Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, May 19, 1875, Image 4

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    THE TI1KF.K A I.I.IRS.
Morn calleth to a lair boy striving
'HiJ golden meadows rich witb clow-r Jow ;
Sbe calls, bnt be b'JII tiiiuVs of nznybt nave
playing
And to she nnuif-n, antl nm bio an adieu.
While be, still Lnc t o"er bin flowery store,
irima nut that morn, awec-t morn, rotiirus
no more. - -
Iwoon eomrtli, bat tin 1-oy toroaaliood (rowing,
Hera's mt the time; he but out- fair form
ne sweet young fa-e, from bowers of jasnune
Anj ail bis biifcnful heart villi lore in hiu
So noon, unnoticed, wtka the western ehre.
And man forg te thut noon rcturna no more.
NijJ't tanjth lightly at a caneneut window,
gleaming
With the thin fireLfc-ht, (litkerin? faint and
low,
I'.y hi" h a gray haired man in sadly dreaming,
O'er plea urjn gone, an all life's pleasure go,
Night bid" him come to her, be 1 av hie door.
Kilfiit and luiie, and he returns no more.
Iteiuinlseenee-a; ot I.iuroln.
Tt was properly a ball, (riven in the
winter of IR'il, wheuOer.eral McClellan
then the idol of the evliole country
called the vonnz Napoleon and wor-
shipped, looked up to, believed in, and
honed for. was in command at Wash
ington of the army of the north the
army of the 1'otomac On his brilliant
stall were the two yonng French princes
Omut do Taris and tue Puke de Cbar
tres. "Wishing my nephews to add to
their education the linishiug touch
without which the training of a French
gentleman is incomplete the power of
drawing their sword in a pood cause."
said tha I'rince de Joinville, "I have
put them on the sUf of General Mc
CMIan." There were Cve tlionfanJ people in
vited to this grand ball, nd ytt many
were disappointed. All the upper
grades of the army and navy were in
vited the diplomatic corps, the two
houses of Conre; . n1 of course the
cabinet and K.ipreme co:irt. Among
the guests of nu'iflical distinction was
X. 1'. Willis, still besritg that "hya
cinthine front" of curling hair, which
ias-ted Lim to the end, although then a
man of more than Ufty years. The two
princes were of eonrve m t conspicu
ous and honored. The Count de Talis
was tall, slender, and very handsome,
with niiiiiners of great sweetness and 1 jan sonnets none of which he had hap
cordiality. The Lnke do Chartres was pened to see before those which were
taller, thinner, less handsome than this written by Dante and those which were
. .. , . i . . . . . , 3-
oriiner, Ulli wuu me same ueuumui j tom (ije pen OI some menu or preue
mar.uers. Doth spoke Eng'ihh per- oespor of his. There are plays and
fectly, and enjoyed the ball like young
luen. There were many of those bril-
liant and distinguished men who after-
ward fell on the various Co-Ids of the
next three dreadful years. . There were
those who were detained to do their
dntv. and yet be mihtaken and do-
. frauded of their just inheritance of
Rlory. It is the fortnne of war, per-
haps, but so much worse than death.
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln did the honors
of this occasion with gnat- dignity.
He was very tall and she was very short
T . .... " - ---j
lade a ctriking tableau as
st the door of the East
ana they ma 10
thev stood at t
liooni. There they stood, patiently,
for many hours, as the nation defiled
Ix fnre them,
At tlie supper honr some unlucky
steward had looked the door, and had
lost the key, so that there was a hungry
crowd pressing onwp.rd against an un
yielding obstacle. Then the irrcpres-
sible humor of the American iieople
uroKe lonu inm Kriui iiuinur lilu
curried them through the subsequent
misery. "I nm in favor of a forward
movement," one would shout. "An
a hniice to the front is only retarded
by the iml-ecility of commanders,"
said, another, quoting a speech just
made in Congress. Tu all this General
MoCIellan, himself modestly strug
gling with the crowd, laughed as hear
tily as anybody, l'in.illy the key was
found, the door opened, and the crowd
fed.
It was like tlio ball given by the
liiohessof Kichmoud the night be
Waterloo. Teople parted there never
to meet again. Many a poor fellow
took his leave thut night of festivity
f.irever. The partincs wore tender and
sad, and as the bull broke up, the baud j
played "The girl I left behind me." i
Ajijth ton's Jvurnul
tlirlins.
It is remarkable but nevertheless
Irno thnf nn a niTe tfii-tn both male
1 1 i .1,. ... .,:..-!.- Tl.o I
nun 11-uiuiu ui'b ujaJij niLnij, uv
chances are that a girl who becomes
engaged at eighteen, and goes on be
coming engaged and disengaged, as is
the custom for flirts U do, ultimately
settles down into a coniirmed old maid.
If she docs wed, as a general rale, she
develops into a virulent wasp, and
makes her husband miserable, and
brings up her children badly.
Jt is not very diilicn'.t to find reasons
why flirts do not marry. Sensible men
admire in a woman some thing leside
a pretty face and engaging manners.
They love intellect, common pense and
heart qualifications, which the flirt
docs not possess. The true woman al
lows her affections full play, and is not
ashamed of them. She will not lead a
man to believe she cares for him when
she does no such thing; sbe will not
flirt with him just for the sake of flirt
ing. She has a truer conception of what is
right, and possesses a great deal more
common sense. She has derived her
edncation from somethir.g else than
three volume novels snd the societv of
the emptypated. She can be thoroughly
merry ; but she knows how to bo merry
withonl being idiotic She msy attract
loss attention in a drawing room than a
flirt does, because she is less noisy and
obtrusive ; but, for all that, she will be
married sooner, and make her husband
a In tter und truer wife.
A true woman does not care for the
spooney young man. She dislikes his
foppishness, the vivid compliments he
pays her, and his effeminacy. lie
quickly finds this out and leaves her in
peace.
Kojal Mimplirif f.
A writer says, in describing the
garden parties giveu by ueen Victoria:
"When you are conducted to the garden
by one of the scarlet flunkies of majesty
said flunky is about the only visible
hint there is of its being a royal party.
You see pretty tents and canvas pavil
ions disposed here and there under the
oaks, on the velvety lawn, or by the
side of the pretty miniature lake. If
this is in the Buckingham I'alaee
iarden, which is in the very centre of
fashionable West End London, the mo
ment you have passed lehtnd the high
wall which shuts it out from St. James's
I'ark on one side aDd Orosvenor 1'laee
on the other, yon would never guess
that you wore in the midst of tho city.
The surroundings are exqnisitely and
most illusorily rural. Yon see a
number of gentleman and ladies, ele
gantly dressed, standing about in
ifroups, or partaking of the by no means
sumptuous fare which is being served
without ceremony in the tents. The
scene is cheerful, elegant, Ixin ton, easy
and unrestrained. Yon catch a glimpse
of the ,ueen dressed in black, with
here and there a relief in rich, white
lace, but with no suspicion of tinsel or
gandiness about iier a plain lady, of
substantial proportions, in the prime
of life, the center of a respectful but
by no means awed or abashed circle, re
ceiving those whom she recognizes
with a slight smile and a pleasant word
and the presentation of those whom she
docs not know with a slight bow.
There are faces here familiar to you in
the win Jot s of the print-shops noblc-
men, statesmen, ambassadors, leaders
of society and court fashion bnt there
is little or no pretension of manner or
carriage.". 4 , .
Kagliah tTittrlwm or Aaifrieas
a'aetry.
It is not strange that American
writers should occasionally manifest
impatience at the tone of English criti
cism of American books. The Eng
libh critics, or certain ones among them
seem to find it impossible to be inter
ested in anything American that is not
"peculiar." The same tendency is
shown in many of their best journals.
An American reads the columns of
"items" from America with curiosity
and astonishment. Can it be that all
these preposterous things hare hap
pened under his very window, and he
has never heard a word about them ?
These absurdities are put forth, not as
abrormal csF.es, but as the news from
America. The fact is, that the true
islander is not interested in anything
outside, unless it is something that
may directly affect hia own person and
property. "I spppone it is really diffi
cult," "said a cockney writer to a New
York editor, of whom he was seeking
employment "really difficult for yon
to imagine how little we care about
things in America you know !"
1 1 . .it. Ik. T' t " o. irm
lU'l mil lb 19 KltU ll.V l'l.,."U VI.
I They vary upon transatlantic imitation
of English models just as if, because
we hannen to live in Xew York instead
of Manchester, we were to be cut off
from the literature into which we were
born. Must an American poet, who is
as ignorant of Indians, prairies, canons
geysers, and the rest, as if be had been
brought up within the shadow, of St.
1'anl's must he be condemned because
he cannot express himself in Choctaw,
or make his verse savor of the Yellow
stone ?
Such criticism is the offspring of a
doubleignorance an ignorance, namely
of American civilization, and of the
principles of poetry, to say nothing of
the further ignorance of American lit
erature. So far as imitation goes, we
claim the right to our own language,
to its literature. We claim the right,
further, to imitate in lust the same
sense that Homer, and Dante and
Shakespeare, and Byron, and Keats,
and Tennvson. and Swinburne, imita
ted. We "do not find that even an Eng
lish critic calls Solomon to account for
imitating David. It might puzzle the
same critic to select from a dozen ital-
j pK.mg bound up with Shakespeare's
works, concerning whose authorship
m.nT learned liritish critics are ex-
ceedingly pnzzled to-Jay, and will be,
,l0nht. to the end of time.
Xow have we brought our own swift
condemnation upon ns ! We see the
, gerene smile that plays over the features
i 0f onr critical cousin at mention of
I these luminous names. Butif any poet
f America desires to be tried by
standard diflerent from the standard
! DT which the greatest are judged, then
or WHICH lllc (renwrfc uojuucu, "
I juJeed, ne deserves no miercy at the
jianaSof "The Athena-urn." Theques-
tion as to any f -ieoe f poetio work is
simply this : Dal ueauiy nas 11 ;
w hat sincerity ; what worth of thought?
These are things tue worm is sure,
sooner or later, to find out.
If we were writing a letter to a yomg
person in America who gave promise of
; jtical accomplishment, we might say
j BOmetbing like this : 1 o not be (rreatly
i tronh eil liv tins OUeoear Ol lmiianon.
Nevertheless, if vou find yourself in
clined to imitate any particular author,
light against that tendency without re
morse. Ferhaps, instead of fleeing his
books, a better war is to "have it out
with him." If Tennyson, for instance.
is your bale uuir, read him through and
through till whatever he baa of mere
maunerinm, whatever of affection, cloys
nKn vou. Y'on will instinctively avoid
bis faults, and will have learned, as yon
should learn, and as you have the right
to learn, something of hia exquisite
art. Aliove all. "look in your heart
and w rite." If what yon have written
in all earnestness and sincerity takes
no hold upon those of yonr fellows, to
. n.iinm TnlI natnriJlv turn for an andi-
ence!if they, as the jtars go on, and
Vourt,kill and' purpose, and individu-
alitv have freer play and development.
if thev still pronounce your best
work nothing but echo and imitation
then yon had better give it np. But re
member that the tendency to imitate is
a part of that sensitiveuess to impres
sion which belongs to the poetic organ
ization. In a sense, all ptetry is imita
tion. The most original and individ
ual of noets often besrius with imitation,
and the greatest put the whole world of
life and literature nmler contnDution.
If yon have stuff in you, you will find
the talk about imitation growing less
and less, and by and by you may have
the fact of vour own strong originality
well proved by the crowd of mere mocking-birds
who are trying to sing your
songs. Look in your heart and write
and all the better for you, for your art,
and for vonr rood name, if you find
there the land of your birth :
Sb- Hint lifts ill. the nianlioMl nf the w.
Sh.-il Um-fti t---ltl anl ) 11 ilixir.
Wi.h rwni nU'Ut liertit-nztu fur all mankind!
Scribncr's Monthly.
A Modoc at C'harrb.
One tolerably pood thins is report
ed 011 that small section of the Modoc
tiilx- now on a tour throughout the
country at the expense and for the
profit of two or three white men. ne
of thi-sc Indians recent iy taujrht
several small bovs how to conduct
themselves in eliurt h. The Indians it
seems, took Ix xiiikUhi. Kv.. in their
lour, and clnitircd to he here on a Sun
day, when several of them atteuded the
liantist church to observe the white
man's way of propitiating the Great
Spirit and smoothing the path to the
happy iiutitine-irrouiHls.
As a matter ot course, whore the In
dians were there were the small boys
also, and a company of the boys mail-
aireii to secure seats directly in trout
of the noble red men. where curiosity
could lc satisfied. When the sermon
liepan the Ixiys turned round and
stared at the Indians uninterruptedly.
never tlatriring a bit in the gaze of
open-mouthed wonder. The Indian,
as a rule, is stoical; but he was not
stoical enough to endure the gimlet
look of those boys, which became final
ly uneiidiirabler tine of the Modocs,
forced to action, leaned farward and
seized a lioy's head as tlioupli he wan
ted a scalp, but be didn't make any at
tempt to secure that trophy, lie sim
ply twisted the boy's head around until
it looked in the direction of the minis
ter, and at the same moment a signifi
cant posture to the other boys caused
them to look the same way.
Never did hoys pay ln-tter attention
to a sermon than did those of lexing
ton dtiiinj; the remainder of the exor
cises, and the Modoc demonstrated
that he had in him bijj material for a
Sunday-school suiK-riutcudcut.
SI age or the I'ari Opera House.
The stage is the largest in existence.
Communication with the rear of the
building can be cut off in case of fire
by an iron curtain and iron doors, and
a curtain of iron net-work can also be
lowered to keep the flames from the
auditorium. The "flies" are twenty
metres above the floor. Nearly all the
scenic machinery is made of iron, but
no changes of importance have been ef
fected in the "working" of the stage,
although some innovations on time
honored methods are to be attempted
hereafter. A large organ, and a caril
lon of ten bells, the heaviest of which
weighs six hundred and fifty kilogram
mes, are on the stage. Scritiiter or
May.
AGKIITMTBAL.
1 .-" t ' '
'Concerning lii Ear Marin of flutter
S Tl 1: T 1 -1. 1. -
l-lW 1 110 11m. jouu -uat me,
noted butter dairymen, of Chenango
county, X. Y.. said, at the late conven
tion of the Xew Y ork State Dairymen's
Association, that he had found the color
on the inside of the ear to be one infal
lible guide in the selection of good
butter cow. If the skin on the inside
I the ear is ot a rich yellow color, the
cow was sure tu jrive a good quality of
milk ; that is, milk rich in batter. He
said in all his experience he had never
Known tnis nm to tan. NT. J. vt .
North, in the Maine Farmer, gives some
further information con corn imz the sub
ject. He observes that cows producing
very burn colored butter have a large
amount of the ear secretion, in many
iustances the whole internal surface
bcintr covered with a thick, orange
colored, oily matter; on the other hand
the light colored butter makers pre
setit a seanty, thin, and pale yellow se
cretion, in some cases found only at
the bottom of the ear. His theory is
that every animal has the power of se
creting a certain amount of this yellow
pigment. If the quantity be sufficiently
large, secretion will take place freely
in the mammary glands, the ear and
skin. If, however, the production be
limited, the tendency may be wholly
toward the luilk glauds aud ear, caus
ing the animal to exhibit a pink hide.
or the skin may be almost the sole ave
nue of escape from the Inxly, the butter
in consequence being light-colored ;
or - thc-re may be so little coloring
matter evolved as to furnish none to
the skin, and a very scanty supply to
the ear and milk. In selecting Jersey
cows, in order to judge in regard to the
color of their butter he recommends
that the car be inspected. Dr. Sun tevant
in his recent address before the Con
necticut State Board of Agriculture, al
luded to this color of the ear in select
ing cows, but he thought some caution
should be observed in clearing away
the secretion that may have accumula
ted on the skin, so that the true color
of the skin on the inside of the ear may
be seen. Otherwise the accumulated
secretion, if taken for the true color of
the skin inside the ear might deceive
as it might le darker, or exhibit a
deeper color than the true skin, lie
regarded the color of the ear as a good
guide in respect to the color of the
butter which the cow would yield.
Ceiled Stable. The usual method of
ventitating stables beneath barns, is
by allowing the foul air ' to es
cape through the hay and grain
stored above the animals. This is ol
jectionable for obvious reasons. Snch
stables, with poles or rails for the floor
above, are dingy, dark, and generally
festooued with cobwebs. Besides their
disagreeable appearance, they allow
the dust, chaff, and hay-seed, to fall
upon the backs of the cattle, and these
are thus always kept unclean. Dark
stables aud coats matted with dust are
not healthful for cattle, to say nothing
of the deteriorated condition of the
feed store above them, wich is exposed
to all the foul air that rises from be
neath. We greatly prefer to have the
floor above laid w ith matched boards,
which will prevent any dust falling
through, and to have the lieams and
under side of the floor whitewashed.
Ventilation mar be provided by spouts
through which liny or straw could be
thrown down below, and which should
terminate in grated openings lioneath
the eaves. American AarieutlnrM.
I'reiMring Chhlen FeeA. Poultry
dough should not be made too thin.
Many young chickens die by being
forced to take too niiiih water with
their fool, whereas, if fed propely they
might live. (Jiving meal too wet 'will
not prove fatal in the case of fowls, but
they thrive liettor if the food is mixed
stiri" enough to crumble. The food is
moistened while in the crop by si-cre-tions
from glands. It next passes, a
little at a time, into a pouch formed by
the expansiou of a part of the passage
iH'twecn the crop and gizrard. Here
other digestive juices are secreted, also
in the gizzard, and still further on.
Now, if the food contains too nint h
water before it is fed, these digestive
juices are diluted and unpaired. All
healthy annuals regulate their tinrst
by the needs of the system : therefore
if they are always kept well supplied
with water, separate from the food,
they will drink only what is necessary
and in mixing food it is best to In- ou
the safe side ) , , ,
There i donbt of the benefit from
feeding crude carlxmaceous matter to
swine when they are kojit inclose pens.
The avidity with which hogs cat rotteu
wood is well known, t'hareotil is but
another form of cailion. Bituminous
coal is still another form. The utility
of iecding wood and coal lias long been
recognized. Some years since we sub
stituted the ordinary. Western stone
coal with the best results, where 2'W to
Viu hogs were kept in close pens and
kept on the refuse of city hotels. Some
thing of this kind seems as necessary
to them as salt to strictly herbivorous
animals. e have known them to con
sume a pound in the course of a day.
and again they would not seek the coal
tor some time. Just what particular
use the coal is in the animal economy
is not easy to answer. Swine are espe
cially liable to scrofulous and inflamma
tory diseases. Carbon, in the shape of
coal, is an antiseptic, and the proba
bility is that it acts m tins way in pun-
tying tne bloou.
Iiran for Horse. The Journal of the
Farm says : Bran when fed to animals
is laxative, and on this account should
not be fed to horses in any Quantity
when hard work is at all required of
01 tnem, because weakness is caused
by this relaxation of the bowels and
great iniurv inflicted. The theory that
introduces bran into the horses' stables
is as pernicious in its effects as the in
discriminate use of bran itself at the
whim of the stableman, and the theory
is, that horses sick or well, should ly
fed upon bran mashes. A little bran
with other and more substantial arti
cles of food may. however, be occasion
ally given with advantage, but always
taking care not to feed it in quantities
to give rise to looseness of bowels, nor
be counted to the poor horse as so much
other solid food, for in doing so you
not only deceive yourself, but cheat
your horse.
A Kollina ITortc. If practicable, pro
vide a loose stall, that is, an inclosed
roomy stall not less than 12 feet square
for a horse that has a habit of rolling.
and use no halter, but leave him unfas
tened, l'ossibly the rolling is caused
by the irritation of the skin, in which
case give an onnce of sulphur in the
feed daily, for a week, and teed braa
in place of part of the com. At the
same time good currying and brushing
would be a help. If a box stall is not
convenient, as it frequently is not, tie
the horse with a strong halter so short
that he can barely lie down comforta
bly. , . - : . .
Did it ever oocur to any of our
readers that it takes more feed to make
a pound of beef than a pound of butter?
A good cow in milk, well eared for,
will make 2( fl pounds of butter in a
season, worth from $60 to 70 ; but a
dry eow, with the same feed will not
gain as much in weight in the same
time, nor will she be worth as tnncb
as the butter from the dairy cow, and
the milch eow is left.
Cral ' Ahe ' Commended. Having
thoroughly tested coal ashes I can as
sure those interested that if applied
while the leaf is wet with dew or rain)
or if necessary sprinkled with water.,)
it win prevent the ravages of the enr-rant-worm
; and also do exceedingly
good service in case the yellow antl
lack 11 y trouble the vines: viz:
melons, cucumbers, squash, tomato,
and potato.
Wheat and A fxtrtina Mure. A writer
in the l'rairie Farmer cites a good
number of cases where mares in foal
have aborted. These had been fed
with wheat steeped or soaked, varying
in quantity fmm less than a gallon to
a gallon.
SCLUT1FIC
Honinf) a Pa:or. The first requisite
is to have a well-shaped, well-tempered
and well (water) ground razor; unless
very truly ground, it will be impossible
to hone it properly. ' 'fate an Italian
hone, of not too fine grit face it per
fectly with fine emery piiier glued on
a hoard ; dust it off', and drop 0 or W
drops of sperm oil on its face. Hold
the razor perfectly flat on the stone,
draw firmly bnt lightly from heel to
point (from the further right hand
corner to the lower left hand corner),
against the edge; if a wire edge be
produced, run the edge lightly across
the thumb nail, and a few strokes on
the hone will remove all trouble on that
score. If you will examine the edge of
the razor now, by aid of a magnifier,
you will rind that the tine grooves or
teeth Incline towards the heel.
I would here say that the hone must
be kept perfectly clean, as. after nsing
a few times antl then neglecting it, the
pores will get tilled with steel, and m
that case it will not be possible to get a
keen edge ou the razor. I have had a
hone in use for forty years, for my own
anil friends' razors. I have kept it
perfectly trne, antl yet there has been
110 percept 1 ble wear.
I make my own straps as follows : I
select a piece of satin, maple, or rose
wood, 13 inches long, 1 inches wide,
and i inch thick ; 1 allow :'i inches for
length of handle. Half an inch from
where the handle liegins, I notch out
the thickness of the leather so as to
make it flush to wants the end. I taper
so the thickness of the leather; this
precaution prevents the case from tear
ing up the leather in putt;-.g the strap
in. I then round the wood very
slightly, just enough (say 1-13 of an
inch) to keep from cutting by the razor
in strapping aud turning over the same.
1 now select a proper sued piece ot line
French bookbinder's calfskin, cover
with good wheat or rye paste, then lay
the edge in the notch, and secure it in
place with a small vise, proceed to rub
it down nrnny anu as soiki as possiute
with a tooth brush handle (always at
hand or should be), and, after the whole
is thoroughly dry, trim it neatly anil
make the case.
I'se cold water for lather, as it softens
the beard and hardens t e cuticle ; hot
water softens both and makes the face
tender. Always dip the razor in hot
water tK'fore using, and also after use,
as it will dry it aud prevent rusting."
A t'i)7cand usually successful mode
of extracting a needle or any piece of
steel or iron broken off in the flesh is
accomplished by the application of a
simple pocket magnet. An acquaint
ance of ours hail a little daughter who
recently broke a needle off in her hand.
A surgeon was called, who made sev
eral efforts to find the needle by prob
ing anil incision, but without success.
After the surgeon hail left, the mother
couceived the idea of trying a magnet ;
one was procured, and after one or two
applications ot it the broken fragment
of needle was discovered attached to
the magnet. This idea will be of es
pecial utility to workers iii iron. Ma
chine shop surgery is not the most
delicate or least paiutul, though men
heroically undergo it rather than stand
the loss of time due to an inflamed eye
or festered finger. Iron tilings have a
way of imbedding themselves 111 the
eye, which defies almost every ordinary
means tor their extraction, tor tln-ir
removal, a small, blunt, pointed bar of
steel, well magnetized, will be found
excellent, and we should recomineud
that workmen liable to such injuries
keep such an instrument almut them.
It would Ik- a good plan to insert such
a bar in a penknife, iu a manner similar
to a blade.
Teeth in the liffcrent Knee of Men.
The conformation of the teeth in the
inferior varieties of man present some
curious approximations to the dental
structure ot the aie. In the latter, the
premolars, or bicuspids, are implanted
by three fangs ; in the C aucasian race
of man they generally have, seemingly,
only one fang, which, however, con
sists of two mora or loss completely
united: but in negroes these teeth have
two distinct fangs. "It is only in the
black varieties,"' says Prof. Owen, 'and
more particularly that rare inhabiting
Australia, that 1 have found the wisdom
tooth with three fangs as a general
rule : anil the outer ones are more or
less confluent." In most of the black
varieties of man. especially the Aus
traliaiis. the true molars attain larger
dimensions than in the yellow or w hite
races, anil as well as iu the apes, are
supported by two distinct fangs;
whereas, in the w hite and yellow races
ol the human subject, these fangs are
not infrequently united in the second
molar, and are usually found to be so
111 the third.
A Heanlifnl Istir. It is.i eeueri.! law
of nature that by heat bodies expand.
and in cooling they contract. To this
one exevin exists water, in contra
distinction -u-oui all other substances.
expands or grows lighter as it cools to
a certain point, nence we orre-n wmkc
up in the morning and find our earthen
pitchers broken after a night's freeze,
aud great rockcand blin ks of iron have
been split by the same power. Nature
never does anvthing for mere pastime,
her freaks are not freaks, her very act
is founded on a good purpose, benefi
cence enters into the spirit of all her
operations. In this case-, the well being
of myriads of living creatures was kept
in view, for if this law did not exist on
our lakes and rivers when the water
grows colli it would sink, and the ice
forming from the bottom would fill
them, thus destroying the life existing
in them. On the other hand, the water
as it 000 is rises, and the ice forms on
the surface, leaving a snug, warm home
tor the creatures that luhabit the sub
marine world.
Awr Imitation Silref Ornament. In
several stores in Munich various ob
jeots of art have lately been displayed,
which are remarkable fortheir brilliant
silver hue. It appears that they are
mere plaster models coveretl with a
thin coat of mica powder, which per
fectly replaces the ordinary metallic
substances. The mica plates are first
cleaned and bleached by tire, lioiled in
hydrochloric acid, and washed and
dried. The material is then finely
powdered, sifted, and mingled with
collodion, which serves as a vehicle for
applying the componnd with a paint
luusli. The objects thus prepared can
be washed in water, aud are not liable
to lie injured by sulphuretted gases or
dust, the collodion adheres perfectly
to glass, porcelain, wood, metal, or
naoirr wc(. -1 he mica can be easily
tinted in (liferent colors, thus adding
to the beauty of the ornamentation. ,
A French surgeon has devised a
compound slaughtering instrument by
which cattle are more surely anil
quickly killed than by the usual axe. It
consists of a sort of punch with a han
dle, and having an annular sharp edge
at the extremity, something- like the
edge of a tool tor cutting gun wads.
1 his is held in the proper spot upon
the beast's skull, and by a blow with a
mallet is driven into the brain, cutting
a round hole into it and causing instant
insensibility.
The disappearance of organic matter
from running water where exposed to
the air is well known. It has also
lately lice a shown that water running
through closed iron pipes nndergoes a
similar process of purification, a re
markable difference being observed in
the same water before aaii after it
pasaeg through the mains.
FMIilian of Knluhuric Arid. Ac
cording to M. Bobierre, sulphuric acid
may he caused to undergo regular ebul
lition by the addition of thin plates of
platinum in the proportion of 1'grains
of metal to :ti quarts of acid. The
whole is to be treated in a vessel of .Vi
quarts capacity.
1'u nuiiten'ma the knife or borer with
a moderately strong solution of caustic
soda and potash, instead of water or
alcohol, it is said tbatindia rubber may
be cnt with as much ease as ordinary
cork-wood.
BOXESTIC.
Mnxic at Home. Do all yon can to
cultivate musical taste in your children ;
let them hear as much music as possi
ble. Invite some one who can play and
sing bright and easy music, aud let the
children hear it, 'I lie music should be
pretty, melodious aud animated a few
songs, some easy galops or marches,
and perhaps a quiet little piece or two.
Make them understand that lliey must
listen to music iu silence. They are
not allowed to talk while others are
speaking, and they must give the same
attention when any one plays or sings.
By this means they will learu to think
more of music, and to appreciate it
more highly. There is nothing to pre
vent children from taking up uiusic as
naturally as reading and writing. The
notes and the alphabet should be
learned at the same time. At five and
six. children learn to sing naturally
and easily, aud JittUt songs and exer
cises should Ik- mingled with the lessons
of the primary reading and spelling
book. Experience teaches that nearly
all' children who can speak may lie
taught to read vocal music and to
sing. Some knowledge of music should
form a part of every child s edncation.
At the same time, it is evident that it is
often useless to carry a child through a
king course of mnsicat study, when he
or she has no special aptitudV for it. If
they tin not care tor ir, let tnem sttiuy
it enough to understand its general
principles, and then, unless they volun
tarily express a desire to pursue its
study, let them give it up. Music in
any form i so great ' an addition to the
social ' delights f home, that we
strongly urge parents to take thene few
hints kindly. 1
An Itniinntd Voult'ut. At a recent.
mee ting of the Aeademie de Mtderiue,
Paris, M. Le Fort read his report ou a
substitute for the ordinary linseed
meal poultice, invented byM. Lelievre.
It is prepared by saturating two super
imposed layers of wadding w ith a so
lution of fuen crixfius. or Carragheen
licl'en, and drying tnem in a stove alter
they had been submitted to strong
pressure. In this way a sheet ot the
consistence of cardboard is produced, a
portion ot which is cutojt when w anted,
anil soaked in hot water for fifteen or
twenty minutes ; this swells it out anil
tills its tissue with a mucilaginous fluid.
It has been tried in several . of the
hospitals, to the great satisfaction of
both patients antl attendants. It can
le prepared in large quantities before
hand, and will keep for a longtime
without undergoing anr alteration.
MM. Demarquay, (iosseiin, anil Ver
neuil pronounce it to be far superior to
the linseed poultice; it keeps moist for
more than sixteen or eighteen hours;
it tbx'S not slip, is inodorous, does not
readily ferment, nor doe it-soil the
linen or l-tl of the patient. The new
poultice is destiued to render great ser
vice iu hospita's and ambulances and
above all on board ship, where it is
difficult to keep the linseed iu a good
state of preservation.. , ,.
S7erufcMii.To tiike a hearty meal
just before retiring is, of course in
jurious, becarrse it is very likely to dis
turb one s rest, ami produce nightmare.
However a little food at this time, if
one is hungry, is decidedly lieneticial ;
it prevents the gnawing of an empty
stomach, with its attendant restlessness
and unpleasant dreams, to sav nothing
of probable headache, or of nervous
aud other derangements, the next morn
ing. One should no more lie down at
night hungry than he should lie down
after a. very full dinner; the conse
quence of either being disturbing antl
harmful. A cracker or two. a bit of
bread and butter, or cake, a little fruit
something to relieve the sense of
vacuity, ami so restore the tone of the
system is all that is necessary.
e have known persons, habitual
sufferers from restlessuess at niyht, to
experience material liciielit, even
though they were not hungry, by a very
light luncheon before licd-time. Iu
place of tosniug alxmt for two or three
hour as formerly, they would soon
grow drowsy, fall asleep, and not awake
more thau once or tw ice until sunrise.
This mode of treating insomnia luis re
cently ltcon recommended by several
distinguished physicians,' anil the pre
scription has generally Iki-ii attended
with happy results.
The ft". Beware of the gossip
110 matter how plausible Ins or her
manner. The artistic, accompludicd
gossip is great 111 asserting Ins own in
nocciice of intention. He repudiates
altogether the classi heal 1011 which
would include him iu the category of
the slanderers t huso conversational
assassins against -whom we make spe
cial supplication ; and, when he is
brought to Ixxik on the charge of
spreading abroad false reports ami
lieariug his tart in sjiyiug stones at
his neighlMirs houses, answers de
murelv: i did not mean to do any
harm ; I only told so ami so to Mrs. This
and That and she hail no business to
repeat it!" This only telling so ami so
is just the wbole burden of the mischief.
Mrs. This mid That is ns great a gossip
as himself as much of a sieve; and
whrn two sieves are put together to
hold water, how much will 1h left for a
thirsty soul to dnnk by the end of a
summer's day f Anil again, 11 r. This
and That's promise of secresv is to
valid plea for condonation. The thing
we cannot ketp for ourselves we have
no right to expect others will keep for
us, ami we only play monkey tricks
with our conscience when we pretend
to believe that every one else is more
trustworthy thau ourselves.
7Air to Mole Safe Safe. The follow
iug hints for the use of safes, and of
what should be put in them, are
vouched for by good authority. Avoid
fancy, colored inks as they are more
liable to be obliterated by heat when
the safe is nnder fire. The black inks
are lietter. Lead pencil writing will
stand the heat bettor thnn either, even
when the paper is burned biack. Jo
not pnt the most valuable account
liooksatthe sides of the safe, as the
heat coming from the outside will af
fect them first. Crowd the IsMiks from
the sides to the center of the safe, as
the heat coining frcm the outside will
affect them first Crowd tlw boots from
the sides to the center of the sate, for
the purpose of making them tight to
gether, as in this condition they w ill
stand the heat much longer. Wood
draw ers are preferable to iron for cash
boxes aud lot small .valuable papers.
as wood is a non-conductor of heat and
iron a good conductor. Never use in a
safe a leather wallet as a receptacle for
valuable papers, as boiling water, heat
213 tlegrt-fcs, w jlj crisp and curl it, con
vert it mto a gluey substance and de
stroy the papers. When a safe has
been under hie, send for an expert to
opes it.
.1 LanniTrv Keeref.The following re
cipe for doing np shirts will He found
of use by many housewives? Take tw)
ounces of fine white gum arabic iiowtler;
pnt it into a pitcher and pour on a pint
or. more , ot water, and then having
covered if, lot it stand all night. In
the morning pour it carefully from the
dregs into a clean bottle and cork it,
and keep it for um-. A tahlcspooiiful
of gum water stirred In a pint of starch
made in the usual maimer will give to
lawns, either white or printed, a look of
newness when nothing else can restore
them after they have been washed.
Hint for 1'lantina. The season being
here for transplanting, some facts may
be useful. Dig holes twice the diameter
of the roots when spread out throw
the under soil or clay aside and tilling
op use the-top soil, well 'pulverised,
about the roots. Before you set the
tree, make a sr. all mound in the soil.
so that the roots will nicl spread out,
and the tree be no deeper iu the fcrona
than it was in the nursery. Alter the
roots are covered, wet. well, and after
the water has settled, till np the hole.
rimsh oft by mulching liefore hot
weather comes. -
l'nlacletl lime is excellent fur clean
ing small steel articles, such as jewelry.
buckles and the like.
Wrrmt lead rubbed no with linseed
oil to the consistency of paste is an ex
cellent application for burns.
A H'oiHiiN ' love is ever uppermost in
her mind. Sleeping, it fills her dreams ;
n -waking, it is her first thought ; in
the moment of life's imminent danger.
still is it the uppermost sentiment,
especially if the object of ber lore is her
umbrella, tor instance, a lauy, xut,
fair and forty, hail a recent narrow es
cape from being killed in the Citadel
Station. Carlisle. Pa. She fell over the
platform while the train was coming
r 1 jt 1 i.....i-
iu, anu was reocueu irmji wu imum
in the fore foot nnder the engine, when
she was extricated from her perilous
position uninjured, notwithstanding
that she bad been dragged several
yards by the engine, a bar at the bottom
of which she had firmly grasped with
both hands. I pon being lifted upon
the platform again, her first words
were, "Where's my umbrella V
t THJt was making a tip for his fly rod,
and Dibks stood watching him.- There
was very nearly a row over it. neai-eful
as the occupation was. Tibbs said,
"Give me good second-growth ash : it's
just as good as lancewood." "What's
the matter witu Tew I - uinm de
manded. "What's the matter with me f
Nothing's the matter. What makes
you think so f "No. no: rew wood."
"J would what Tr "Thunder, can't yon
understand a man T I mean vew wood
the wood of the yew tree, sawed into
shape. Now then, is that plain enough V
"Oh!" said Tibbs. much relieved, "I
never yewsed any."
!P m
Why he Ka Srry.A miuister ex
amined his school-boys thus :
'What is the meaning of the word
repentant T
'Please, sir, don't know.'
'Now if I hail stolen a loaf of bread,
what should I be P
'Please, sir, locked up.'
"Well, should I feel sorry P
'Yes.'
'Well, why should I feel sorry r
'Please, sir, 'cause you was rulehed."
"Here we are, within a quarter of a
mile of land" was the joyful announce
ment made by the captain of an ocean
steamer to his grumbling passengers.
"Where V "Which way is itf were
the eager exclamations which followed.
"Anywhere down below there," said
the captain, pointing towards tlte bot
tom of the sea ; the lead gives us just
two hundred aud twenty fathoms of
water, ami the land comes slap up
against the brine."
A doctor of divinity, whose name
began with a P., lived iu Boston. An
other man of the same name died, and
a zealous newspaer reporter seeing
the death in the paper, and thinking
only of Dr. P wrote a most enthusias
tic obituary. A wag met Dr. P. the
next day. "What, vou are not dead ?"
he said. "Well,-then, yon ought to
be: no man can ever live up to that
obituary." -
A uoirkv saw, for the first time, a
school girl going through some of her
gymnastic exercises for the amusement
of the little ones at home ; after gazing
at her with looks of interest and com
miseration for a while, he asked a Ixiy
near by if that gal had titsf No, re
plied the lad, contemptuously, that's
gym nasties. Oh, 'tis hey? said the
verdant; how long has she had 'em I
Ike landlady of a hitel in Boston.
entered, in angry mood, the sleeping
apartment of a boarder and said. "Now
sir, 1 want you to pay your lull, and
you must; I've asked vou often enough.
ami I tell you now that you don't leave
my house till .you pay it." "(iood!"
said his lodger: just put that in writ
ing; make a regular agreement of it!
11 stay with you as long as you like!
"Ctia I have a steak for breakfast T"
asked a very thin man of a distrustful
butcher. 1 es," growled tue slayer of
animals. "And will you trust me nntil
""'' you! Get out! You
owe me for the very meat ou your
bones now." "Well, I can't owe you
much, then." replied the individual,
looking at himself.
WW yonr eves and listen mit me,"
said L'ncle Van Heyde. "Veil, de ' tCKl rceiy e to be on your
first night I open store 1 counts del1""'' ascend a flight of stairs, that
monies ami finds him nix right; I
counts him and dere lie tree gone ; and
vat yon dink I does dent" "I can't
say.' "y, 1 did not count hi 111 anv
more, and
ever since.
he comes out shoost right
A yonnij britle who had been faahinn
aWy educated was asketl by her fontl
husband to attend to the ordering of
the dinner, as he shouldn't have time
to go to market- It is a fact that she
blandly requested the butcher to send
home a "leg of tongue, seventeen
pounds of steak, and two halibut."
irV a girl crops her front hair ami
pulls it dowa over her forehead like a
Mexican mustang, and then ties a piece
of retl velvet around her uet k, who ran
wonder at the ntimls r of pale-faced
young men that throw away their am
bition ajid pass sleepless nights trying
to raise tlou n on tlie;r upper lips I
If iretl enough for you to name your
lxy jVlias," said Annt Hepzibah ; "but
for gracious goodness sake don't name
him 4 has, cause the -1 liases is always
a cutting up bad. Here's Alias Jones,
Alias Brown, Alias Thompson, Alias
ine-nyed Jake, all been took up in New
York for robbiu' an' stealiu',"
Dr. Itarnen, when ninety-five years
of age, slept during a sermon, and on
being joked about it by a friend, in
sisted he had beou awake all the time.
"Well, then," said his friend, "can you
tell me what the sermon was about ?''
"Yes. I can," he answeretl "it was
about half an hour too long."
J inehritited stranger precipitated
himself down stairs, and on striking the
landing reproachfully apostrophized
himself with : "If you'd been a-wantiu'
tocume down stairs, w hy in thunder
didn t you say so, jybg wooden beaded
old fool, an' I'd a come yitli you, ant
snoweii you ine way i
I'tHloatr between two bachelor gour
mands: My dear fellow. 1 ve 111st
engaged a cook, a woman of marvelous
talent." ?ls she married r "No. and
for that reason 1 am afraid I sliilj lose
her." Oh, then, you must not hesi
tate." : " hat must I do I ' "i beseech
you marry her.".
A ' iu the Bergen Tunnel the
other morning hailed a fellow. laborer
with, "So yeye got a baby at yer
house; what is it T a boy or a gynrl V
"tJuess!" "An' it's a loy." Xo."
"Well then it's a gyurL" . "Faith," said
the deiigkterj father, "somebody's b'en
telling ye."
A yonng dry goods clerk, who is to
be married after Lent, says he believes
in the obi maxim, "In times of peace
prepare for war." and accordingly is
daily getting up his muscix on the
Health Lift in au tip-town gyniuasium.
The slim man who used to chalk his
head and attend masquerades as a
billiard-cue, or braid bis legs and at
tend as a riding whip, now slips a rubber-tip
over bis cranium anil goes as a
lead-pencil.
"Well. Bridget, if I engage you I
shall want you to stay at home when
ever X shall wish, to go out." "Well,
ma am, I have no objections, providen'
you do the tame when I wish to go out."
H tire curious to know bow many
feet in female arithmetic go to a mile,
because we never met with a lady yet
whose 1 oots wore not. to say the very
east, a mile too big for her.
Mluii is tha djnereuep between tl;e
outer wall of a bridge, aud 4 cjufe ot
nice young ladies I The h rat is a
parapet, and the second are a pair of
pets.
He lieu of orthography, an inmas-
ionetl swain wrote, "Mary, I love the
well." She replied that glut wg glad
be didn't drink liquor.
- If a small boy is a lad, is a big boy a
uuuer 1
EartaqaavK Teatis!
. r.ihiw Rortelri. an Italian monk, for
several years past has made a study. Of
the tremblings of the earth, and more
especially those which are so extremely
slight a not to be perceptible, save by
pendulum placed in th fields of micro
scoiies. I11 one year he recognued 5,."0
of these movements; anu grapuiotnj
representing the same over many years
by a curve he finds that the line corres
ponds neitlier with the theniiometrio
curve nor with the tidal phenomena,
uor can it lw brought into any relatum
with the ilistances or poition of the
sun or moon. With the barometric
curve, however, it is otherwise; and
anoears that, iu the large majority of
cases, the intensity of the movements
augmented with the lowering of the la-
rouietric column (a the investigator
states) the gaseous masses lniprison.il in
the smierlii'ul layers of the earth
escaped more easily wbeu the weight of
the atmosphere diminished.
DeapoBde-aey.
What riffht has any person, endowed
w ith 111 wnliiiarv share of intellect, am
hl.-.sml w iih .1 respectable share of good
health to is-iH.ini ? What is the cause
ofilesiMiniloiiev what i the iiicniinig
ofit? The cause Is a weak iniinl, and
the iiieanhi!' is sill. Providem-e iievwr
intended that 01m of His creatures
should he the victim of a desire to feel
and look the gloom of the thunder
cloud. Never ilesmiid. for one of the
lirst entrances of vice to the Heart 1
made throii-rh the instriiiiieiitalil V of
ile-is u nl -v. Although we cannot ex
IH-ct all ottr tl.-ivs and hours to lie gilded
by sunshine, we must not. for mere mo
mentary griefs, supMise that they are to
he on-hroiiiloil 111 the mists 01 niisery
or clouded by the owelty of sorrow anil
misfortune.
A Massachusetts girl has constructed
fifteen hundred words from the letters
contained in the word Constantinople.
Learning passes for
those who lack both.
wisdom among
A Few Ward! to Feeble aad Del
icate Hanaca.
By It. V. ITEBCE. M. D., of the
Woki.p's Dispensakv, Buffalo. N. 1.
Knowing that yon are subject to a
great amount of suffering, that delicacy
ou your part has a strong teudeney to
prolong uimrimr, buu uiv? luujtci ii in
neglected the more vou have to endure
and the more difficult of cure your case
becomes, I. as a physician, who is daily
consulted by scores of your sex, desire
to say to yon, that I am constantly
meeting with those who have been
treated for their ailments for months
without lieing benefited in the least,
until they have become perfectly dis
couraged and have almost made up
their miuds uever to take another dose
of. medicine, nor be tortured by any
further treatment. They had rather
die and have their sufferings ended
than to live and suffer as they have.
They say they are worn out by suffer
ing and are only made worse by treat
ment. Of anything more discouraging,
we certainly cannot conceive, and were
there ne more successful mode of treat
ing such difficulties than that, the
principles of which teach the reducing
aud depleting of the vital forces of the
system, when the indications dictate a
treatment directly the reverse of the
oue adopted for them, their cases woidd
be deplorable indeed. But lady suffer
ers, there is a better and far more suc
cessful plan of treatment for you ; one
more in harmony with the laws and re
quirements of your system. A harsh
irritating caustic treatment and strong
medicines w ill never cure you. If yon
would use rational means, snch as
common-sense should dictate to every
intelligent lady, take such medicines
as embody the very best invigorating
tonics and nervines, compounded w ith
special reference to your delicate sys
tem. Such a happy combination you
will find in my favorite Prescription
which has received the loudest praise
from thousands of your sex. Those
languid tiresome sensations causing
continual drain that is sapping from
yr systems all your former elasticity,
! a.nd unving the bloom from your
--- i nai nwiuiui mwh uimii
your vital forces that renders yon irri
table ami fretful, may all be overcome
and siiImIiiciI by a persevering use of
that marvelous remedv. Irregularities
and obstructions to the proper work
ings of your systems are relieved by
this mild and safe means, w hile period
ical pains, the existence of which is a
sure indication of serious disease that
should not be neglected, readily yield
to it, and if its use is kept np for a rea
sonable length of time the special
cause of these pains is ieruianently re
moved. Further light on these sub
jects may lie obtained from my pam
phlet on diseases peculiar to your sex,
sent on receipt of two stamps. My
Favorite Prescription is sold by drug
gists. 14
DjspepKiat Dip?pia!
Dypepla I
Dyspepsia is the most perplexing of
all human ailments. Its symptoms are
almost infinite in their variety, ami the
lorioru anu iiesponuent victims ot the
disease often fancy themselves tiie
prey, in turn, of every known malady.
This is due. in part, to the close sym
pathy which exists between the stom
ach and the brain, and in part also to
the fact that any disturbance of the
digestive function uecessarily disorders
the liver, the bowels and the nervous
system, antl effects, to some extent, the
quality f the blood.
L-t.Kuukel's Bitter Wine of Iron
a snre cure. This is not a new prepar
ation, to lie tried and fonntl wanting ;
it has been proscribed daily for many
years in the practice of eminent physi
cians with 11 11 para lie led success; it is
not expected or intended tn cure all
the diseases to which the human family
is subject, bnt is warranted tn cure
Dyspepsia in its most obstinate form.
Kunkel's Bitter Wjuo of I run never
fails to cure Symptoms of Dyspepsia or
loss of appetite, wind and rising of the
food, dryuess of the mouth, heartburn,
distension of the stomach antl bowels,
constipation, headache, dizziness, sleep
lessnecj and low spirits. Try the great
remedy and he convinced of iN merits.
Get the genuine. Take only Kunkel's,
which is put only iu ? bottles. Depot,
2T! North Xinth Street. Philadelphia.
For sale by all Druggists and dealers
everywhere.
Tirt-OKa Entovrn itvf. TTail
and all complete, in two hours. No fee
till head passes. Seat, pin and Stom
ach Worms removed by Dr. Kinkel,
3-19 X. Nixth street. Advice free.
Come, see over l,lJU specimens and be
convinced, IJe never fails.
Sufferers with Files should ern;i
a monument to JJr. Sii.si:f.e for Lis
beneficent discovery of AX AKESIS, an
infallible oure for the worst cases of
piles a failure in ZO.Ouq rases ban not
Ix-en recorded, It is a simplu sup puni
tory, painless and easy of application,
gives iustant relief, acts as an instru
ment, poultice and medicine, and can
not fail to cure. Lotions, ointments
and internal remedies may fail but
AXAKOIS is infallible. Frice t.
Anakesis lot, -W Walker Ht., Xew
ork. Kent free br mail tn mt ml.
dress on receipt of price. M
BROOMS! BROOMS !
CO.OOO DOZN :
from ftr Somi, aid Tpwards,
l all gtytta, Im bmI QoAliiM.
Tbrawti enrlanraar ml mrr pnrrhvw tot 7 all
VMlMttMIMphrOiV-M!MmT St
Uii tUwaiMrirfoLfcuat-ri-iTuiti.
A 1m fta fiTira B rfl-tc Wil .... m--r .
WAHB. nra at rl. TiK Utk W tV
Crikw.. Wick r VXMb ,,Ul luU lof 4uS
- i id war paw aatl I
. J. W.I1IF.R A CO .lllllw , . T.
P. . U jooj. X pW, u not nnair.
anydnuialiiiroa IB mad. Onfcm W h will i
ir proapt utoatiua. artaUalud 1MU. 3-24-1 t
lM A Co., Ponlaao. M.
Vg.f fi k f. . Q..n: ,t 4
so 5 ? v4 r-j
-3 O 2
ag'SsSSsr" to
.liiLJ-H-"- O.
1" 3 Q
a. piabsoh.
jacob r. NiLira.
PEARSON & MILLER,
Fruit and Produce
corraissiou kerceants
ISo. lli Vino Stret,
PHILADELPHIA.
THE
Gr XL H3 J. T
RUSSIAN SPECIFIC
CUKES
RHEUMATISM
A.ND
NEURALGIA.
Tfct cTsBat ret It. natil nrmtlj, atikasiwa u
aaal alar bafor tto pa tie, ak aoC cfauaa, aa
ijr olaer auxraJlrd i-wavedies, cb--tf a will ctir otbct
aa Id wbu-a nnnuinity m nirt, Hit wa lodaina.
and hava tb erniaacra to ptrvx that it will ixrtujLf
CPU RniTMATTHa! NaPB.UAIA. t4JiJ 0T1bv-4 i
tuaaa avm ma jaMaa. bum oj vramuM amriui
PriftripaJ Dap. 96 N. KUtYKSTH ST., Puumlphu
THE GREAT RUSSIAN SPECIFIC CO.
l-ZMf
ETO1
MAS WHO OWa A
tirrmit il from rooting by
fttnjt HlLL'tf Patcst Kinm
.uu King pr !'' o' enu;
Totin w Holdm. ti 'li, bj Mail. pt-wi4. for Solo
UiMnn uemiorm.
dreaitrs Ito.
AiSnm,
H. W. HILL a, CO,
lHOt-oow Uocatar, III.
SHOW CASES!
SHOW CASES!
AH atTl. 8ffwr MHmtd an 4 Walnut, sew
gecond-oavnd.
IVmreiy packed fr ahippiuir
OOL'NThlkH. hAJU
1 rtf c
HOUHB AND OKKU.'K KUKMTTRS all kluda
Tb brfft and beat aaaurtod aiock. itaa) atid
aacond-banti in lb City.
LKW1N Sc BKO 3M l
lm 101. 14KS aad lOl? B1IM.I Af li- Phlla.
HORSEMEN !
OW Milts OF STOCK !
Save Your Horses and Cattle I
CCRE THEM OF DISEASE ASD KEEP
THEM IX A HEALTHT CONDITION
BY GIVING THEM
M. B. ROBERTS'
CELEBRATED
TIADK
ABIC
HORSE POWDERS.
IX USE OVER
FORTY YEARS!
TBI 0LI roWDIRJ C0JTAIXI.1S
TC27I3, LAXATIVE A1TD PU3IT7-
DT3 P20PZ2TE3
C0B1IJ1D, THIIIBT BAKIIO TBB TBS
BEST COXDITIQy MEDICWft
IS TIIE WORLD.
Tkey srs ms-I of Pur HiUrisI only, out
toblespoonful foing ss fir bj oa pouaJ af
riliasry ssttl powders.
Buy oas package aatl after nsing tbem
you will sever get done praising them.
For sal by all storekeepers.
USE
M. B. ROBERTS'
Vegetable Embrocation
FOR ALL EXTERNAL DISEASES
BITBIB OB
MAN OR.
BEAST.
FREDERICK SPIECKER,
WBOLBBaLB Mill! IB
Leaf Tobacco, Cigars, Pipes.
Smoking and Chewing
Tobacco,
OF THE BEST BRANDS
KOL 152 FAI220TO7 AVKIUS,
FFILApFI?II.
Oaly As eat for U
Ifooli
SaiiJ Tep t'i(r
Cigar I lore aaa Ve supplied.
I lair
JOB PRINTING
DAILY IXaOUTVB AT THIS OfFKa.
I 5 ? a a a
I?,: r '''' '