HOUSING. bill mono. Day ia dawning. Slim and wide, Through the mists that blind it, Tremble up the rippling tide With Uie esa behind it. Like a warrior-angel eped On a mighty miaaiOD, Light and life about him abed, A tnueoendeot Tuiion. Hailed in gold and fire he etanda, And with splendor ahaken. Bide the deeping eeaa and land Quicken and awaken. Day is on os. Dreams are dumb. Thought ha light for neighbor Room! the rival giants come Lo, the Bun and Labor. Cornhill ilafaiine. The Crkaart. Some account of this secret political society, which became so notorious and whe influence was so widely extended in Iialv. France and elsewhere some sixty years ago, may not be uninterest ing. J he name is irom me luuiau w ru rtirbJuajn literally, a charcoal burner. About the year 1810, when the Neapo litan Henublicans. alike opposed to the UKiiriation of Murat and the rule of KennnaiKl, tooic reiuge in me awu.zi Mountains, they organized under the liwdership or i.apoDianco, a caruonan societv. adopting charcoal as a symbol of purification, with the motto "Revenge n im n the wol ves who devou r the lambs." Iu lSH the little N'eajiolitan town of I.aii-iaiio numbered as many as two thousand carbonari, and all over the Abruzzi new societies were formed, whose political influence became 'so marked that Prince Moliterni was dis IKitched to them by Ferdinand, with a View h securing meir fo-viwmuuu , against the r rench. But the carbonari, although their unwillingness to bear any foreign yoke had originally given rise to their asso ciation, leaned more ana more loivaru republicanism, and especially when the expelled dynasty was reinstated upon the throne" of Naples tlicv assumcd-aii attitude of uncompromising hostility against the monarchy. from thirty thousand members the number of car- Ixuiari all over Italy had been swelled, in one month (March, 1820), to the enormous tigure of seven Jiiinured thousand, including many persons of education and good family. The place where thev assembled was called the Ixirncca, or collier's hut; the surround ing country was designated a rorest; the interior of the baracca was called the reudita, from the sale of coals whiflh col liers are supposed to carry on in their huts. Kach province contained a large number of such harrache, or huts, and the union of the different provincial lints constituted "a Republic." The growing influence of the order alarmed the Conservative Governments of Kurope, especially the B'rirbous, as since 1H!I the carbonari had allied lit'Di selves with French Republicans. The trial of t lie Corsica n G nercno. who in accordance with the decree of the nltn eendiUi had stablied a tellow uiem lier for having betrayed tlie sot-rets ot the Sciety,adiied to the exi-iti-nieiit. A fresh impulse was given to the r rench fraternity, and many .Republicans of mark, among others i-ajayette, joined the iiiAenii-Dt wlm adiitu the ritual modification. The statutes o'' the French Carbonari were most stringent: the faintest whisper of the secrets of the society to outsiders constiti ted treason and was punishable with death. No written communications were eruiitted In 1S19 there were about tweutv thous and carlonari in I'aris. Fr m Septem- . Ijer l&iO to March 1S21, a separate com mittee sat in I'aris on military affairs, as the army contained a large number of carbonari. In 1S21 the Government was officially informed that the boeictv existed in twenty-five of the eighty-six depart meuLs of France, and the "National Congress" of the Carbonari, which had its headquarters at I'aris, seemed for a time omnipotent. All the insurrection ary movements, from 1KT.) to 18:22, were attributed to them. One of the cardinal points of the French carbonari was to make I'aris the jtoliticttl focus of the world. After the July revolution ot 18.10 manv carlionari gave in their allegiance to Louis I'hillipie; but at that time a new society of the order, more radical in its character, was founded by Biiona- rotti uiion the theoricsof Balieuf, which Testa, who was a prominent member, expounded in his 1 rojectd line icepiin lioaine." The carbonari are not known to exist la I'aris at present, at least not . under that name. . Partei-Haaaei Meat Its. This term has an American origin. In 1SU, a hungry pilot entered a New York porter house on l'earl street, where lunch as well as drink could be obtained. Morrison, the keeper, had nothing nut the beef ordered for the next day's family dinner, in the shaie or a sirloin roaung piece, and irom this he offered the pilot a cut, which he accepted. After ravenously devouring it, he turned to his host, who was ex ecting dissatisfaction with the order, "Messmate another steak just like that After having finished his steaks and iiorU-r, the old pilot ordered his steaks to lie "cut off the roasting piece for the future," and goon his comjtauious learned the good that lies in the "small loin steak," and Morrison was obliged to instruct his butcher to cut Ins sirloin into steaks for ids customers, and the butcher, ordering his subordinates and messengers, designated them as "jiorter house steaks, and increasing custom and extending repute soon established the term now so common in all eating houses of New England. Larger Teleaeope WhIM. . Wljf n we consider the enormous, dis tances which the astronomer has to tienetrate, ere he can bring himself within the range of observation of the nearest even of the celestial lwxlies, and when we think of the infinite depths iK'vond, filled with untold wonders, it is manifest that instruments of far greater light-grasping and siKii-e-jieiie-Iratiug power thau : we now jiossess must be employed. Everything has already been done by small instruments which can be done, lhey are, many ot them, of exquisite wcrkmsnship, and admirable in their details; but they are no more fit to give the revelations, and lenetrate to the distances required than a drinking-cup is to measure the Atlan tic. What is now needed is instruments of gigantic size and great erlection of workmanship, wnich will give us some specific and reliable information in re gard to the solar system, and which will oien up the inter-stellar spaces around iu It can hardly be regarded as cred itable to astronomical enterprise that such a planet as the moon, only some 240,000 miles away from us, aud most admirably planned for observation, should lie so little known ; or that an object the size of St. Paul's Cathedral should lie seen only as a discernible point on Iter surface; while of the con ditions of life on such planets as Alar and Venus we should be profoundly ignorant, it remaining a debatable point whether animal or vegetable life exists on their surface at all. The reason simply is, that the toys (as they must soon come to be regarded) hitherto em ployed in their observations are alto gether inadequate to cope with the dis tances they are removed from us. How ever fine their quality, they cannot bring these celestial bodies so near us as to enable us to see them distinctly; and our knowledge of them will never be increased until we have instruments which can. - Every astronomer knows that with the increase of the size of telescopes the difficulty of moving and observing with them increases. But the overcoming of such difficulties is just the thing to be done, in order that agronomical observation may advance as it ought to do. There is no impos sibility in the way, for, fortunately, there is no limit to the size or perfec tion of the telescope. .Manipulatory difficulties may increaie, but the theory of the instrument, Doth in Its reflecting and refracting form, admits of an in finite enlargement. Good Words. TheCklBese Xedtral SjrMeaa. The medical treatment of a sick Chi naman in Chinatown, merits the atten tion of all "Melican" doctors, whether ith or without a diploma, lie had re cently recovered from a severe fever, and while hardly convalescent nau gorged himself liberally with the pre mature melons, abortive apples and mildewed grapes, which are so plenti ful and "reasonable" In the -Mongolian hops on 'lay street. 1 his diet did not seem to strengthen him, and in a few days he was curled up in his bunk with a terrible attack or cholera morbus, a jrreat Celestial phvsician and astrologer was called, and the usual amount of broth from the eighth rib or a DlacK pig required to be applied to the patient's chest, but strange to say, this did not seem to straighten him out, as did not the customary draught of soup from the entrails of a dried serpent. With great Kimp the second Galen was summoned; but a twig of Acadia plucked when the moon was full placed beneath the sick man's pillow failed to revive him, and broth from the fourth finger of the hand of a man who was decapitated, applied to the sole of his foot, had no tendency to ease his Imwels. The doctors said that their skill was in vain, as a god whom the man had offended had sent devils to torment him. So, after secur ing the customary fees, they retired from the field. The evil spirits must be driven out. and to this end the pagan relatives seized every available weapon, from a tin pan to a blunderbuss. They raised the most frantic and discordant cries and the most terrible din with their weanons. as thev beat the empty air in hope ot winging a devil ; all of which the sutlermg mail muttered was without effect. The joss sticks were then lighted in all quarters ot the house, and the household cod offered a good souare meal. The sick man did some tall cliow-chowing, for his bowels yet veanied. but his moans grew feebler, and his friends began to calculate the weight and compass of his bones, when in came a German butcher, attracted no doubt by the pow-wow. lie saw the Situation Ul S glUllcu, auu stauri in mi joss slicks right and left grabbed the invalid bv the collar aim poureu seven siooiifiils of whisky into his throat, riiboea him aown wun a one, aim iu less than four minutes the dead man arose, cursing vociferously, and was able to take up his bed and walk. .Sm Francisco Bulletin. The Woaden of Oeatloa. Not the least interesting among geo logical discoveries is the fact that I'aris was once below the waters of a gulf, and the site of busy, teeming Ixmiloii was covered by the waters of an estuary. What are the revolutions effected by man in these cities, compared with the mighty changes wrought iu them by the mysterious but ever-active forces of nature? ' Embedded in the strata of the Silurian system are the fossil remains of what may lie fitly termed the marvels of the ancient world- - Hear the author's description of a gigantic monster called the Cetiosaurus, which science proves to have once inhabited the British seas, and another extinct animal called the Megalosaurus: "The Cetiosaurus was probably about sixty feet long. This kin of monsters was fumi-lied m ith a broad vertical tail, capable of administering a terrific blow, and the toes ot its webbed feet, proiior- tioned in size to the prodigious bulk they had to sustain, were armed with shari claws, with which it fastened on the fish and smaller reptiles constituting its lood The Megalosaurus was another gigantic reptile, which is supposed to have com bined with the magnitude of the hippo potamus the structural peculiarities of the alligator. But the strangest of these hideous creatures, in point of structure and apearaiice, was the Pterodactyl, a living reptile formed to subsist botli on land and water. The size of the Ptero dactyl is variously estimated, but ler- haps the outstretched wings from the extremity of the one to that of the other did not quite mver seventeen feet. It was of predacious habits, and iu jaw, which was erfcctly reptilian in form, was set witli about sixty conical teeth. firmly riveted in the bone. The legs apiear to have been of considerable length, and adapted equally for walking or swimming. 1 he neck was also long, assimilating with a bird's; and the wings, which dillered irom any organ of flight now exi.-ting, jiossessed extra ordinary power, and enabled this a nal scourge to soar to incredible heights, and thence fall like lightning on its prey. After perusing this last quotation, it affords a singular contrast to the student of natural history to read of some of the Infusoria, a class of animals so minute as only to be seen through a microscope. Among these, the Botifera, or wheel insects, are so highly organized as to Iiossess a mouth, a stomach,an intestine, and a tail; while the neck, examined through a powerful microscoiie, appears to be luruished with eyes, aud anteriorly it liears a most curious organ, the denti culated edges of which vibrate in suc cession, giving the whole memlier the apjiearance of a wheel. Equally singu lar is the genus called Proteus, winch is observed to be iieriietually changing its tdiae, and seldom retains the same form lor two minutes together. niaesae Help the teller. In his "Enigmas of Life," Mr. Greg, the well known English essayist, takes the ground that bodily pain and disease are not only compatible with, but may directly contribute to the loftiest efforts of the intellect, sometimes iiositively enhancing its powers, that the effect of some disorders and of certain sorts of iiain u lion the nerves is to produce a cerebral excitation, aud that the stimulus thus communicated to the material or gan of thought renders it for the time capable of unusual effort. Mr. Greg asserts that men under tlie stirring in fluence of severe pain are capable of a degree of imaginative and ratiocinative brilliancy which astonishes themselves and all who have known them ouly in ordinary moods of comfort; torpid fac ulties becoming vigorous and sparkling, torgotteu knowledge being recovered, and marvelous gleams of insight being vouchsafed them. The wonderful elo quence of Robert Hall is believed to have been greatly owing to the stimu lating influence of a terrible spinal malady. Ir Conolly mentions a gen tleman whose mental faculties never reached their full power except under the irritation of a blister. Such in stances as these are regarded by Mr, Greg a fully corroborating his theory, i'anaol aiadl their veL, By far too many people fancy that they are not appreciated accordiug to their deserts. "I want to make a change. I feel that 1 am - not valued according to my deserts," says an aspir ing young man. In all probability our inexperienced friend has more egotism and selfishness Uiau is good for him; but we advise him to move anywhere that he may choose in order to test the accuracy of his gauge of his own ability or merit. It is projer to add that, as a rule, a mau is appreciated fully for all he is aud does often for much more; and it is wise and, as a rule, safe, to take the measure other eople give you as a just one; and if it does not satisfy vou, work harder until they voluntarily change it. Few men rise and remain long above their just level ; lew can tie kept below it, A railroad is In contemplation to connect Alexandria, on the Red , river, Louisiana, with Marshall, Texas; thus opening up a territory which produces 6,000,000 worth of cotton alone per annum. AGEHTLTtRAL. Science a the Farm. It was formerly thought by many that if a man was scientific" be was a little cracKeu, or at least that be put on tne "flashy vest" and "gaudy neckties " or knowledge to make the show which his intellect was not otherwise capable of. To a certain extent, and with some, this was proba bly true; but the "world moves," and now it is kuAwn that science is "knowl edge, learning, the comprehension or understanding or truth or lacu oy me mind." Wclxter. Now, who is therj in tlie wide world ho has more pressing need of "under standing facts" than the farmer? The man whose business it is to live by rais ing food that others may live, should know exactly what he is about. He must explore his farm for "facts," and when he finds one he should forthwith cipher out iu entire significance. lo live by any prolession, a man must make some profit; a merchant is very careful that each article he sells yields something more than it cost. The moment an article in his line won t pay he discards it from his stock in trade. He is a "scientific man" on the subject of cost and profit. The manufacturer is precisely the same ir an article won t pay, he won't make it. What is a farmer but a manufacturer aud a merchant? He makes or produ ces, and sells his produce. How olten does he calculate before putting in a cron what it is going to cost him, and what it is likely to bring nitn: iwes he ever con over the different modes of producing his crops with a view to se lecting that one which will be the cheapest, and which will yield tlie largest return ? w ny does ne not uo these things? Because he is not "sci entific," because he does not search for truths or facts, and because ne wouiu probably not understand them if he found them. How then shall we make every farmer a "scientific" man. He must be taught to count the cost, 10 iook for facts and to understand them, and draw business conclusions from them when go found. There is but one way to do this : An account must be kept in a book with each crop as carefully and accurately as if with an individual with whom he has an open running account. By a regular charge to each crop of the cost of preparing the soil, the cost of seed, cultivating, harvesting, and marketing, and a credit of the actual sums received therefor, he will arrive at facts, and if some of them areof an astounding char acter, his "understanding" will only be the more lierfeet. He will instantly become a "scientific farmer;" he will discard some crops, or revise his mode of producing them ; he will think more; ne win guess less, anu ins pocseis in reel the change. t or. linrvi n orta. Chamjing Seed. A change of seed in agricultural operations is almost al ways beneficial. Growing the same crop in one locality, from the same seed year after year, often teuds to deteriiv ration. The advisability of this change of seed from one locality to another is well instanced in the oat crop, heed erown in the cool ntmosphere or North ern Vermont and Canada is found to grow more luxuriantly when resown in the Middle and Western States, and uniformly turns out heavier - weight, to the bushel. If the same seed is sown every year in the latter States, without new importation, the produce per acre and weight per bushel gradually dete riorate, the tanners ot iiermuua al ways grow tlieir potatoes from Ameri can seed, ami never from their own seed. Hence they are able to attain a remarkable success in uotato culture. such as we never attain here. Vegeta ble seeds should be changed frequently aud obtained from localities reuiote from the farms where sown. Tlie far mers of England, who raise excellent cereals, roots and grasses, are very par ticular in the selection of seed, and pro curing it from a foreign country, if pos sible, and in steeoing it in liquid ma- nure before sowing. In the north of Ireland, where flax is grown exten sively, the farmer? prefer seed brought from Russia or Holland to that grown by themselves, as they find the change very beneficial. The finest bullxmsaud tulKTons-rooted flowering plants are annually imported into England, the I'nited States, etc., from Holland aud Germany; and the change is very bene ficial for two or three years. Forest tree seeds, obtained in tlie mountainsof the Tyrol, germinate in other parts of Europe with much greator vigor than those of home growth. t.f.. Growth of Skort-huni George Ged des in an article on feeding makes the following remarks in the Country ,' tlemnn: ' "I owned a short-horn bull that on the day he was a jesir old weighed one thousand pounds, having emptied his stomach by a five mile walk, before going on the scales, and no great enort bad been made in feeding liuu to pro duce great growth. ' I do not believe that the most skillful feeding could have put T.'sJ pounds on him the next year, and I believe that food given the first year of a life of a steer or heifer returns fully twii-e as much gain to the feeder as it would the second year of the game animal's life. Why is this so? Take the case of my bull, that at one time weirhed 1,000 iioiinds. Jle had the waste of that 1,000 imhiikIs to pro vide for first, and after to add to iu If we assume that 2lZ per cent per day of his weight in good hay was required to provide for this waste (and most au thorities say 3 per cent,) then he must eat and digest pounds or hay eacl day merely to sustain himself, and all the flesh he added mnst he made- from an.!, fuul a li a ml-a u Til fit . 1 i im ct 1 Ti 1 1 assimilate over and above this 25 or 30 pounds; this may be considered a per petual tax on his flesh-making powers, This may not be a full explanaiion, but it is the best that I can give of the fact that young animals pay much better for reeding than old ones." Oire of Honrs. The London horse book says: All horses must not lie fed in the same proportion, without regard to their ages, their constitution and their work; because the impropriety ot such a practice is self-evident. Yet it is constantly done, and is the basis of diseases of every kind. ' Never use bad hay on account of the cheapness, because there is no projier nourishment in it. Rack feeding is wasteful. Tlie better plan is to feed with chojied hay, from a manger, because the food is not then thrown out, and is more easily chewed and digested. Sprinkle the hay with' wafer that has salt dissolved in it, because it is pleas ing to the animal's taste, and more easily digested. A teaspoonful of salt in a bucket of water is sufficient. To cure a horse of bridle-breaking, get a piece of bed-oord, four times the length of the horse and double it in the middle, and at the doubled end make a loop, through which pass the animal's tail. Then cross the cord o er his hack. and pass both ends through the halter- ring under his chin and tie both ends ol the cord to the trough-ring through which the halter strap plays, the end of the halter being attached to a billet of wood. Should the horse attempt to pull back the strain will all be on the root of his tail before the halter strap will become tightened, and he will at once step forward to avoid it. After so fixing bun a lew Dmeg in the stable he will abandon any such propensity, A -V!w Tork gardener has succeeded in keeping his currant and gooseberry bushes from the currant worm by mulching heavily with coal asbes. The ashes also have another value not ex pected, viz., keeping the ground cool and moist, so that even English goose berries will bear heavy crops without sign of mildew. - 71 it mid that charcoal will fatten fowls at the -same time giving the meat improved tenderness and flavor. Pul verize and mix with the food. A tur key requires about a gill a day. scixxnnc ; SciemeeaMa Poirtr fa tie llona. By your very attendance on these courses yon nave given the strongest evidence of your appreciation of the volume of chemical studies aa a part of the system of education, and let me say, in the first place, that yon have not overvalued their importance. The elementary principle) and more con spicuous ieats oi cuemisixy hvbuiu timately associated with the experience nt nrorv.ilir lifa. and find ftnch im portant applications in the nseful arte. that no man at tne present uaj ran uo regarded as educated who is ignorant of them. Not to know why tlie fire burns, or how the sulphur-trade anects tVio inrfuBtriea nf tliA world, will be re garded, by the generation 'of men among whom your pupua uimneiu win their places in society, as a greater mark ot ignorance man a xaise quanti ty in Latin prosody or a solecism in grammar. Morever, I need not tell .1... i .. I a,.unA ll Q & 1W " lTlif a great power in the world. IiMeed, alter reunion, it i inc n'tow: i."' of our-modern civilization. Consider how much it has accomplished during the last century toward increasing the comforts and enlarging the intellectnal vision of mankind. The railroad, the steamship, the electric telegraph, pho- coal-tar colors, chlorine-bleaching, an- a-sthesia, are a few of its receni mate rial gifts to the world ; and not only has it made one pair of hands -to do tl.o ari.rir r.t lirontv hnt it liaS BO proved and facilitated tueoiu inuusrnes that what were luxuries to the fathers of our republic have become necessities to our generation. And when, passing f.... mituriiil f 111 1 ta VOU COD tMMV V. sider the purely intellectual triumphs of phvsical science, sucn an inosc wliuii nave oeen paineu witu iuc irc scope, the microscope, and the spec- tmdiAna vnn nnnnt. tt,niH.r &t the e Atm in u-It i K T llPBA 1irA.m-i.pft of atmlv wrcau nuivu v - " . !.; TtrariAi Aire of the UIC II. H luio f ' ,V i f world. 1'opKlur Srieac iiiowiiw. An Enameled Iron Ceiling. X ceil ing made of thin plates of iron, and en ameled, lias just been put up in its place in the central retreshmeut room of the South Kensington Museum, Lon don, and is nrobablv -the first experi- . ..I.- i - i frt. .1 ..t ment 01 tuo tiiiu. jueuwviMrmii'ii this room were designed to resist all dirt and impurities incident to a pnblie room where food iseatenbyanaverasre of 10.0(H) persons a week. I he wans and columns are maiolica. the floor is is paved, and the ceilings are of iron enameled. The whole gives an impres- nion of nerfect cleanliness, and every part might lie washed down by a fire entrine weekly, if necessary. The manufacturing part of this ceil ing was clone at Birmingham by the Enameled Iron Company, tne wnoie enameled plates being sent from Bir mingham, and painted with charming and vigorous araliesques by the artist, Mr. James Gamble. The work is high ly effective and the expenment sue eessful. In cases where it is necessary to keep a ceiling clean and to wash it frequently, tins material promises i answer neifectlv. and the artistic work will last for centuries, as the design is burnt into the enamel. Excommunicated Insects. Apropot of the efforts in progress to destroy the phylloxera and other insect scourges iu "France, a writer in La Suture gives a bit of information relative to the way iu which such ix-sts nsed to be pro ceeded against when Science, save so far as it could be made to agree wun theological dogmas, had no existence for the world. In U:W. the Bishop of Laon formally excommunicated all the caterpillars aud field mice. In l-PH. the grand vicars of Antnn commanded the parish priests of their vicinity to en join the weevils to cease their ravages, and to excommunicate them. In 1 '". the Grand Vicar of Valence cited the caterpillars to appear before him for trial, lie Kinuiy assigueu tueiu coun sel for their defeuse, and, as they did not annear. proceeded against and sen tenced them, in contumaciam, to clear out of his diocese, a command which they probably obeyed. During the seventeenth . century. thirty-seven similar judgment, against both insects and qnadrupens, were is sued. One is on record.duriug the eigb ternth century, fulminated against a cow ; and there is still another, of later date, clue to a Judge of Falaisc, who condemned and hanged a sow lor Kill ing a child. - Pictorial Tile. A comnaritivcly new mode of employing tiles for the fining of rooms lias been introduced by Jiesnrs. Simnson. who have decorated the m terior of several important buildings m this manner. 1 he tiles are placed together iu their tin glazed state, and a picture is painted upon them in colors suitable for firing. They aie then taken asunder and put into the furnace and then subjected to great beat aud glazed. If this is successfully accom plished, the tiles can now be fixed agbinsl tlie wall of the room and pres ent an angoiuieiy 1u1u3.su iicuuie uecu ration. which can be. washed as often as it is needed, though from its high glaze it is not easily apt to catch dirt. A a A Ihm of Conner Adherent to Class, An allov of Conner which will adhere to glass or porce lain is made by mixing from 31 to 30 parts ot copper in powuer, (obtained by the reduction of the ox ide of hydrogen or by the precipita tion of the sulphate by zinc) witu sul phuric acid and then with T parts of mercury. The mixture is triturated and mingled with care. The acid is removed by washing in hot water, and the mass allowed to dry. At the end of 10 or 13 hours, the latter becomes quite hard and susceptible of a tine polisu. vn neaiing it nien, uui cooling does not contract. This alloy may also lie used for joining any deli cate Objects which win noi witiibianu very lush temperatures. , Metal Class. Another hard glass, to which the above name has been given has been produced at Count Solni's works, near Buntzlau. Germany. Th e test withstood appear to be-afiout the same an those to which the Bastie glass was subjected, with the exception, how ever, that the metal glass is indifferent to cold water when higluy heated. 1 he Bastie glass breaks under similar con ditions. The treatment to which the glass is snbjected in the Dew process is not made public ; but it is probably, like the Bastie method, a system of an nealing. ) . Detection of Picric Acid in Eeer.Yot this purpose, Brunner recommends acidulating the beer with hydrochloric acid, and plunging therein a fragment of woolen thread, and digesting the same in a bain marie. After the thread is removed, it is heated with s solution of ammonia. The latter is filtered, evaporated in a 1ain marie to small vol ume, and a fews' drops- of cyanide of potassium are added. The presence of 0-015 grain of picric acid in a pint of beer is determined by a red color being produced, due to the formation of iso purpnrate of potash. - ' 3ir Method of Prtecti no Adultera tion of Fatty M.- Roth employs, as a re-agent for the above, snlpbnric acid at 40 deg. B. saturated with ni trous vapors by causing nitric acid to act upon large pieces of iron. At the end of six or eight days, the solution acquires a tine bluish green color, in dicative of complete saturation. This re-agent solidifies either-partially or entirely the olein of non -siccative oils. The purity of the oil - may thus be de termined by noting the time which it occupies in solidifying. - t Boring Holes in Glass. An apparatus has recently been devised in France by which plates of glass may be safely and rapidly pierced bv means of the electric spark. By the aid of this machine, MM. Teiquem and Tanries were enabled to pierce half inch plate glass at points near one one another without cracking. - - ' What is defeat? Nothing bnt educa tion nothing but the first step to some thing better. Wen'tefl P,illi).t. ' oiranc. fWmi for UnrL Pronle. A verr in teresting lecture was delivered recently, says the London Standard, at the St. Giles' schools, by Mr. Bnckmaster, of the Science and Art department ot toe Snnth Kpnsinpton Museum, on the sub ject of plain and cheap cookery. The lecture was ueuvereu uiiua mo j'lTJ sidency of the rector of the parish. Rev. Canon Nisbet,and was largely attended by the wives of working men, and by a number of district visitors and ladies connected with the Ladies' Sanitary Association, which has promoted tne movement. The lecturer had previously prepared three excellent dishes, con sisting of two soups and one stew. The first soup had for its ingredients five pennyworth of meat, one pennyworth of bones, three-farthingswortn of car rots, one halfpennyworth of onions, and one halfpennyworth of herbs. making a total ot two quarts ot savory soup for seven pence three farthings. The second had for its ingredients drinniii?. onions, nea-tlour. potatoes. ne egg, some parslev, and a pint of milk. This furnished more man two quarts for six-pence halfpenny. The atTc vn a ranital dish, consisting of odd scraps of meat for two-pence-half penny, and vegetables ana nour at an additional cost of two-pence : the whole heinir served for four-Deuce-ualtpenuy. The lecturer gave a clear statement of the chemical value of the materials nsed. as sunnlvine the various wants ot the human frame, lie went mrougii the whole process of making each dish in the presence of his audience, insist ing on the great importance of time for the nrocess of simmering on the tire. Time would not allow of the poor women tasting the viands which they had actually seen prepared, but they were invited to partake of tlie duplicate dishes, which had been on tlie tire, two of them for four hours and one for one hour, before the lecture. By the clean sweep which was made of this food, it seemed as if it were considered very palatable. We are informed that it is the intention of the rector of St. Giles' to have similar lectures given from time to time bv competent persons; aud if so, it is confidently hoped that the poor est inhabitants of St. Giles' may he taught to furnish their families with nutritious, palatable, aud cheap food. . , it. ii m i What Cats are Worth. It is supposed that hitherto the culinary value of cats nas oeen eonnnea to (junta ano japan. Our eastern friends may have long held the monopoly, but the Parisians now follow suit. According to Onlignani there are a few cat butchers in that city of gourmands who will give a good price to the rag pickers for a pnss dead or alive, nrovided it be freh aiud fat : their sKtns are som tome miners, meir fat to the frying shops and their flesh to the low eating houses. A certain amiable naturalist who has tasted al most everything under the sun, says that a well fed cat is superior to an Ostein! rabbit. Prodigal as we are of cat life, kittens were recently quoted in the New Zealand price lists at from ltojC:i each, and a grown rat from 4 to 7. A tortoise shell Tom ex hibited in Piccadilly a few years ago was valued at 100 guineas ; and Kev. A. W. advertiseses one for sale, in the Aniuuil World of February, 1ST3. "A cat, jierfectly black, nine months old," is likewise oll'ered for sale on April 1 in the same journal. As long ago as the days of "Howell the Good," iu the year that fish king enacted that the price of a kitting be fore it could see was to be a penny; till it caught a mouse, twopence, aud when a skilful Biouser, fourpeuce. Those who stole or killed a cat that guarded the royal granaries were to forfeit a milch ewe, its fleece and lamb, or as mnch wheat as when non red on the rat. susoended by its tail (the head touching the floor), would form a heap high enough to cover the tip of the tail. A short time since "the rage set in so strong from Brussels for Angora cats that fabulous prices were asked, and dealers stole the cats that were Ixmgiit from them one day and sold them agaiu the next. to satisfy the demand.'' ('tlamlers, Journal. . - Home Lessons. The banes of domes tic life are littleness, falsity, vulgarity. harshness, scolding, vociferation, an incessant issuing of superfluous pro hibitions and orders, which are regarded as impertinent interferences with the general liberty and repose, and are pro vocative of rankling and explosive sentiments. The blessed antidotes that sweeten and enrich domestic life are relinemcnt, high aims, great interests, soft voices, quiet and gentle manners, magnanimous tempers, forbearance from all unnecessary commands of die tation. and general allowancesof mutual freedom. Love makes obedience lighter than liberty. Man wears a noble alle giance, not as a collar, bnt as a garland. the graces are never so lovely as when waiting on the virtues: and where they thns dwell together, they make a heavenly home. ; Wltat is in the Jiedroom.- The im portance of ventilating tiedrooms is a tact in which everybody is vitally in terested, aud which few properly ap preciate. If two men are to occupy a bedroom during the night let them step npon weighing-scales as they retire, and then again in the morning, anil they will find that their actual weight is at least a p iuuil less in the moniing. Frequently there will will be a loss of one or two pounds, and the average loss throughout the year will be more than one pound ; that is, during the bight there is a loss of a pound of matter, which lias gone off from their bodies, from the lungs partly, and partly through the pores of the skin. The scaped material is carbouic acid and decayed animal matter, or poison ous exhalations. To Clean Class. This mode of clean ing tine glass gives it a great brilliancy, Take finely powdered indigo, dip into it a moistened linen rag, smear over the glass with it, aud then wipe it oil ith a perfectly dry cloth. As a sub stitute for this line sifted ashes, applied by a rag dipped in spirits, will answer as well. Spanish white is apt to make the glass rongh and in Hire it. Linen which has been laid by unused for a long time is liable to acquire a yellowish tint. Washing in a weak solu tion of chloride of lime will speedily restore the original white color. After the soaking in tiiis chlorine preparation, the articles ought to. be riuscd. first in a solution ofantichloride livposnlpliate - ir -, i.i - - - . .1 1 oi whiiuiiij, auu men aaiu hi pure coin water. - , Clticlen CJieese. Did you reader, ever eat any T We like it. Boil two chickens till tender; take out all the bones and chop the meat tine ; season to taste with salt, pepper and butter; pour in enough liquor they are boiled in to make moist. Mould in any shape you choose, and, when cold, turn out and cut into slices, It is an exec-lien t traveling lunch. Crane Lotiem for Sunburn, a bunch of green, grapes in- a. basin of water, aud then epnuklo it with alum and salt, well - powdered and mixed. Wrap it in clean paper, and bake it under hot ashes : tlmn take it up and express juice; Wash the face occa sionally with this, aud it will remove suubarn, tan, and freckles. . . Lemon Preserves. One pound of pul verized loaf sugar, quarter pound of butter, six eggs and the whites of four well beaten, - the riud of two lemons grated, and the juice of three. Mix to gether and let it simmer till of the con sistency of honey. Be careful to stir all the time or it will be apt to born. driwt irnrff mnv Ha mat ir& I tn itm original whiteness by cleaning it with a paste, composed simpiy' ot burnt pumice-stone and water. After cleans ing, place the article nnder a glass in the snn s rays. ; 1 Immersing a growing plant in water of 120 degrees, will clean it of lice and other insects, ana not hurt the plant. To stop new boots from squealing. drive a peg in tue mniiiie oi ine sole. caoEors. Km. MJliss has a verr fidffetT hoy. named Sam. He don't mean wrong, bat he can't help it. Nature turned him out with too mnch quicksilver in his blood. Mrs. Milliss took Sam to church last Sunday, and was ushered into a pew in front ot a nervousoia way. wno bad, evidently, come there to worship her Creator. As Sam's head didn't reach above the back of the seat, be felt the secuntv of his situation, ana heean to wobble about as usual. The old lady endured it for some time with Spartan fortitude, but when Sam, having piled np three nymn dooks, a New Testament, two catechisms, and an old edition of Fox's Martyrs, ac cidentally spilled them off the seat, she leaned over to Mrs. Milliss and said : "What I wish to remark, ma'am, is, that if that bor of vonrn s omte well, be ought to know better, and if he's got worms, church am t no place tor him. It made Mrs. Milliss' patrician blood boil, but it sobered Sam. Our neiirhliors. the Briggses. have had trouble with their maid of all work. She arrived from the country only last month, and had never seen gas used in bouses. The first night of her stay at Bnggs' the family smelt gas strongly after her retirement, and, upon going to the roam, found that she had blown the light out. Mrs. Briggs woke her, and showed her how to turn it off properly. But the next night fearing to trust her, Mrs Briggs gave her a candle to go to bed by. A boot midnight Mrs Briggs woke, and, looking out. she saw that the light was still burning brightly in the girl s room, she went np to ascertain what was the matter. She found that tlie girl, after spending an hour trying to extinguish the candle by fumbling with the gas cock, was now endeavoring to tnrn off the candle by twisting the handle of the candle stick. Couldn't Tell a Lie. it Quad relates that as one of the dozen old women who drive milk carts around Detroit was rattleing across the Campus Martins a chap wearing lavender pants and a bright blue necktie motioned for her to stop, and then approached and in quired uo you put water in your mil k i ' Yes, sir," was her prompt reply. Ah. ha! So you owu right up. do von f "Yes. sir : - Her prompt replies rather staggered him, but after some hesitation he asked: "And what makes vou do it I ' "Because it's much healthier for calves when mixed half aud half !" she re torted. . She waited for him to ask another question but he couldn't think of any. "Say. Shiner, what's dat all 'bout in de papalis' boiit'tlashiiii ob de scurrency, an' wat'l be- de 'feet on shinin "Flashnn ! .Ain't yon bin reed in' well's me in de papalis f ' t'Well I donno ? I don't zackly misremembah bow it is." "You fool inggah can't 'stand nuthlng. It's jes dis: liar's sum'er dem fellers dat wants ter git dar boots shim d twice wid one ten cent dime ; and agin, dar s sum wat tinks it aint iestis. Dem fus ones is flashunists and de ndder ones is distiasliuuists.'' Dat is it, jes it. an' 1 don't beleeve in flashuus at all ; tlat's it, de hole subjeck." "So yon want a pull-back dress do you 1" said old Red nose the other day, when his sixteen-year-old daughter proffered a timid request to that effect. "Do you know 1 baint been able to pay yet for that last gallon of rye, aud 1 can't get any more till I do! Here you are wantin' luxuries, when ynre father is suffering for the necessaries of life '." And old Heel nose's nose grew redder with indignation at the uu filial sellish ness of his offspring. Said a demure-looking stranger, with a prayer-look under his arm, to an old resident of San Antonia, Texas: "Where can I find the Methodist place of worship f "After you pass the seventh bar-room on this side of the street, strike across and take np Sole dad street, and yon will find it one hundred yards beyond the last beer saloon on the same street, nearly op posite a ten-pin alley," was the reply. " l'oung gentlemen,n aaid the Judge, "I want to say a thing or two to you. You have passed as good an examina tion as usual, perhaps better ; but you don't know anything. Like those young fellows just back from their graduation at college, you thiuk you know a great deal. It's a great mistake. If you ever get to be any account, you will be surprised at your present ignorance. "J-Tra.didyou hear that lady's name that's come to see mamma f - "Yes, Mrs. Abel." "I wonder if she's the mother of those two boys mamma told nsof. And oue of them was naughty. and killed his brother I ' " hat non sense, Eva ! Why, that happened ever so long ago! If she's anybody, she run it be their grandmother." Punch. "A Utile gi'l came into onr house one day, and some apple-parings lay on a plate on ineiabie. Alter sitting a w niie she said, "1 smell apples P' "Yes," I re plied, "I guess you smell those apple sDarings on the plate." "No, no." said she, "'taint them 1 smell ; I smell whole apples:. . There is a lady in New York who will not permit her children to eat anything of which Indian meal constitutes au ingredient, for fear that it will make them savage. It must be the same lady who would not ' let her children eat spinach for fear it would make them green. "As to being conflicted with the gout,' said Mrs. Partington, "high living don't bring it on. It is incoherent in some families, and is handed down from father to son. Mr. Hammer, poor soul, who has been so long ill with it, disin herited it from hiswife's grandmother." When the poet Campbell died, Samuel liogers was asked whether he would Ulibscribe to a statue of his brother poet, "Certainly," answered Rogers, "for it will lie a great comfort to see Campliell steady on his legs." Poor Campltell drank deep. ? - ' ' . , ' A distintnihel personage once re ntal ked to. Talleyrand, "In the npper chamber, at least, are to be found men possessed 1 of a conscience. "Con science!" replied Talleyrand, "to be sure ; I know many a peer who has got tWO." - - -- '. .-.-. " 1 A Mean Jole: "l Mr. Brown a man of means t" enquired a lady visitor of Aunt Betsy. I .1.1 I. a nonlioi! Aunt Betsy, "as everybody says he's tlie meanest man in town "Whu. Nora." cried Mrs- Reginald aghast, "why did you ImhI tlie potatoes i ...An it "ciiim Missus." aaid Nora, with a smile, "an if I I cut out the petatie'eyes how will they see to boil I - Teunuson ' savs that he has smoked twelve cigars while he pondered over the construction of a siugle line. By this we gather that the more he fumes the more be frets ever his composition. Why is the letter R very unfortunate T Because itisalwayain tronble.wretched ness and misery, is tins- beginning of riot aud ruin, and is never iouua in peace, innocence or love. if is said that Bnghaai Young has acouired the title of General from hav ing been called "Briggy. dear," so of ten by his numerous wives. A Predicament Mother Who has left Charlie home to mind baby), "What are yoa crying about, Charlie T" Charlie "Why, I put baby in de bureau 'r drawer, an' now I'se lost de key.". .-. . Hot springs Rope jumping this weather. .. . i Beanreoolent enterprises Soap hou ses. Queens of Arts: Female graduate. -Tha -.J i r.ii fmm familiar onRTureenw .. scenes at me aiii" r ,,. looking in on the law-make- i Britain. .n a.a I II M She gives some oi ner lows: - iib uwi - ----- r . - of seeing the Houses of Lords and Com mons. In the former we witness entire session. One feels somehow de pressed and dominated by the dignity and decorum, the wigs and the wool- l f real lords and sack, HIB iirrarui dukes, though they be in nndress, and a . . i 1 ; ..u t.e llllAII real throne, tnougu m "i" rw .a - itohat of some covers, mere , sort if such a courtly Interchange of sentiments can be called a aeoatc. noble Lords spoke slowly and lowly, - . : . . tntlA.tinn An Sir wuu geiiuy rising !...-... .-- of aristocratic repose brooded over the stately deliberations. I pictured some of our democratic Senators seated on those slipiierv red benches, and thou" how thev would piay tne uukhki - .1.. ....... -r.,1 nr.inriftiea Slid tlie hlgtl- toned English of the august assembly. It made me shudder, ouniuci have been at home here, and Freling- buysen at ease; and not a nooro "" them all, with a pedigree as long as his . ii ;w...i.i im, ihnvn as truly lordly as Daniel Webster. He would have brought, if not tlie thunders of Olympus into this dull chamber, some grand reverberations from Bunker Hill. Iu the gallery ot tne nouseoi wium"" we speut an hour or two very pleasantly, : .i k V. mnii listeit- peering mruupu uk n""""r -- Fng to the speeches, the 'aw aw s, oh-oh's, ml 4hear! heat's. It was a t.-irtinuton snoke very Indifferently, and with much hesi tation, and Lhsraeli replied iu a puuu, lir atfnient- nil relieved by a flash of eloquence or a flower of rhetoric. "The good, motherly yueeu oances hi the hall of Balmoral with her retainers and household servants, makes her own tea when out on picnics, spins in the cottages of her tenants, and has herself i in th or.-ccious act be stows" warm flannel petticoats" on poor old women wun ner own uuu.-, .all ..a all liint it in hr nwn book. The Prince of Wales goes everywhere, . i i , . . .!... dines wuu every oouy, anu umni for all the world as though he were no greater man than the President .oi the United States. The new court dress r.. HniiAmAn id it aimfiltf half military costume. Gaudy liveries are going out ... 1 . 1. . . 1 1 IJW.L- lufiB 111 111 11 places, SO lUill 1 a iwm iw i;l-a lJmiupi ami li7!inls tli.-m fornierlv. and I doubt not that ere IonK it is ready to fall to pieces from sheer old age, like the deacon's 'one horse shay,' the royal stagecoach will be remanded, Tritons am? all, to that Valhalla of old state coaches, the first hall in Kensington Museum, and the moiiarchs of England will cease to lumber along on wheels like those oi i naraou s cuariot, out may tlirimirh tin streets of lndon. even on the grandest state occasiohs, with celerity, com I ore and quiet elegance, like oiner sensioie wrii-wuu iuik. A Stehajrialaja. . The scene is laid in tJamle Norge, in Norway, visited by some English lady travelers, one of whom describes it. "1 have not told you of the interruption to our first night's rejiose in our new home. Nestled in eiderdown, ana lulled ny me drone of the air through the stove-pi pe, I had fallen fast asleep while semilog home thoughts and longings over the wild waters w hich we were so glad to lie done with. I woke suddenly, my heart beating wildly with fright, to find the room quite dark, and tilled with a sound so unearthly that for an instant 1 dare not move. The cry ceased and rose again long, weird, melancholy, discordant. Before it died away 1 was at the window with Janet, w ho was equally startled, and bid hurried to my room that we might meet me catastro phe together. Again it came; this time louder, nearer was taken up at some distance, swelled into a horrid chorus, and ceased just as all the neighboring clocks struck twelve. 'The watchman ; only the watchman,' affirmed Jeanie. Mie was right; and calming ourselves with this bit of common sense, we went to bed again, to sleep till morning. Now please don't thiuk 1 have exaggerated the hideous unearthliness of the sound ; how it can proceed from human lungs I am at a loss to imagine. 1 believe they do assist nature by using some kind of horn, imagine a number or donkeys, lunatic, heart-broken and gifted' with articulation, parading the streets at dead of night to awake the inhabitants with the information that the clocks are soon exfiected to strike, that the wind is blowing (generally southwest, and consequently rain pour ing from a cloudy sky, but that other wise, "all's well." and everylxxly may go to sleep agaiu imagine all this, and vou have an idea or what the liergeiiese endure every hour of every night all tlie year round. 1 never hear it w ith out thinking of the dead-carts plying through the streets of a plagne-stric keii citv to the doleful cry, "Bring out your dead." The Wy t . Iu looking over tlie columns of a live newspaiier the reader looks over the advertisements of places wanted by cooks, cariieuters, masons, bricklayers. Iiainters, paper hangers, rounders, rol ers,tailors,seamstresses,uurses, ostlers. joiners, blacksmiths, clerks, miilers,ainl occupations vacant or every kind. In this way he Is posted, and ir he does not want a place, or desire to employ some one advertising, when he learns of some one who does, he mentions the fact, and persons iu this way by advertising find situations which otherwise would escape them. Tlie best engineering building a bridge of faith over the river of death. Dyapeavalat! .. OyapepMat Dyspepsia! Dyspepsia is the most perplexing of all human ailments. Its symptoms are almost infinite in their variety, and the forlorn and despondent victims of the disease often fancy themselves the prev, in tarn, of every known malady. This is due. In part, to the close sym pathy which exwta between the atom ach and the brain, and in part also to the fact that any disturbance of the digestive function necessarily disorders the liver, the liowels and the nervous system, and effects, to some extent, the quality of the blood, E. F. Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Jron a sine cure. This is net a new prepar ation, to be tried and found wanting : it has been prescribed daily for many years in the practice of eminent physi cians with unparalleled success ; it is not expected or intended to en re all the diseases to which the human family is. subject, bnt is warranted to cure Dyspepsia in its most obstinate form. KunktU'a Bitter Win ef Iron never fails to core Symptoms of Dyspepsia or loss of appetite, wind and rising of the food, dryness of the month, heartburn, distension of the stomach and bowels, constipation, headache, dizziness, sleep lessness and low spirits. Try the great remedy and be convinced of its merits. Get the genuine. Take only Knnkel's, which is put only in 1 bottles. Depot, 2T.9 North Ninth Street. Philadelphia. . For sale by all Druggists and dealers everywhere, . I - TarEwoRM Buoyed Axivs. -Head and all complete. In two hour. No fee till head passes. Seat, Pin and Stom ach Worms removed by Dr. Kxhkkl, 2-9 N. Nistb Street. - Advice free. Come, aeo over 1,000 specimens and be convinced. . He never fails. Doa'r TsaroBjii wrrm Pilcs. Lotions, ointments, electuaries aal all Banner of quack aostrnms are a waste of lime and money. Tha only mbsoluttly infallible ear rortbese pamfol diseases is ANAKESIS, discovered by Da. SiLasaa. It has beea pronounced by aeientifie men as tha haDti- est discovery made in medicm for 200 years, it affords instant relief from paia ia tii worst eases and has cared mora thaa 20,000 sufferers peraaaeotly. All Doctors prescribe it. Price tl. Seat frc by mail oa receipt oi pries, r. fleustaedter a Co., 4 Walker St., New Tork. - - 3 TH Lida mm Caav jjJlOOtlS ! BROOKS ! " JOH I. KEIIES 10., 353 Waahington St. Haw Tork. PriBriral Drpot m Srm Tork far lb Ud -,,-liuiiawtan ia tfc VmJm SUM. Brooaas froa $2.M per doiea nd pward. The lowaat prln aad crMtot witty lo t kmM aajwaer. aho aa mlira aew ttoek of WOOD aad WTLLnw WARE, rock a. Patta, Tuba, Batkrta. Mata, TvaMv OonkMn. Wicaa, e.to(rthr with a fall Una jtZT Briur Wood aad Clay Pipaa, raary Soap, TaakaaTC Btoaa, CuUary, ac Satan from U k HU par aig. A rail Baa of th baat quality ofTIXWAll. P. . W n ar gwde at Brio thai aoaot rank. MivSrammlaa og aa tha naa. oraar ay sail in (rmanmatattaatioa. Eataliliahi 5J O g o 3 o TJ fj 7 2 O jr a m d 7J fcrj IB u t52 i? h rv r o D t h c a M tt 51 u o o LI 4 J rr 0 tp Alper ay at Mm. Tanaa naa. aaarat 0 4CUi- aruaM Ca Fanlaa. M. THIRST 6RAXD EXPOSITION ef th I IrruAl iMtrriTi. Plttlnrjrti. Pa.. apaaaUct. 7, doaaa Sot. . AiMrw, A. J. 5 ELLIS, Prae. T. t 1 -t-ai FREDERICK SPIECKER, vaoLaaata Daaiaa ra Leaf Tobacco, Cigars, Pipes, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco, Or THS BE8T BRANDS. Ha 152 FARUCTOT PHILADELPHIA. ObIt A real for 0. B. Solie Top ClfM Krald. Cigar fur aaa aa sapaaoa. BClEXTiriC DISCOTEBT. For 19 1 will wnd directions how to produce a litfht without Ore; salt, simple and coMa sue. a year to uvnt a room, ny man to a. uujuiaixb. box siia, -ew lora. Jeyer'i Poultrj Powdir. WarraBted.lfaMd la ttiaa. locaracnicKea coot wm aaa rfMA- WithaaaDDlvofthl Powder. and a beatowelof oruinaT7 uauv" Uneaa as proper faadlDC. with a needful raDDl? af e.rm ana eenmell-iormlnr material. any one any keep Poultry ( arm I n confinement )for any laoetfc of tlaie.wtta hoth proStanS pleaaore. Package at eta-. rafortt-M. Ak your eaalar. Seat ft aaea ra atptof nrica. Adcreie, A. C BTETEB At CO., Balttaiur -l4- SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! AO atrlaa. Borer Mourned and WamwL aaw ad) acood-uand. Securely packed for ablpuina. JOGaTEKtt. BAilM. SHKLVLHU, iiuaa ni TTRES. AO. HOCBS AUD ort'lUK rUUMITUBE all ktaaa Th larrcM and beat aaaortad atoafc. aaw aad acond-aasd ta th City. - LEWIH Ac BKO. a-Mj tMl. lets. ltMa aad lD klME IT rkUa. HORSEMEN ! OWNERS OF STOCK! Sate Tour Horses and Cattle I CUM THIJi OF DiaiAfll AH WP THXaf IS A HIALTHT CO1TDIT10" IT eiTIHO THBM M. 8. ROBERTO' CELEBRATED HORSE POWDERS. ur csi OTIE FORTY YEARS! ... tbb oatt rowDsaa eeararaiaw TONIC, L&XATX7S AKS PT71UTT X2T3 PE0PISTLE3 oaaiiatv, mtiiT baxim naa taa BEST CONDITION MXDICZirM US THS WO&LD. They ar mad of Par afaUriaionlj, a tablwpooafal coin: aa fu aa aata aaa rdiaary attl powder. Boy aa packaga aad aitar aaxag aV yoa wilt ayr gat don raiaug Itiai r aaia By ail ataraEaapara. USB M. D. RODERTG Vegetable Embrocation ' FOl ALL IXTXRJAL DUXAtXS 11TIII MAN OR. BEAST. JaaM CLANK 8 auxLi raartiD at S n