AGRIClTTCKAL. Application of Limb. The state in which lime is applied to land varies with the quality of the land and other circumstances. The common practice is to cart the lime to the field, make it into a heap, or heaps, cover it over with a little earth, and allow it to fall into powder, or slake spontaneously ; after which it is evenly spread on the land and harrowed in, or otherwise worked in the ground. The slackening of lime is a chemical process. The lime absorbs and com bines with moisture, forming a hydrate of lime, and causing the development of heat, and a swelling of the limeshells, will soon crumble to powder. The finer the state of subdivision into which the lime falls the more completely it is dis tributed through the soil, and the more thorough and uniform its action. Sometimes the lime is made into a compost with earth or peat, in which state its action is slower than in the preceeding state. It is evident that the propriety of ap plying it in one or other of theeu states depends on the nature of the ground ; also on whether we wish its action to be quick or slow. Lime should be applied in as caustic a state as possible to all soils containing much vegetable matter, sucb as peat and moss, as well as to clays, moors, and other soils undergo ing reclamation, and to all soils con taining injurious substances, such as the salts of iron. The applicatian of lime to clay land renders the soil more friable, and at the same time converts a good deal of its dormant constitutents into the active state. An excess of moisture in the soil pre vents the lime from producing its full pfffv-tH- Hence wet lands require a greater quantity of lime than those which are naturally ary, or loose which have been made so by drainage. In the permament improvement of clay land, or wet gronnd of any kind, lime should, therefore, be applied after drainage. For the same obvious reason, good far mers put lime upon the gronnd in dry weather. The Eabx Sheet. The barn sheet is a very useful thing to have in every barn. Every harvest it will save more than its cost" in grain, that would other wise be scattered upon the field or the barn, and go to waste. When loading oats or buckwheat especially, the sav ing of shelled grain, by having the sheet in the bottom of the wagon, is often eqnai to the amount of the seed. It is also useful to spread over a load of hay or grain that may be caught in a sudden Bliower, or over a half finished stack. It will serve to cover up a car riage and preserve it from dust. Many other uses will suggest themselves to the careful farmer who has provided himself with one. It may be made of four widths of yard wide stout sheet ing, four yards long, strongly sown to gether with linen thread, and with a strong cord bound into the outside hem. It would be better to have a coat of linseed oil, which would make it nearlv water-proof, but without this, if placed over a stack, the top of which is well rounded up, it will t:irn a steady rain of '2i hours' duration. The cost of a sheet like this being so insignificant and its uses so obvious, it should find a place in every barn. A Safe Tether ris. The Agricul turist for Ootober illustrates a simple device which we infer any one is at lilK-rty to make and use without fear of infringing upon any patent. A strong iron rod, say five-eights or half an inch in diameter is sharpened at one end and bent into a corkscrew-like spiral. The nusharpened end is lient into a ring large enongh to receive a good sized rope. It is easy to screw such an iron into anything worthy of being called a soil, using a stick, if necessary, after the manner of an augnr handle. Snch a tether-pin as this will defy the efforts of the strongest animal to pull it up, and with the ring at the level of the ground it is inioshille for the rope to be twisted around the pin. This de vice is likewise serviceable in a hun dred other ways about a country-house or, indeed, wherever the surface earth is not covered by a natnral or artificial pavement of stones. It will hold guy ropes for shears, or the lower block of hoisting tackle, or tent-ropes, or in deed, any rope which is to be firmly held at the surface, and the great beanty of it is that it does not get bat tered by being hammered down every time it is set in a new place. Scores ! Houses. When dysentery occurs in a horse rice-water formed by boiling rice in water until it is very soft, should be the sole drink, and given when cold. The food should be dry hay and chopped oats (or oats coarsely ground). Two ounces of salt should be given the horse to lick, daily. If these do not cure, a quart of rice-milk (rice boiled in milk until soft), strained should be given frequently along with an ounce of landnnm. If the purga tion still continues the following may be administered : 1 pint chalk mixture, half an ounce tincture of catechu and one dram of powdered opium. The food should be boiled rice and hay and the drink rice-water. This latter treat ment should only be resorted to after patient trial with the others without result. Tlantixo Totatoes is titk Fall. It may be too late when this reaches many of onr readers to make the exper iment, bnt one of our friends informs us that be practices fall planting for his early potatoes, and gains by it full two weeks in the succeeding spring. They are planted in the usual way, excepting rather deeper. In the row, manure is put on the sets ; they are then covered with earth and leaves put over the whole. This plan has been pursued for several years in his own private garden with entire success. Whether it would be profitable on a large scale is somewhat doubtful as our early markets for potatoes are sup plied from the South. Extermination of Field Mich. An approved preparation consists in a mix ture of one part of arsenic, two parts of meal, and two parts of brown syrup, made np into little balls or pills. This answers an excellent purpose for exterminating mice around the house : bnt if used in the field it becomes ne cessary to take some precaution to pre vent its being devoured by birds and domestic animals. To avoid this diffi culty it is placed within the mouse holes or run ways, which are then closed by stamping upon them. By the systematic application of this rem edy, it is said that fields completely overrun have been freed from mice in in the course of a few weeks. Annual Jtccord of Science and Industry. Keetixo Leather Harness Pliable. It is well known that leather articles, kept in stables, soon become brittle in consequence of ammoniacal exhalations which affect both harness hanging in such localities and the shoes of those who frequent them. The usual appli cations of grease are not always suffi cient to meet this difficulty ; but it is said that by adding to them small quantity of glycerine the leather will be kept continually in a soft pliable con dition. To destroy cabbage worms make a strong solution of soft soap and water and sprinkle the plants wita it. It will destroy the worms and stimulate the growth of the cabbages. A paper can for kerosene oil, which is claimed to be as strong as tin and much cheaper, is among the latest inventions. SCTETnFIC New Camera LrcrDA fob Drawtxo. It is known that the construction of the camera lucida is founded upon the simultaneous perception of two images that of the object and that of the pencil, Various means have been em ployed to errive at this result. In that of Sommering, it is a metallic mirror smaller than the pupil ; that of Amid is constructed on the principle of re flection on a plate with parallel faces ; that of Wollaston, at present most in use, consists in prism, of which the edge, dividing the pupil in two parts, permits the object to be seen by the upper half, and simultaneously the pencil by the lower portion. In all these systems the fusion of the images is somewhat difficult to seize, especially for certain points of the reflected im age. Oovi, Professor of Physics at the Koyal University at Rome, proposes to cover with a thin layer of gold the re flecting surface of a prism, and to apply upon this, with Canada balsam, a sec ond prism with like angles. Although this layer of gold is sufficiently trans parent to allow the luminous rays to pass, its power of reflection is consider able, and it gives images of great brightness. We have thus a perfect means of superimposing, without fa tigue to the eye, two different images the one direct, and the other reflected. The principle is the application of that property of thin plates metallio or otherwise to transmit simultaneously direct rays, and to reflect rays which arrive obliquely from another source. Hard and Soft Water. There is a notion quite prevalent in the minds of people that drinking hard water is inju rious to health, and most physicians have warned people to as far as possible avoid the practice. But Dr. Letherby, an English physician, who has devoted much time to investigating the subject finds as the result of his observations that hard water is not only clearer, colder, more free from air, and more agreeable to the taste than soft, but that it is less liable to the absorption of organic matter and to the sustenance of the life of zymotic organisms, or to exert solvent properties upon salts of iron, or upon leaden conducting pipes. And he claims that the lime salts exert a beneficial influence. It is asserted that a practical test of the truth of this new theory is to be had in the case of the residents of mountainous districts, where the water is most invariably hard. and where the inhabitants exhibit the best physical development. He claims that a water containing about six grainB of carbonate of lime to the gallon is suitable for use in all household pur poses, for such water offers the neoes sary amount of carbonate of lime for the support of life in the simplest and most digestible form. Transformation of Sandstone to Marble. J. Corvin. an engineer resid ing at Dresden, Germany, has invented a method of Riving the ordinary sand stone, found in abundance in many localities, the exterior appearance of marble. He accomplishes this by im preirnatinfr the well dried stone with soluble silica and alumina. The thus prepared sandstone becomes much lighter in color, some kinks being in tensely white and translucent, while it is capable of the highest polish, equal to that on the purest marble. He has even succeeded in imitating marbles of every color by adding mineral colors to the liquid used for impregnation. The famous quarries nour Pima, in Saxony, produce a sandstone exitecially adapted to this process, and Mr. Corvin now makes colored stones from this sand stone, adapted to the most elegant architectural structures. The price is considerably below that of marble : and the new material has the important advantage that it is much more fire proof than marble, which, when ex posed to the fire, rapidly burns into quicklime and crumbles to duBt. Tub manufacture of illuminating gas from water has not been heard much of lately, bnt' now has come an English inventor who mokes an illuminating gas from sewage water, forty-seven feet of gas being obtained from one quart of sewage water. One foot of sewage gas gives as much light as three feet of coal gas, and the flame is clearer, purer, more healthful, and cheaper. The process consists in passing the liqnid through two heated retorts, then through an iron cylinder called the hydraulic main, which is above the furnace, then through another heated retort, and next through a coil of metal piping immersed in cold water. After wards the process is the same as in making coal gas. Kecent investiga tions have raised grave doubts as to the propriety of using sewage as manure, the vegetables raised by its means E roving to be unhealthfuL If we can ght our streets and houses with the contents of the sewers the great problem of what to do with the sewage of great cities is in a fair way to be solved. But it will not do to be too sanguine. The following extract from a letter to Science Gossip will show what large prey is sometimes hunted by compari tively small animals : "Being out one June afternoon in search of marl fossils at the Downs, above Vent nor, in an angle of the Down enclosed by two fences, and where the sun's rays poured down with unusual warmth, I encoun tered a large adder lying on the top of a stone that had fallen ont of the above. At the first sight I took it for a toad, but when it uncoiled itself, which it did when it saw me, and tried to escape, I saw nty error, and that it was the above mentioned reptile, which had gorged itself with something that had caused it to resemble a huge tadpole in ap- r'arance. On the spur of the moment threw my fossil-hammer at it, which completely disabled it ; and on exam ining it I found that the creature had swallowed a full-grown mole, and when I disturbed it it was in the act of taking siesta after its repast." Albumen. Albumen is an organic compound found both in animal and vegetable substances. Its properties are best studied in the white of an egg, which is a very pure form of albnmen. It also abounds in the blood and chyle, and more or less in all the serous fluids in the animal body ; it also exists in the sap of vegetables and in their seeds, and other edible parts. Albnmen forms the starting point of animal tissues. The chief component elements of albu men are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen, with small proportions of sulphur and phosphorus. It is believed to be a definite chemical compound, though the exact proportions and the rational formula have not been definitely ascertained. Carbon forms fifty-four per cent of it, nitrogen sixteen, and snlphur two. The disagreeable smell arising from the decomposition of eggs is from the generation of sulphuretted hydrogen. Tne Potato fob Food. By chemical analysis the potato is found to contain of water, 73.9 ; carbon, 10.6; hydrogen, 1.3 ; oxygen, 10.7 ; nitrogen, 0.3 ; ashes 0.9. From this it appears that very little nitrogen is contained in the potato and it diminishes the longer potatoes are kept. If nitrogenized principles alone contribute to the nutrition of the body, then one pound of good beef is equal in nutritive power to 10 pounds of potatoes. Liebig observes that a horse may be kept alive by feeding it with potatoes, but life thus supported is a gradual starvation; the animal increases neither in size nor strength, and sinks nnder every exertion. D0IESTIC Ost Place Whebb thb Leak Is. Daring the latter part of 1871, as I sat by the evening fire, moodily pondering over the hard times, my wife said : "Hub, I wish you would buy Dolly and I a new dress for a Christmas present." I felt aa though this little request which my wife wished to construe as an act of liberality and kindness, was nothing more than a duty on my part, and, under this feeling, I could cot possibly refuse, though the want of money made it almost impossible to comply with this very reasonable and modest demand upon my purse. My salary was good, and, in years agone, had furnished my little family with all the necessaries and many of the luxuries of life. I was, in the general accepta tion of the term, a temperate man ; my morning call, noonday lunch, and eve ning social took only the pittance of fifteen cents each, while my fragrant Havana drew upon my purse for only ten cents after breakfast, dinner ard supper. These were small outlays, a d seemed necessary to my health, co n fort and social standing; they were mere trifles, and could not possibly amount to much, one way or the other. It is true, I was out of debt, but, what was worse, out of money, and the modest request of my wife seemed to harrass me to a degree imaginable to one not in exactly the same fix. The old adage, "the mickles make the muckles, came to my mind very forci bly, and under the peculiar circum stances surrounding me, I made a firm resolve to act upon it for the next twelve months. I could remember very well that it was considered, in my younger days rather disgraceful for boys to be caught smoking or chewing tobacco, or drinking whisky ; consequently, these little habits must contribute their mites to the money-box, which I procured for the purpose of catching the stray mickles spent for unnecessary articles. In a few weeks I imagined I felt better without the toddy and cigar, and thought of them only as discarded vices, as each day I deposited the little amounts in my savings bank. ' Just twelve months after the time I resolved to do away with the unnecessary expenses. I opened my money-box, and, to my surprise, found just two hundred and tcrrnty -three dollar and tcventy fire cent .' It may be well to state that the new dresses, with many luxuries for the table, and ornaments for my little home, were now procured with out any difficulty whatever. Old Santa Claus was also more lavish with his toys and good things when Dolly hung up her little stocking on Christmas eve. I felt happy not moody nnder the good influences that were brought about by the price of bad habits ; and, what is better, I have found out the cause of hard times and "where the leak is." Flowers in Winter. Make a little preparation for winter flowers. It is surprising what a little fore-thought will do in this direction. A pot of mignonette and another of sweet alyssum cost nothing.and yet few things will be found more pleasant and attrac tive in the winter season. Plants that appear unimportant, almost insignifi cant, and entirely eclipsed by more ambitious rivals, when the garden is ablaze with its summer glory, some times prove to be very queens of beauty when transferred to the sitting-room or the bay-window. The balsam is a very desirable plant for winter blooming, particularly the white, and toward autumn we often select cuttings from a few of the finest plants in the garden and root them in pots for winter flowers. The stocks are equally good. The cobcea scandens, and nearly all the climbers, make good winter bloomers. Mignonette and sweet alyssum may be sown now. Put from three to six plants in a pot. Any plants, in the open ground, that have not bloomed, may be taken up carefully and potted, shading a few days after potting, and giving a full supply of water. Look around the garden, before frost, and if yon have some young and strong plants that proved a little lt for out-door flower ing that you would like to try in pots. If so, take them up with as little dis turbance as possible, and put in good soil. Vanitt. Personal vanity is snpposed to be a common failing, but that it is not so general as we are disposed to be lieve it to be, is proved by the fact that people are so constantly wishing for some physical attribute which they do not possess. The stout people write to their favorate papers to inquire about some system for reducing their weight. The thin girls ash the same amiable anthority what will make them plnmp. Black-haired people slyly purchase golden hair-dye, and men with red beards dye them black. The pale beauty "touches up" a little before going to a party, and the rosy one wishes she did not "look like a milk maid." The little man is always envy ing men who have grown to be six feet three ; and big men would often give a great deal for the pretty dapper figures of those whose growth has not resembled that of the oak. To get the "wave out of curly hair, to get it into straight locks, to lace in a waist that approaches the Grecian sculptor's idea of beauty, and to pad the thin form into greater bulk, is the task of every lady's-maid. As for gentlemen well, we'll only ask does nature make their shoulders all so square ? In fact, to look other than they were made appears to be the ob ject of the majority of the people. And if that is the case, how can the human family be called vain ? A SmrLE Disinfectant. One pound of green copperas, costing seven cents, dissolved in one quart of water and poured down a water-closet, will effec tually concentrate and destroy the foulest smells. On board ships and steamboats, alraut hotels and other public places, there is nothing so nice to purify the air. Simple green copperas, dissolved in anything under the bed, will render a hospital or other places for the sick, free from unplensant smells. In fish markets, slaughter houses, sinks, and wherever there are offensive gases, dissolve copperas and sprinkle it about, and in a few days the smell will all pass away. If a cat, rat or mouse dies about the house and sends off offensive gas, place some dis solved copperas in an open vessel near the place where the nuisance is, and it will purify the air. Then keep clean. Cheap Ptddiso. Put in a tin pail 2 quarts of skimmed milk and set in a kettle of boiling water ; when very hot, stir into it 1 pint of meal ; take from the fire and add 1 teacup molasses, 1 teaspoonfnl salt and 1 of cinnamon ; bake in a butter cake-pan ; use cream sauce flavored with nutmeg. Hard Ginger Cakes. Two quarts of flour one pound and a quarter of sugar, one pound and a quarter of butter and lard mixed, two tablespoonfnls of ginger. Make up with molasses into a tolerable stiff dough, and roll ont quite thin. Cut with round or cake cutters of fancy shape. Raised Cake. Two cups of raised dough, two eggs, two cups of sugar, one cup of butter, one cup sweet milk, one teaspoonfnl of soda, two cups of flour, one cup of fruit,cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg. To be put into the oven at once. A Chinese Young Men's Christian As sociation has been established in San Francisco. Its name is Yan Hok Chong ToUL KnroBocs. A Rich Scene. A retired clergyman sends us an account of a little affair that happened in his place. It appears that there was a young woman, a fine, spirited girl, engaged at a washtub opposite an open door. Just behind her was a young man, aa is generally the case, and in the yard was an old buck that was allowed the freedom of the premises, which was not always the case, we are glad to aay. Well, the buck came np to the door and looked in, and the young man, going close behind the young woman, pointed his finger straight at the buck, and the old fellow, recognizing at onoe the pressing character of this mute invitation, put down his head and dashed forward, and the miserable man stepped one side and fled. The young woman, all uncon scious of the arrangement, received the awful shock without warning, and passed over the tub ; the air for an instant appeared to be full of slippers and wet clothes and soap and hot water and suds. The next minute the goat came flying out of the door at a dread ful speed, bald the whole length of the spine, and with a wild look in his eye. And for an hour afterward he stood back of the barn scratching his chin, and trying to recall all the circum stances of the affair. In thb Spiritual Link. It is a good story that they tell of Dr. Hayman, formerly of Rugby School. England. While returning recently from the Brighton Congress, a fellow-passenger undertook to draw him into conversa tion, and so far succeeded that the reverend gentleman asked him to what profession he happened to belong. "Oh," said the layman, cheerfully, "I am in the Manchester line. Oh, indeed." replied Dr. Hayman. urbanely. "there is a good deal of business going on there just now, I understand." "First-class," said the layman, with a canning smile ; "and may I ask what is tout line? 1, said the doctor. patronizingly, with the nearest approach to a joke he was ever known to perpe trate. I am in the spiritual line. "Blessed if I didn't think so," ex claimed his companion, knowingly; and putting one hand on the doctor's knee, he leaned lorwara eagerly and added, with an indescribable wink, "but I say, what a high old price you got gin up to. Dr. 11 ay man instantly collapsed. Herb is another story about Horace Greelev : On a certain occasion, as he sat writing at his editorial desk, he received a visit from an irate man, who spent fifteen minutes in pouring out upon his head a torrent of denunciation to which the abused man replied not by so much as a single word. At length the visitor, seeing that the editor could not be induced to pay him the compli ment of defending himself, passed out of the door with a growl. Thereupon Mr. Greeley, rising, with his pen in his hand, and following the departing cen sor, cried out : "Come back, my mend, and free your mind. Don t go off with' out entirely relieving yourself." A Sincere Mourner. The German papers tell this story in connection with Baron Rothschild's death. A. and B. meeting B., weeping and sobbing aloud. "Says A., "V hy do yon weep ? "Because, says B., as if his heart were breaking, "because he is dead, the powerful, the rich baron. "But, replies A., "why do you cry so much ; he was no relation of yours ?" "That's just what I am crying about," howls B., more affected than ever. When a jilted young man looks on her. who is now another's, and sees that the once lithe form resembles a sack of wheat with a string tied in the middle ; sees the eyes that once "looked love to eyes that spake again, bearing marks of the uxorial bootjack or blacking bottle ; sees the five red-haired children and the tow-beaded twins, then indeed, he may sigh and recall the poet's words the saddest "it might have been" worse, for me. A stranger from the country observ ing an ordinary roller rule on the table, took it np, and inquiring its use, was answered. "It was a rule for counting houses." Too well bred, as he con structed politeness, to ask unnecessary questions, he turned it over and over and up and down repeatedly, and at last, in a paroxysm of baffled curiosity, inquired, "How, in the name of wonder, do you count houses with this ?" A traveler in Vermont, stopping at a hotel recently, ordered supper. The meal was a very inferior one, and at its conclusion, which was soon reached, he stepped up to settle for it "Well," said Boniface, with alacrity, "I hope you had a good supper." "Yes," re plied he musingly, "the sapper aver aged first rate ; the butter was strong and the tea was weak." "Mr real number is six, bnt my hand will bear squeezing," is what she said to the young man at the glove counter. And the great thick-headed lunatic got her a pair of five-and-and-a half gloves without finding out how mnch squeezing her hand would bear. We would have worked at that job an hour but she should have had an exact fit. Lucy Hoopeb admires the perfect equality in business matters which exists between the sexes in Paris. Women keep books, govern hotels, run large shops and even factories, and are often the business partners of their husbands, and most efficient ones at that. The Frenchwoman is indeed a power in the land. A gentleman, while walking in his garden, caught his gardener asleep under a tree. He scolded him soundly for his laziness and ended by telling him such a sluggard was not worthy to enjoy the light of the sun. "It was for that reason exactly," said the gardener, "that I crept into the shade." An Iristtman was speaking of the ex cellence of a telescope. "Do yon see that wee speck on the edge of the hill yonder? That, now, is my old pig, though hardly to be seen ; but when I look at him with my glass, it brings him so near that I can plainly hear him grunt." "Ben," said a father the other day to his delinquent son, "I am busy now, but as soon as I can get time I mean to give you a flogging." "Don't hurry yourself, pa," replied the patient lad, "I can wait." "Can you spare me five minutes ?" said a friend, entering our sanctum. "Not if two will answer your purpose," we replied. He occupied but one, and thanked us kindly for the intimation. Ladies should remember to keep their mouths shut when going out of a warm room into ihe cool air. In fact, it wouldn't hurt anything to keep them shut most of the time. A California woman is captain of a schooner. That's nothing. Lots of Massachusetts girls have married West Pointers and command men-of-war. Monkeys never grow older in expres sion. A young monkey looks exactly like his grandpapa melted up and horn over again. Toy banks are safest. If the bank breaks the children get their money. Thb beet way to rise in a lady's esti mation is not by stares. Drawing materials Corkscrews. TwentT-nine vears ago. whea David Maydole was a roadside blacksmith, at Norwhich. New York, aix carpenters came to the village from the next county to work upon a new church, one of whom, having left his hammer behind, came to the blacksmith's to get one made, there being none in the village store. "Make me a good one. said the car penter, "aa good a one as yon know how." "But." said the young blacksmith, who had already considered hammers, and had arrived at some notion of what a him mar nnvht to be. and had a Droner contempt for cheapness in all its forms, "perhaps you don t want to pay lor as good a one aa I can make." "xes, 1 do ; x want a good nammer. And so David Maydole made a good hammer, the best one probably that has ever been made since Tubal Cain, and one that perfectly satisfied the car penter. The next day the man's five companions came, each of them wanting just such a hammer, and when they were done the employer came ana or dered two more. Next the storekeeper of the village ordered two dozen, which were bought by a Aew lore tool mer chant, who left a standing order for as many such hammers as David Maydole could make. And from that day to this he has gone on making hammers until now he has 115 men at work. He has never borrowed. He has never tried to compete with others in price. He has never reduced a price because other men had done so. His only care has been to make a perfeet hammer, to make as many such as people wanted and no more, and to sell them at a fair price. I'arton. How Moeh We Talk. It is well that all we say is not writ ten down not only because some of it might be rather against us, bnt because there would not be room for it (John 21 t25.) A curious Frenchman has lately been making a calculation, which is, that a man talks on an average three hours a day, at the rate of about twenty nine octavo pages an hour. This would make eighty-seven pages a day, about six hundred a week, which would amount to fifty-two good-sized valumes every year 1 And then, multiplying this by the number of years in a man's life, what a library he would have if it should be printed ! And, too, how very little of the whole would be worth preserving, and how much he would be so glad if it had been left unsaid 1 The cost of the various expeditions for observing the transit of Venus is es timated at $1,500,000. E. F. KankH'n Bitter Wine ! Iron. E. F. Kunkel's celebrated Bitter Wine of Iron will effectually cure liver complaint, jaundice, dyspepsia, chronic or nervou de bility, chronic diarrhoea, disease of 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, digust for fooi, fullness or weight in the stomach, sour eructations, sinking or fluttering at the pit of the stomach, swimming of the head, hur ried or difficult breath ng, fluttering of the heart, choking or suffocating sensations when in a lying posture, dimness of vision, dots or webs before the sight, dull pain in the head, deflciency of perspiration, yellow ness of the skin and eyes, pain in the aide, back, chest, limbs, &e., sudden flushes of heat, hunting in the flesh, constant imagin ings of evil and great depression of spirits. They are em irely vegetable and free from alcoholic stimulants and all injurious ingre dients, ami are pleasant in taste and smell, mild in their operations, will remove impu rities from the body and give health and vigor to the frame. ISeware of counterfeits. The genuine is sold only in 1 bottles. Sold by Druggists and dealers every where. E. F. KL'XKEL, Proprietor, No. 2o'J North Ninth 8t Philadelphia, Pa. Tapeworm Removed A lite. Head and all complete, in two hours. No fee till head passes. Seat, Pin and Stomach Worms re moved by Da. Ki-xkel, 2S'J North Nisth Street. Advice free. Come, see over 1,1100 specimens and be convinced. He never ails. Bi-sixes roa 1875. New brass article. Sells rapidly. Profitable. Agents wanted. Success guaranteed. Address Man'fr'a, S. S. Mass 4 Co., 231 N. Howard Street, Bal timore, Md. A st Reader of this, sending me the names and post-office address of five or more young and middle aged men desiring a start in business life, will receite, free of charge, the novel and intoresting engravings of "The First Railroad Train in America," 'The First Engine Built." "The First Steamboat ever Constructed' and "Robert Fulton's First Steamboat on the Hudson." Address Eastman College, Po'keepsie, N. Y. Piles cas be Cl'eed only by ANAKESIS, the greatest discovery of the age, and the sole, infallible remedy for the worst eases of Pile. Thousands of sufferers after try ing in vain all manner of lotions, ointments and internal remedies, have been instantly relieved and permanently cured by ANA KESIS. It is the happy discovery of Da. Silsbrb, a regular scientific physician, and Doctors of all schools endorse and recom mend it. Price fl. Sent free by mail on receipt of price. P. Nenstasdter & Co., Anakesis Depot, 40 Walker St., New York. 10 THAT COUGH! BY TAKIXO SINES' COMrOUXD STRUT OF TAR, WILD CHERRY AND nonsnoTiND. for the Care of Coughs, Whooping Cough Croup, Sore Throat, Hoarernt, Atthma, Inflammation of the Lungs, rain hi the Side and lirtatt, JJronehitit and all dittata tending to Do not neglect that, which to yon may ap pear to be a trifling cold, or you too may be added to the NINETY THOUSAND human beings who die annually in the UNITED STATES who are hurried to premature graves, by that dreadful scourge, rrLxos ART COSSCMPTIOSJ. The specified ingredients, via.: Tar, Wild Cherry and Horehound, are so well known, and so highly recommended, that the pre paration must come into general use for af fections of the breast and lungs. It is re markably pleasant to take, containing no thing to cause nauseating sensations which is a very important consideration as it is extremely difficult to prevail upon children to take a sufficient quantity of most medi cines in nse to have the desired effect. Has beea sold by Druggists and Store, keepers for thirty years. Fries 25 ani 53 cents per bottle. Prepared obIjt 1j CHARLES NEHER, JR., PHILADELPHIA. USE M. B. ROBERT'S EMBROCATION, rOB ALL EXTEESAL DISEASES Of MAN OR BEAST. Price 35 Cents per Bottle. HI JONAS JONAS-I want to hand yon, Neighbor Gat., eomethln that will be of real Interest, not only to yoa, but to yoo, 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 prove. to b, correct In every word and figure. NEIGHBOR GATES I saw a list of Wanamaker & Brown's One Price Clothing last Saturday. JONAS Yes ; but this Is a New List, and has a great deal more in it HERE .AJRIE Heavy and Durable Melton Coat Panta Vest Whole Suit Overcoat, same material Black and White Mixed Coat Black and White Mixed Pants Black and White Mixed Yeat Whole Suit.. Oxford Mixed D. B. Coat.. Oxford Mixed Panto Oxford Mixed D. B. Test . . Whole Suit Black and White Diagonal Coat. . Black and White Diagonal Panto. Black and White Diagonal Test.. Whole Suit SOO Broken check D. B. Coat 9 50 Broken check Panto 5 50 Broken D. B. Vest - 273 Whole Suit 1775 Very choice Cassimere Coat Very choice Cassimere Panto.. Very choice Cassimere Vest Whole Suit Good Black Cloth Coat Good Black Doeskin Panto.. Good Black Cloth Vest Whole Suit Better grade Black Cloth Coat. . . Better grade Black Doeskin Panto Better grade Black Cloth Vest Whole Suit Fine Dress Coat.. Fine Dress Panto. Fine Dress Vest.. Whole Suit . . Extra diagonal ooat. extra uinjumi buw. Extra Diagonal Vest Whole Suit Every-day Panto. Better grade Panto. Dress Panto Choice Pattern Panto Elegant Style Panto. 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 Overcoats Men'a finest Fur Beaver Overcoats.. Men's finest Johanny Beaver Overcoats The Great Woolen "Glengarry" Glengarry" "Glengarry" "Glengarry" "Glengarry" "Glengarry" Overcoat. Overcoat. Overcoat. Overcoat. Overcoat. Overcoat . The Great Woolen Woolen Woolen Woolen Woolen The Great The Great The Great The Great JONAS The way liiitiiifn in done at Oak Hall is very gratifying. Ivery article Is Barked with Its trie aaaie tad price In plala flare, ami no deviation. When anything does not suit, the money is returned instanter. It is handy to get to Oak Hall, as the can take you direct to WANAMAKER A BROWN'H, on tho corner of SIXTH and MARKET. 00 AN. South-East A. H. FRANCISCUS & CO., SIS Market Street, PHILADELPHIA. Wa ha spam far Otm RPR ISO TRaDB. la tartaat and kaat aaaorud Stock at PHILADELPHIA CARPETS, Table, Stair and Floor Oil Cloth, Window Shade and Paper, Carpet Chain, Cotton, Yarn, Batting, Wad ding, Turinea, Wick,Clock,Lork img Olae, Fancy BatkeU, Broom, BatkeU, Bucket, Bruhe,Clothe Wringer, Wooden and Willow Ware in the United State. Oar kwa Inn mi la tatn anabtaa aa B a) law arioaa and furrjaa U bat qualj at Quiia, sou Aozirra fob thb CELEBRATED AUESI0AI WA8HEX, Price, $3.54). Ovar tMM sold la 81a Koataa Xmnm: Carina, m Sara. AS Mhm aoaaa, a Bav .taa rVCDY evrmnt tt froarootia by II fl P r I F II I "( HILL'S Paraa Ruoaa. II II fl LILIII tlAlRmo parlUO-ltlerat; II U U Tonn or H0I.W1. tl IS, ky Mail, aoM-pud. Tar Ma by Hardvara 11 lura. Circalara fraa. Aooraaa, Fl. W. HILL CO, aaia-lni-aaw Doeatar, III. SAID TO NEIGHBOR mil 8 5 00 275 ...... 200 975 8 00 Whole Suit 750 425 250 Whole Suit. . u25 Whole Suit ..$14 00 ..$800 .. 450 .. 250 Basket Style D. B. Basket Style Pinto Basket Style Vest Whole Suit Basket Style D. B. Basket Style D. B. Basket Style Panto Whole Suit. $12 50 ,y0Iltn8. stal Better 650 350 .$8 00 . 400 . 200 $22 50 Yon1"' Better Grade Kersey Oovercoat , 18 00 lYouths' Fine Schnabel Fur Beaver Overcoat 22 00 .$9 00 . 500 . 250 Boys' First Great Boys' better grade Great Coat Boys' still better grade Great Coat , $16 50 ftoya' good Cape Boys' better grade Boy a' higher grade $12 00 . 650 . 300 Children's Woolen $2150 $14 50 . 650 . 350 $24 50 'Boys' heavy Woolen !DoJ,. heVT WooleD 4 00 Whole Suit $27 50 Boys' All-wool Jacket W All-wool Panto. $ 2 73 : , Aji-wool Vest 3 50 5 00 Whole Suit 6 50 7 50 10 00 Better grade D. B. $ 8 00 10 00 12 00 Whole Suit 13 00 .Extra nice D. B. 25 00 Extra nice Panto 27 50 .Extra nice D. B. Whole Suit .$950 16 00 jSnperior foreign cloth D. B. Coat. ' 20 Superior foreign cloth D. B. Vest. 22 M Snperior foreign cloth Panto. . 27 50 . 33 001 Whole Suit 3R & Brown, OAK HALL, Corner of Sixth and Market Streets, SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! AD atrlaa, 811vr Monntml and Wahmt, nowf 'jn MoBd-band. Dm iliuly rarkd tar ablpnlna. OOLJiTtKa, BAK SHKLVISU, BTOlUt FIX TTTREH. aa housr a wd orriok PDHNrrrntK aa inula Taa karriat and beat aaaortaa atock, un and MxaaVfcand tn tba Ottj. LiEWIM fc BROs -la-li ten. lazs. i aad iee aiM.t ivi raiu. CLSTSX3 A3EX2 1 TV to im 0 wmtd t (Ta'nr aal) tut frnetal mr im aM at SUO; wnnka bat far Boaada. hair tbma by hand, and lax wrar of Ik Konda, Send tor circalara to J. K. Ill'UDALB, Whit, walar, Wayaa Co, lad. It m TOEX BLACK LEAD WORKS. JOB PRINTING bsatlt mxaavm at trw or ft ax. Youtha Heavy Woolen D. B. Sack $430 Youths' Heavy Woolen Panto J 50 Youths' Heavy Woolen Vest 1 50 S50 Youtha' Oxford Mixed D. B. Sack $ 6 SO Youths' Oxford Mixed Panto 3 50 Youtha' Oxford Mixed Vest 200 .$1100 i Youths' Broken Check D. B. Sack t 8 00 Youtha' Broken Check Panta . .7. 5 00 Youtha' Broken Check Vest 2 30 .$15 W $10 50 . 600 . 325 -SWTS Sack.. Frock. Vest. . . .$13 00 . 3 25 . 6 01) -$22 25 Youtha Heavy Overcoat $700 Ynnthn' Tfettor Oraile Overcoat 10 00 Grade Overcoat 11 00 Youths' Extra Choice Color Overcoat 13 50 Youths' Extra Ileavv Kersey Overcoat 15 tM Coat ..$ 450 .. 650 .. 750 .. 9 10 .. 11 U0 .. 1350 Overcoat Cape Overcoat . . Cape Overcoat.. Suito $5 00 Children's Woolen Suito 6 50 Children's Cloth Suito 7 59 Children's better grade Suits. 8 50 ! Children's heavy Cassimere Suits. 9 50 Children's very stylish Harvard Suits 10 50 Children's English Granite and Tricot Suits. 11 50 'Children's Kilt Suito 8 50 Jackets $2 50 Panta 2 m $450 $ 3 73 3 25 1 50 $ 8 50 Better grade D. B. Jackets $ 4 75 Better grade Panto. 4 00 Vests 2 00 $10 75 Jacket . . $5 50 4 50 Vest 2 50 $12 50 .$ 6 75 . . . . 2 75 .... 4 50 .$14 00 THE WEEKLY SUN.iJ'sr at and faarbaaa ai wapwaaa?. of M brad ciahai, aiai to naka tba Waakly faa lb bra haul; -r ia tb world. Try u. I.M par yt , aoataa a- aJ.li Tai sua, a lora -t aoOJi STATION AKK. POKTABLli AND AGRICULTURAL STEAM ENGINES. eaaaral Af aata tar BUSS ILL 4 CO.t Massillon Separators A HORSEPOWERS. HORSE RAKES. raaicK'a HAY CUTTERS ASD OTHEB FTBST-CLASS FARM MACHINERY. HARBERT RAYMOND. 1835 Mnrkot Street, rBiLAOH.ru a.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers