BRIGHTEST EYES. - fvtM the oaxa a or beixk. Of -Vr" ao bright and pearls so clear, 1 ' Bast thou a shining store ; And eyes hast thou, so bright, so black, A poet's heart hsre they won. Alack. My darling, what wouM'st thon more ? Those eyes so bright, their hoe, their light. Have been the theme of ditties a score. And berond the reach of dcsin or time. Embalmed he they in my rhyme My darling, what would'st thon more ? The proud disdain of those eyes so bright Has troubled thy lover's hesit sore ; To deep despair reduced your bard. And his happy numbers ssdly narrd Now, flirting, what would'st thou more ? The Medterraaeaai af Japs. In the far East, lvine between the islands which comixtse the Empire of Japan that anrieiit nd mysterious realm but recently explored and Intro duced into the circle of nations by the greed or enterprise of Western com merce there ebbs and flows and - sparkles, with a gorgeous beauty truly Oriental, a fair Mediterranean, known a the Seto I'chi, or Inland Sea. Though smaller by far than its namesake of the West, it has many physical characteris tics much more striking. It abounds in harbor, lys, snug anchorages, deep -channels, and sheltering islands. It haks in a climate almost perfect in its serenity and freedom from extremes. The mariner fresh from the chilly Spring-time and ungenerous Summer of our own islands navigates its waters in June with a cloudless sky, Beneath s roof af blue Ionian matter," unprotected by awnings and fearless of the sun, whi"h at the same season off , the .Spanish and Julian coasts Deals down on those who sail beneath it with an insupportable and even deadly fierce ness. Here are no tiileles waters; a - s.rong ebb and flow, running to and fro between fairy islets, and round verdant caes, with a'lmost headlong fury, puri fies and freshens every inlet with an influx from the wkWacitieOi-ean with out, lieniarkably free from storms and rain, the frailest "fishing-boat is pushed , fearlessly out to the mid-waters of its widest iiart. Xo limcm b'ows across it - to render life scarcely : worth having throughout the length of many an Autumn day. In tine weather the bosom of the sea does not undulate sufficiently to rock even the smallest bark; yet there is no lack of breeze. It should be the very paradise of pleasure seekers. The scenery Is truly lovely, a Itnvou foieground set in a background of the Aiiis. liOfty mountains bound theland- scae. In Summer light, fleecy clouds hover about the higher slopes, while through dips in the stately range of heights glimpses are caught ot sun higher peaks lieyond bathed in a violet haze or dissolving into the misty dis tance. Fronting the water are pine- clad lulls, with the varied and fantastic outline natural to a oni-e volcanic region. Their sides are seamed with valleys, in which nestle pleasant villages, half hid in the variegated foliage of shady trees. The tr-niieral6 zone meets the tropics in groves and coppices of pine and fir and camphor-wood and graceful DaiuDoo. , A bove, the lilac waves in clusters, while unuerneaiii iue sleeps are an agiow wmi azaleas in crimson masses. The quaint gables and high-peaked roofs of temples n-er out from leafy groves, traversed by glades of brilliant green. Streams gusliing from the rocks trace silvery lines upon the abrupt hill sides. ISorky promontories, festooned with crceiers and crowned with clumps of firs, jutout into the sea and divide white, sandy lieaches, or form placid little coves and bays. Here a huge mass of gray granite stands out as a monument of some an , cient convulsion of the soil; thereasue 1 cession of grassy Jcnolls and hanging woods nndulating backward from the shore introduces a park-like feature into the panorama. Art completes the pic ture. The slopes of the mainland and of innumerable islands .. That hk In rifc ami varem gfma inlay TbatimadiinMHl kumtni "i the tit-p. " , are clothed with fields of waving corn, of a really golden hue in the dazzling ' June sun fight. The style of cultivation is high. 1 he fields are arranged in ter races, which climb in a long series of steps the sules or full and ravine to a goodly height anove the lower ground Here and there the fields are dotted with the brilliant emerald of tinv patches of the young rice-plant. Blue wreaths of smoke rise from the lionfires f brnsbwood. lighted to bream the (harp-bowed craft hauled up on the Tieacli below. 1 he sea Is studded with the boats of fishermen, and flecked with the white sails of scores of native trad' ing vessels. Fortniijhtlg Jierietr. Large Bralssssd Iatellerf. The relation between weight of brain and extent of intellectual capacity is as yet in obscurity, and this obscurity is by no means cleared up by a report or ur. I jtwson. pathologist to the Lunatic Asy lum of the West Hiding of Middlesex. Six distinguished men are instanced as having exceeded the male average of forty-nine ounces, and opiosite their brain weights are placed those of six lunatics, the aggregate or the latter ex ceeding that of the former by more than ten ounces. I lie following are the figures: Dr. Chalmers, 53.oz., luna tic, 58 ox. ; David Webster.M.o, lunatic, "8; Sir J. Y. Simpson, 54, lunatic, 58.5; ijKKMlsir, u.i, lunatic, .!).; Ahcrcrom bie, 63, lunatic, 00.5; Cuvier, (VI, luna tic, CI. it must, of course be remem bered that lunacy is no indication of a want of intellectual capacity, and also that the size of the body should be taken into consideration in all comparisons instituted between brains. This last circumstance is not alluded to bv Dr. 1-awson, although the advocates of woman s rights forced attention to it by their efforts to account for forty-four ounces being the average for the female lirain. J his is a subject or great sci entific interest; but iu all investigations great care should be taken to carefully discriminate between mental weakness and the destruction of mental equilib rium. es Faeta af EntctaaMl. Leaving the specialists, it is observa ble that the voices of the female poets, if not the best-trained, certainly are as natural and independent as any. Their utterance is less finished, but also shows less of Tennyson's influence, and seems to express a truly feminine emotion, and to come from the heart. As the voice of Mrs. Browning grew silent, the songs of Jean Ingelow began, and had instant and merited popularity. They sprung up suddenly and tune fully as skylarks from the daisy-spangled, haw thorn-ltordered meadows of old England, with a blitheness long un known, and in their idyllic underfiights moved with the tenderest currents of human life. Miss Ingelow may be termed an idyllic lyrist, her lyrical pieces having always much idyllic beauty, and being more original than her recent ambitious efforts in blank verse. Her faults are those common to her sex too rapid composition, and a diffuseness that already has lessened her reputation. But "The High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire' (with its quaint and true sixteenth century dia lect), Winstanlev," "Songs of Seven" and "The Long White Seam," are lyri cal treasures, and their author espe cially may be said to evince that sincer ity which is poetry's most enduring war rant. The gentle stanzas of Adelaide Anne Proctor also are spontaneous, as far as they go, but have had less signifi cance as part of the literature of the lime. Yet it is like telling one's beads, or reading a prayer-book, to turn over her pages, so beautiful, so pure and unselfish a spirit of faith, hope and charity, pervades and hallows them. These women, with their melodious voices, spotless hearts, and holy aspira tions, are priestesses of the oracle. Their ministry Is sacred ; in their pres ence the most irrevereut leeomc sub dued. I do not find in the lyrics of Isa Craig, the Scottish ietes, anything better than tlie ode in Honor oi Burns, which took the Centenary prize. Chris tina Georgina Rossetti demands closer attention. She is a woman of genius, whose songs, hymns, ballads, and vari ous lyrical pieces are studied and origi nal. " X do not greatly admire her longer poems, which are more fantastic than imaginative; but elsewhere she is a poet of a profound and serious cast, whose lips part w ith the breathing of a fervid spirit within. She has no lack of mat ter to express; it is that expression wherein others are so fluent and adroit which fails to serve her purpose quickly but when, at last, she beats her music out, it has mysterious and soul-felt meaning. Anther -omn-ioet is Mrs. Webster, already mentioned as a trans lator. For many poetic qualities this lady's work is nearly equal, in several departments of verse, to that of the best of her sister artiste; and I am not sure but her general level Is above them all. She has a dramatic faculty unusual with women, a versatile range, and much penetration of thought; is objec tive iu her dramatic scenes and longer idyls, which are thinner than Brown ing's, but less rugged and obscure; shows great culture, and is remarkably free from the tricks and dangerous mannerism of recent verse. Srrilmrr'i Monthly. Views 1 1ke Mm la tae Mm. A writer in the UritUM Quarterly In dulges in a glowing description of the appearance of our earth to an inhabi tant cf the moon ; but, according to the inculcations of science, the "man in the moon" is a creature of the imagination. We cannot conceive how it would be possible for a human being to exist without air or water. He says; At last, however, nigiit sets in. Gradually it coms, after the sun has gathered up his smi'g beams and gone down to rest. All at once we are plunged into comparative obscurity, Tor again there is no twilight to stay the steps of the departing dav. But looking into the sky, we behold a vast orb, which pours down a milder and more beneficent splendor than the great lord of the system. It is such a moon as we ter restrials cannot boast, for it U not less than thirteen times as large and lumi nous as our own. There it hangs in the firmament without apparent change of place, as if "fixed in its everlasting seat." But not without change of sur face. For this great globe is a painted panorama, and turning round majesti cally on its axis, present oceans and continents in grand succession. As Europe and Africa, locking the Medi terranean in their embrace, roll aay to the right, the stormy Atlantic offers its waters to view, and then the two Americas, with their huge forests and vast prairies, pass under inspection. Then the great basin of the Pacific, lit up with island fires, meeU the gazer s eye, and as this glides over the scene the eastern rim of Asia and the upper portion of Australia sail into sight. The Indian ocean, and afterwards the Arabian sea, spread themselves out iu their sultdued splendor, and thus in fou r-ai id-twenty hours the great rotun dity we tread turns its pictured conn teuance to the moon and grandly re lavs the listening lunarians bv repeat ing to the best of its ability the story of its birth. A or is the sky less marvel lous in another resiiect. For the al- sence of any atmospheric diffusion of light permits the constellations to shine out with a distinctness which is never parallelled on earth. Thev glitter like diamond points set in a firmament of elxny. Stars and clusters which we never see with the naked eye flock into view and crowd the lunar heaens. Tips aad Tails. Times are altered since those early days of C'apt. Gronow, when he relates, "if one dined at any of the great houses in London, it was considered absolutely necessary to give a guinea to the butler on leaving the house." Yet this "very bad habit," as the gallant officer pro nounces it, could boast a long continu ance a distant origin. A century and a half before. Tope had decided that he could not afford to dine with the Duke of Montague, finding that each dinner involved the disbursement of five guineas to the servants of Montague House. Subsequently the Duke accom panied his invitation to the poet with an order for the amount in question. This was his Grace's way of avoiding offense to his servants and the breach of an old custom,the while he secured the pleasure of his friend's society, which, to so rich a nobleman, was surely cheap at five guineas. In the World of the 20th Feb ruary, 1751 the World being the publi cation famous for the contributions it received from the great Lord Chester field a t-orrespondent discusses the ab surdity of giving vails to servants, and the inconvenience arising from that perverted form of benevolence. It is charged against a certain noble Lord that, by his connivance at the custom of bestow ing gifte ujion his servants, he, in truth, compelled his guests to pay for the entertainment afforded them at his table; indeed, it is almost hinted that his hospitality had thus been turned into a source of profit, llie attendants are described as very numerous, and their exertions are done tull justice to. "They get about you, are very diligent, fetch you whatever you call for, and retire with the tablecloth." But the departure of the guests is the signal for the de mands of the servants. He is then made sensible of the responsibilities lie has incurred. "They are drawn into two tines, right and left, and make a lane which you are to pass through before you can get to the door. You are now required to take out your money and apply it first on your fight hand then on your left, then on your right, and then on your left again, till you find yourself in the street." Meantime the situation of the master of the house is described as particularly ridiculous. He attends you to the door with great cere mony; but be is so conscious of the awkward apiearance he must make as a witness to the expenses of his miests. that you can observe him placing him self in a position that he would have it supposed conceals him from the inhospi table transactions that are eoinir on under his roof. He wears the sillv look. oi an innocent man who has unfortun ately broken in uiwn the retirement of two lovers, and is ready to affirm with great simplicity that he has seen noth ing. - All the lear Bound. Child Ed arm! I a. I't parents not lament because their children do not exhibit uncommon powers of mind in early life, or because. compared with some other children, tney are uencient in knowledge derived from books. Let them rather rejoice if their children reach the age of six or seven with well-formed bodies, good health, and no vicious tendencies. though they be at the same time ignor ant of every letter of the alphabet. If they are In Uiis condition, it is not to be inferred that their minds are inferior to those of children who have been con stantly instructed. It is a great mis take to suppose that children acquire no knowledge while engaged iu voluntary play and amusement. Aaeleat Oaks. The Anti-ruory, an English paper, de scribes an oak felled at Newport 28 leet in circiimterence; the timber sold for $3,350, and the bark for $ 1,000. The Parliament oak in Chepstow Park is supposed to be 1,500 years old. Edward I. held a Parliament beneath its boughs. The "Duke's Walking Stick," at Welby Abbey, is an oak 112 feet high. The Greeudaleoak has a spread of 700 square yards and a carriage drive is made through its partly decayed trunk. The largest oak in the world is stinnosed to exist at Calthorpe, in Yorkshire; its trunk is 78 feet in circumference. ACKICCLTTKiL. n, m la Ktia ViAnti' Those who have good cellars under their barns, or t 1 V IWw anil vikt cool and dry, can generally make po tato growing pay; anu uiese are usuanj the ones who do.' In old times a large quantity of pota toes were stored out of doors in the open ground. They were, arranged in long ridges, not in great bulk, as even a mass of potatoes will heat, and cov ered with earth sufficiently thick to keep out the frost. But since the in coming of the potato disease, this plan is not so mucn ioiioweu. a lie miccum tnbers will often rot, especially if the mu liMti a littln. and the diseased ones will often communicate the disease that mat In a cellar tins CSJ1 De Been and noted, but in a mound out of doors no one knows or the trouble uu opri when great loss nas neen iounu. V.U It Is an difficult, tn rpt Be at thom In Winter that those who have no it-. t A nraArr nfitntns excent this. " . f " " I" ' as a general thing prefer not to grow . . r i .i . " i as aii rawer uiau w uc iwu !. this. Stored In cellars the potato is seldom troublesome if healthy. Xo matter in bow great bulk, or whether put in wet or dry, they seldom heat to injury. But if the seeds of disease be there the little heat geneiated by the heaping together of so many roots, is often enough to set the disease to wors, anu very greai losses have been the consequence. Dampness undoubtedly favors the i.m.i1 r,f thm TwitjitA HithMSA. ami there fore where there is any chance at all of toe disease existing in me roots, uiry ought to be stored as dry as possible. Tl.wu hi. h are tn ho. Vent in this gen eral way should be dry and cool, but tnis snouiu oa especially seen w iu lire case of seed potatoes. Since the potato beetle came among us it is ciear uiu e . r. h,vA tho heat refin 1 fa from verv early planting, and by the use of the earliest varieties. Xow these early kinds are more easily affected by warmth than the late ones. They sprout easily, and coolness is therefore the more essential for them. Some people think it makes little difference whether seed potatoes sprout or not be fora nlfintlnir. W have known neoDle tear off sprouts several inches long, and cut up tne tuners in iuu iauu mat mey will sprout out again ana be none tne but there to little doubt they are consti tutionally weaker, anu mucn mure lia ble to disease than those which do not sprout till ready to go In the ground. Cnrt of Cor i AntHmn. An enter prising farmer of Western Jew 1 ork communicated to us recently his prac tice in the managment of his cows during the season when the grass be gins to fail. He says the great secret of rearing and feeding siock successiuuy is to keep what you get to save every pound of flesh and fat that is produced. The question lying still back ot this is bow shall the fat and flesh be retained? What to do and how to do it is the question. Hitherto I have always com menced feeding my cows meal in Octo ber, and continued the regular extra feed through November; and we made more butter in one of those autumn months than in any other month of the grazing season 1 have a pint cup with flaring sides that holds, when dipjied in and heaiied up full, about two quarts of good Indian corn and oats, of equal part.-, made ot the pure grain, i never "cob" my animals. I am down on the cob system of management. With every fifteen bushels of corn and oats I mingle, before it is ground, about one bushel of flaxseed. This improves the quality of the feed for animals of any kind, as ground flaxseed, wnen mingled with grain, is far better for milch cows, for horses, for fattening young sheep, or Tor young stock or any "kind, than all meal. 1 sow a little flax seed every year for the purpose of liav ing the seed to mingle with the grain that is ground into meal for my cows and other stock. I think this is the true way to make money to save all that is made without losing any portion. The little losses abstract the profits. (.Veif l'ort Herald. The True Text of Vtmtnhln. Large vegetables may indicate good strong soil, thorough culture and nigh manur ing, but it is a question in my mind whether the mammoth things should always receive the first award. At the table where we give the true test to vegetables size does not rank as a very Important attribute. 1 was astounded to see so little tasting and examination of texture by the committee that judged the vegetables.' So man is thoroughly capable of passing upon the relative merits of specimens in this class unless he can go more than skin deep in the matter. I never saw so perfect an ex hibition or garden products as was shown at the State Fair. There was earnest and close competition. Still in the awarding of prizes I saw no judg ing of quality by taste, which is the true test. The prizes may be awarded correctly, but not as the result of care ful comparison of quality. A man may know vegetables so well as to judge from the constant surface attributes that accompany first quality, but 1 have failed to meet the man yet who consul ers himself so skillful as this. The judges of apples would consider it ab surd to pass upon the value of an apple by its size and complexion alone. Is it uot equally unjust to pass upon beets, potatoes and turnips in this way? The quality of these vegetables is just as ap parent to the connoisseur in its raw state as that of an apple. I do hope there will be progress in this matter, and that men who judge will have a solid founda tion for their decisions. Prvterring Manure. The Boston Jour nal of Chemistry states that the sources or loss in the storage are two: F irst, the escape of volatile ammonia and other gases; anaL secondly, the loss of valuable salts Try leaching. The first difficulty may be obviated by covering the droppings with eight or ten inches of good soil or loam, which will absorb all escaping gases. A bushel or so of plaster may be advantageously scattered over the heap before the soil is thrown on. The whole mass should be per fectly covered, leaving no "chimney" for gaseous exudation. The danger of leacning may oe avoided Dy covering the heap with hay or straw sufficiently thick to shed off the rain. If kept in this way a sufficient time, the manure will undergo spontaneous decomposition the products of whieh will be ready for immediate assimilation by plants. The usual process in vogue among farmers its curuug ujuuurc KJ uie neius iu tne autumn, where it wastes, in the wav shown above, some of its most valuable constituents. Society oir-t more to the substantial farmers who ride iu the old family carryalls, than to the jockies who drive iu skeleton sulkies, aud more is to be hoped for from the improvement of mucn cows than rrom an increased speed in horses. If all the horses in the world were each to become able to make a mile sooner by half a minute the world would gain little. But if more hardiness and longevity could be given to all, there would be great ad vantage. All round on fruit trees should beat tended to as soon as discovered. Bark bursting wounds will never heal over if not attended to, the dead bark and wood nared away and the wound covered with some preparation w hich will ex clude the air. Fresh cow manure with a little old lime and ashes, and a very little salt mixed with it makes one of the best applications. It i well Vnown that the character of pure milk differs sometimes on tne same farm and among the same breed of cattle, and there aeems to h nn - counting for it; but the true standard of milk lb set down by the best authority at 3.16 per centage of fat and 9.65 of other solids. cusTinc. ' r.'.i.v. vir-taf lTaer. Certain ex periment made by a French tacan, with the view of ascertaining how tax the phosphate of lime in bone may be replaced by other phosphate, have been used by Mr. W. J. Cooper to il lastrate how profoundly the bodies of animals are influenced by the waters they drink. This is an aspeci ot uie water question which will be new to mnat nnnle : Imt there is nodoubt that the composition of the body w mater ially influenced by the mineral consti tn tents of the fluids we habitually drink. The active effects of several mineral waters upon the tuncuons are well known ; it is not so generally known that water from artesian wells, so pure from organic pollution, aome timea vn tains anlohate of majrnesia and other salt to such a degree as to be positively mjonous. Un the otner band in some districts in Holland where there is only rain water to be obtained for drinking purposes, soft ening and distortion of the bones are frequent. That, as shown by the ex periments referred to by Mr. Cooper, the nse of natural waters may tend to alter the structure of onr bodies, in troduces another element into the much vexed question as to the proper source whence to draw the supplies of potable water for towns, by showing that the inorganic impurities of water are of more importance to the health than thev have been usually considered ; while it lends support to the opinion that the same conditions have some thing to do with the goitre and other glandular affections endemic over cer tain regions. r.inMutio of the Su . Professor Balfour Stewart, in an address on this subject, said : Several new metals have been added to the list of those pre viously detected in the solar atmos phere, and it is now certain that the vapors of hydrogen, potassium, sodium rubidium, barium, strontium, calcium, magnesium, aluminum, iron, manga nese, ebronium, cobalt, nickel, titani um, lead, copper, cadmium, zinc, uran ium, cerium, vanadium, and palladium occur in oar luminary. If we have learned to be independent of total eclipses as far as the lower por tions of the solar atmoennere are con cerned, it must be confessed that as yet the npper portions the outworks of the sun can only be successfully ap proached on these rare and precious occasions. Thanks to the various gov ernment expeditions despatched Dy Great Britiao, by the United States, and by several Continental nations thanks, also, to the exertions of Lord Lindsay and other astronomers we are in the possesion ot aennite miur matioo regarding the solar corona. In the first place, we are now abso lntelv certain that a larre Dart of this appendage unmistakably belongs to our luminary, anu in iuo ucn iara, we know that it consists, in part at least, of an ignited gas giving a pecu liar spectrum, which we have not yet been able to indentify with that of any known element. The temptation is great to associate this spectrum with the presence of something lighter than hydrogen, of the nature of which we ara vet total I v iirnorant. A peculiar physical structure of the Corona nas likewise ueeu nunpevuru. On the whole, we may say that this is the least known, while it is perhaps the most interesting, region of solar re search ; most assured ly it is well worthy of further investigation. The Atmotphere and Sound. Profes sor Osborne Reynolds read a paper on the refraction or sound by tne atmos nhere. and re I ft ted the effect of experi ments which he had recently made, with a view of throwing light on the suhiect. He had confirmed his hypoth esis that, when sound proceeded in a direction contrary to that of the wind, it was not destroyed or stopped by the wind, but that it was lifted, and that at snfiicieatlv high elevations it could be heard at as great distances as in other directions, or as when there ws no wind. An npward diminution ot tem perature had been proved by M. Glai sher's balloon ascents and he showed. br experiments with the sounds of br ing of rockets and guns, that the np ward variation of temperature fcad a great effect on the distance at which sounds could be heard. By other ob servations be fonnd that, when the sky was cloudy and there was no dew, the sound could invariably be beard iiucn r . i. : . i. . I. : .. ... . I . a . lai Liicr mi mau fcaiuii inn piuu , bnt that, when the skv was clear and there was a heavy dew, the sound could be heard as far against a light wind as with it. Professor Everett re marked that Professor Reynolds had given the most important contribution to the subject that had been given for very many years. Material for Hoofing. It is stated in a scientific journal that the adoption of board made of leather-waste, for covering roofs, is steadily on the in crease, especially since it has been found practicable to impart to tne ma terial the required durability, imper- vionsness, and that most important quality of all a great resistance against the constantly changing influ ences of the atmosphere. Only by changing the mode of manufacture, however, have these valuable proper ties been secured. According to the account given of this manufacture in t.nrjneerng, the board of this description formerly used for covering in roofs was a spongy, easily compressed mass, which re ceived a single coat of tar. and which possessed the great fault of softening, and consequently losing its consistency in damp atmosphere. But this product has ot late been sane reeded bv an arti cle composed of fibrous matters pos sessing, like leather, great substance: and these matters are, in the process of manufacture, impregnated with an oleaginous composition, imparting to the material when cut into sheets like paper and dried the appearance of real leather. This fabric is said to pre sent the combined advantages of being light, nnn, lasting and economical. What it the Sun T Professor Rudolph in a lengthy paper on the snn. savs : A molten or white hot mass,85t,000 miles in diameter, equalling in bulk 1,260,000 worlds like our own. havin asnr- ronnding ocean of cas on tire. 50,000 miles deep, tongues of flame darting upwara more man ou.uuu miles, volca nic forces that hurl into the solar at mosphere luminous matter to the height of 160,000 miles ; drawing to itself all tne worlds belonging to our familv of planets, and holding them all in their proper places ; attracting with such su perior force the millions of solid and stray masses that are wandering in the fathomless abyss that they rush help lessly toward him. and fall into his fi ery embrace. And thus he continues bis sublime and restless march throneh his mighty orbit, having a period of more man is.irw.uuu ot years. Kn. .N'tkSl mil J fuit,nL.l. Vnm. n Professor Barrett read a paper prepared by Mr. T. Moftat, on the apparent con nection between sun spots, atmospheric oznne rain, and fitr-oA f w nl TL. author stated that from 1850 to 10 he discovered that the maximum and min imum of atmospheric ozone occarred in cycles of years. He had compared the number of new groups of sun spots, iu cacu year ot uiese cycles, wiU toe Onantitv of oznnn. anil thm Monlta showed that there was an increase in tne number ot new groups of son spots. He a! ai ahnwcul tliat tliAm ia n in the quantity of rain and the force of wind with the maximum quantity of ozone and sun spots, and a decrease in these with the minimum of nznna and sun spots. j. rtKiriaj i noio cmniire t aper. Ti nt a c, ... . blotting paper by immersing them in a solution of bicarbonate of soda and letting them dry. These may be sed over and over again. Then sensitise as much paper as is likely to be wanted (IlinntT ttlA ncrl thru. M . 1, ; - . - ... vi iwur wwai interleave it with the blotting-paper. and nlam tha hj. - -i i Sensitive paper thus treated may be preserved ready for nse a long tit- ir. iv to Prepare Tomatoks. There t- - . CmnnnM w K I silt la far tm wide concerning the preparation of vegetables for the table. They ought to have cook lag very simple and very perfect, and they do not always get it. One of the most ueiicious ana oeaumut ui iuuiuic. rla la th lAmntn anil Is also One Of the most abused. Raw, it is often brought to table cut up into unshapely lumps wun tne sun sun auuenug w them. Cooked, it generally appears a watery red mess, Interspersed with pieces half done, hard and greenish in color. The ideal dish of raw tomatoes I. thtia nmaml Choose onlr those which are large, comparatively smooth, firm, ana morougniy reu-npc 1 .Ki,.i.tv tn After small or immature muiuj " v.-. specimens in a salad, and, if you can t una sucn useix rroMuaicuuwi jv m.iat nnt attomnt tn eat raw tomatoes. Put them in a tin pan ana pour over them boiling water, pouring it off im- nA'ISatdltr 'TIS I a (Bi Innwiu the skins 111 V 1 .J . - - . . K v nn nautili V llA milled Off fruav mLj '- i . easily, witnout any vnaeiia p.it-w of the knife. Then with a very sharp irnir sii them across, discarding the first piece, which has the hard base of the stem, ana tne lass piece, a m ia k . . . . 1 1 .I-!.. -Un V. a. n small. Mane tne slices iuiu rkieir i-iwn them lartre and whole, and pile them carefully in layers in a pretty dish, dencateiy sprinauing them. Then nut them awav to get thoroughly cold in your cellar or refrigerator, i-repareu ium iu-j . aimi.Tir mhmaiiil and onlv a Dagan .wiiti. I uwn them If anvbodv wants to add sugar and vinegar to the seasoning . 1 . I .1 ..... t rat can oe none at iauie uy lucora. uiLut, nr th lartra vellnw tomatoes scattered among the red sometimes make the dlsn iook very tempting. - rnr aiaaail tnmatAns. neel as above hut out. in nieces, not in slices. Put these in a two-quart tin basin or in a porcelain-lined saucepan, and add salt and just enougn water to seep iueiu 'Mln hnmlnir Whila thevare aimmer- fng comfortably in row in very nine .. i :..t rum ttn t a mum lartn Tiieee ill II liTn uuim. 1" I I " 9 - " ' O i ; ; . . and enough rresn soua cracKer oroivcii into small bits to thicken the mixture without making ft like a puouiug. it aiiAiiui im inn fminirn ui run cvuf from the spoon, and yet not be watery. Thi-i illsh alsl is eT.illisi telv invltinir. Thn an nther methods of cooking tomatoes stewing with rice, stuffing and baking, etc. oui in no guise arc . .t j i -1... tney so goou as in iiiooc ikstiwi Graci. Jeliv. Boil your grapes till very soft, in a double kettle, or, if you have not that, in a large earthen ikiu. covered tightly with a plate, set in a kettle or boiling water. hen soil, run through a sieve ; to the pulp thus ob tained, but a Dound of sugar, to a pound of pulp; stir well together; boil slow twenty minutes, taking care it does not burn. Dip out when a little cool, into small bowls, jars, or large tumniers. Cover with a piece of white paper dipped in brandy, and then paste newspaper tightly over the top. The brandied paper is to be laid on the top of the pre serve, to keep It rrom moulding, i should not be afraid to warrant you, that grapes preared in this way, would keep three years. Be sure and put it in small dishes, it keeps so much better. When wanted for use, remove the pasted paper, and if you find the other paper all covered with mold, don't be alarmed, it won't do any hurt; take it off care fully, and turn the grape out upon a plate, when you can cut it into any shape round, square, diamond, or any other way, as it will remain just as you cut it. keep in a dry, dark, cool place, IIorsEHOLD Hints. The best method of easing a cough is to resist it with all the force or will possible, until the ac cumulation of phlegm becomes greater; men mere issoineiuing louougu against and it comes up verv much easier ant with half the coughing. A great deal of hacking and hemming and coughing in invalids is purely nervous, or the re sult of mere habit, as is shown by the frequency with which it occurs while the patient is thinking about it, and its comparative rarity when he is so much engaged that there is no time to think, or when the attention is Impelled in an other direction. To make a good servant let the mis tress of the house take two pounds of the very best self-control, a pound and a half of patience, a pound and a half of justice, a pniinu or consideration, and a pound or discipline. Let this be sweet ened with charity, let this simmer well and let it be taken iu daily or (in ex treme cases) in hourly doses, and be kept always on hand. Then the domestic wheel will run quite smoothly. To Preserve Grapes. A lady sends the following: First pick off all un sound or unripe grapes, and lay the clusters in an empty room on papers until dry, Tor in all packages some will be crushed and damien others. Then an empty crate will do to iack them in. First a layer of grapes, then a thickness oi paper, so as to exclude the air and keep them separate, then graiies and then paper, and so until you have three or four layers no more than four. If the box is to hold more, put in a parti tion to supiHirt the others that are to be packed. We packed hundreds of pounds thus last year, and they kept perfectly until the middle of March, and, had the supply not been exhausted, they could have been kept much longer. To Keep orr tub Praft. When blinds and doors do not close snugly, llllt leava rraeLa tlirmicrh wlilil, ilpoOa enter, the simplest remedy recommended uy -ir. .-cnueise, ituuuing commis sioner in Dresden, Germany, is this: Place a strin of tuttt-r all alnno. th . - i j jambs, cover the edge of the blind or uuur wun cnaiK, anu snut it. tne putty will then fill all umvs whi.-h ,il.l i-i main open and be pressed wnere it Is i" neeoea, w nue tne excess is removed With a knife. The ehaltr mhKo.1 nn thA edges prevents the adhesion of the putty to the blind or door, which then can be opened without adhesion, and the putty is left in nlace. where It Imn ririea ami leaves a perfectly-fitting jamb. To Broil Chops. Trim and flatten the chops with a chODber. snrinkle salt and pepjier on both sides, dip them in melted butter, place them on a gridiron, and set on a sharp fire, turn over two or three times to broil properly, and when done; serve them around in a dish, one lapping over tne otner, etc., and serve with the gravy. It takes about twelve minutes to cook with a good fire. An other wayWhen trimmed and flat tened, dip them in beaten egg, roll them in bread-crumbs and broil, either as they are, or enveloped in buttered paper. T.KVOV PrfiTith T'rtrtTva- A....n.a . - . Kill ifucu , milk, teacupfulof bread-crumbs, rind of one lemon grated, yolk of fouregrg beaten, t&blesnnnn of whlto mm. n..!?. In a deep earthen dish, not too hard. un... -. . hi ..i .t t . . . "cu auuicicuuy uoue taice out or oven, have the white of the eggs beaten to a Stiff froth, toirether with a toa-onn At powdered sugar and the juice of the lemon. Replace the dish in the oven and let it remain till th ftwi-;n iB done. To be eaten cold. " COXESTOGA Pl'FTS? One nuirt At flour, one nnart of milt- ami thru Mix the milk gradually into the flour to uauc a Buiuutu uaiier; aiso tne yolks or the eggs: then add the wh itea hei tort stiff; bake in gem pans in a hot oven, "g me pans neaieu wnen you pour in the batter. A Linr anvst "In Huua .1...-- r . - .. " t a vi lieaches in plenty it is well worth "while to know that they will preserve much nicer and cleaner if, instead of paring With a knlfa. whieh rliaenlm-a tko . , .. ...... .in , luri lie dipped for an instant in hot water, and peeled in the same way as tomatoes." WaTEB Porvt. rraa-v ThMa mivj bn 1 two cups sugar, half cup butter, one cup cold water, three enps flour, one tea spoon cream tartar, half teaspoon soda. Spice to taste. racMta. . T . "Tlk atxWlt TOUT A Will, aw-aar m. -" - . i i t Amoriea. HhT. It nunilllg -, . areu't nothing to what you find In Africa," said a dohsiiui "Pid you ever go hunting in Africa . one of his listeners asked. "Why, of course." 'What kind of game did you get EleDhants. lions, tigers, aebras and other animals." . . , "Gracious! It must be exciting ! hunting lions." "Yes, rather., , "Awful savage, I guess," suggested another. . "Savage ! Tou bet : ny, mem is jist orful." V. . . .. t t .k.lta. acthev t:an tney lies any wan i.., - j sy l ,, , ...v.:.. In the "Lick ! A lion can nca au iu.mi 1 1 urt... t w na fleers tackle worm. . " -' , a lion one day, and he jist clawed one of 'em all to pieces qmoKiier n -i" "-,. lamb could shake his tail, ine toiiier tiger he skipped, you bet, up into a irrr. ii. .li.l.i'f aeem lianDV down there with Mr. Lion. But that liou got him, you bet." ft .. s "How did ne ao ii r go up n-i "Xo; he shook him down." "Shook him down! How, for good ness sake?" . W all, when lie sen mm hk" "f there he began to roar. Lord, how he did roar! 11 snooa me "j .. It shook the tree wnere m kl,lln arar and he clun!T Oil Sllll clung on, but lie couldn't stand it, bime by down he fell, and the lion ji"t eat him up." "Itttn Mr at nim Ultr tvrnhinir- then lanited the i ' His hearers thought that something or a roar, but no loiiuer unn . thev had listened to. Pan MET Xrws Jokes, The most gorgeously flounced dress w ill not com pensate for a large shoe run over at the heel. The schools commence next week, and the teachers have returned from their vacations so strong and healthy- looking as to inspire the average small bov with unspeakable emotion. When a dog barks at vou, go for Mm Follow him over the fence, chase him bevond hills, careen after him through swam dm. Give UD vour whole life to U-hase him. That is the only way to get the best or a cur; anu to gei me best of a cur Is greater than reaching heaven. If a hoy in contemplating a pile of attractive apples In rront ol a groccry tlnds that the owner is looking, he does not become discouraged and go home Hj goes on to another place, and keel iroiiig on until he finds an apple owner who is not looking. It is only by per severance that success in life is attained. What would be thought of this boy if at the first apple-stand he gave up the search, declaring that rate was against him, that there was no use at all in trying to get an apple, and moodily retire to his home; When we are prone to be discouraged by adverse cir cumstances let us remember the boy and the apple, and press forward. This is the way it occurs: "Yes, sir. said a gentlemanly looking man in Washington street, on Saturday, "the panic will have to come; no preventing it. You see that man just going away ? n ell, he nas a bill against me, and he says if 1 will pay him that he can pav someone else; or, in other words, that if each man will pay what he owes, the others can pay, and that thus under the rules of political economy, the thing will travel around in a circle. But he didn't calculate that the thing must have a bottom or the circle will break You see I owe him, but the trouble is that nobody owes me. and that breaks the circle, and the broken circle makes a -tunic 1 am the starter." And he took a peanut and departed. TheXcw Orleans Times intemiieratelv observes that whi-ky is always kicking up a rumpus somewhere. Sometimes it nestles iu the hat of a mau as a jolly brick, sometimes In the boots or a man as a hissing serpent, and anon it wraps the pavement around the weary traveller, and induces him to believe the flags a patchwork quilt, a stone sill a bolster, the street lamp a bedpost, and the gutter a babbling brook. It is worse than Banquo's ghot, yet unlike that classic brook, it will "'down'' at any man's bidding. She stepped Into the car radiant with youth, and looking cool and bright in her flower-trimmed hat and her speck less suit of linen. Four voung men immediately offered her their seats; she accepted oiie with an entrancing smile and instantly gave it to a poor, wan. little old woman, who hail been stand ing ror ten blocks. Vt hereupon the young men did not know whether to get np again or not, and tried their est not to look foolish. People who are afflicted with mos quitoes will he pleased to know that the buzzing wherewith the diligent in sect enlivens tne night is the way In which he ells his mate. He does not make this noi-e in sheer malice, hut he sings to bis sweetheart, and these curi ous creatures liste.i to each other with their feelers. The aiite.ui.-e vibrate to different notes, ard so the delicate crea tures commune with each other in the darkness. MadaMk's Feet. Madame X. has charming features, charming arms, charming hands but she has monstrous feet. Just recovering from a long ill ness, she said recently to one of her friends, "I am still very feeble, but 1 begin to be able to put one foot before the other." "And that is not saying a little," murmured the excellent friend. "Pear! Ih you rail those aclies dear at that price, when I have sat on the fence twenty-five hours a day with a double-barreled shot-gun to keep the boys out f Git up, Billy !" And the old farmer drove moodily off. Query Pid history ever produce a rasher man than Friar Bacon ? As Professor Smith delivered it in his scientific lecture it was as follows: "Filtration is sometimes axiUtixl hv th use of albumen." After filtration through tne mucmie nead or the compositor it appeared thns: "Flirtation is some times arrested by the use of aldermen !" "Well, Pat," asked the doctor, "how do rnll feel tnlui. f "n.1, rl.h..- r j - - - j . vx.ta, uiu uiri, a enjoy very poor health entirely. The rheumatics la vertr Hiatroaain "i.t.lu.la, whin I go toslape I lay awake all night, and me toes is swilled as big as a goose hen's egg, so whin I standup 1 fall down immediately." Whex a Marquette woman gets a spite at a neighbor she drops a mourning en velope into the Post-Offlce, addressed to her. and the.i ehnetrlja at th thn,..h r ..... . . . ..... ..i.riiii. t i how that womaa will faint away at the igm oi me envelope. A lazy chap was laying in Nil one morning, wiien a man, stepping in, said, "Joe. breakfast U come," exclaimed Joe with a look of .)...: . . . . . . .. .. urimncr. -A m not airaiu oi it." Ax aivoramodating man Buggs "Hello. Trine movlnir?" Trin"V2 ' Buggs "What tort" Tripe "Weil, times are a little hard, and I am moving to please my landlady." Wht is a lawyer like a restless man in bed t Because ha rt rat 1 Iaa mi ! I a one and then on the other. What hAmmMitr Ks nim m. fall to the ground and become terrapins. JH VRlT r.lis aMrttr koaa1 lu.t. at , inu i Cai n .- than one? In a barrel. Whex does a chair dislike you "When it can't bear you. Aleaaval Prl-n.-1- j The capital which, is "wereTven of thecapi..! --' pfovedii the production of wine in the w& atrWhV the &TfiJ countries, it is qnite impossible to con- 1874 the duties P'u. ""VLi IesforthevanV-Tn-'0"?8 drink were : For foreign spinus S&-t0 ; foreign wine, V&j hrt make spirits. and for malt To be converted into beer, i.,. W If to these varioussutns there be added the furtheramonnt which represents the brewers' license, "'', "1 the hop dutv, and the duty on sugar consumed in brewing.it at once appears that at the present time the public revenue derives yearly a clear i. .50,000. 000 sterling from direct taxe levied on alcoholic drink ; and it will be further observed that of this great sum very nearly two-thirds relate to the con; centrated form in which the powerful agent is procured bv the employment of the still that is, by the application of science and art to strengthen the spirit lieyond the point to wticu ii cu possiblv be raised by natural fermenta tion: and very nearly one-half refers to the cheaper form ot tuis cunreu.raicu product which is prepared in the home manufacture, and which therefore, it is to be presumed, expresses approxi mately the consumption of the less naithtr nnrtinn of the community. The exact number of the millions of pounds sterling that are swaiiowea in uie iorni of strong drink in our own islands alone can scarcely oe asrertaineu on account of the diversity of form in which the nroduct is Dresented for con sumption, and on account of the com plex relations which connect duty and nnantitv in the different forms. The amount can only be guessed at under the guidance of such ngnres as nave been named. If. however, one penny in the pound upon taxable incomes be taken to represent, as it is stated it will shortly do, a sum of i.'2.0H0,0u0, then the jC .10,000,0.10 paid yearly to the revenue by alcohol is tantamount to an income tax of fifteen pence in the pound upon such incomes, and to an assessi ment of 31 a year upon an individual inennin of iiTiilo ner aiiauni. The fact which is involved in the figures of these several statements would assuredly be a very surprising one, even if the large sum 6f money were expended in an article of unproductive bnt harmless luxury. As Ur. l.icuarason suggesieu in his lectures, a very strong impression wonld be made unon the public mind if, after some long period in which the boilers of steam engines nau been iea with a mixture of spirit and water, it was suddenly discovered that the engines would work quite as well with the water, without the spirit, and that the millions of pounds that bad been devoted to the production of the spirit had all been so much unnecessary waste. Bnt the argument goes very mnch beyond this in the case of "the millions of engines called men." if it can be shown that there is hurtful as well as wasteful expenditure, and that in a very large proportion of instances the engines would have worked even better without the costly addition of the spirit. In these days of the scientific applicationsof the doctrines of economy it certainly must remain a matter of some surprise to thoughtful men that in a land of advanced cultivation and intelligence so many millions of good money are continuously applied to the production of a commodity which, in the existing habits of society, may reasonably be held to be pernicious alike to the pockets, to the health, and to the morals of the community. It unfortunately happens that the ques tion of the influence of alcohol is a difiicnlt one to deal with on account of the subtle effects and the complicated instrumentalities which have to be en countered and unraveled at every turn ; bnt it is for that very reason a question that imperatively demands a more searching inquiry and a more concen trated attention than it has yet received at the hands of the general community. Edinburgh V.Vreir. Ha at all Amiable. The clam, says a writer, lias a foot which he protrudes ami uses like a spade to shovel up the sand when he would retire out of sight, and beneath the sand he lives in jieace, coming out only at night to bask in the moonlight, to behold the wonders of the sea and gaze at the starry sky spread out above him in all its splendor. Walking on the shore on a bright moonlight night one may see thousands of these beautiful and highly organized beings forming them selves into communities and hopping gayly about, emitting their peculiar cry, which is not unlike that of the katydid. Their locomotion is performed by oien ing and shutting their shells with great rapidity ami force, some of the larger ones being able to jump several inches at a time in this way. Men who have closely observed their habits for years say that at times they are not so amiable as might be supposed by the superficial observer,and that they engage in terrific combats, when the whole shore will re sound with their savage growls and maddened yells as they rush upon each other and endeavor, by inserting the edge of their shells into each other, to pry them ojten. The dying cries of the victims may be heard even above the noise of the surf. Ad vlee Uiri,. Somebody give the following advice to girls. It is worth volumes of fiction and seutimentalism : Men who are worth having want women for wives. A bundle of gew-gaws hounded with a string of flaps and quavers, sprinkled with cologne and set in a carmine sau cer this Is no help for man who ex pects to raise a family of bovs on bread and meat. The piano and iace fabrics are good in their places, and so are the frills and tinsels; but you cannot make a dinner out of the former, nor a bed blanket of the latter; and awful as sucb an idea may seem to you, both the din ner and the bed-blankets are necessary to domestic happiness. Life has its re alities as well as fancies, but yon make it all decoration, remembering the tas sels and curtains, but forgetting the lied stead. Suppose a man of good sense and good prospects to be looking for a w ife, what chance would you have to be chosen ? Yon may catch him, or you may trip him, but how much better to make it an object for him to catch you. Keuder yourself worth catching, and you will not need a shrewd mother to help you find a market. aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa E- r. Kasktl'i Bitter WlweaHraa. E. F. Knnkel's eeletiraKsl Riitav w; - tf Iron will effeetuallv rnra Mmni.;.i jaundice, dyspepsia, chronic or nervous de- um.j, curumc aiarrnoea, aisease oi tne kid neys, sod all diseases arising from a disor- J I . i - uercu urer, bio mac a or intestines, sucn as constipation, flatulence, inward piles, full ness of blood to the h. ad, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust for food, fullne s of weirht in the atnmu-K eructations, sinking or fluttering at the pit a . i-. t - - . . . ui us nounco, swimming or me nead, hur ried or aitficult breathing, fluttering at the hsrt, choking or sutTueatiog sensations when in a lying posture, dimness of vision, dots or webs before the sight, dull pain in the head, deficiency of perspiration, yel lowness of the skin and eyes, psin in the side. back. head, chrat limh t- .... flushes of heat, burning in the flesh; eon- " agiuiugs oi evu. ana great depres sion of snirits. I'rif. $1 rt K..t. D. ware of counterfeits. Do not let your drug gist palm off some other preparation of iron he may say is ss good, but ask for Knnkel's Bitter n me of Iron. Take no other. Knn kel's Bitter Wine of Iron is not sold in bulk only in Si bottles. E. V k.,.b.i d prietor. No. 209 North Ninth 8U Phili., Pa. wkers. "tuW ad dealers every- Taiwqbm Rm . new lOU au eompltte, in two hour. No fe lilt head PtSSea, SmL Pi- an. StAm..k w moved by Dm. KrsxiL, 259 Bourn Nistb Ui...r. autics iree. Lome, see over 1,000 specimens and be convinced. He never IBM lab 2'l,llO L li-r.3 uaG OeQ a. t.idcd during the past five year, N AHKSIri, the happiest discover tlifine ever made. No disease ? ,i re painful and vexatious than Pa-7 .i.d lotions, ointments and quack tm jrr.- a'ways make them worse. AxT" KKSI-S is an infallible, painless, tintnu. . rmanent cure, acts as a bougee pof i.-e and medicine. The relief frJJJJ I ;vio i" iiiihii. .uic certAiii A J Doctors recommend it. Prit, s7 t l. M.il n rMt.in .a P. Xenstirdter St Co., 4 Walker T New York. .?S SCIEXTiriC DISCOVERY. For IS 1 win send directions how to wa. tlirht wlthotit lire: safe, slmpln an4 costs J year to lights room. By mall to H. DaU.75 BoxflTKewiork. SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! AD sCrb. Btrmr Mora tad sad Wattmt . mud-band. Sacnmly packfd tor atupMn " TbtSsTlia M fa BOCHB A3IB OrriCi KCMTrrM as Ku. T!ta largaat and beat aannJ hoc. araT. acoad-naad la tne Citj. LEWIS Jt Bno, a fl. ln. lOtk aaa 107 BlMlATt, rUa. -4 BS w - 5 mm ccrr ea025 S 3 O P P S 2 S 0 0 0 m 7) X r r o o a a o CB o 3 m M to Q BBt C w fw 3 m -3 (A H a PI Z on rm SS "0 3 a w LI LI 55 i z o H M eg Ai H X ww S & 0 H c to at HORSEMEN ! OWNERS OF STOCK! Sate Tour Horses and Cattlel CUM THEM Or DISEASE AND UD THIlf IM A HIALTHT CONDITIOI IT 6ITIN9 THEM M. 8. ROBERTS' CELEBRATED HORSE POWDERS, 15 TSE OTEE FORTY YEARS! tun MM rowDiu COXTAillie to::::, laxative axd pubti- H'2 F2CFZ27IZ2 oaiiaiD, muif haziss tub isi EST CONDITION MXDICOl IN THS WORLD. They are made af fare af stsrialOBlj, si tablatpooaful goinf sa far ss see fsaaa ordinary tattle powders. Bay en package and after asing yen will never get dona praisiag thsav Far sals by all storekeepers. USX M. B. ROBERTS' Vegetable Embrocation rOK ALL EXTERNAL DISKA3M BiTism MAN OR. BEAST. JasHT BROOMS! BROOMS! JOBS i. EE11TR A CO., 253 Washington 8t New Tort Prinriral Drpot tn aw Vrk tot th tort IM Manalactaraa ia th CaUad Stalaa, Brooms from $3.00 per doici and apward. Th kwrt prices aad graataat lariat; to to anvwhera. Alan aa aattn sew stark af WOOD and WIW WARS, mch aa Paila, Tuba, Baakrta, Mala Tana Oordaea. Wlcka, Atnntlxc with a Inll Una at Af Briur Wood aad CUj Vipaa, tmarj goapa. Taakaa ikms, Catlarjp, Ac. Satw from $li to $ p al A tall Una of the bast quality of T1NWARI P. S. Wa aall oar saada at prkaa that do net "V ny dmmmlna; aa tha road. OrrWa by atail aia " xn aroawt attaatioa. satahlahad into. FREDERICK SPIECKER, wiouiim tutn n Leaf Tobacco, Cigars, Pip Smoking and Chewing Tobacco, 0F THE BEST BRA5D8- Ka 152 PAI220U:TT AV2? PHTTxATJELPHIA. OnW Aswai far U. 8. TspOt Ma.li ' Cigar Sura saa e saaaCta. $5SS20S vt say si worn. Ttm naa Brutes Co., Patti. t FRST ORAXD BXPO81TI0X of TJ5 Ismtbtsuj. lsarrrars, pitwbnrah. rt--'T't I--., rloaaa Nut. . Addraaa, A. J. sU.1. Pl i r2 P !' 1 ft 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers