ILWIS S0S6 TO LAUBCELOT. Yea ! I shall sleep. Heed not this le aotbing. Bhed o'er my eon the lore light of your eyes; Boon, soon thia heart shall eease it painful throbbing, To seek the aoandleaa sea and silent a Idea. Keen, dreamless deep, will come forever more. With neither pest to moon, nor future to de plore. Yes ! I shall Bleep. The nightingale is Hinging; A thorn haa deeply pierced her gentle breast; ThoM troubled notes within By soul are ring ing. But I most ehortly sleep, and ahe mint rest. God hears thy plaint, sweet Philomel ; He hears. As He haa beard the plaint of men through all the years. . .. Yea ! I most sleep Too long the day haa tar ried And oh ! too hard the ways of God and men. Though brave the heart, and great the hope it carried, ' In rain its longing wish for happiness has been. Hut i can rest in this sweet, silent dell ; And thou wilt say. Beloved, softly, "It is welL' Birds Biaaalailas: gaDriaa;-Aalaaal MlarL In walking along the side or a river with overhanging bank, I tame sud denly on a wild duck, (Ana Jbnu-hu,) whose young were ju.st out. Springing from under tiie bunk, she fluttered out into the rtream with loud cries and with all the struggles to ec-ae of a lieljilessly-wounded bird. To Minulate the efforts of suffering from disease, or from strong emotion, or from wounds iiIKin the human frame, U a common ne-e$ity of the actor's art, and it is not often really well done. The tricks of the theatre are seldom natural, and it is not without reason that "theatrical'' lias become a proverbial expression for false and artilicial representation of the realities of life. It was therefore with no small interest that on this, as on many other occasions, I watched the perfection of an art which Mrs. Millions might have envied. The labored and half-convulsive flapping of the wings, the wriggling of the body, the straining of the neck, and the whole expression of painful and abortive effort, were really admirable. When her struggles had carried her a considerable distance, and she saw tjiat they produced no effect in tempting us to follow, she made resounding flaps upon the surface of the water to secure that attention to herself which it was the great object of the mameuvre to attract. Then, rising suddenly in the air, she made a great circle round us, and returning to the spot renewed her endeavors as liefore. It was not, however, necessary; for the separate instinct of the young in suc cessful hiding effectually baffled all my attempts to discover them. If now we examine, in the light of our own reason, all the elements of knowledge or of intellectual perception UKin which the instinct of the wild duck is founded, and all of which, as existing somewhere, it undoubtedly re flects, we shall soon see bow various and extensive these elements of knowl edge are. First, there is the knowledge that the cause of the alarm is a carniv orous animal. On this fundamental liint no creature is ever deceived. The youngest chick knows a hawk, and the dreadf ul form fills it w ith instant terror. Next, there is the knowledge that dogs and other carnivorous juad niieds have the sense of smell, as an additional element of danger to the creatures on which they prey. Next, there is the knowledge that the dog, not being itself a flying animal, has sense enough not to attempt the pursuit of prey w hich can avail itself of this sure and easy method of escape. Next, there is the' conclusion from all this knowledge, that if the dog is to lie in duced to chase, It must le led to sup Kse, that the iiower of flight has been somewhat lost. And then there is the further conclusion that this cau only tie done bv such an accurate imitation of a disabled bird as shall deceive the enemy into a ltclicf in the xissilility of cajr turc. And lastly, there are all the liowers of memory and the qualities of imagination which will enable good acting to oe performed. All this rea soning and all this knowledge is cer tainly involved in the action ol the bird-mother, just as certainly as reason ing and knowledge of a much pro- founder kind is Involved in the struc ture or adju-tment of the organic ma chinery by which and through which the action is itself erforiiied. Cfutem- Hon to Hate a Latin Wife. If yon would have a loving wife, 1 us gentle in your words after as before marriage; treat her quite as tenderly when a matron as when a miss; don't make her the maid of all work and ask her why she looks less tidy and neat than when "yon first knew her;" don't buy cheap, tough beef, ami scold her liecause it does not come ou the table "porter house;" don't grumble about squalling babies if yon cannot keep np a nursery," and remember that "baby may take after papa" in his disiositiou ; don't smoke and chew tobacco, and thus shatter your nerves, and spoil your tenier, and make your breath a nui sance, and then complain that , your wife declines to kiss you ; go home joy ous and cheerful to your w ife and tell her the good news you have heard, and not silently put on your hat and go out to the "club" or "lodge," and let her afterwards learu that you spent the evening at the opera or at a fancy ball with Mrs. Hash. Love your wife; be patient; remember you are not perfect, but try to be; let whisky, tobacco and vulgar company alone; spend your evenings with your wife, and live a decent Christian life, and your wife will be loving and true if you did not marry a heartless beauty without sense or worth ; if you did. who is to blame if you sailer the consequences? California Fame Life. There are few cozy, comfortable middle-class homes. The house is either a niairniticent country residence or a mean, nnpaiuted, red-wood shanty, thoueb neither can be occupied but by a man immensely wealthy. Everything seems put there adventitious ; nothing grew out of the soil. 1 here are no an cient trees, no shrubberies, no grass. Instead of homely farmer messes, you eat urban fare of beefsteak and hot bis cuit made with Boston yeast pow der. Vou hoe for pumpkin pie, and get a can of Baltimore oysters. There are Oregon apples, Cincinnati hams and stewed prunes from Germany. A man may be worth ?100,0u0and have no milk to whiten his coffee. The cow runs on the range and comes home when she lists. A boy may be dispatched for her on his tough little shaggy cow-horse, and a man must be sent to bring the ioy home. 1 he yard tences all look imported, as they are ; all things have a contractor like look, a little tawdry, a little cheap. Everything is so naked and so new that do one can hang a tra dition on it. There is no moss on the fences; sawed boards and posts and the houses stand ont painfully ugly and prominent beneath the lovely sky. Ohio Farmer. Calbaaa aad Wewater. "The great mental excellence of Mr. Calhoun was his remarkable acuteness as a logician, and his keenness and subtlety in metaphysical speculation. No inau ever reasoned more closely or with more mathematical precision. His words went straight to their object, like a ball shot from a rifle barrel. His sentences were the distillation of con densation. He never had a superfluous word. He was the soul of brevity, and, in this respect, is a model for speakers and writers of this age, whose tendency is to extreme verbosity. He spoke with great rapidity, and, as reporters declare, delivered fluently and easily far more words a minute than any other of our orators. These were his qualifications as a great speaker. He bad his deficien cies, mere was little poetry or imagi nation in his soul. His speeches are enriched by few flashes of feeling or sentiment. Everything was kept sub ordinate to pure, cold and naked logic, which showed in debate like polished Damascus cimeter. lie, therefore, spoke to the intellectual audience, and not to the more popular crowd. "Daniel Webster's talents were very dinerent from tnose or .Mr. lilhoun. He had, in a great degree, the logical powers of the latter, but he had with them fine poetical and imaginative ele ments that the latter was oencient in His sense of the beautiful was exceed' ingly great, and his command over copious and magnificent language was almost unexcelled. - He was the orator, therefore, not only of Senates, but of great popular crowds, lie gave KunKer Ilill and Plymouth Hock the leading positions they have in our history. His orations were majestic compositions, connecting the thought of the philoso pher with the superb generalization of the best historian, and enriched ny the flowers of fancy and poesy. So of his leading efforts in the senate, llis statements of proosition were models of clearness and power, and. If accepted as true, almost precluded controversy Cold and uuimiiassioiied in general almost as the granite of his native hills. he yet, on great occasions, aroused to the glow of enthusiasm, and spoke with the vehemence of fiery zeal and pas sion. It vi strange that the man from the ice and suow of the North should have hail this peculiarity in so much greater degree than Mr. Calhoun, Imrn under the more ardent and tropical zone of the South. (. M. I. 1SI -Vew 2iV. laal-Me-taw Love. Why is it that so many ieople keep all their pleasant thoughts and kind words about a man bottled and sealed up until he is dead, when they come and break the bottle over his count, and bathe bis shroud in fragrance? Many a man goes through life with scarcely one bright, cheering, enconraging,hope- ful word, lie toils hard and in lowly oliscurity. He gives out bis life freely and unstintedly for others. I remember such a man. He was not brilliant; he was not great ; but he was faithful. He had many things to discourage him Troubles thickened about his life. He was misrepresented and misunderstood Everybody believed that he was a good man, but no one ever said a kindly word or pleasant thing to him. He never heard a compliment, scarcely ever a good wish. No one ever took anv pains to encourage him, to strengthen his feeble knees, to lighten his burdens, or to lift up his heart by a gentle deed of love, or by a cheerful word. He was neglected. Lnkind tilings were often said of aim. I stood at his coffin, and then there were many tongues to speak his praise. There was not a breath of aspersion in the air. Men spoke of self-denials of his work among the poor, or his good qualities, of bis quietness, his modesty. his humility, his pureness of heart, his laith and prayer, there were many who spoke indignantly of the charges mat falsehood had lorged against him in past years, and of the treatment he had received. 1 here were enough kind tilings said during the two or tUree days that he lay In hiscotlin, and while the company stood around his open grave, to have blessed aud made him happy all nis ntty years, and to have thrown sweetness and joy about his soul during ail his painful and weary journey, there was enough sunshine wasted about the black colli n and dark grave to have made his whole life-path as bright as the clearest day. Hut his ears were closed then, and could not hear a word that was spoken. His heart was still then, and could not be thrilled with the grate ful sounds. He cared nothing then for the sweet flowers that were piled upon his colli n. The love blossomed out too late. The kindness came when the life could not receive the blessing. And I saM then that I would not keep all my kind words, and all my pleasant thoughts and feelings about my neigh nor locked up In my breast till he is dead. 1 hey will do him no good then His dead hand cannot feel the warm pre-sure. Gentle words will not make his pale; cold face glow. It will be too jate; w hen lie lies in his coltin, to seek to make him happy, to lift the shadows v i. ; i : r.. , . i. , jii, n iv ilia iaiii. - It costs but little to give men a great ueai oi joy and help, one Drought a bunch of flowers to my table, and for a w hole week they filled my room with fragrance. One wrote me a cheering letter, breathing a spirit of gratitude and love. It came when I was weary and depressed, and was like the meal prepared by the angel for the old propnet. l went on its blessed strength for many days. One met me 'on the street and floke an encouraging word and grasped me warmly by the hand; and for hours I felt that warm grasp ami heard that word echoing through my soul. A little child may brighten scores of lives every day. There is not one of as who may not 'gladden and strengthen many a heart between every rising and setting sun. Why should we not live to bless the living, to cheer the disheartened, to sweeten cups that are outer, to hold up the hands that hang down, to comfort those that mourn, to bear joy mto joyless homes? Kind words will not sixil a man. If a sermon helps yott, it will do the preacher no harm to tell him so. If the editor writes an article that does you good, he can write a still better one if vou send him a word of I hacks. If a book blesses you, do you not owe It to the author to write a grateful acknowledgment? If you know a weary or neglected one, would it not be such work as angels do. would it not be Christ-like work, to seek every opportunity to brighten and bless that lite? 1H not wait till the eyes are closed, the ears deaf, and the heart stilled. Do it now. Pnt mortem kindnesses do not cheer. Flowers on the coflin cast no fragrance backward over the weary days. i Dob t Tell all yea Kuow. It is a bad plan to place unreserved confidence in man or woman. - Never tell any one everything about yourself let there be a little mystery and reserve; your friends then will like you all the better for it. A book that you know by heart must Inevitably be cast aside for a fresh volume; so will you be served if you allow yourself to be thoroughly read. But be prepared, in any emer gency, to look your own lire and acts squarely in the face w ithout ever flinch ing, or making yourself a coward. It is not necessary to publish to the world all that is strictly personal, unless ridi cule and frittering of power are desired; but if gossip makes itself busy with your name, do not be aggrieved if a grain of truth is spread over a dozen of lies. Pas them by in silence, and do not even then forget your habitual reticence. Justice will be done you In time, never fear, and the less you clamor for it the better. Don't talk too much. Da ana Dare, What 's the use of a dog that can't bark? It seems that on the Guinea Coast there is a race of dogs that are absolutely dumb.-, The bird that told me does not know whether or not they are good watch dogs. Guesses not. Perhaps they don't bark because they've nothing to watch ! I heard a sailor say that once a few dogs of the barking kind were left on the desert Island of Juan Fernandez. Thirty-three years after ward, when the original dogs were dead, and their descendants had all grown wild, not one of the w ild dogs could bark. Then some of them were taken away to another country by sailors, and behold 1 after a time they began to gain their voices, and bark like common dogs. This sounds like a hard story, and I'll not say yea or nay to it, though It was told to me as a truth that had been Indorsed by Mr. Darwin. St. Xicholat for September. AMrCGLTimAL, UttfuX Receipt for the farm. The best remedy for currant and gooseberry worms is powdered white hellebore, ob tainable at any druggist's. Put the powder In a common tin cup, tying a piece of very fine muslin over the mouth. Fasten the apparatus to the end of a short stick, and dust the pow der through the muslin lightly upon the bushes. Do not work on a windy day, and stand to windward during the operation, as if taken into the nostrils, the hellebore excites violent sneezing. The same material Is a good remedy for cucumber beetles. Sawdust can be converted into a liquid wood, and afterwards into a solid, flexible, and almost indestructible mass which, when incorporated with animal matter, rolled, and dried, can be used for the most delicate impressions, as well as for the formation of solid and durable articles, in the following man ner; Immerse the dust of any kind of wood in diluted sulphuric acid, sufll ciently strong to affect the filters, for some days; the finer parts are then passed through a sieve, well stirred, and alio wel to settle. Drain the liquid from the sediment, and mix the latter with a proportionate quantity of ani mal offal, similar to that used for glue. Roll the mass, pack it In molds, and al low it to dry. The following table for boiling fruit in cans will doubtless prove useful, as the present Is the time for putting up such preserves for winter. The first figure after the name of the fruit refers to time of boiling in minutes, tne second to ounces or sugar to the quart; cner riea, 8, 6; raspberries, 6, ; blackber ries. 6. 6: eooseberrles, 8, 8; currants. 6, 8; grapes, 10, 8; plums, 10, 8; peaches (wnole), la, 4; peaches, (naives;, o, , pears ( whole; , 30, 8; crab apples, 23, 8; quinces (sliced), 15, 10; tomatoes, 30, none; beans and peas, three to four hours. . The following soluble glass Is best adapted for coating brick and stone; Dry carbonate or potassium, to parts: powdered quartz, 13 parts; charcoal, 1 part. Sand, ' free from alumina and iron, may replace the quartz. Fuse to gether and dissolve in boiling water 5 or t times the weight. Filter. Coat of Threshing. Wheat is the great money crop of the Middle, Western and Pacific States, and hence Its early mar keting Is often one of the pressing ne cessities of the farmer. This requires that the grain be threshed and cleaned as speedily as possible; hence machin ery of great efficiency and motive power especially steam power, is found to be the most economical, it win oe seen by consulting the accompanying tables that the smallest total cost of threshing wheat 5.8 cents per bushel is found in California, where the most extensive machinery is used. The greatest cost cents is in boutn Carolina, wnere steam machinery is unknown, and where the planters to a great ex tent, thresh their own crops. In north ern New England it ranges from 10 to 1.; cents per bushel. In the Middle States it runs from 7.7 cents in 1'enn svlvania to 10.5 In New Jersey. Mary land averages 6.8 cents. The average increase to the southward, varies from 9.7 cents in Irginia to 19.2 in South Carolina. The Gulf States range from 14.1 cents in Texas to Ji cents in .Mis sissippi. The inland Southern States from 8.7 cents in West Virginia to 12 cents in Arkansas. Xorth of the Ohio river and west of the Mississippi, no State averages more than 7,'J - cents, w hile in Nebraska the cost averages as low as 5.8 cents. The cost of threshing oats is generally about half the cost ol wheat, ranging from 3.4 cents per bushel in Nebraska to 1.1.3 cents in Massachusetts. In the Middle and Western States the general average is between 4 aud 5 ents. Deportment of Large and Small Farm. Twelve of the I nited States have farms that aver age less than one hundred and twenty live acres, in extent, which is less than the average elsewhere which In some States even runs up nearly to an aver age of nve hundred acres. :i he twelve States give the following as the average size of their farms : Maine,. . 1 N'ew Hampshire, . . Massachusetts, Khode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, : '. .. 98 acres. ....122 " . . . . 103 " .... 94 " ....93 " ....103 " .. 'J " ....103 " . '..112 ...111 " ' ....11 " ...114 " While the total value of the farms in the United States is put down at $!,2G2, 80.1, 3G1, the value in the , above states foots up 5,407,.r87,17f , or nearly three- fifths of the total and this, too, while the area of these states is less than one- tenth of the area of the whole country No more conclusive exhibit of the prac tical superiority of the small farm ty tem could le given than this. To f, 1-ent Smut in Wheat. A corres pondent of the Southe.rn CnlUrntor says : Make a strong brine and wash or wet the wheat thoroughly; then drain, and before the wheat gets dry, sill on ashes and stir well, so that all the wheat may come in contact with the dry ashes; or. in other words, soak the wheat in strong brine and then dry it with good strong asnes, (air-siaKed lime wonid prorjaoiy do as well, or better,) aud then it is ready for sowing. It may be prepared any time wbeu needed, but should not stand over too long, as the vitality of the seed might be Injured. I have seen it nsed fifteen years In succession, and never knew it Ian to prevent smut. 1 also think that the wheat grows off bet ter when prepared in this way; , than hen sowed dry, or soaked in a solu tion of blue-stone. i Clipping Winn of Fotcl. Clipping the wings of fowls to prevent their fly ing Is a necessary operation sometimes, but never unnecessarily disfiguring. It generally Is, however, since the far mer's shears almost always makea clean sw eep of all the quills, and an ugly wing is the result. .Besides the ugliness, there are other disadvantages in such sweeping operations. A setting hen uses the outer side of her wing to retain the eggs under her in place and those near the body protect the skin being torn by her mate's claws. The proper way is to only trim the feathers partly off with a pair of scissors, except about one inch from the end. It shows but little when the wing is closed, and does not disfigure the fowl, and lets the wing through, so as to prevent Ilying. f ar mer Journal. - "The largest recorded yield of a single cow that is perfectly reliable and well-authenticated," save the Mnssn- ehutrtt I'lotrman, Is that of an animal kept at the jail at Lewes, England. In eight successive years she gave 9,720 rations, or an average ot more than .210 gallons a year. She was milked. one year, 323 days, and gave 1,230 gal lons which made 540 pounds of butter, or at the rate of a pound of butter from 22 pounds of milk. A Mr. Scott, of Shaftsbury, Yt had a cow whose milk yielded 504 pounds of butter in 1SC6, or at the rate of one pound or butter to 20 pounds of milk." Late Chielev. It Is difficult and un profitable to raise chickens hatched, in August. They stop growing as soon aa the cold weather arrives, and are not strong enough to resist- the cold of winter. If they do survive, they con sume several times as much as they are worth before spring, we would not allow any hens to brood now, but would break them np, and get them laying again. The eggs are wortn more tnan he chickens. MDimCi Tmoortance of Mathematica. In the recent eloquent dedicatory address of President Beeiye, oi omun oueire, Mass., the importance of mathematical knowledge was illustrated aa iouows : "It would be easy to show the in creasing importance of mathematica to practical life, the assistance it give the engineer, and our indebtedness to it for the most highly prized comforts of our civilization. But it is not for its practical utility that I advocate its . - . i iii ti.b, place 111 llm uiKuer niuuvui ua ntilitv, indeed, is due to the study, which had no thought of practical re sults. Nor does it owe ita place to its importance aa a mental discipline, al though the testimony of many genera- tiana of educators bears witness to its value as an intellectual exercise. Rather wonld I justify tne prominence of mathematics in the niguer educa tion because it is the study, above all others, which gives ns a knowledw of the mind in .Nature, l o it, more man to any other source, we are indebted for what we know ot the physical sci ences. Long ago its importance in as tronomy was recognized, it made fa miliar to our common schools the se crets of the earth's motion, of day and night, of the changes of the moon and the tides. Problems in the starry fir mament, about which the wisest sages for centuries were hopelessly puzzled. mathematics has enabled school boys to solve. Yet its triumphs in astronomy represent only a fragment of what it has accomplished in tne puysrcai sci ences. Sound, light, electricity, heat, have all become subject to mathemati cal formulas; algebraic signs explain to ns not only how the subtle forces,un- recognized by any human sense, make the music of the spheres, but how they interpret for ns the music which we hear, the colors which we see, the warmth which we feel. So wonderful have been the result of mathematical analysis that modern scientific discov ery has been forced to introduce it into all departments of physical science." Tlit Form ot T.'uilituiua Rods. Know ing that electricity at rest always tends to disuse itselt oa the surface, in fact, that it always confine itself to the sur face, it became, at an early period, a Question w ueiuer eiecincuj m uiwuou id not follow the same law. Pouillet determined the question in a very in genious manner. He took a cylindrical wire of a certain size and measured the resistance which it ottered to a current of electricity. . He then rolled the wire out fiat and measured the resistance again ; it was found to be the same, al though it is evident that- the extent of the surface of the tondactorvwas by this means irreatly increased. Other experimenters have determined the question by different methods, bat al ways with the same result. - The com mittee of the French Academy, which included Becquerel, De la Hive, Pouil let, and others, adopted a solid square bar as the best form for lightning-iods; and Sir William Snow Harris, though often quoted as favoring rods which present a large surface, says: "Provi ded the quan t it p of metal be present, the form under which we place it is evidently of no consequence to its con ducting powers, since it would be ad surd that a mass of metal, nnder any form, did not conduct electricity in all its particles ; indeed, we know that it does so." Popular Science Monthly. ITearu rs. Lioht Tool. -The great end at which all improvements aim a the maximum of power combined with the minimum of material and weight. A man shoveling dirt with a shovel one fiound heavier than it should be will if c G.000 pounds more in a day of ten hours than he would do with a suitable shovel. All this strength is wasted. The same is true of machinery. So simple a thing as an unlubricated pul ley u felt in the furnace, and the cost of the coal is augmented. Every use less pound in a truck or carriage takes vitality from the horse which draws it, and costs the owner many extra dol lars for his keeping. The man who pulls an oar in the great boat races at Saratoga puts himself in training and reduces every ounce of surplus flesh. The racing horse carries not one extra ounce of fat to burden him in the ef fort to wiu. Yet working men' will carry through half their lives fifty pounds more desb than is seeded for the liest working condition, a burden which tells agaiust their efficiency and personal comfort through many years of their industrial life. These may seem little things ; but whatever wastes power, increases expenses, and hardens the laborer is not a little thing. . Van ill j a a Waste Product in Iheifan ujacture of Paper. We take the fol lowing interesting suggestion from a recent number of Vingler' Journal: In the preparation of wood pulp for paper, tine wood is treated to a solu tion of caustic soda under high pressure in iron boilers. After the operation the solution contains the soda salts of resinic acid, hnmic acid, and carbonic acid, and some resinous bodies. In this solution the soda salt of vanilla must also be nresent. if it has not been destroyed by the high pressure and tem perature, 1 he presence ot this body is indicated by the intense vanilla odor which always appears on treating the above liquor with acids and allowing it to stand a few davs. The writer above referred to has not yet succeeded in obtaining crystals of vanillin, and hence does not describe his process in fulL If any of our readers possess suf ficient quantities of this lye to experi ment upon, we have strong hopes that their lauors will be rewarded with bet ter sucess than those of our German friend, and that America will one day boast of a vanillin factory. Copying Pencil. Pencils are now sold bv stationers, the marks of which may be copied in the same manner as writing made by the pen with ordinary copying ink. Th method of preparing the leads is as follows : A thick paste is made of graphite, nnely pulverized kaolin, and a very concentrated solu tion of aniline blue, soluble in water. The mixture is pressed into cylinders of suitable size and dried, when it is ready for use. Gum arabic, it is said, may be substituted for the kaolin. Baoid Transit in London Recently, during one day, Whit Monday, 346,547 passengers were carried on the Metrop olitan Underground Railway, London, being at the rate of ninety millions of passengers per annum. The stations area half a mile apart. .The trains run every two minutes ; they consist of twelve cars each, and are drawn by locomotives weighing forty-five tons each They discbarge and take np a load of passengers, run to the next station, and stop, all within the space of two minutes. Cldoral a an Anesthetic. Hydrate of chloral, administered bypodermi- caiiy, has recently been used as an an aesthetic with success in the hospital at Bordeaux, France. The operation was a resection of the internal and ex ternal nasal nerve, involving some fif teen minutes' work and. necessarily. excessive' pain to the patient. The drug took effect in eight minutes, and complete insensibility on the part of the sunerer resulted. Tm Aninniutrin ntinna in fann.iiv a new kind of belting is being adopted. It is made from hair, presumably that of the alpaca, and is delivered by the makers in a single piece without seam. It has a coating which consists princi pally of minium. It is spoken of as most satisfactory, and as being more durable than either gutta perchaor leather. Brick made in Japan, and paving 30 per cent duty, are now imported into San Francisco. The duality is superior. Japanese brick makers can beat the world in the cheapness and excellence of their productions. A nere hydrometer consists of strina of paper dipped in a cobalt salt solu tion containing common salt and gum arabic. In dry weather, it is blue, and in wet, rose red. 1 . MIKTie. Do Jfot Eat Bam Egg. One of the most common prejudices of housewives ana motners is tnat nara eggs are unn eult to digest- esnecially the white and that the less they are boiled the better they are for weak ana dyspeptic stom achs. The reverse is the case, as there is more danger of raw and soft white of an egg passing through the digestive apparatus without hringreally digested, than when thoroughly boiled aud hard. In fact then it constitutes a most ex cellent food for dyspeptics, as ex perience is proving. A writer in the Medical Journal say s : " We have seen dyspeptics who have suffered uutold torments with almost every kind of food. No liquid could be taken with out suffering; bread became a burning acid ; meat and milk were solid and liquid fires. We have seen these same sufferers try in g to avoid food and drin k, aud even going to the enema syringe for sustenance. And we have seen their torment pass away and their banger relieved by living noon the whites of eggs which had been boiled in bubbling water for thirty minutes. At the end of a week we have given the hard yolk of the egg with the white, and upon this diet alone, without fluid of any kind, we have seen them begin to gain flesh and strength and refreshing sleep. After weeks of this treatment they have been able, with care, to begin upon other food." And all this the writer adds, without taking medicine. He says, what we also have always main tained that hard-boiled eggs are not half so bad as half-boiled ones, and ten times as easy to digest as raw ones ; and we have no doubt that an animal may be starved to death by eating only the -raw white of egg; for the same reason that dogs have been starved by eating gelatin alone. Only toothless babies can digest soft food, such as milk. Sugar a a Bemedyfor Wound. This recipe is excellent, and ought to be published once a year. 1 found it in a paper sometime ago and have tried it and can recommend it from experience : lake a pan or shovel with burning coals, and sprinkle upon them common brown engar. and hold the wounded part in the smoke. In a few minutes the pain will be allayed, and recovery proceeds rapidly. In my case, a rusty nail bad made a bad wound in the bottom of my foot. The pain and nervous irritation was severe. This was all re moved by holding it in the smoke for fifteen" minute, and 1 was able to re sume my reading in comfort. We have often recommended it to others with like results. Last week one of my men had a finger-nail torn out by a pair of ice-tongs. It became very painful, as was to have been expected. Held in sugar-smoke for twenty minutes, the pain ceased and promised speedy re covery. Sourishment in Cocoa. Mr. John Holm, of the Edinburgh Chemical Society, has shown, by recent analysis, that cocoa closely resembles beef in its nutritive constituents, and largely ex ceeds milk and wheaten flour in its value as an article of diet. It differs widely from tea and coffee in being a food or flesh former, while they are rather conuimentsand stimulants. One half the weight of cocoa consists of fat. and 20 per cent, of albuminoid material. whereas milk contains 3.5 per cent, of fat and 4 per cent, of albuminoid mate rial; beef contains 3.87 per cent, of fat and 20.75 of albuminoid matter; and wheat contains 1.3 per cent, of fat and 14.0 per cent, of albuminoid material. In addition cocoa contains starch, which is absent in milk and beef, and present in but a small proportion in wheat. .. Here is the refined style of eating peaches: Cut the fruit open in the middle, and remove the pit; hold the hemisphere in the left hand it will scarcely be soiled theouterskin shield ing the fingers, and use a spoon, dessert or tea, to scoop out the pulp and juice, and carry it to the mouth. Vou thus escape the disagreebleness and vul garity of soiled lingers, and that fright ful temptation to suck the tinger-euds, which not all, even ladies, are able to resist. To add a little powdered sugar to the fruit as it reposes in the velvety i cui f-i mg auiin in me niiutniifl ic-ont iiivt : .. i. .i : .: t . sacch rine which, in a cold season like this, it seems to need in order to Ite palatable to most persons. Who could wait to read all this before biting a peach? Hon; to Make Oil JLamti Safe. A great many accidents are happening everv rinv from the nse of kerosene. 1 will tell you a method by which they can be, to a great extent, prevented, and I hope you will publish it for the benefit of poor people who are obliged to buy cheap oils. If the body of the lamp is filled with cotton, such as jewelers use to wrap their articles in, after it is stutled lightly it will receive one-half the quantity of oil which it would if the cotton were not put in. If any accident happens, the oil cannot spill or flow about, but is, as it were, "sopped up'' in the cotton, which bums like a fagot, but all in one place. tjichange. To Make Itakent Bunt. Mix 11 lbs. sugar with 3 lbs. of Hour, make a hole in the centre of the flour, and pour in half a Dint of warm milk and two table- spoonfuls of yeast, make the whole in a thin batter, ana set tne disn netore the fire, covered up, until the leaven begins to ferment ; add to this i lb. of melted butter and milk enough to make a soft paste of all the flour, and let it rise again for half an hour ; shape the dough into buns, and lay apart on a buttered tin, in rows, to rise for half an hour, bake in a quick oven. A few currants are added with the butter. To Boil F ruit. The following table for boiling fruit in cans, will prove use ful, as the present is the time for patting it np previous to winter. The first figure after the nameof the fruit refers to time of boiling in minutes, the second to ounces of sugar to the pound : Cherries, 5. 8 ; raspberries, 6, 4 ; black berries, 6. 6: gooseberries. 8. 8 ; car- rants, 6, 8; quinces, (sliced) 6, 10; grapes, 10, 8; plums, 10, 8; peaches (whole) 30, 8 ; crab apples, 35, 8; toma toes, none ; beans and peas, two to three hours. . Mulled Ginger Wine. Boil in one wineglassfnl and a half of water, a quarter of an onnce of cinnamon, ginger slightly bruised, and cloves, with three ounces of fine sugar, nntil they form a thick svruD. which must not be allowed to burn. Pour in one pint of ginger wine, and stir it gently until it is on the point of boiling: then serve im mediately. The yolks of fonr fresh eggs stirred into the hot mixture will by some be considered an improvement. Tomato Pie. Take four tomatoes; pour boiling water- over them, and re move the skins ; slice them and s prink le them with aait; let them stand while yon mix and roll oat the crust ; then drain off the juice, and add a teacupfal of sugar, half a cupful of sweet cream (if you have it, it not a tablespoonful of butter will take its place), one egg, and some nutmeg. This is enough for a pie in a long baking tin, and is a very rich and excellent pie. '.ffi . i .. , Raspberry Lily. Boil rice so that the kernels will be as distinct as possible, spread a spoonful upon a dessert-plate, cover it all but the -edges with ripe raspberries, pour over it two spoonfuls of sweetened strawberry or raspberry juice, sprinkle over the whole some white sugar, and serve cold. . . HorttradisX Sauce. Grate very small a stick of horseradish ; then, with a couple of tables poonfals of it, mix a small teaspoon ful salt, and four table spoonfuls of cream : stir it briskly, and add by degrees a wineglassfnl of vine gar. Excellent to serve with coal roast beef. ' Charcoal placed in a saucer and mois tened with boiling water, in a few days gathers its own weight in impure air. Use a dozen pieces the size of a hazel nut and change every S days. Tivty flail fniVAVAl iff T-An will Vaam a cistern free from worms and bugs. C1MOCS. A Little Mistake. He took the eve ninir train no from Cleveland, and in looking through the ears discovered a female sitting alone in a seat, ana it instantly occurred to him that she might be lonely. A Teil dropped over her face, but there was no reason to suppose that she was nor good looking, and he gallantly raised his bat and sat down beside her, remarking, with a lovely smile : "It a lonely traveling alone." She iust murmured a reply, but the accent was captivating, and he was won at the start. He was practicea in all the arts of polite tactics, and spoke to her softly of this great desolate world, with appropriate allusions to human hearts, lie toiu ner now ne nau hungered and thirsted after the affec tions of a true heart and had yearned to feel the breath of the heavenly flame of love. "No," he sighed, he bad no wife, no one to love and caress him ana mena his suspenders ; and when he inqmred if she was treading the path of life single and alone, she murmured so pensively and sad that he feu com pelled to put his arm on the back of the seat lest she should fall out of the win dow which was closed. They reached Norwalk. and just as the train stopped he heard a grating, hissing sound close to his ear, and the words: " -o-u villian. t-o-u old hypocritical sinner. 1 11 make you think you ve. been struck by a breath of heavenly flame. von old owl." lie looked around just tar enougu to get a glimpse of a pair of flashing eyes and the face of his wife, who had mur mured so fondly to him along the jour ney. A snuden spasm seized him, bnt he managed to accompany her from the train, and as they moved into the dark ness toward home her dashing eyes lit np his pale face with spectral etlect. x fVN inc jmrvn ivjiiv; vMvnfiffi. FurtuiUof the Florida n. A recent letter written from Florida says: At 'Tocoi,' where we connect, or rather wait for St. Augustine s train, we have an hour for observations. Since the advent of the l ankee. every conceiva ble device and agency have been em ployed to decoy him out of his snare shilling, and well may we exclaim bow adroitly this nas been done. " 'What do you keep here T asks a burly son of New Hampshire. " 'Canes, alligators and oysters, re plies Floridan. . " 'Any 'gators this morning t' " 'Sorry to inform you last one just sold.' " 'Very nice canes. What ate they made ot I ' "'Palmetto, sir.' , 'How many can you make a day V "'Only three, aud it is hard work at that.' "What do you ask T "'One dollar apiece. "'Well, give me five.' "Looking around on the banks of white sand that glared in his face he continued : ' . " 'What do you live off of here in the Summer r "'Fish! " 'What in the Winter f -Yankees!'" . He Bememhered. A few days ago an insurance agent hired a boy to mind his office and run errands, and he bad a long talk with the lad. telling him what he must do and what he must not do. The boy got alongall right nntil yester day when the agent entered the office and found him up to deviltry. "See here, my boy," said the agent, "didn't I tell yon just what you'd have to do if you staid here f "You did,1 replied the boy ; '"you said I mustn't sing or whistle ; that I mustu't have boys uo here ; that I was to come at eight and quit at five; that I was to keep up the fire, sweep out. run errands and be civil ; that I was to be careful and lock the door, scrape my feet on the mat, keep my knife away from the furniture and not idle my time away. Yoa told me all this, but you didn't say a word about my not pouring ink on the cockroaches?" Lately as the black clouds rolled up in the u est and people prepares for a storm, a citizen standing near the monu ment wiped his face and remarked : "What a grand sight for an artist." A woman, not thirty feat aay, waiting for a car, soliloquized : "Rain coming, and I'll bet a dollar I'll get drenched'" Just beyond her was a boy who yelled out: "Oh, yes! rain if yer want to, there haint any circus in town.' I'ctroit Free Pre. Wanted to be Sure. An old worn-out darkey, with his Wool wrapped np in knobs with cotton thread, stood hold ing his carpet-bag in his haud at the depot. "Why don't you get on board !" said the brakesman. "Dis yar train go to Xorcros, boss?" "Yes; going to start soon." "How yoa know! When I see her start I'll know she's a-gwine." And when she started he got left. ' " Tiro yonng ladies were conversing at Saratoga, the other day, and one said that her heart was really broken. Charles had proven fickle. "Wa he rich V asked the other'.: .' ' "No," was tlw reply, "but he was so nice." - i "Well, m- dear," was the consolatory response "marry old who is after yon, and mend your heart with diamond cement." . A little boy accosted a gentleman on the street in Portland the other day with. "Mister, canyon fix things!' "Well, T don't know; I can 'fix some things. What is it t" ''Can you fix my collar T There's a pin sticking into me, and our folks are so busy about the Centennial that they can't do it." "1 rViMf," said a Western stump orator, "on the broad platform of the principles Of '63, and palsied be mine arm if 1 forsake 'em !" "You stand on nothing of the kind!" .interrupted a little shoemaker in the crowd ; "you stand in my boots that you never paid me for, and I want the money." Old -gentleman (having had to pay twice :) "But I'm positive I banded you the money. It may probably have dropped down the slit in the door!" Conductor: "Slit in the door! Well' 'taint likely I'm going to turn the bus upside down for sixpence! " A notoriou gentleman, who has been in jail, is reported to have said that he had left prison, after having served his sentence, without any stain on his char acter. Very likely. Some characters are of such a color that they never show the dirt. - i m i r r ' . Joeh Billing remarks i "The bnly way to git thro this , world and escape censure and abusei is to; take sum back road. You kant travel the main turnpike aud do it.""' -. ; "Mother," says Rev. Dr. Hall, "are the great primary educators." True. Who, like a mother, can point the way through the slippery paths of youth !" A ilMffflin piuiciu wib. uciuiv going to war, pray once ; before going to sea, pray .twice; before going to be married, pray three times." Ar waste a fly in huckleberry tea son. One fly in a plate of huckleberries contains more nutriment than . three berries. ' A musical amateur writes to ask if the old English song, "A Single Smile,', furnished the theme of Wagner's "Lone grin." - r r, i A celebrated barrister was in the habit of saying. "I al ways study the feasibility of a case before 1 undertake it." .". .. Prop' who never take the will for the deed lawyers. Motto for the Arabs Ud and Be douin. 1 ' Ode to my landlady Three- weeks' board. A comic ong is an absurd-ditty. ' ' ' A bad position imposition. W TTAKAaa CrunfPP in his work on .UI. AlCilT 1. T . .iir .it,i. " trust very Dlalnly ' jiunusvi a i v. v., ... . of accommodation bills, which have coine Into notice in connection - cent failures. After asking If those who lend trust money to specuiuion., . as the speculators who borrow it, are to k. .,.i.., what ahall be said of the UC WUUttuut., , still more delinquent class w no loans by rraud, wno noioiuv - ' i. Ahi.inMl hut obtain men a muiici - It under false pretenses, he says, or how else than tnus must rlnin of those who raise money by accommodation bills. When A and B aree, the one to draw and the other to accept a bill of i.T.000 for value received, -.:io i. imth ihrn has been no sale of goods between them or no value re ceived, the transaction is not uiupiy embodied lie, but becomes thereafter a living and active lie. Whoever dis counts the bill does so In the belief that B, having become possessed of X' 1,1 W0 worth of goods, will, when the bill falls a,... .ith..r hva the i: l.i Ml worth of goods or some equivalent with which to meet It. Iid he know that there were no such goods in the hands of either A or B, and no other property available lor liquidating tne nut, ne wouiu um m count it he would not lend money to a man of straw without security. The case is intrinsically the same as though A had taken to the hank a forged mort gage deed and obtained a loan ii"" it. Practically, an accomuiiMlatiou bill is a forjrerv." la raralyala Mairide? Death by naialavsis" is growing to lw the ton tnnnliar ciose of the history of business and professional men. It discloses something radically wrong. It is like the collapse of steam boilers at sea or on land, something which shows an overstrain ban been put on the working powers. We deprecate in advance anv medical criticism which shall proceed to show ns that in sundry instances pacients me oi iariKin " have led easy and uneventful lives. We are ntx; writing a medical treatise. We onlv know that as a fact it is a very customary ending to lives with a great pressure upon them. And there are lives which, as a rule, with this great pressure have no relieviug occupations and habits, w e are mciweu 10 mm that many nrofessional men are merely professional. Outside their work they have nothing to do, nothing' to care for. The climate of this country, while it stimulates mental energy, represses bodily exertiou. To use the phrases of the day, the American is unrivalled at "nutting on a spurt." As a rule we should say that the thing required in this country was "generous temper ance." On the contrary.the habit of the niaioritv is parsimonious and spasmo dic indulgence. If men who use their brains in one set of cases will relieve them be a comulete change of interests and occupations, they wni oa more work and do it better in the end. with out wearing themselves out prema turely. If they will take good and ha bitual care of their bodies, without trying them bv occasional and irregu lar dissipations,tliey will be, much more likely to chaiieuge paralysis. i rcs- E. r. Kaakel'a Bitter Wlaeeriraa. E. f. Kunkel's caleoraie I Di ter Vio of Iron will effectually euro liver eomplnint. jaundice, dyspepsia, chronic or nervous de bility, obroaio diarrhoea, disease of too k lo ners, and all diseases arising from a disor dered liver, stomach or intestines, such as constipation, flatulence, inward piles full ness of blood to tbe b a l, acility of tne stomach, name, heartburn, disgnt for food, fullne s of weight in the stomach, sour eructations, sinking or fluttering at the pit of the rtomaeh, swimming of the head, hur ried or dimcult breathtnz, fluttering at the heart, choking or suffocating sensations when in a lying povtnre. dimness of vision. dots or webs before tbe sight, doll pain in tbe head, deficiency of perspiration, ye lownese of the akin and eyes, pain ia the liJe, back, head, chest, limbs, etc., su.l len flushes of beat, burning in tbe flesh, con stant imaginings of evil, and great depres sion of spirits. Price $1 per bottle. Be ware of counterfeit. Do not let yonr drug gist palm off lone other preparation of iron he may any ia as good, hut uk for Kunkel's Bitter n uk- of Iron. Take no other. Kun kel's Bitter Wine of Iron is not sold in bnlk only in $1 bottles. E. P. Kunkel, Pro prietor, !io orth .Ninth St., V bits , fa. Sola by ail Pruggista and dealers every where. Tafewobs Bixdved Alivi. Ilea l and all complete, in two hours. No fee "ill head passes, seat, rin and stomach n orms re moved by Da. Kfxkil, 259 Noktb Nisth 3tiit. Advice free. Come, see oer l.unu specimens and be convinced. He sever ails. As Ittallibls Pili RraaTT. Sufferers with this painful disease who hae tried electuaries, lotions, ointments and a long list of nostrums for its relief, in vain, will tbank as for calling attention to AN'AblE 313, the happy discovery of Da. Silsbii, an experienced and scientific M. D. Thou sands of caaea attest its virtue. It is a simple suppository, acts as an instrument, oothing poultice and medicine, gives In stant relief and cores permanently. Price $1. Sent free by mail on receipt of price, P. Xeustasdter k Co., 4 Walker St., Sew York. ... ! -4 HA IB VIGOR RECIPES. 50 CENTS. A. CALVIN, AW V. u, Knsl Culm. III. -JB.lt ' -. ,, . ii.. aciEwnric dihcobcbt. For f I win annd directions how to produce a llifht wtthout lint safe. Minpl and dista m-. a ear tnllclil a room. Bj uiali Ul H. LmLAvau.a. tox x , .lew i one. "MR.'ST GRAND EXPOSITION of the TxuicnrV l.ttenauL Imktitutx. Pittabarzh. fa., nom Oct I Sul. B. Aoilraa, A. J. a KLL1S, Plea. T. I. I ... . WMt , FREDERICK SPIECKER, J )i -TV L4.. 2 C3 "'ft ICb?&J . Iff WIOLBlllB BlAXim n ' leaf Tobacco, Cigars, Pipes. "I Smoking and Chewing , Tobacco, . : "OF THE BE8T BRANDS. - ZTQ. 152 7AISY0TJ2iT ATZOTZ,' PHn.APKT.PHIA. - Oaly Ansa far 0. . aelid Tea ClfM Meald. .- - ,; Cigar luraa asa be sayaUaa. fCoff On?' r u a, Tarma rraa. aidras Stmxob a Co.. Fanlaae. at. vavly BLANKS nuzu ncrriD At ek omoa. 500,000 ACRES ur MICHIGAN LANDS .FOIt SSlE! lUUrat) tovpaaj are .w Wfrrw. tor ie. They r atliaUl kUtix it raiirotv.1 tcmtia lam tracts of xYilnt FA KM 1 M) and I' INK Ui-t The Iturminz hndj inciii'fi "m o trn mt frrrsu utd well-ratortl barttwo 4 lanl) m lb 9rat. Xhtf an ttmbvrr. Miniy urtth hurd-aMj. ami br-h; 4 Mack, ammJy lustm, and abourfc m prinrj of txuaj wittT. Mtc hi r.m 19 one of the mt ityitrbre itoil DiMwrnti States ia the Ln:oo. and it fanam harm a greater rrx-t ot crtH-s ad rwoarcva than any W. ra States 4 the prairie itmlm nmv prr dwveorn ia rreat aiaixUno. thy bn t othtr i. wee. and when this crop foil, tiVwtitntion Mtow, m haa ' Lhvoswp tba pmt ymria Kmmm aol Nr-hrka. Prfc-f from .-v 9r 'r ""mmied BROOMS! BROOMS! J01I5 J. KEIWER TO., S53 Washington Bti. New Tort 1rinrirl Drriot lli X-w Vir f.r the bwt Rn.ua Hnnti&M'tttr hi th Cn.tel SbUn. Brooms fr.3 92.00 per dozen . and op war J. TV lownrt pricrs ah! greatf?t varirtT to t CtibJ aiiTwhrr. Al mo ntin m ttrx-k of WOOD nl WILLOW WARS, orb m Pail. Tat, Bukrii. )lt. Cordh.-. Wick. ,t"Cthic with a fall liwof Appl. Sriuv Wood and Clav fipw. Vane Suap. 1 uLr No tajca, Cntlarr, Ac Sesnro from U to $i ptr mill. A fall line of the bnt quality uf TIN W ARK. P. S. Wr atll our inMis at pnre that !, not rwn h aiay dm mm tn.; on the road- Or-lm tT naul will r 3Ma uau artcatios. KtW!lhrH Iwi ctWTB?S GREAT EEMsEY." ThU CrvM.t1 Is a CEHTAI?f CURE for Coaic-hs '!, Inflammation the 1-iuic" nrt9 Throat and ilrraxt, itronrhi lis, aad If taatm in (Imr, wiJl am tiu ftalAl li4-oM- ConvrTt ton. Tti rnt of tit, a mrtllcUt 1 prrparntJovi flarolt-. t.t.a4 hy a peculiar ja-cc-s from the nap rui Pine Tree, tn r.ieZ.c!nI priper .( w kit hare will kaoun. With ! powerful elcmrnt are ihoronxhiy fcn-or-pnrateil .several otber vrt,J- i:firt4l ., earn ef which posw MNihn aa nealinx attr.btnr, 11-. Sain if tt the no-t POTENT ANXAGCiVUX to all !--. tf the pnlmonary organ .hat ha yrt beeu lntrtHfiierfl, i . ss. l. a- c. rasr a ?.rs . PiNE TREE TAP. COnDlAL la mot a mevr remedy tiiat tin nvrr hef-a hm of brforr. nl an CX.13, RELI ABLE. AKD WILL-Till 13 mHi-!a (hat haa keen In rtnlly tt-r ttr lamith-a nnJ Intelllsrnt pbyKl. fitrthr IxHilltfta year, aikal ia xjxjk -.1 mt In tUa ltj;li4 levau by nil it!io tiire It. as thw- s.n.1. of TJXbOUtCIXEIi TESTIMO NIALS arotr. If yon anflcr fW-m any atlaraaa Tnr nhkh thXa Cor2iaa ta r-uilnrattfd. xt ntiIrltatljs!T ay "TRY IT. WE KNOW IT WILL DO YOU GOOD." ' A ainjcla buttle aiii arnntlatrmi tt lata; able a,ujtli!lra. IM Will E5...iST. 153 STI8EKHPEBS. PRINCIPAL DEPOT. 232 North Second St., VhUatl'd. HORSEMEN! OWNERS OF STOCK! Sare Your Horses and Cattle! CURE THE CP DISEASE A"D KEEP , TEEM IS A HEALTHY C0NDITI0K ST GIVING THEM r.l. D. ROBERTS' CELHI3KATE1 ' T1A2Z HORSE POWDERS.- VS CSS 07Z& " , FORTY YEARS! TMI OMIT rOWDafftJ eOTA!SIV TC2TI3, I.AXATT7Z AND PU21TT IN3 P0?Z3TESv. - - ' - . . .. -: ! BEST COSDITI01T MEDICLWZ IS THE WORLD, . ; They ara Bad sf Pur Mat rial only, oa tablaapowaful (in( as far as aa wauad I. ' rdiaaxy aauia powders. Buy aa packag and aftar Baina; la. yan will aarar gat dan praiain j tkaav Par sals ky all starakaapars. TJ8K M. E. ROSSRTSV Vegetable Embrocation P0S ALL EXTERNAL DISEASES '' SITS It II 1MAJS OR BEAST. Jaally Jejer'g Poultry Powder. Wamalrd.lftiMdlR tuna, itocuractnken cnoieraanil l (apea. Wiltliupi..T oimia 1 Fowder.aod a bVtfcwalof llnee ant prnnr f u. with k aaMflil annnlw ttf 1 aw.rmatilPxnril-!nrn!:DXiiiaterial.any onemay B wp Ponltry (avn I a cor flD-mrm ) for any lanxtb of tlnip.wl'.b hota profit and pleasure. Parkagetfcta.. Ivafhrti.ta. lit tar ueaKf, dent fraa apoa ta- , ' .. , A. I,. MKTr.B ft CO. Balttewia SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! All stylea, BCrar VonstM an1 Wilntti. aw no aaocna-ivoJ. iwiccrwj itaJ lyr au.tibfe . OUtHTltiU. BAIlr, 4l"tl.VI.-.,r iUuii IHl TTht'. he. Fors i orricK kchmttkh' ad mma To laruMt acit ta aaaunait atuca, arm aa aoaad-BAud ta tiw Cuj. LEWIS As BHO. M 1M1. 1S3S. 10b aa I0S KIMS ATI ralla. 3 1- 2 O S 5E J O 2 2 I m 3 O . u ---- w f"-. v. .l a-V