AGBICCLTTBAL. Charcoal as a Mastbk. There is no fertilizer so easily produced by American farmers as charcoaL la wooded countries, large quantities of logs and stamps are obstructing the implements of agriculture, and a ready way of disposing of them is by coo verting them into charcoaL In prairie countries where wood is scarce, peat, tnrf or clay may be charred and turned into a manure still more valuable than pnre charcoaL A pile of logs fourteen feet long, three feet high and three feet wide, when perfectly burnt, yield only three bushels of ashes and these not equal to charcoal, bulk for bulk. A pile of similar size yields from twenty eight to thirty bushels of charcoaL The stimulating power of carbon upon seeds is noticed by Liebig in his chemical explanation of the effects of charcoal as a fertilizer, lie states that the carbon of the charcoal forms the base of carbonic acid, which acts bene ficially on plants, by a gradual combi nation with oxygen, but he admits that the beneficial effects of charcoal as a fertilizer, depend upon the presence of other substances besides carbon. lie says that plants thrive in powdered charcoal and may be made to blossom and bear fruit, if exposed to the influ ence of rain and the atmosphere, ltain water must therefore contain one of the essentials of vegetable life, and this is ammonia. An instance of the quick vegetation of seeds produced by the use of pow dered charcoal is related by Mr. Kajn bird in the Journal of the Ilojal Agri cultural Society of England, Vol. 7, page Ml. He says during a very dry summer of 1811, wood charcoal, pow dered fine, was drilled with carrot seed with which it was well mixed to prevent the seed clogging in the drill ; it served two purposes the seed was deposited with great regularity in the drills, and the carrots made their appearance above ground in a few days notwithstanding the dryness of the weather, and grew rapidly. The crop was a good one for the year, being upwards of five hun dred bnHhels per acre. In 1H13, forty bushels of powdered charcoal per acre, were drilled in with green topped Aberdeen turuips in a light sandy loam, the previous crop being rye and vetches mown for soil ing. Tlie young plants appeared above gronud in a short space of time, and were singled out in a week, as soon as turnips of a quicker growing kind that had been drilled twelve days earlier with one and one-half cwt. of guano, mixed with peat ashes per acre. The good effects of charcoal as a fertilizer last for huudreds of years. This has been proved at Thurstable Hundred in Essex, England, where there is a large mound that accumulated around a lto man pottery. The earth of the mound contains a large amount of charcoal, and produces remarkable effects when applied as manure. Com r a bati v e FEaxmir of 1itks and Hess. -Some interesting experi ments have rn-.eiitly been mado uioii the comparative fecundity of ducks and hens, so as to determine from which of the two the larger number of eggs can be obtained in the ame time. For this purpose three hens and three ducks were selected, and all hatched in February and nourished with snitable foid. In the following autumn the ducks laid 2&iegfjs, while thebeue laid none. In the next February the lay ing season bejran aain with the ducks and continued uninterruptedly until August They showed no inclination to set' but became very thin, although they were afterward fattened up Eouie what. The total number of eggs laid by the hens amounted to 2-"7, or D eggs each, and il'.W, or 131 each, for the ducks. Althouph the eggs of the ducks . . . . .i were rather smaller than those of the hens, yet they proved to be decidedly superior in nutritive material, so that the superiority in productiveness ap pears to be decidedly with the ducks. rLowTN.i Unpeu Stkaw.-A "Learner ! own. the case of chronic diseases, asks whether st raw plowed under yields j to be decadent mi recurring variations more fertility than the manure made j the energies of organic life ; aud in from the straw by feeding to cattle. the ea.se ,of acute diseases, the cause is Undoubtedly straw loses by passing i ascribed either to the existence of n through the animal, else the animal narked daily extreme of bod.iy would gain nothing by eating it. and depression, oi -a daily maximum of in the amount of fertilizing matter must j tensity of acute disease, be less in straw after being used as a j "! food. But its condition after being fed, i. mtii.li imrmcnl that its effect mav I be greater upon the first crop, espe cially as a top dressing. The greatest effect that can be produced by straw as a fertilizer upon heavy land, is to plow it under. It will then frm an air space under the furrow and cause a con stant deposit of ammonia from the at mosphere during the first season, pro ducing, often, as fine a crop as even well settled manure. The second year the straw will decay and become active manure of itself. The straw takes long to decay, while the manure mado from it dacays rapidly. These are the facts which lead to such contradictory con clusions. But straw plowed under will show its effects for many years. Kesovattxo Broor Tops. Enamel leather tops which have become hard, but have not lost their color, can be softened and much improved in appear ance by oiling them with pure castor oiL Tiie oil is readily absorbed by the leather, and will not fry out in the sun. When the leather has turned gray, ap ply a coat of hatter's blacking, after the oil has struck in, and rub well with a cloth to bring but the polish. Most varnishes dry too hard to be used on tops, shellac varnish being the only kind that can be used with safety, but this will crack unless the coat be applied very thin. JFrosted grass does not tend to dry up cows. Apples in moderate quanti ties have no such tendency, but on the contrary may le fed to advantage es pecially sweet apples. Potatoes are said to dry up cows also nothing is more absurd, for they are an eminently milk-producing food and when small potatoes are not boiled and fed to pigs, the cows ought to have them, rump kins are well known as excellent milk feed. The seeds, however, are diuretic in the tendency and very likely reduce the quantity of milk. Ashes fob Cows. To keep cows in good health in winter, I feed a little Lard wood ashes eoual parts, (live a small handful twice a week. Try it and see how they will seem to thank you for it-. It is good for them, and I think will help in case of garget. It will clean out the fonl blood ; the cows will look slick aud feel good. Issects is rorxTcx HorsE. If a solution of two ounces of carbolic acid and three quarts of water is sprinkled with a watering-pot in poultry houses after they have been swept out, it ill free those places of all insect pests. But the work must be performed every week. Fulniigation with sulphur will be effective ia extreme cases. Soke Thboat SvMrroMs. 1 he horse hangs his head down, chews, but can not swallow, throat swollen aud fever ish. Apply a poultice of wheat bran wet np with strong decoction of red oak bark. Give him tepid water to drink, with moderate exercise. If he is feverish, bleed him two gallons from the neck. House's Maxb Falltxo Oct. "The shedding of hair from a horse's mane and tail can be prevented by washing the parts affected a few times in car bolic soapsuds. Or wash made of lard oil, one pint, and aqua ammonia, one gill well mixed and rubbed in, will prevent the falling of the Lair. SCIENTIFIC Dental Amalgams. It is the general practice to combine the alloy with an excess of mercury, afterwards squeezing out the surplus mercury with the fin gers of a pair of pliers. As it is impossible to get rid of the mercury by this operation, since about twice the necessary quantity remains, leaving the amalgam hard and unwork able, the only proper course is to use the exact proportion necessary to the combination. Should a surplus of mercury at any time be found on the surface of an amalgam filling, when the packing is finished, it can be tolerably well absorbed by slices of crystal gold, cut thin with a razor and laid upon the dry surface of the filling, until they are white with the mercury, when they are removi J. Now, if chemically pure silver and tin be combined in atomic proportions, silver 13, tin 118, twenty-four grains of the clean filings, mixed with seven grains of mercury, will result in a powder, adhesive under pressure, which will not dissolve in alcohol, and there fore needs no washing, and which will weld up as solid as a coin. This is a true amalgam, containing no free mer cury, in fact there is great difficulty in separating a trace of mercury below a red heat. 15 at, of course, it is impossi ble to use a powder in the majority of cases. But there is a filling which it is prac ticable to use in almost all circum stances, namely, the ordinary silver and tin amalgam mentioned above, with the addition of ten percent of fine gold and sufficient platinum to insure rapid set ting, if to twelve grains of alloy four or five grains of mercury be added, and the resulting compound be carefully packed, without washing, into the cavity, little by little, with small point, warmed, if necessary, and fin hshed up by repeated burnishing, the result will be a more perfect filling than can be procured by ordinary means, and that, too, with a compound con taining little or no free mercury. An Ixcessaxt Wast. One of the in cessant wants of man is air. We want air mainly to nourish us and to keep us cool. The quantity of air inhaled by an adult in twenty-four hours amounts on an average to about three hundred cubic feet, or two thousand gallons. What we take in and give ont during twenty-four hours in the shape of solid and liquid food occupies on an average the space of five and a half pints, which is equal to one three-hundredth of the volume of air passing through our luDgs. It will astonish you to hear, perhaps for the first time, that this amounts to seven hundred and thirty thousand gallons in one year, and to be reminded of that continuous work which goes on day and night a never ceasing liellows-blowing, by which the ! organ of onr life is kept in play. Of course tLe quantity of air flowing around the surface of the unman body is greater than that. Do not object that air is sometimea so light that it need not be taken into account. It has some weight ; water, certainly is seven hundred and seventy times heavier, but our daily two thousand gallons have for all that a weight of twenty-five pounds avoirdupois. Tits HoniLT Death Hate. Dr. Law sou, an English l.liVMi'iau, has recently published some curious observations regarding the time of the day when the greatest and least numlier of deaths occur. He finds, from the study of the statist ics of several bospitajs, asylums, and other institutions that deaths from chronic diseases are most numerous between the hours of eight and ten in the niorninff. aud fewest lietween like hours in tlio evening. Acute deaths from continued fevers aud pneumonia . - it i. take place in the greatest ratio either in the early morning, when the powers of life are at their lowest, or in the after noon, when acute disease is most active. The occurrence of these definite daily variations in the hourly death rate is Saltwater ice. inc. notion geue rally prevails that when salt water fresh, and when freezes the ice melted will produce fresh water. Trot. Tvndall states that such is the case in his orms of Water. lint Dr. lite, the Arctic explorer, declares that ho was "never able to find sea ice, in nifii. either eatable when solid or drinkable when thawed it being invariably too salt." He adds, however, that when his party found ice projecting above the water, and from its appearance in dicating that it was a year or more old, it was generally fresh, and made good drinking water. His theory explaining the fact is. that the salt is not itself concealed, but that a concentrated brine, imprisoned in minute cells, is retained in the solid ice. These cells communicating with each other, when the ice is lifted above the general level. the brine is drained off. leaving the mass fresh. The Chinese, more than any other people, have reduced the saving of fer tilizors to a science. It is well known that they scrupulously save, disinfect. and put to valuable use every particle of offal. In no other way could their land be so enriched as to support its teeming inhabitants. Liebig traced the primal fall of Borne to the building of her great sewers, which conducted to the Tiber fertilizing material which should have been applied to her soiL It was the lack of breadstuff's, conse quent upon the poverty of the arable lands, which drove the Bomans to for eign conquest, and ended in the over throw of their liberty. Our people are wasting every day substances which, if properly utilized, would save them many a dollar and much tribulation. Convenient Fkepabatios of Cab. bonated Water. An ordinary syphon bottle is employed by Gawalouski of Prague, instead of the usual Liebig's apparatus, by placing in it, when filled with water, a small tin tube closed with a screw-rap, and supplied near the top with several holes abont I-lUtli ol an inch wide, and charged for a two quart b' ttle, by placing in it JEJO grains of bicv-.'bouate of soda and upon it a small perforated tin disc, and then 201) grains of tartaric acid. The water passing into tho tube causes the development of carbonic acid. Dr. Balmaso, a London surgeon, has successfully applied the magic lantern to the study of diseases of the skin. A transparent photograph of the skin is taken, and then placed in a magic lantern. A strong hydro-oxygen light casts the picture, enlarged, on a white sheet ; aud in this way the small est details are brought out with aston ishing minuteness. At a recent meeting of the French Academy of Science, MM. Fautra and Sargnian stated they had fonnd by ex periments made in a forest of more than 500 hectares (a hectare is 11.1H30 English square yards) and also on a plain situated alniut 300 yards from the forest, that much more rain fell in the wooded part than on the plain. When a Tennessee husband will horsewhip his wife for washing pota toes in las Sunday ping hat, it is time to enquire wnether this generation of men is getting to be too high-toned for the age of the century ? BOIDiTIC Valuable Inforhatios. Knives and forks my be fastened in their handles by the following : 1 pound colophony (obtained at druggists), eight ounces sulphur ; melt and, when cool, powder. Mix one part of the powder with half a part of the fine sand or brick dust, fill the handle cavity, heat the stem of the knife and fork, and insert, Kerosene oil is good for removing rust from cutlery. Saturate sponges with water and stand them on plates around and among the window plants. The object is to supply moisture to neutralize the effects of any furnace or grate heat. In hanging paper, first pumicestone the wall and wash with size made of glue to a gallon of water. See that the paste has no lumps and that the back of the paper is ecvered with for fully ten minutes before hanging. It is said that lining the walls, ceiling, and windows of s cellar with four or five thicknesses of old newspaper, pasted on with strong size, will prevent roots and other articles stored therein from freezing. A section of wire cloth, grade from Ko. 20 to No. 30 : is the best material to strike matches upon. Tho cords of hard wood are about equal in heat-giving qualities to one ton of bituminous ooai. If the sink spouts freezes, insert a niece of lead Dine, into which pour boiling water through a funnel. Keep the pipe constantly pressed against tne ice, About Hyacinths. The hyacinth is not only a very beautiful and fragrant flower, but one easily cultivated. This is the season when the bulbs intended for honse cultivation should be secured. A word to our lady friends in regard to the best modes of what is known as glass or water culture. First give a preference to the single varieties. They are less beautiful, but are to be pre ferred to the double ones for the reason that they bloom two or three weeks sooner and are more fragrant. Having selected the bulbs, fill the glasses with pure water, place the bulbs in them and set them in a dark closet for a fortnight or three weeks, or until the glasses are well filled with the fibres. Then expose to the sun ; give fresh air occasionally, when the weather will permit. When making the change take out the bulbs and rinse the roots well in clean water : also wash the insides of the glasses thoroughly. The freezing of the water not only endangsrs the safety of the class, bat causes the root to decay. Soft water is always preferable. It should be perfectly clear to chow the roots to advantage, and should be on s level with the base of the bulb. Avoid placing the glass within the influence of hre heat, inese oriel directions, carefully observed, with result in hand some blooms. Fish Cake. 1. Put the bones of the fish, with the head and fins, into s stew pan, with about a pint of water, add pepper and salt to taste ; one good sized onion, a handful of sweet herbs, if you like, and stew all slowlyior about two honrs. Then mince fine the clear meat of the fish, mixing it well with bread crumbs and cold mashed potatoes, aud a small quantity of fine chopped parsley ; season with salt and pepper to taste, aud make the whole into cake with an egg well beaten. Brush it over lightly with white of egg, strew with bread crumbs, and fry of a rich amber brown. Strain the gravy made from the bones, etc., and pour it over ; stir gently for ten minutes of a quarter of an hour. Serve very hot, with garnish of parsley and lemon slices. 2. Care fully remove tho bones and skin from any fish that is left from dinner, and put it into warm water for a short time. After taking it out press it dry aud beat it in a mortar to a fine paste, with an enual quantity of mashed potatoes, and season to taste. Then make up the mass into round flat cakes, and fry them in bntter or lard till they are of a fine eoldt-n brown color Be sure they do not burn. Codfish is excellent recooked after this fashion. To obtais lieht instantly without the use of matches and without the danger of setting things afire, take an oblong viol of the whitest and clearest glass put into it a piece of phosphorus about the size of a pea, upon winch pour some olive oil. heated to the boiling point. filling the vial abont one third full, and then seal the vial hermetically. To nse it, remove the cork and allow the air to enter the vial and then recork it. The empty space in the bottle will then be come luminous, and the light obtained will be equal to that of a lamp. As soon as the light grows weak, its power can bo increased by opening the vial and allowing s fresh supply of air to enter. In Winter it is sometimes neces sary to heat the vial between the hands to increase the fluidity of the oiL Thus prepared the vial may be used for six months. This contrivance is now used by the watchmen of Paris in all magazines where explosive or inflamma ble materials are used. A good waterproofing compound is prepared by melting paraffin aud adding gradually a suitable drying oil, stirring well to insure intimate mixture ; it is then poured into monlds the shape of bricks or blocks, and allowed to cool. The fabric to be rendered waterproof is rubbed over with a block of the com pound, warming the rubbing face gently if the atmosphere is cold, and then iron ing the cloth with a warm iron, or passing it between hot rollers. The ap plication of bis compound to leather and textile and felted fabrics is said to give excellent results, as, although it renders the cloth thoroughly water proof, it is not impervious to air. To Make Apple Bbead. Weigh one pound of fresh juicy apples ; peel, core and stew them into a pulp, being care ful to use a porcelain kettle or a stone jar, placed inside a kettle of boiling water ; mix the pulp with two pounds of the best flour: put in the same quantity of yeast you would use for common bread, and as mucn water as will make it a fine, smooth dough ; put it into a pan and place it in a warm place to rise and let it remain for twelve honrs at least. Form it into rather long-shaped loaves, and bake in a quick oven. Earache, Take a piece of salt pork, say an inch or more long and half an inch square, cut down one end to fit the ear and insert it, taking care to have the piece too large to slip in. It gives almost instant relief. Tie a hand kerchief to keep it in place, if the child will allow it. Pork is also good for sore throat, croup and Inng colds. Cut slices half an inch thick, dip in warm water, sprinkle on a little pepper, and sew the flannoL Deliciocs Stewkd OrsTKRS. Take fifty nice oysters, separate them from the juice, put them in a saucepan with a pint of cream ; let them come to a boil quickly. Thicken with a little butter and flour, beaten together. Season to taste ; let them just boil again.and send to the table immediately. To move a tight glass stopper, hold the neck of the bottle to a flame, or take two turns of a string and seesaw it. The heat engendered expands the neck of the bottle before the expansion reaches the stopper. To renew ribbons, wash them in cool suds, made of .soap, and iron when damp. Cover with a clean cloth, and iron over it, ToDkstbot Crickets. Put Scotch snuff upon the boles where they come ont "I'm qois' to cut this yer youngster in half and let Mrs. Murphy take the body, while Mrs. Doolan goes home with the legs. it was a cievenuea, but it failed. Mrs. Murphy stepped up to him, and doubling up fist that looked like an underdone leg of mutton, she shook it close to his nose and said, Ef ye do, ye shpalpeen. 111 murtber ye wid my own hand 1' And Mrs. Doolan seized him by the hair, threw him to the ground, and exclaimed, while she brandished the knife over his prostrate body. "Gimme the legs, will yon ! Gimme the legs I Be me aowl, I've mind to kill ye and ate yon 1" Then squire Doobs adjourned the case. and while Mrs. Uoolan retired witn tne boy he went out to hunt np a Bible commentary, in order to ascertain if there was not something abont Solomon's proceedings that he did n't understand. A "'MoBarroB." Sambo wanted to buy some land, but he had only half enough money. "Well," said the land agent, "the price is $000, bnt I'll take $150 and s mortgage for the balance in a year. Sambo scratched his wool. "But, I say, boss, spose a feller hant got no morgitch ?" In vain the agent explained, when up steps Bill, and says, "1 can lucidate that pint. A morgitch is like dis yer : Spose you pays de boss $450 down, and give yer word and honor ob honest nigger to pay him de udder $150 in s year ; den spose on de very last day ob de year yer pays $119 and don t pay him de Oder dollar, why den de morgitch says de boss can joss take all de money and de land, and you don't have nnffin not a cent." 'Sho, boss, a morgitch makes a pusson mighty honest." Bishop Axes tell s story of s white man in Missouri, in the olden time of slavery, who aaid to one of his servants : rompey, 1 hear you are a great preacher." "Yes, mass a, de Lord do help me powerful sometimes." "Well, Pompey, don't you think the negroes steal little things on the plantation." I'se mighty afraid they does, massa. mas a. "Then, Pompey, 1 want you to preach sermon to the negroes against stealing." After a brief reflection, Pompey replied : ' You see, massa, dat would never to, 'canse twould trow auch a eol'ness over de meetin'." 'Yora young friend stayed uncom monly late last night, and I was quite inclined to come into the parlor and dismiss him," said an indulgent father to his pet of sixteen. "Oh ! yes, it was pretty late : bnt we got so interested in discussing Ritualism that we did not notice the fleeting hours, papa !" "Dis cussing Ritualism ?" sternly queried the father, and then he walked slowly away, with his hands under his coat skirts, trying to remember what they called it when he was young. The arrival of Marshal BazAine at Madrid, has not given rise to any un pleasant demonstrations. It seems that a Frenchman got up a sort of charivari outside his house to annoy him, but on tne beginning of the performance the porter went out and asked, "How much are they giving you for playing ?" The reply was, "two duroft." "Very well," was the rejoinder, "here are four ; be off with yon," and the men de camped at once. The marshal lives in thoroughly retired fashion. "Toe have a pleasant home and a bright fireside, with happy children sitting around it, haven't you ?" said the J udge. "Yes. sir.' said Mr. Thomp son, who thought he saw a way out of the difficulty. "Well," said the Judge if the happy children sit aronnd the cheerful hreside until you return, they will stay there just forty-three days, as 1 shall have send you up for that time. "Abe you going after that sugar?" called a mother to her boy, who was in the street. "Am 1 going after that sugar ?" drawled the youth in a saucy and impndent tone ; but just then he happened to see his father coming up !ehind him, and he said very resject- f ully ana lovingly ; " hy. of course I am, ma I didn't know yon needed it ;..!. The cultivated cannibals of Fiji are just now divided on a question of taste. One party claims that the most exqm- site flavor is imparted to roasted missionary by cooking the subject alive while others think he should bo killed. hung np and allowed to season awhile. V Inch side of the question is taken by the man to be cooked can only be sur mised. Screened. During the time that the late Sir Robert Peel was Premier. Lady Jane Peel was in the habit of pasting on a screen all the articles that appeared in the newspapers opposed to him "l here is nothing very singular in that, remarked PeeL "It is the duty of every good wife to tereen her husband's faults." As old lady in town has become dis gusted with almanacs. She says if all the people in this country were to stop buying almanacs "maybe the printers who make em would put in some total eclipses of the sun and moon, and some transits of Yen uses that would be visible here. Xorrintown Herald. Chables Lamb once said of one of his critics : "The more 1 think of him the less I thtnk of him." This is not unlike Thackeray's mot: "What do you think of Tapper, as a poet," he was asked when in his country, "I don't think of him as a poet," was the reply. A thief was arrested in England the other day who admitted his guilt and asked that sentence be passed as a pro tection to himself and the public. "For," said he "It is a terrible thing that a fellow like me should be going about. A University student broke through the ice on Lake Monana, the other day, where the water was only four feet deep. When he was hauled out and laid upon the ice, he faintly whispered: "Boys, I didn't care for myself, but I'm George IV., on hearing some one de clare that Moore had murdered Sheridan in his life of that statesman, observed. "I won't say that Mr. Moore has murdered Sherdan, but he has certainly attempted his life. The expression of a nervous woman's face upon getting into a dentist's chair is something that no man can imitate until he gets a letter from his mother- in-law, sharply inquiring if that spare room is ready. Blessed are they who scatter ashes nnon slinnerr sidewalks, for thev shall slide easily through the gates of Para dise. Jtichmotut .nquirer. A patron of a poor hotel said every thing he obtained there was cold but the water, and everything was sour bnt the pickles. What is the difference between an auction and a sea-sick man ? One is a sale of effects, and the other the effects of a saiL A Hartford widower prefers living near a sawmill, as, he says, the sound puts him in mind of his lost wife. A mother in-law is not a heavenly body, but she has been known to eclipse a honey-moon. What is the largest room in the world ? The room for improvement. The first thing a man takes to in his life is his milk the last is bis bier. A Ostljr Sepalefcre. A correspondent of the Cleveland Leader describes one of the tombs in the famous Milan Cathedral: Procuring a permit and a priest we descended to the subterranean chapel, the richest in all Europe. Here I had the pleasure oi coming in contact with the most dis tinguished and wealthiest dead-head in the world, the late lamented St. Charles tforomeo, wno aiea zw years since. .None knew him but to love mm; none named him but to praise." He was a Cardinal, Bishop of Milan, and good to the poor, and for his many virtues was canonized. His remains lie in a rich coffin of silver, and through the crystal sides you see the dead and withered skull grinning in the midst of rich robes, rare jewels, ana uasuiun geuia. The coffin is hung with costly offerings. and the ceiling of the chapel is covered with bas-relief in solid silver, represent ing events in the saint's life. In this little chapel, 10x12, 4,000,000 francs have been lavished. In the coffin hangs a gold cross containing seven emeralds, each as large as a chestnut, incrusted in diamonds. Ibis little or nament is worth $100,000. I tried to buy it. but unfortunately the priest could not change my large bills. E. r. Honkel's Bitter Hlse r Iron has never been known to fail in the cure of weakness, attended with symptoms : indis- poait on to exertion ; loss of memory ; dim eulty of breathing; general weakness; hor ror of disease ; we k, nervous trembling ; dreadful horror of deatb ; night sweats ; cold feet ; weakness ; dimness of vision ; languor ; universal lassitude of the muscu lar system ; enormous appetite, witn dys peptic symptoms; hot hands; flushing of the bod; dryness or the nam ; pallia coun tenance and eruptions on the face.purifying the blood ; pain in the back ; heaviness of the eyelids; frequent black spots flying be fore the eyes with temporary suffusion and loss of sight; want of attention, etc These symptoms all arise from a weakness, and to remedy that, use E. F. Kcxeel's Bitter nine of Iron, it never laiis. inousantis are now enjoying health who have used it. Take on'y . F. Kcxkil's. Beware of counterfeits and base imita tions. As Kunkel a Bitter nine of Iron is so well known all over the country, drug gists themselves make an imitation and try to palm it off on their customers, when they call it Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron. Kunkel's Bi ter Wine of Iron is put up only in $1 bottles, and has a yellow wrap per nicely put on tne outside, witn tne pro prietor's photograph on the wrapper of each bottle. Always look for the photograph en the outside, and you will always be sure to get the genuine article. Bold by all Druggists and dealers every where. TAPiwoaa Removed Alivi. Head and all complete, in two hours. No fee till head passes. Seat, Pin and Stomach Worms re moved by Dr. Kcskil, i9 Nobth Nisth Stseet. Advice free. Come, see over 1,000 specimens and be convinced, lie never fails. St-rrsBEas with Piles should erect a monument to lift. Silsbeb for his beneficent discovery of AXAKESI3, an infallible cure for the worst eases or piles a lailure in -0,000 eases has not been recorded. It is a simple suppository, painless and easy of application, gives instant relief, acts as an instrument, poultice and medicine, and can not fail to cure. Lotions, ointments and internal n-inedies may fail, but ANAKESIS is infallible. Price J1. P. Neustxdter & Co., Anakesis Depot, 46 Walker St., Xew ork. Sent free by m-ul to any address on receipt of price. 1 3 stoi1 THAT COUGH! BY TAKING SINES' COMPOUND SYRUP OF TAR, WILD CHERRY AND nonunouxD. For the Curt of Ci.7. Wkooping Cvwjh Croup, Sure Throat, lluartrnett. Asthma, lu)tmmtitivH of the I.uhijm, I'oin in the Ki'lt und Hrwut, Jlronrhitit and all dataset tending to Do not neglect that, which to you may ap pear to be a trifling cold, or you too may be added to the NINETY THOUSAND human lieing who die annually in the LMTbD STATES who are hurried to premature graves, by that dreadful scuurg -, Fi'Lao ABV CoSSKMPTIO!!. The specified ingredients, viE.: Tar, Wild Cherry and llorehouud, are so well known, and so highly recommended, that the pre paration must come into general ne lor ai red ions of the breast and lungs. It is re markably pleasant to take, containing no thing to eause nauseating sensations which is a very important consideration as it is extremely difficult to prevail upon cnuuren to take a sufficient quantity or most medi cines in use to have the desired effect, Has been sold by Druggists and Store, keepers for thirty years. Price 25 and 53 cents per bottle. Prt-pared only by CHARLES NEHER, JR., PHILADELPHIA. USE M. B. ROBERT'S EMDROCATIOIV, FOB ALL BXTEBXAL DISEASES or MAN OK BEAST. Price 35 Cents per Bottle. FREDERICK SPIECKER J I WHOLESALE DEALE IS Leaf Tobacco, Cigars, Pipes, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco, OF THE BEST BRANDS. HO. 152 FAISlfCTOT AVEOTE, PHILADELPHIA. Only Agent for D. S. Solil Top Cigar Mould. Cigar Stores can be supplied. lliy ..ii WHAT JOHAS JONAS-I want to hand yon, Neighbor Gate., omethlng that will be of real Interest, not only to you. but to y,, boya. . NEIGHBOR GATES Glad to get anything that ha money In 1C JONAS-Well, I think you cmn certainly aave money by coniultlng this llat, which personal examination prove to f correct In every word and figure. NEIGHBOR GATES I uaw a liat of Wanaaiaker A Brownf On. Price Clothing last Saturday. JONAS Yea ; but this ia a New List, and has a great deal more In It Heavy and Durable Melton Coat. Pasta Vest Whole Suit Overcoat, tame material Black and White Mixed Coat. Black and White Mixed Pants. Black and White Mixed Vest. . 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 Panto. Black and White Diagonal Vest. . Whole Suit Broken check D. B. Coat Broken check Panto Broken D. B. Vest Whole Suit Very ehoice Caasimere Coat Very choice Casiimere Panto Very ehoice Caasimere Vest Whole Suit. Good Black Cloth Goat Good Black Doeskin Panto.. Good Black Cloth Vest Whole Suit Better trade 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 Coat. . . Extra Diagonal Pants.. Extra Diagonal Vest. . . Whole Suit Every-day Panto. Better grade Pants. Dress Panto Choiee Pattern Panto Elegant Style Panto. Buperior to any in the Market . Men's good heavy Overcoats Men's better grade Overcoats. Men's still better grade Overcoats Men's choiee eolor Overcoats Men's finest Fur Beaver Overcoats. Men's finest Johanny Beaver Overcoats. The Great Woolen The Great Woolen The Great Woolen The Great Woolen The Great Woolen The Great Woolen Glengarry" Glengarry" "Glengarry" "Glengarry" Glengarry" "Glengarry" Overcoat. Overcoat. Overcoat. Overcoat. Overcoat. Overcoat. JONAS The way buniues Is done at Oak Hall is very gratifying. Every article Is narked with Its trie same and price la plala flgsres, and no deviation. When anything does not suit, the money Is returned Instanter. It b handy to get to Oak Hall, as the can take you direct to WANAM AKKR A BROWN'S, on the corner of SIXTH and MARKET. HEW YORK BLACK LEAD WORKS, SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! AO atTba, 81lmr KmnM an Walmrt.aww a4 wcond.bana. ttocuralv barked for ablpolntf. UOUMTaJUi, BAKm, RHK1.VIMU, bloWE M TfrltKH. An. BODHB AND OrriC'S rUKNITCKE B Mn4s Tb buwmt and beat iined etocA, new and aaeond-auid In the city. LUWIN efe IIHOs -lt-lj ien. less. ie ies bine atx rua BURKE 4 XOEIBATJf Monumental MarbU Works, I. 12th Street, above Cherry, PHILADELPHIA. oar An. a easFairrca. Sonr lunniN loam. a. OAapajrraa. torn. m. vboelaji, s vilxiasi a. vaaan. Sill 70 NEIGHBOR BATES. .$ 6 00 .Youths' Heavy Woolen D. B. Sack . 2 75 Youths' Heavy Woolen Panto . 200 Youths' Heavy Woolen Vest .$9 75 . 800 Whole Suit Youths' Oxford Mixed D. B. Sack. Youths' Oxford Mixed Panto Youths' Oxford Mixed Vest , 750 425 250 Whole Suit. I14 25 Youths' Broken Check D. B. Sack. Youths' Broken Check Panto Youths' Broken Check Vest S 800 . 400 . 200 Whole Suit $14 00 $ 800 450 250 $15 00 Basket Style D. B. Baaket Style Panto Basket Style Vest Whole Suit Basket Style D. B. Basket Style D. B. Basket Style Panto Whole Suit. 1775 $9 50 550 2 75 Youths' Heavy Overcoat Youths' Better Grade Overcoat Youths' Still Better Grade Overcoat Yontha' Extra Choice Color Overcoat .$12 50 . 650 S 50 1 Youths' Extra Heavy 22 50 Youths' Better Grade Kersey Oovercoet , Youths' fine BcnneDei ur weaver isvwwm , .$9 00 . 500 . 250 .$16 50 Boys' First Great Boys' better grade Great Coat T.. hotto rra.1a fireat Coat . Bovs' cood Cape Rots' better mile ' Boys' higher grade .$12 00 . 650 . 300 .$2150 Children's Woolen Suits Children's Woolen Suits Children's Cloth Suits Children's better grade Suits. Children's heavy Caasimere Suits. Children's very stylish Harvard Suits. .$14 50 . 650 . 350 Children's English Granite and Trioot Suits.. Children's Kilt Suits S24 50 Boys' heavy Woolen Boys' heavy Woolen .$16 00 . 750 . 400 Whole Suit 27 50 .$2 75 . 350 . 600 . 650 . 750 . 10 00 .$8 00 . 10 00 Boys' All-wool Vest Whole Suit Better grade D. B. . Whole Suit . 12 00 . 15 00 . 25 00 . 27 60 Extra nice D. B. Extra nioe Panto Extra nice D. B. Whole Suit .$ 950 16 00 iSuperior foreign Superior foreign Superior foreign 22 50 27 50 33 00 Whole Suit "W AN AM AKKR, & BROWN, OAK HALL, South-East Corner of Sixth and Market Streets, FUTT. A DBLPElIA. VICK'S FLORAL GUIDE FOR 1875. Published quarterly. The January Num ber is now ready. It contains over 10 pagea, 500 illustrations, and a description of 5M of I he finest Jhwtrt and tryetablet; giving also directions how to cultivate them. A colored plate ia added to the Floeai Gciue. It U the mot useful and meat handsomely brought out work of this kind. Only 23 Cents per annum. Is published ia Eng'inh and German. Address, JAMES VICK, . Rochester. N. Y. I-last THE WEEKLY SUN.fJMK aed herim nmarar, ol M brad eulaama. Wt mmm tbe WeeKIJ Mn the bnt haul; ne BOT ia UW ocVL4Tl7l $1. iO par yar, niMaee mwL Addrani Ju Mew Yarn Oil. eorJaa not. nincER, la.aew.swo Kl Ie,aee k Teae f .t. i . a.t Ter, l.l.tIu,l. eaa) aao. H. W. Hut S Co. Diiit ir, 111 ecttt-ioteow . $ 4 oil .. I &) .$ 6 zn . 2 "t) .$ suo . 5 00 . 250 S15 30 Sack. $10 50 . 6 01 . 325 Frock. Vest. . . .$13 00 . 600 .$ 7J0 . 10 00 . 11 00 . 13 50 . 15 00 . 18 00 . 22 00 $450 . 650 . 7 50 . 9 00 . 11 DO . 13 50 Kersey Overeoat Coat . . . Overcoat Cape Overcoat Cape Overcoat ( 5 00 6 50 7 50 8 50 9 50 10 50 11 50 850 Jackets $ 2 50 Panto 2 00 $450 Boys' All-wool Jacket J $375 Boys' All-wool Panto. 3 25 1 50 $ 8 50 Better grade D. B. Jackets $ 4 75 Better grade Pants. 400 Vests 2 00 $10 75 Jacket $ 5 50 450 Vest 2 50 ....$12 50 eloth D. B. Coat. $6 75 275 450 $14 00 cloth D. B. Vest cloth Panto STATIONARY. PORTABLE SD AGRICULTURAL STEAM ENGINES. oeaaral Afaau far S088ILL CO.'S Massillon Separators HORSE POWERS. ta., HORSE RAKKS. HAY CUTTERS AND OTHER FIRST CLASS FARM MACHINERY. HARBERT RAYMOND. 1835 Market Street. wwn.AWSi.rm. JOB PRINTING nutl! I1KJWI1I AT THB OfFUIB.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers