Ar-BKTMTRAL. Winter Cam or Tbees. Where trees are purchased in the fall, many of them are lost through want of proper we daring the winter months, and for this reason many wait till spring be fore buying. If trees, especially small ones, are properly cared for through the winter, it is better to get them in the fall; or, if they are growa on the place, and to be replanted in the spring they are better to be taken up at the approach ol cold w earner, ana ueeieu in. This operation of heeling is simple, eaoy, and puts the trees in the very !ent condition for keeping through the winter ; as, when they are thus treated, there is no danger of heaving out by frost, and the ends of the roots become w.-ll calloused, and are ready to uegin a fresh growth at once, when planted in the spring. To heel in trees properly, li? a trench, sav three feet wide, and deep enough to cover the trees, a foot or so alove the tops oi uie roots, ne fore the trees are itlaced in the trench. the roots should be dipped in what nnrserymen call grout, and other peo ple call thin mud. This gives each root and fibre a coating of fine earth. This done, place one row of trees against the hack-side of the trench, leaning against the edge, and as thickly as they can well stand, then carefully sprinkle fine earth from in front of the trees, among and around the roots, taking pains that no air holes are left ; pack the earth down firmly there is no danger of it leing too solid and when this row is finished, the trench for the next row is ready. The great point is to have the earth filled in closely around every root, and well packed down. If this is done the trees will be in better condition for planting in the spring than if they had laoen allowed to spend the winter where they grew. If we were purchasing trees from a distance, we wonld much prefer to get them in the fall, and have them well heeled in through the winter, so that we could have them ready at the earliest possible moment for plant ing in the spring. Cnrrso axd Storing G bafts. There is no better time to cut grafts, says the London Canlr.n, than at the commencement of winter. In cutting and packing them away, there are some precautious to be observed. In the first place, let them be amply and dis tinctly labeled, as it is very annoying to find the names gone at the moment f using them. For this pnrpose they shonld be tied np in bunches, not over two or three inches in diameter, with three bands around each bunch at the ends and middle. The names may be written on a strip of pine board or lath, half an inch wide, a tenth of an inch thick, and nearly as long as the scions. This, if tied np with the bunch, will keep the same secure. For conveni ence in quickly determining the name, there should be another strip of lath, xharp at one end, and with the name distinctly written on the other, thrust into the bundle with the name project ing from it. If these bunches or bun dles are now placed on end in a box, with plenty of damp moss Ik t ween t hem and over the top. They will keep in a cellar in good condition, and any sort may be selected, and withdrawn without disturbing the rest, by reading the projecting labeL We have never found sand, earth, sawdust, or any other packing substance convenient, clnan, and easily removed as moss, for packing grafts. It is needful, however, to keep au occasional eye to them, to t-ee that the proper degree of moisture is maintained which should Ik) just enough to keep them from shriveling, and no more. Fat Siteep for Heavt Fi.eepe. There is much said abont ewes leing too fat to breed well. In my exierieuee of twenty years, I have never seen any tbing that led me to think so, providing the flesh was pnton with good pasture during the summer, and a few roots with good hay during the winter. The fatter sheep become under these cir cumstances the more valuable I should a insider them. Tuere is time in the year when it pays better to feed a small allowance of grain daily than in the Fall, after the feed gets frozen, and it is not necessary to bring the flock to the barn. It is an old saying, that "sheep well Novemliered are half wintered." Keep the ewes fat and the Iambs will be fat and fleeces heavy. I do not say whether it is 1etter to have the lambs come early or late, but I do say that it is best to have them fat ; then whether early or late they are sal a Me. All ewes, that with good care, will not raise a lamb and shear four poands washed wool, should be sold. I have them in my flock that will shear nine pounds, and raise a pair of twins, and it costs no more to keep one than a sheep that shears only three pounds. I think no one will hear the man who keeps his flock in this way, complaining that his sheep are "run out" and do not pay and the like. Ticks must be kept out of the flock ; they are the worst enemy of the sheep. I f they are not killed they will destroy the sheep. For killing them I have never tried anything better than strong tobacco juice, Alaska AomcrxTTBK. A visitor to this far off region writes: There is a general impression that nothing will - grow in Alaska, and that it is a region of hostile winter and savage icebergs, all of which is extravagant nonsense. On open land and along the streams, succulent grass grows luxuriantly, and sometimes to a height of three feet and a half. Red-top and wild timothy abound on the island, and in the main land something very like Kentucky blue grass grows extensively. Considerable hay has been made this year, the hay ing season being nearly the same as in Oregon. Heretofore the Government has been paying $70 a ton for imported hay, but this year the natives are cut ting and storing native hay for about S-'tO a ton in currency. Barley was raised last year and it yields as well as elsewhere. Potatoes, tnrnips, onions, and the like have all been produced on the islands ; and generally turn out as in other places. ForxTBT Management. The Poultry World tells us of a very successful pro ducer of poultry and eggs whose hens ay regularly the year round. The hens are of various breeds and their profit is credited to the manner of feed ing, as follows : Not one particle of meat or scraps is given, and but the veriest trifle of vegetable food is fed in the shape of a few bpiled potatoes, about once a week. Abundance of grain is allowed, of various sorts, ground and nnground, but never cooked and plenty of unburnt oyster shells, pounded, are at all times accessible. They have a pailful of skimmed milk every day, so that they can help them selves to all they want, no other drink being provided. Liquid Mantke in tub G REENnorsE. Manure is best applied to plants in pots in a liquid form. That obtained from sheep dropping or from cow dnng (with a little Boot added if it can be had) is preferable to that obtained from chicken or pig mannre, guano or even horse droppings ; it is less stimulating and does not cause such an excessive leaf and stem growth, or prod ace as serions injury if incautiously applied. A Sandt or gravelly soil is usually best adapted to the use of piaster, but it is found beneficial upon any soil abounding in vegetable matter. A clay soil has the power of absorbing ammo nia from the air, which is one of the offices of plaster, and therefore plaster is not as leneficial upon clayey as a sandy soil. m iextific - The Hydrographie Office at Paris has begun a process of engraving on copper which promises by its rapidity and the moderation of its price to be very widely useful. It consists in substance, brst, in covering a plate of copper with a thin Bhell of adhering silver, upon which is spread a thin layer of colored varnish ; second, in drawing thereon, with a dry point, the lines, topography, and let tering, precisely as one engraves with a diamond upon stone : third, in cor roding the traces by means of the per- chloride ol iron. While numerous processes for util izing the offal in the manufacture of leather are in successful operation, there has been a comporatively open field respecting leather waste. At the lenna Exhibition, leather was shown. suitable for heels, toe-caps and inner soles prepared from leather clippings, according to a French method, by simply mixing them with some adhesive substance, forming the mass into rect angular plates on top of each other, subjecting them to hydraulic pressure, and then drying and rolling them. This article was restricted in use because it could not withstand moisture. A Copenhagen firm, however, exhibited. for the brst time, an article made upon an entirely different plan. The leather scraps were first converted, in suit able machine, into sort of leather-wool, which was then mixed with caoutchouc and different chemical reagents, kneaded by machinery into a thick pasty mass, and then formed in metal moulds and dried, and subjected to a gradually in creasing pressure until it was finished, under 6,000 to 10.000 pounds to the square inch. The appearance of leather is imparted to it by a light coating. Articles manufactured from this mate rial are said to be 00 per cent, cheaper than those made from leather, and can be made in the same manner, while they are at the same time perfectly waterproof. Chemical investigation shows it to consist of abont 40 per cent, caoutchouc and 60 per cent, leather. TnE Cowrns of Birds' Wncos. It would be an error to suppose that all the exquisite metallic shades which diaper the feathers of birds and the wings of bntterflies arise from pig ments ; it was a dream of the alchemists to try to extract them. The sole cause is the play of light, fugitive as the sparkles of the diamond. When the beautiful feathers on the breast of a humming bird are examined under the microscope it is astonishing to see none of the shades, the mystery of which yon wonld penetrate. They are simply made ol a dark brown opaque substance, not unlike those of a black duck. There is, however, a remarkable arrangement ; the barb of the feather, instead of being a fringed stem, offers a series of small squares of horny substance placed point to point These plates, of infinitesimal size, are extremely thin, brown, and, to all appearance, exactly alike, whatever may be the reflection they give. The brilliant large feathers of the peacock are the same ; the plates are only at a greater distance, and of less brightness. They have been described as so many little mirrors, but that comparison is not correct, for then they would only give back light without coloring it. neither do they act by decomposing the rays which pass through them, for then they would not lose their iris tints under the microscope. It is to metals alone that the metallic plnmage of the hnmming birds can be compared ; the effects of the plates in a feather are like temiered steel or crystallized bismuth. Certain specimens emit colors very variable under different angles, the same scarlet feather becoming, when turned to ninety degrees, a beautiful emerald green. Popular tir.icnrc Monthly. The Temper ATnrE of the Srx. M. Violle considers that the emissive power of the snn at a given point on its sur face will be the relation Ix-tween the intensity of the radiation emitted at such point and the intensity of radia tion which a body, having an emissive power eqnal to nuity and carried to the temperature of the sun at the consid ered point wonld possess. Ho that he defines the true temperature of the sun as the temperature which a body of the same apparent diameter as the sun should possess in order that this body having an emissive power equal to the average of the solar surface, may emit, in the same period, the same quantity of heat as the sun. From experiments made at different altitudes, M. Violle determines the intensity of the solar radiation, as weakened by passage through the atmosphere, and finds, for the effective temperature of the sun, 2,822- Fan. Investigations conducted with an actinometer by the dynamic method lead the investigator to conclude that steel, as it emerges from a Siemens Martin furnace, has a temperature of 2,7323Fah. If it be admitted that the average emissive power of the snn is sensibly equal to that of steel in a state of fusion, determined under like condi tion, it appears that the mean true tem perature of the solar surface is about 3,C32 Fah. The Possibilities of Paper. Hardly a year passes by without some new use for paper being discovered, the possi bilities of that article seeming yet un developed. It is now very successfully used for making buggy boxes, baskets, belting for machinery, boats, clothing, and household materials, and in some branches of trade it is rapidly super seding wood in the manufaeture of fancy articles. According to Dingler's PolyUch-nim-hc Journal, if a sheet of paper be immersed in an ammoniacal solution of copper (liqueur de schweitzer) prepared by treating copper filings with ammonia of O.NNt density in contact with air, the paper becomes entirely impermeable to water, and maintains its consistency even under the influence of boiling water. When two sheets of paper thus prepared are passed together through rollers they adhere completely to each other, and by placing a number of such sheets together a board of great solid fty is obtained, which may be still further strengthened by the interposition of fibres or tissues between the sheets ; boards thus formed are quite equal to wood in solidity. Blood Coloring Matter Free From Iron. Two French chemists announce that they have obtained the hematic pigment in a state of perfect purity and free from iron. Hematosiae, as it is termed, burns without ash, similar to resinous substances. It is insoluble in pure water, and dissolves in small pro portion in ammoniacal water, to which it gives a light yellow tinge. It is altered by potash and caustic soda solutions, to which it gives a brown color, and is lightly sol able in alcohol. The solvents of hematosine are ether, chloroform, benzine, and bisulphide of carbon. With these bodies the weak solution is amber-colored ; when concentrated, red. Kangk of Toktrdoes. From experi ments conducted by an English Tor pedo Committee against the iron hulk Oberon, with the view of ascertaining the maximum distance within which the engines of an enemy's vessel might be rendered nseless, if not the ship herself destroyed, by the explosion of a submarine torpedo, it appears that the hull of an ironclad is practically safe from danger at range of 100 feet from a 500 pound charge of gun cotton, ex ploded in 43 feet of water, but that her engines are liable to derangement at that distance. DOS est I c. Parasites nt Bird-Caoes. Many Denton has watched with anxiety and care a pet canary, goldfinch, or other tiny favorite evidently in a state of perturbation, plucking at nimseu con tinually.hia feathers standing all wrong, always fidgetting about, and every way looking verv seedy. In vain is his food changed, and in vain is another saucer of clean water always Kept in ms cage, and all that kindness can suggest for the little prisoner done ; but still ail is of no use, he is no better and why ? because the cause of his wretchedness has not been found out. and until it is. other attempts are but vain. If the owner of a pet in such difficulties will take down the cage and cast his or her eyes up to the roof thereof, there will most likely be seen a mass of stuff look ing as much like red rust as anything ; and from thence comes the cause of the poor bird's uneasiness. The red rust is nothing more nor less than myriads of parasites infesting the bird, and for which water is no remedy, in ere is, however, a remedy, and one easily pro curable in a moment fire. By pro curing a lighted candle and holding it under every particle of the top of the cage, till all chance of anything being left alive is gone, the remedy is com plete. The pet will soon brighten up again after his "house-warming, and will in his cheerful and delightful way thank his master or mistress over and over again for this, though slight, to bim, important assistance. Land a J Water. Cellars. Damp cellars are deep cellars with bad ventilation. To avoid this, the cellar should be mainly above ground, not excavating more than one to two feet at most below the surface. If the walls are made of brick, there should be a hollow space of four inches; and, in that case, the wall need be only four inches on each side ; that is, the whole thickness of the wall, including the hollow space, need be only one foot. The windows should be large, say six behts of ten by twelve glass, with shutters on the outside of these ; the cellar will need no other protection in the average climate of our country, but might where it is very cold. To keep such a cellar cool in summer, we close the shutters during the warm part of the dar and open them at night. The cool night-air remains in the cellar through the day and at night is re plenished with a fresh supply. The flues should go down into the cellar, and, by leaving the stove-pipe-holes open, a free circulation is created. I have a milk-room eighteen by twenty- four feet in the cellar that is thus ven tilated. and the room is always cool in summer and flies are kept ont of it. Power of Mind. One half the men who become intemperate are driven from home because of its lack of con geniality. These unhappy homes are full of scolding and fretfalness. lhe mother spends her evening talking about the unfaithfulness of servants, and the father mourns about family ex penses. And these parents are not satisfied nntil their children feel as badly as they do. For such young people you need a reading-room. J. here is also a large class of yonng men in boarding-houses who need such a re sort. In winter they have no Are in their rooms, and if they want to read in their parlor they are hindered by groups of ladies talking spiritedly abont new styles of fur, or three or four gentlemen pay their attentions to a lady, each one determined to stay till the others are swie. Many of onr young men need, for reading purposes, a room well warmed, well lighted, and quiet, and thev can find it nowhere except in a pnblic library. Is it now better for them to resort to such places than to resort to the public-house ? Pk-kled Onions. With pickles, as with every other object in life, it is de sirable to make up your mind what you wish for. Some like pickled onions soft ; some hard and nutty ; some think them prettier when white and bottled in colorless vinegar ; they often taste of nothing but that and spices ; bnt in colored vinegar and less hery condi ments, von can taste as well as see, that yon are eating pickled onions. Gather the onions dry ; expose them to the sun and air for fortnight or so. Peel them without too mnch waste. For soft pickled onions, throw them into boiling salt and water, and boil nntil you can put a steel fork into them. Skim ont on to platters to drain off, then put into jars or bottles, and pour hot vinegar, spiced to taste, over them. Cork up tightly. For hard.white pickled onions, peel and scatter salt all over them, and let them stand three days. Drain through a colander, pack in bottles, and pour over them white vinegar,(chemist's vinegar), in which plenty of capsicum has been steeped. Fire and Waterproof Paint. Slack stone lime by putting into a tub, covered, to keep in the steam ; when slacked pass the powder through a fine sieve, and to every six quarts add a quart of rock salt and a gallon of water ; then boil and skim clear ; to everjtfive gallons of the liquid add pulverized alum one pound, pulverized copperas half a pound, and still slowly ; add powdered potash three-quarters of a pound, then very fine sand or hickory ashes four pounds ; then use any color ing matter desired, and apply with a brush. It looks better than any ordinary paint, and is as durable as slate ; will stop small leaks in roofs, prevent moss from growing thereon, make it incom bustible, and render brick imprevious to water. A Singular Remedy. An exchange gives the following simple application for the toothache, on the principle, if no cure, no charge for the advice. If any of your readers suffer from tooache or neuralgic affections arising from teeth in any stage of decay, they may ex perience relief instantaneous and per manent, by saturating a small bit of clean cotton or wool with a strong solu tion of ammonia, and apply it immedi ately to the affected tooth. The pleasant contrast instantaneously produced sometimes causes a fit of laughter, al though a moment before extreme suffer ing and anguish prevailed. I have used the remedy for over one year, and I have obtained sufficient proof to warrant publication. It is a remarkable fact, that one who loves his mother, who honors that mother's memory, is never a bad man, she is never a bad woman. Tell me how a yonng woman treats her mother, and 1 will tell you what her general character s. Toll me how a young man treats his mother, and I will tell you what his future prospects are for time and eternity. Torso people who are troubled with a cough can be greatly relieved by mix ing a spoonful of honey with water and drinking it before retiring to bed. The "honey" extracted at the front gate, between ten and eleven o'clock, is what causes that cough, as a general thing. If toc have any difficulty in making wall paper stick to walls that have been whitewashed, it can be easily remedied by making a sizing of common glue and water, and applying with a brush to the walls, and if your paste be good the paper will remain firm for years. Boiled Suoitlder of Cod. Take the upper half of a fresh cod, well dressed, pin in a napkin, place in boiling water with salt, and let it boil thirty or forty minutes, according to its size. Turn out hot platter, and serve only the fish without 6kin or bone. HTioitors. A Dormant Wasp. Says the Burling ton llawkeye : A West Hill minister picked up a frozen wasp on the side walk, and with a view to advancing the interest of science, he carried it in the house and held it by the tail while he warmed its ears over lamp chimney. His object was to see if wasps froze to death, or merely lay dormant during the Winter. He is of the opinion that they merely lie dormant, and the dor mantest kind at that, and when they revive, he says, the tail thaws ont first, for while this one's head, right over the lamp, was so stiff and cold it could not wink, its probe worked with such in conceivable rapidity that the minister couldn't gasp fast enough to keep up with it. He threw the vicious thing down the lamp chimney, and said he didn't want to have any more truck with dormant wasp, at which his wife burst into tears and asked how he, a minister of the gospel, could use such language, right before the children, too. A handsome young Englishman, making a call at a house in Washing ton, where there resided some of the loveliest young ladies, suddenly dis covered that he had come out without his purse. The prettiest of the ladies said, "Shall I lend you a dollar?" "Would you?" was the reply. The dollar was produced from the most charming portemonnaie, and the beau tiful American said, laughingly, "I must have interest, you know, when you return it." The handsome Eng lishman called next day, repaid the dollar, and placing a couple of exqui-sitely-cut-bottles of perfume on the table, added, "and there is the interest, two cents." A Manager's Expedient. All the female vocalists and fair members of the chorus engaged at a certain little theatre in Italy had got into the habit of never going to rehersal, or to the performance in the evening, without each of them being accompanied by one or two old ladies, who passed as their mothers. All these old ladies crowded the stage very inconveniently, tili one day the manager, whose patience was quite exhausted, resolved to put an end to the abuse. For this purpose, he had a notice printed and stuck np at the stage door ; "Henceforth, no lady en gaged in this theatre will be allowed to bring with her more than one mother at a time." A Yankee gentleman, escorting a British friend to view the different objects of attraction in the vicinity of Boston, brought him to Bunker Hill. They stood looking at the splendid monument, " when the Yankee said : "This is the place where Warren fell." " Ah 1" replied the Englishman, evi dently not posted in local historical matters, "did it hurt him much ?' "Hurt him 1" said he, "he was killed, sir." "Ah, he was eh?" said the stranger, still eyeing the monument, and computing its height layer by layer. "Well, I should think he would, have been, to fall so far." Ax ambitious Biddy, applying for a cook's situation the other day, was un fortunately a little too glib in self praise for her own interest, when, in reply to the iunniry if she could pre pare a dinner of three courses, said she could "pnrvide a dinner uv a dozen courses, or aven twinty, no matter how manv. if the butcher sint the coorses in say son for there was niver the coorse I conldn t cook sure it s a coorse cook I am entirely." Xo doubt," replied the lady, "entirely too coarse for me." A nruoRors old man fell in with an ignorant and rather impertinent young minister, who proceeded to inform the old gentleman, in positive terms, that be could never reach heaven unless he was born again, and added : "I have experienced that change, and now feel no anxiety."- "And have you leen born again ?' said his companion musingly. "Well, said the old gentleman, eyeing him attentively, "I don't think it would hurt you to be born once more." Woman's impulsiveness in forming conclusions is well illustrated in the following note from a Brooklyn gentle man : "I was relating at tea a moment ago, the account in the papers of the collision on the Chesapeake. 'How did you say the passengers were saved ?' asked my wile. hy, the i alcon, the other boat, took them off,' I replied. '.My ! she said, hat a fortunate thing that other boat happened to be just there.' " A famous banker was busily writing a letter at a desk in his office, when a well dressed stranger entered. "Take a chair, sir, please," says the banker, "I will finish my letter in a moment." Do you know who I am. sir ? cries the stranger, drawing himself up, "I am Lord , Minister Plenipotentiary , etc. "On I are you indeed ? was the banker's reply. "Then pray, take two chairs." Stewardess, stewardess." called Mrs Timidity from her state-room one night aboard an tnglish steamer, "come here quick, the ship's side has cracked." The stewardess rushed in in a great state of excitement only to find that the water pitcher, carelessly left on the lounge, had jumped into Mrs. Timid ity's berth, and somewhat saturated the old lady. A Torso la!y. known as a regular chatter-box, having monopolized the conversation for the first half hour at table, aakod a Quaker present how he liked tongue, remarking at the same time that she had prepared it in several tempting ways; to which he meekly replied : "In repose." A slight lull in conversation followed. Two Tor.so gentlemen were looking at fashionable ladies promenading in front of a fashionable hotel. One of them asked the other why he did not get married. "You have got money enough," said he, '-to feed a wife." les, replied the other, "but I have not money enough to clothe her." Quick Time. A gentleman was one day arranging music for a lady to whom he was paying his attention.' "Pray, ansa v., saiu ne, --wnat time do yon prefer ?" "O," she replied carelessly, "any time will do ; but the quicker the better." The celebrated Chesterfield is said to have died with a witticism on his lips. When told that he was dying by incites, he thanked heaven that he was not so tall by a foot and half as Sir Thomas lSobinson. A little boy asked a lady who made her teeth. "My Creator," she replied. -wen, said tue youngster, "vt. made my ma's, and they beat yonr'n clean out o'sight" A humorous old gentleman, having handed a few coppers to an itinerant music-grinder, has entered the disburse ment in his petty expenses book as "organic change I" The only unoccupied real estate in New York is advertised thus : "A nice three cornered lot in a cemetery, short and, just right for a fat man with only one leg." Nothing so mnch destroys a man's peace of mind as to hear a woman ex press an intention to give him a piece of hers. A bad style of an arithmetic Divi sion among families. The fastest city in the worldElectricity. A raiTersml 'Langaaae. The New York Timet remarks that the adoption of a universal language is a desirable object to be attained, but it may be asked, whether it is at all feasi ble. International congresses are con vened to consider the expediency of a uniform system of money, weights, and measures, or to promote international legislation. If there is ever to be a supreme tribunal to which nations shall commit the guardianship of the peace of the world, it looks almost like a corollary of such an institution, to agree upon the adoption of language which shall be the common medium of expression between ail interested par ties. As to what language it shall be, there is no pressing necessity for cavil ling about the merits of this or that language. English and French appear to us, the editor says, to combine most of the qualities desirable in an inter national medium of communication. The Germans would very likely bring in a plea for German, and, indeed, if we are led by the people wno nave the biggest words, they have as good a chance as any. In the mean time, as no international congress has yet to decide which of the living idioms shall be the international language of the world, we can only recommend to our readers to study well such as may be useful to themselves, especially their own. Educate (he Girls. The tenderness displayed towards our daughters in guarding them from all knowledge of the world, supplying their every want, and freeing them from the necessity of exertion in self- support, is a cruel kindness. In this country, where iiriniosreniture is not recognized, where pioperty is rarely entailed, where fortunes are so con tinually shifting hands, where the rich man of to-day may le the poor man of to-morrow, and where the petted and indulged wife of the huslKind neglect ful of life insurance, has before her the possibility of widowhood and destitu tion, there is nothing so wrong, so un just, so wicked, as training np women to be so dependent on others, ana ot a consequenee.so forlornly helpless when their dependence fails them, fcvery girl, as well as every boy, should have some honest, self-supporting occupa tion. There may never be need of its practice on the part of the girl ; but the accomplishment will le a valued one nevertheless, for it will give her cour age to meet life, and whatever change it may bring her. The long and short ot the matter is that girls must be taught as lioys are taught, that it is dis graceful to look toanot her forthat means of 8iipMirt which they are perfectly couqietent to acquire for themselves. E. F. Hanker Bitter Wine of Iron. E. F. Ktinkels celebrated Bitter Wine of Iron will effectually cure liver complaint, jaundice, dyspepsia, chronic or nervous de bility, chronic dntrrhtci, disease or th kid neys, and all diseases arising from a disor dered liver, stomach or intestines ; such as constipation, flatulence, inward piles, full ness of blood to the bead, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust for foo l, fullness or weight in the stomach, sour eructations, sinking or fluttering at the pit of the stomach, swimming of the bead, hur ried or difficult breath np, fluttering of the heart, choking or suffocating sensations when in a lying posture, dimness of vision, dots or webs before the siht, dull pain in the head, deficiency of perspiration, yellow ness of the skin and eyes, pain in the side. back, chest, limbs, &c, sudden flu-dies of heat, turning in the fl-sh, constant imagin ings of evil and great depression of Hpirits. They are entirely vegetable and free from alcoholic stiniuLints and all injurious ingre dients, and are pleasant in ta.te and smell, mild in their operations, will remote impu rities from the body and give health and vigor to the frame. Iteware of counterfeits. T ie genuine is sold only in I bottles. Sold by lruggits ami dealers every where. E. F. KINKr. L, l'roprietor, So. "VJ North Ninth St., Philadelphia, I 'a. Tapeworm Urxovrn Alive. Head and all complete, in two hours. No fee till head passes. Seat, Tin and Stomach Worms re moved by Dr. Ki skel, 25'. Nobtii Ninth Street. Advice free. Come, see over 1, (an specimens an 1 be convinced. He never fails. QrACK Mr.nicisi:. We never puff, but AN A K ESI. S, the g tat vettern I'M rrmrdg, has cured Thousands, after lotions, oint ments, and all manner of nostrums have failed. It is the discovery of l)a. Silsbek, an eminent western physician, and has been endorsed by medical men of all schools. It is a simple medicated suppository, acts as an instrument, poultice and medicine, af fords instant relief from pain, and is pro nounced an infallible cure. Price $1. Sent free by mail on receipt of price. 1'. Neu stielter & Co., Anakesis Depot, 40 Walker St., New York. 8 the PlWESOLOaiCAL JO URSA L. A rtaar-cuss ILLrSTR ATED MAUAZ1NB. tFVOTFrt TO SCI t.NCE, LITKK Ml KK AND UK.NKRAL lNTLLLIiiKNCK. rilRKNOLOOV The l.rin ami lt funrtimM: tlx l-ati.n anil Nalnrv of all th Orzam. with iltrcc ttHM ffT rultiViAtinir. tevHofiinic luipruviug and re tr.itlinc tlii-m. -k-l"W TilfCLr." I'llYSIiNiNoMY "Siciil of Charvtrr. airi How to K--a! Tli4-m." at a glam-e, in tlw Uiraian ?re, oa ScH-ittitic l'ritK-ilt-. lllii-trMtcl. KTHNOLOUV Or. IU Matnral tlixtnrr nf Mn: Origin. M-mnrr. Cni-toms an.1 M alra of Lift- in va riu TritM-w autl Nation, with Ti-mperainentji tLacial Chnrartrri-tim and Illustration. I'll VSlul"i V Tlie of Life; hx-tading the Munition, Training awt liiiipliiM of Cliillr-n, ami tlM Kisbt Management of lmlM-rilra, Utm luaana. rrrannrnt anl all otlint. Ini)orfanC MOliKAI'lllriS I'.drait- gira o manT Inkling Men atxl Wanen of 1m Wf-Il. with akvtchea of cliararter. livmfihH aal ormtti.m. trXr-d I.TLI1B Inlruolir artiiiea on Self Im-prove-m-nt. Memory, Oioe of f urttliU,Oiir National liititntMn. KeKireen, etc H.NALLY MiK-fa niefitl infiirmatina on tha lead ing tofiim of the ilar Political, not partisan Reli gitrtl, not aertarian K-lncatHHial. Ketirniatory, Agri cultural, f.Hmoerrial, etc. No eff1n will he aarel to Malta tlie PNRK-foL'MilCtl. Jot'aL for IHTa I lie aMt itKtrnrtive- and i!itrotiii ever uMi.hei. TKI1MS. Mmthly. ! a Tear, in mlvanee. CloW of ten or more, 1 oath. tNiila noniWra, onlj 3b cnta Toe ninftt lilieral premium are giren. Aiklreaa a Ii. WELLS, a-tt BROADWAY, NEW YORK. CL37HI3 WAJSE I 7V Vf ia .- warM (Cn al fcir getMT.il nee i aoM at $10: weigh hut four romtiils. Kaeier tlian l.r hand, and le wear of the go..l. Send tr rirmlar to J. K. Ill'liDALE, White. water, Wayne Co., I ud. It is rr o r THAT COUGH! BY TAKING SINES' COMrOCXD SYRUP OF TAR, WILD CHERRY AND -Qoni-iionND. Fur tin Cure nf Coinjhs, W'knoping Cuugh, Crimp, Sre Throat, lluartentim, Atlhmtt, inttttmmatirn of the Lung, i'ain in the .VfoV and llreatt, JironehitU ami ali dtaet lending to FOLMOIJIBT C0ISDHPT1DI! Do not neglect that, which to you may ap pear to be a trilling eold, or you too may be added to the NINETY THOUSAND human being who die annually in the UNITED STATES who are hurried to premature graves, by that dreadful scourge, prixon abt cossmrTinx. The specified ingredients, vit: Tar, Wild Cherry and Horehound, are so well known, and so highly recommended, that the pre paration must come into general ne for af fections of lhe breast and lungs. It is re markably pleasant to lake, containing no- rlitn in mm, wanaaatiiigaenswtiuaa whiea is a very important consideration as it ia extremely difficult to prevail upon childrea to take a sufficient qnaatity of most medi cines in use to have the desired effect. Has been sold by Druggists aad Store keepers for thirty years. Fries 25 and 50 cents psr bottle. Prepared onlj by CHARLES NEHER, JR., PHILADELPHIA. USE M. B. ROBERT'S ESIBROCATION, rOB ALL BXTEBXAL DISEASES OE MAN Oil BEAST. Price 35 Cents per Bottle. SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! All tyfe. 8Urr Mounted and Walnut, bow ad aaoond.aaod. HerarWj packed for anipoirig. CUUNTaUU. BAK-s ftHaXVlSta, UTOhUC FIX TTTlKJi. fco. HOUSE AHD OfFIOE rCKNTTTKB all fttada Tba large and bent aaaoftad atoca. arw aad ajecoud-uand In the. City. JKIYV 1H St. HR(K -l-ly KMU Ia. 1S aad MB BIBat ATE Phlla. Hm J0HAS JONAS-I want to hand yon, Neighbor Gates, something that will be of real interest, not only to you, but to your boys. NEIGHBOR GATES Glad to get anything that has money In It JONAS Well, I think you can certainly save money by consulting this list, which personal examination proves to bs correct in every word and figure. NEIGHBOR GATES I saw a list of Wanamaker A Brown's One Price Clothing last Saturday. JONAS Yes ; but this is a New List, and has a great deal more in it HEIRIEI ABB Heavy and Durable Melton Coat Tants Vest Whole Suit Overcoat, same material Black and White Mixed Coat Black and White Mixed Pants Black and White Mixed Teat Whole Suit Oxford Mixed D. B. Coat Oxford Mixed Pants Oxford Mixed D, B. Vest 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 Whole Suit Very choice Cassimere Coat very cnoice cassimere ranis Very choice Cassimere Vest " -a--- Whole Suit Onrwa T?lik Cloth Coat Good Black Doeskin Pants. Good Black Cloth Vest Whole Suit Better grade Black Cloth Coat Better grade Black Doeskin Pants Better grade iliac iviom vest TOofc SrJit. Fine Dress Coat Fine Dress Pants Fine Dress Vest . wnoie bum. Extra Diagonal Coat Extra Diagonal Pants. Extra Diagonal Vest Whole Suit Every-dsy Pants. Better grade Pants. Dress Pants Choice Pattern Pants Elegant Style Pants. Baperior 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 Overcoats 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 business is done at Oak Hall is very gratifying. Ivery article Is narked wltk Its trae iame and price la plala 0;sm, and no deviation. When anything thies not suit, the money Li returned iuittuuti-r. It is handy to get to Oak Hall, as the car take you dirett to WAN A M A K K ft 4 BROWN'S", on the corner of SIXTH and MARKET. "Wanamaker & Brown, OAK HALL, South-East Corner of Sixth and Market Streets, FTTTTi AJ3ET.Tttt a . HEW TOE! BLACK LEiD WORKS. rUTD Y P" mw rooting by I fl Q f 1 1 H I aainz HILL'S PaTasT Klaaaa II II 11 L1LIII SliM Six. ran-lOO-iucew: II UU Tiaara ar HolaVta. tl A by Mail, poat-paid. tor Sala by Hard war Daaaana. Cu-canwa fraav Addnaa, H. W. H1X1. CO MlS-XX-aow Vccatwr, IIU THE WEEKLY SUN.t'Sr at aad learWea T-M-r. .d b tnayl colnaaua. VI a aim a auae the Weakly the beat tuanly Bear! aer a tax wurtd. Try.rt. - l ."a-. laT l"d. Addraaa Taa Sia, Sear Yurk City. aataAa BLANKS vbatlt ran no at this omoi M TO HBIGBBOR GATES. ...$500 ... 2 75 ... 200 9 75 Whole Suit 800 ' 7 50 25 2 50 Whole Suit. U 25 S 800 4 00 2 00 Youths' Broker Check D. B. Sack. Youths' Broken Check Pants Youths' Broken Check Vest Whole Suit. 5U00 8 8 00 4 50 2 50 Basket Style D. B. Basket Style PtnU Basket Style Vest Whole Suit S15 00 Basket Style D. B. Basket Style D. B. Basket Style Pants .8 9 50 . 550 . 2 75 Whole Suit. $17 75 $12 50 a r A I "iYouths' Extra Choice Color Overcoat 3 50 YontnB. E-t Kerse Overcoat 822 50 Youths Better Grade Kersey Oovercoat 18 m Youths Fine Schnabel Far Beaver Overcoat 22 00 S 9 00 .". 5 00, Boys' First Great 2 50 ' Boys' better grade Boys still better 8' 6 50 Boys' good Cape Soys better grade Boys' higher grade $12 00 6 50 a w Udren's Woolen Suits 8 5 00 $21 50 Children's Woolen Suits 6 50 Children's Cloth Suits 7 50 Children's better grade Suits. 8 50 814 50 Children's heavy Cassimere Suits. 9 50 6 50 .ChUdren's very stylish Harvard Suits 10 50 3 50 .Children's English Granite and Tricot Suits. 11 50 'Children's Kilt Suits 8 50 - 816 00 7 50 4 00 Boys' heavy Woolen Boys' heavy Woolen Whole Suit 827 50 $2 75 3 50 BOO 6 50 7 50 10 00 $ 8 00 Whole Suit 10 00 12 00 15 00 25 00 Whole Suit Extra nice D. B. Extra nice Pants Extra nice D. B. Vest 27 50 Whole Suit .8 9 50 . 16 00 . 20 00 . 22 50 Snperior foreign Superior foreign Superior foreign cloth Pants. . 27 50 . 33 00 1 Whole Suit. 3TATIOSART. PORTABLE AND AGRlCULfUIlAL STEAM ENGINES. Oaaaral Aetata fc SOSSBLL a CO.- Massillon Separators HORSE POWERS. nttim IIORSKKAKKS BI'RDICKH HAYCUTTKIaS AND OTHER FIRST- CLASS FARM MACHINERY HARBERT & RAYMOND. 1835 Market Sti o t PHH.aPKT.KMi. JOB PRINTING HBATt- t -f-Mi AT m Youths Heavy Woolen D. B. Sack $M Youths' Heavy Woolen Pants 2 Youths' Heavy Woolen Vest 1 w S50 Youths' Oxford Mixed D. B. Sack 8650 Youths' Oxford Mixed Pants 3 50 Youths' Oxford Mixed Vest 2 00 !t)0 800 5 00 2 50 Sack $10 oO 6 00 3 2j 81'-75 Frock. $13 00 . . . . 3 25 6 00 Vest. . . Youths' Heavy Overcoat 8 7 IX) Youths Better Grade Overcoat 10 00 Youths' Still Better Grade Overcoat 11 00 13 50 15 00 Coat 8450 Great Coat 6 50 grade Ureat (Joat .. 7 50 .. 9 00 .. 11 00 .. 13 50 Overcoat . . Cape Overcoat . Cape Overcoat. Jackets 8 2 50 Pants 2 00 8 4 50 Boys' All-wool Jacket 8 3 " Boys All-wool Pants. 3 25 Boys' All-wool Vest 150 8 8 50 Better grade D. B. Jackets 8 4 75 Better grade Pants. 4 00 Better grade D. B. Vests 2 00 $10 75 Jacket 8 5 50 . 450 . 250 $12 50 cloth D. B. Coat 8 6 "5 cloth D. B. Vest 2 75 4 50 ....$1400 K A :;