50 Children's heavy Cassimere Suits. 6 50 .Children's very stylish Harvard Suits 3 50 Children's English Granite and Tricot Sait.H. . 7777: Children's Kilt Suits $24 50 'Boys' heavy Woolen v 7 50 IBoys heavy Woolen - 00j Whole Suit '00 (Boys' All-wool Jacket $3 , (Boys' All-wool Pants. 31 .9 2 7oj-, .ni tt.i 1 ; 3 50 5 00 6 50 7 50 10 00 Better grade Pants. Better grade D. B. S 800 10 00 12 00 15 00 Whole Suit Extra nice D. B. 25 00 Extra nice Pants 27 50 Extra nice D. B. Whole Suit. ...$ 950 ... 16 00 Srmerior foreiim 20 J Superior foreign cloth D. B. Vest 2 75 22 50 Superior foreign cloth Pants 4 50 27 50 1 33 00 Whole Suit $14 00 Wanama & Brown, South-East Corner of Sixth and Market Streets, MAM WHO A MB HILL'S P ' " tl m TlTo "I .T-" . - nis- II II Towe. Hold . It , by Mail, mi., , " Cifealara DM. Aialnaa, H. W. HILL CO.. SEW YORK ELACK IEAD VGEKSL SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! U Mylos slivfr iu.tM SI.. Wainot ura r-.n: oaii't. S:T!irrlj pat it.1 f.ir lu:.uuia " CO! Mti". HAUS. SJI1VI.V4. Wl.t ,lx HUUSK AN Ul'FICa, il UNlTl'KH IUi Tbe !ari "! aaaortett H.vt p, niwUlaiia B IU t.lj. a m:vis Ac iiko.. Vt j UU. fM SS Mil. VK. .ni, C2sr: is LA Ml', ill .Irl.cLl .r .,"r'X'" IMdnr air u. r to order U. Ii o,. 7( " S 4. . 2 50 . 150 S3 50 S 650 . 350 . 200 100 .$ 8 00 . 500 . 250 50 Sack. .S10 5i) . 6 00 . 32i .Sll) 75 Frock. . Vest. . . .$n in. . 3 25 . 6 in , .S 7 1! . 10 (Kl . 11 l . 13 & . 15 OJ . IS Mil . IIH .3 4 50 . 6 5i . 7 5i . 9 tm . 11 u . 13 50 grade Great Coat . . Overcoat Cape Overcoat Cape Overcoat " Suits .$ 5 00 . 50 . 7 5 . 8 50 . 'J 5.1 . 10 50 .. 1150 . 50 Jackets $ 2 Pants 2 $4 50 00 EVERY i Whole Suit...: 3 8 Better grade D. B. Jackets 3 4 4 Vests 2 $10 75 Jacket. ..S 5 4 Vest 2 !50 cloth D. B. Coat S 6 75 no OJ 50 50 50
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers