HATraTBJ. A reset face foflowe tarn where'er I go, And will not be pot by A face with heavenly beauty ao aglow, I cannot wonder why ' KotI, my heart, not I! It saakea for ana the nearieat bnrdana light, Wbea griefs beeet my breast. It eomee to me and will not take ita flight, -Bat eosthee me into rest. This vision bright and blest, It goes with me through all the thorny way -Wherein my footsteps wend, It brings me sunlight in the darkest days. And will onto the end Be an ali-helpfal friend. - i It haante me in the city's careless crowd ; With peace ita eyes are rife ; It calla to me above the tarn alt load Above the petty strife Of this poor little life. Its white bands beckon me by night and day. Fain would I follow on ; But wedded is my soul to its dull clay. And I am weak and worn A bruised reed forlorn. Im arf stall read Aerldeata. The assertion has a strange, at first, indeed, almost a bar-.li ami brutal sound, and yet It U unquestionably true, that, ho far a the general welfare, the com mon eood of mankind in concerned, few lives are no profitably expended as those tit the unfortunate victims of railroad accidents. This, it is true, may not be tuiying much; for it is a melancholy fact that there are few thing of which either nature or man is, as a rule, more lavish than human life; provided always that the method!) used in extinguishing it are customary and not unduly ontru sive on the sirlit and nerves. As i necessary consequence of this wasteful ness, it follows also that the results which flow from the extinguishment of the individual hie are, as a rule, pitiably small. Any ersou curious to satisfy himself as to the truth of either or both of these' proKfc-itions, can do so easily enough by visiting those frequent haunts in which poverty and typhoid lurk in company; or yet more easily by a' careful study of the weekly hills of mortal ity as they are issued by the autho rities ol any great city, luueeu, com pared with the massive battalions daily sacrificed in the perpetual conflict which mankind set-ins forever doomed to wage airainst intemperance, bad se weraire, and worse ventilation, the victims of regular warfare by tea and land count as but Hingle spies, lhe worst ol it is, too, that if the blood of the martyrs is in these cases at all the seexl of the church, it is a iced terribly slow of germination, Kach step in the slow progress is a hu man Oolgotli.t.' It is far otherwise with the victims of railroad disasters; they, at least, do not lose their lives without great and immediate compensating bene fits to mankind. Alter each new rail road "horror," as it is calletl, the whole world travels with an appreciably in creased degree of safety. The causes which led to it are auxiouslv investi gated by ingenious men, new appliances are invented, new precautions are iiu- losed, a greater and more watchttil care is inculcated. And hence it has resulted that each year, and in obvious conse-qin;in-e of each fresh ottasuTophe, travel by rail h:ia liecoine safer and safer, until - it lias been said, and with no inconsider able degree ot truth too, that the very safest place into which a man can put himself is the inside of a first-class rail road carriage on a train in full motion. . The study of railroad horrors is, Uicre- fore, the furthest jtossible from leing a useless one, and a record of tlieni is hardly less instructive than interesting. If carried too far it is apt, as a matter lor light reading,to become somewhat mono tonous; though, about railroad accidents as aliout everything else, there is none the less an almost endless variety, fc-ven in the. forms of sudduu Ucalli on the rail nature seems to take a grim delight in an infinitude of surprises. iaperUaons Wanes-,. Mrt Livermore, in her lecture, says "Woman for ages past lias only been al lowed to sutler, and has not been able to come up and prove what she was able to do. I'p to the lsth century, and even in the l!'th century, she has been called by what was considered good authority "a natural invalid." Colleges are opening for her for joint education with the young men, and institutions devoted to her sole use. She is finding her way into many kinds of employ ment. The generally accepted theory ot woman's fife was that God has made her lncause man needed her, and it was this feeling that needed to lie rooted out. ihe would not depreciate mar riage, but she did not want girls to think that wifehood and motherhood were their only ends in life. To simply train women lor domestics would be a great mistake, for such training would not ref ult in producing goo. I domestics even. As a rule, 105 boys were born to every 100 girls, but when the sexes ar rive at a marriageable age the propor tion is reversed, and the difference largely increased." War and dissipation cuts off the men. I'p to 100 years ago more than d.i,inx million men had per ished on the battle field. In the marriages in the United States were but 7S out of each 100 marriageable women and the tlisiiroitortion is now much greater. In Massachusetts to-day there are 70,000 marriageable woiueu who re main single, 'lhe Dugbcarof being an "old maid" or the evil eflect of the present system of educating girls led many of them to accept oners ot mar riage which they ought to reject. In olden times the "suiertliious women" were content because they knew no lietter, but this was not their feeling now. I lie tendency of the time is more and more toward single women, and they can le happy and self-supporting without marriage. The day which sees women as careful to choose virtuous husbands as men have been in the past to select virtuous wives will mark the greatest social revolution of t he age. In regard to the question what to do with the superfluous women, she said that in some of the Western States the men greatly exceeded the women in num bers, and judicious immigration might lie advisable, but to cease, demanding that woman should only he trained for marriage was the only proper proceed ing. The Imperial Violet. It was on leaving France for Elba that he said, "I shall return with the violets," and this little sentence a niereiiroN jrfr, as it would seem was sullicieiit lor his friends and svm- atbizers. Violet rilittons and violet rings were worn publicly bv the Bona- artists as a arly distinction, while .Napoleon himself was spoken of and toasted as C'uporal or iii Ui VMtUe. "Aimet-Ktu la riolclte t" was the ques tion by which a sympathizer might be knowu. A simple reply In the attiruia- tive indicated that the responder was ignorant ot the schemes for the restora tion, while the answer, "h lien! elle rrrirndra au printmii,'" was the sign of a conlederate. A lavorlte picture repre sented a small group of violets so ar ranged that in their outlines the profiles of Napoleon, Marie Louise, and the King of Koine could he traced by the initiated, or the profile of Aapoleon alone was exhibited, with the motto, II reriendra m pnitttmy. Byron, iu his poem, "Napoleon's Farewell to France," has the following allusion to the violet : "Firman to lb, France ! tnrt s-hrn tfherrv nllies, Otire more In thy ree-totte, remember me thro ; The violet still if row in the de4b of thy valley. Though eUtered, thy lean will unfold a atfain Such being the significance attached to this little flower, we may imagine how it increased in favor when Napo leon, having escaped from Elba, entered the Tuileries on the 20th of March, 1315, when the violets had indeed returned, and were worn on all sides by his re joicing friends. Xaturally enough, the violet thenceforth continued tlie Napo leonic flower; and during the Bourbon ascendency it was dangerous to wear one in public, its old signtncmnee re maining in foil force. When Bonaparte was finally conveyed to Sc. Helena, we are told that be gave a violet to an English naval otneer wno accompanied him an intimation, it (Bay be. of his bope (which was never realises!) of a speedy return. The revival, in greater force than ever, In connection with the alte Emperor as manifested at bis funeral, and at the mausoleum atunisei burst, which is sometimes almost bid den by violets is, no doubt, chiefly due to tradition, its popularity, nowever, was probably enhanced by an Incident which happened at the time of the late Emperor's escape from the Fortress of Ham. A packet or violet plants nanng arrived by diligence, the keeper was directed by Dr. Conneau to plant them in pots, and while bis attention was thus occupied, the escape was effected. It is stated that the annual sale of vio lets in Paris exceeds 6,000,000 bunches, realizing a sum of more than 677,000 francs. Argoty. HearlyBr In a larire majority of cases, says the Jimrmal of Health, it will be found that the best and healthiest meal ot me aay should be eaten in the morning. - If the closing repast of the day has not been eaten too late, or has not been excessive in quantity or Indigestible in quality, the stomach will be rested and active in the morning after the individual has enjoyed a cool bath. The stomach will then respond quickly with the necessary gastric juice for the solution of food, and. if a fair amount of exercise is taken during the day, a large mass of lood will be assimulated ana converted into blood and tissue. With a good, substantial breakfast, no great amount of food will be required during the re mainder of the day. One further meal will be ample, aud that might better be taken at from two to three o'clock in the afternoon than at any other period, if business engagements only permuted it. The breakfast may be made from any kind of wholesome food, and the fewer kinds the better. The dinner should be light and readily digested, if sound sleep is desired, aud strong appe tite and perfect powers ol digestion next day. If hunger comes, a bowl of sweet milk and well-cooked mush of Indian meal, or other unbolted grain, will allay it, and it will digest quickly. One "square meal" In every twenty-four hours is at! tnat can De lateen care oi ny many weak stomachs, aud more than this is an excess, aud induces headache, nausea and distress. If dinners were abandoned, especially late and heavy dinners, aivriads of dyspeptics would be cured. But under the exigences of city life, a late dinner cannot be well avoided. This need not lie the tremen dous meal it is customary to make it, if the breakfast b substantial and nutri tious, and not a thing of slops and bis cuits, as it too olten is. Jasaartailea- latseeta. New Zealand has apiiealed to England for an imiortatinn of bumble-bees. It seems that red-clover grown in that couutry fails to produce seed, be cause there are no insects native to the island that act as fertilizers in carrying the itollen from flower to flower. The honey in the nectory of the red clover cannot be reached by the proboscis of many insects, but the bumble-bee is ame to dip down and drain the lowest.de iosit, hence its services as "marriage priest" to this particular flower are in great request, ' It was suggested by the gentleman applying to the London Ento mological Society lor a supply oi tnese needful insects, that they might be se cured when in a dormant state and con veyed to New Zealand in that condition packed in ice. Inquiry has also been made by another resident of New Zea land as to the possibility of importing a lot of Chrympa. As yet no indigenous Ajhride, or plant-lice, have been ob served on the island, but , imported species are making a good deal of de vastation.., lhe larvie ot tne vnrysojiat, or luce-wing flies, feed on plant-lice, destroying immense numliers, therefore they 'are the valued friends -of the gardener, who often cherishes them as one does a cat for the extermination of mice. . . ; Debt. There is no worse demoralizer of char acter. The sad record? of defaulting. embezzling aud dishonest failures which, we meet with so constantly in the daily press, are often, indeed most frequently, the results of Uie-deinoxaliza-tiou of debt, and consequent desperate e Hurts at extrication. 1 be little- debt. which at first was small as a grain of mustard need, like the rolling snow-ball, has gathered weight and 'multiplied itself a thousand-fold. And still it grows, and like the fabulous hydra which Hercules was sent to kill, you no sooner strike off one head than two shoot up in its place. The struggle is .severe, but in the end decisive; either confession is made oi a hopeless bank ruptcy which might and should have been avoided, or Integrity is sacrificed to the temptation of the moment. Debt ruins as many households and destroys as many fine characters as rum; it is the devil's mortgage on the soul, and he is always ready to foreclose. Reman liltrhea Flesislls. - The museum at Geneva, Switzerland, has recently obtained for its cabinets a set of Roman kitchen utensils, found in a field near Martigny, which were pro bably buried by their owners on ac count or some sudden alarm. Inese consist of thirty articles, mostly in bronze, and some of them elaborately worked, reminding one of the beautiful sliape and ornamentation of Pompeian vessels. The shovel and potbanger do not differ much from modern utensils of the same sort, and there is an earthen mould shaed like a shell, several plates in various sizes, a saucepan with the bottom worn away, a large boiler, a funnel, two ladles, a stewpan, and vases or ewers with two handles, one of which bears a representation of two gladiators, and was apparently awarded as a prize. There are also two silver ornaments, evidently of later: date, and believed by Dr. (iosse, the curator, to have been used in Christian worship. lie attributes the articles to the third century, . TheSpaalsh Peetaaat. Writing of tillers of the soil in Spain a correspondent says : Their life is of the roughest; there may or may not be a "settle in the cot, but, anyhow, there is chopped straw and a rug, or a bundle of dried rosemary from the mountain a plant so common here that is is inva riably put in bundles and used to light the fires of the engines. The peasant lives on bread and fruit and celery stews, flavored with garlic or saffron. Prices are low ; the war has raised his wages, aud often, wound around bis waist, he carries a purse full of gold onztit or ounces. To save is the Man- c hegan's delight. Frugal, industrious, honest, his pride is to put by money, aud oftimes he hides itbricks it up in the walls of his house. His house is al ways at your service; for, although un educated and faring hardly, he is a gentleman. Tour English peasant is rough, but has a good bed ; your Spanish peasant is a gentleman, but often has no bed at all. The Waif the Water!. The rapid growth and extraordinary voraciiy of the pickerel are well shown by lr.Sturtevant in the report of ' the Massachusetts Inland fisheries Com missioners. The doctor investigated their powers of eating in the following manner: He put two young pickerel, five inches long. In a trough with a great quantity of little minnows, about one Inch In length: and these two pick erel ate 123 minnows the first day, 133 the second and 150 the third, and they increased one Inch in forty -eight hours! They were mere machines for the as similation of other organisms, and may truly be termed the wolves of the waters. ; ' U t STBiWBXRKJza ec Wistx. A corres pondent of the PlamfikmKm desires to know the best mode of protecting strawberry vines in ' winter. In a climate like ours, where the soil is not always covered with snow in winter, some protection is requisite. ; ai we could be sure of snow on the ground from December to April we could get on well without any .protection. It may not be the actual severity ot tne cold that destroys the vines, so much as the frequent and repeated freeiing and thawing to which they are liable, if not ceveredup. It matters little in our ob servation and experience, what the material is that is used as a mulching provided it is non-conducting. Strawy manure or old hay would be as good as anything, provided we could be snre that they would not fill the ground with the seeds that will spring up into vile weeds. : Perhaps "alt hay or com mon meadow or swale bay might be free from this objection, and they ' may be used to advantage.. But we prefer the use of leaves from the forest, and pine needles that can be easily gathered in sufficient quantities, or even pine boughs, to the use of any common coarse manures. They are usually cleaner, and make less work in weed ing. Spent tan will do very well, chopped straw, or even corn-stalks. When strawberries are cultivated on the annual system the use of the hay is not so objectionable, and we notice the market gardeners, win almost invaria bly cultivate on this system, use hay, which they rake off towards spring, and pile up for use again in the fall. Of leaves, pine needles, as they are called, are better than oak. as they lie better without blowing off. Two or three inches is covering boughs enough especially if thev are held down by a few pine boughs. Cover the beds be fore the ground freeze very bard, and before the first heavy fall of snow. Leaves settle down among the .plants, and may then be left.' Some cover, a foot deep or more with oak, maple or other similar leaves, and throw over them a few boards to bold them , in place. Matnachutettt Ploughman. . . R.vrxo Seed Corn. One of the great difficulties experienced in the cultiva tion of corn is the failure to get a good stand. In nine cases out of ten this arises from injury to the seed while hardening; for corn thoroughly ripe and dry at the time cold weather sets in will remain intact and germinate as promptly at planting as any other or dinary grain. Our plan, says the West em Farm Journal, . lias been in . fields thoroughly ripe, when husked, to have a man at the wagon when unloading to throw out such ears as appear all right. These should be thrown into narrow cribs, well protected from the weather, and in an airy situation .where they may have the full benefit of the sun aud wind. As soon as convenient the corn should be sorted, saving only such as is perfect in every respect, and put where it will become thorough lydry before hard weather comes. If corn is damp on the cob' freezing and thawing wilt surely injure the chit or germ. ' Iu this case we have found it of great benefit to smoke it lightly, say for one day, thus assisting in dry ing. This has been practiced by the Indians from time immemorial, and when they do not smoke it they bury it during th winter ia some, dry , spot, thus securing an even temperature and uniform moistnre. Whatever plan is pursued for saving peed corn it must not be placed la compact, masses, etse injury is liable to follow. Once dry and kept so it is secure. Now, if none but the ears are saved for planting, you will have no difficulty in its germina ting, and as like produces like, in creased yield must follow selection from the best just as surely as it does iu the animal kingdom. , It will pay. . A Lesson from Cabbage. Every one knows that cabbages will not grow fast or head out well unless they are hoed very often. Most have also learned that this crop does the best if hoed very early in the morning, while the dew is on the ground. Hoeing later in the day, when the dew has evaporated will not have the same effect. The reasons appear to be these: The . dew being covered with the soil, is retained, and . helps keep the earth moist. It contains a large amount of oxygen, which it took Iroin the air. , inese act to decompose the soil, and to hasten the growth of plants, it also absorbs a large quantity of ammonia which li taken directly up by the plants. . Now the same causes ought to produce the same enect on other plants, and it has been found by observing farmers that they do. Market gardeners prefer to have potatoes hoed either when the soil is wet with dew or after a slight rain. - Observations made by one of the best farmers or isconsin extending through many years, con vinced him that there was great advan tage in plowing bind while it was wet with dew. Especially was :tnis the ease when clover or grass was plowed under. It was found that the grass and sod rotted much sooner, and that the succeeding crops were larger and of better quality, i, ; ,:;.-f now to Bi'RT Boots. Says a con temporary : There is one way of bury ing roots so that the frost will not get at tliem, and that is the placing of lay ers of straw between the layers orearth with which thev are ' covered. It is necessary to be more careful with pota toes than with ether roots, as they will not stand the slightest frost without being iujured. Potatoes should De laid in compact heaps and covered carefully with straw. Over the straw put about eight inches of earth. ' Frost will go througo almost any thickness of earth alone, put will not penetrate iar Deiow the nonconducting straw. The earth should not be packed any harder than will suffice to keep it In place. By using straw and earth combined, time is saved in uncovering when the roots are wanted to be got at. - If the snow is blown from the heaps during the winter and the cold is very intense, it will be well to cover them with a coating of coarse manure. . FauncRS akd Rhxc matism, Why are farmers so liable to rheumatism J Answer : Because they wear wet cloth ing, heat and suddenly chill the body, over-eat after hare work, -and because they do not keep the skin in a vigorous, clean, healthy condition. If farmers would avoid suddenly cooling the body after great exertion, if they would be careful not to go with wet clothing and wet feet, and it tney would not over eat when in an exhausted condition and bathe daily, using much- frrctlon; tney would have less rheumatism. .The same rules applies to ether than farmers. lhe Turkish oath is the best remedy for rheumatism. Acieace of Health. ' 5 "Bt'LES fob Grading: Oats. The di rectors of the Detroit Board of Trade have adopted the following; new rules for grading oats : 1. White oats, which include all white oat, whether State or Western, that come up to the standard of mer chantable oats. . 2. Mixed oats without regard to State. 3. No. 2, which includes all good. clean oats below the standard of white and mixed. 4. Kejected, to which class are con signed all musty oats, or those not properly screened. Surs from the kitchen can' be run up on a heap of dirt, which may be oc casionally shoveled over and changed after it has absorbed -a good deal of filth. It is then well worth removing as a fertilizer. It is better than to let them ran under ground into s pit, where the odors generally Hud some way of escape, often into we. kitchen. on account of some defect or stoppage of the pipes. ' i ; - The woman lives In Massachusetts who can be carried over a revolving shaft 600 times, dropped into a race, pulled out and go home and have sup per at the usual hour. AGEICCLTTJEAL. 4 f r - 3 T - wt'iurmc. t . . t . t . , Modern Su$penno Bridge. . At Kiev, one of the most arte rent towns in European Kuaaia, and for centu ries the recognised capital of the whole empire, is one of the most grace ful and solid bridges ever erected. The roadwav ia perfect! V level, being sus pended from catenary chains ef great Btreagtn- wnten nans; . oeiween . ui oiere. of which latter there are five. Although the dimensions of these spans have been tar exceeded in many bridges in the country, it will be admitted that the architect of the Kiev bridge has united, to a form of construction ex ceedingly difficult to treat with any artistic enect, a picturesque sua iui notuns- Armeaxance. Although we are accustomed to con sider the suspension bridge as one of the triumphs of modern engineering skill, it is really one of the oldest forms of bridge construction in existence. In the year A. D. 65, Ming. the. Emperor of China, built one in the province of Ynn-an ; it was 3u0 feet long, and the road bed was laid directly on chains suspended across the river and drawn com parati veJ r tant. in the time . of the Incas of Peru, suspension bridges atiiMw the defiles of the Andes were made of ropes of the bark of trees ; a roadway was in some places construc ted, and in others a basket waa drawn to and fro. The latter plan is in use in that conn try in this day. - The iron suspension bridge was not brought into use till the year isi,ine nrm Deingiue bridge at Berwick-on-Tweed. England. The roadway waa bung to 13 cables, and the span was 449 feet, a consider able distance for a first attempt. Tel ford's bridge over the Menai Strait has a span 580 feet. The Conway bridge hv the name enanneer. 327 feet, and Tiemey Clark's bridge over theThames at Hammersmith, London, 422 feet, were considered marvels of engineering in their day : but the wire bridge at Fribourg, Switzerland, with a span 870 feet, ecli psed all previous achievements. But of late years,' sua pension bridges have been . numerously cousiructeu, and we have ceased to marvel at the dimensions they assume. The Cincin nati bridge has a clear span of 1.057 feet; and the most remarkable of all the suspension bridges vet designed. the New York and Brooklyn, is to have a span, of 1.5U5. feet, the ,whole bridge, being 3,475 feet long, . - It mast be considered that the bridges of the future, for long spans, will be constructed on the suspension plan. The great superiority of the iron and steel of the present day, and the improved facilities for turning out large masses of these metals, make it impossible to limit the capaoiuty oi bridge constructor to- defy the diffi enltiea which Nature has placed in their way ; and -every vear shows us fresh achievements in the art of engi neering the way over crevasse, sanons, and defiles. " Wood-ruin tor Paver-Haling. The Berne de Vkim-ie describes the process now generally preferred by the t rench manufacturers of pulp from wood. Soft deal or pine is BAwn up into pieces six to twelve inches long and half an inch thick, and these should be all of the same Bire, 'but.- the -smaller they ore, the more' rapid, of course, is the operation. The pieces, of wood are placed in a cylindrical boiler, which turns upon its horizontal axis during the maceration. . - In another boiler, close at band, is prepared a solution of caustic soda, of about the strength of twenty degrees Banme, and this solution is introduced through a tube into the first boiler, which is presently closed hermetically, and the soda forced into the pores of the wood by means of a pump. A pressure of some fifty pounds on the square inch is sufficient when the wood is not more than half an inch thick, and the iniection ia completed in about half an hour; on this being accom- pbshed, the superabundant solution is at once pumped back into Die second hnilr. for the next operation. When this excess of solution has been pnmped off from the wood, steam is let in-between the double sides of the first boiler, and the wood thns heated to about 310 to 370 degrees, t an: The wood is now washed in the or dinary way, until the water runs off perfectly limpid ; and half the stuff may tnen oe converxea mio puip enucr before or after the operation of bleach. ing, according to the qnality or color of the paper which is to oe maue irom it. ' - - , HagmeUc Flmaomeua. It appears from the: scientific report of the Aus-tro-llungarian expedition to the North 1'ole recently, that magnetic disturb ances are closely conuected with the aurora that, while in temiierate tones they are the exception, they form the rule iu arc uc regions; at leant, mc iu atrumenta are in almost constant ac tion, this being the case for the incli nation, declination, and intensity nee dles. The niairnetic disturbances in the region visited are represented as of extraordinary frequence and magni tude. They , were closely connected with the aurora borealis, the disturb ances being the greater, the quicker aud the more convulsive the motion of tlie rays of the aurora, and the more intense the prismatic colors. Quiet and regular arcs, without motion of light or radiation, exercised almost no influence upon the needles. With all disturbances, the declination needle is reported to have moved toward the feast, and me Horizontal intensity ue creascd, while the inclination increased. . Adaptation of the Structure of Animals to their'Seeds. The expansion of the body in animals, as a support while moving through theair.isan adaptation fouod in various classes. The Hying squirrels and pterosaurs are well known examples among mammalia. The lizards of the genus Draco repre sent it anion ir reptiles.- The batrach- ians posses a modified representative in Wallace' Kbaoopfaorus, where the webs of the' toes are ' so dilated as to resemble a parachute. , Mr. Cambridge descrilies a spider from Australia which is furnished with a parachute. This species the isaincue volant nas tne integument of the sides of the abdo men extended into a horizontal mem brane, waarave below, the -upaar sur face of which is a brilliant metallic green. The saltici are great leapers. and the expansions in question serve as a support in long jumps from tree to tree , "The Iguana Family. The lizard tribe furnishes one of the most uni versal and persistent types in all natu ral nrscory."iVor oouuirj .is wiireiv without thrtn. and none but the very earliest geological formations fail to furnish specimens of this remarkable race. Of the iguanas, the character istics are mainly the horny scales which cover the bodv, ana tne toes, which are distinct and free. The ser rated crest along the ridge of the back is generally present : and the teeth are usually set in a common alveolus, bat . i i. . sometimes mey are aiiaciieu iu iue free edire of the iaw bone. Eleven species of the ' tribe have been found in Australia. , , -. , The thaamascope is a cheap and ex cellent substitute for the magic lantern It does not require glass sides, but will enlaree photographs, prints, and the il lustrations of a book without injuring tne volume, ana win aiso renect live in sects and fishes on the screen. Though not equal to the magic lantern in inten sity of light, it surpasses that instru ment in the variety of its illustrations and the scope of its usefulness, and can be obtained for very much leas than a magic lantern. For educational pur poses it is very valuable, and a delight ful source of parlor am us men to. . . Sisitta R. K. Whitehead renders materials employed for sizing yarn, woven fabrics. &c rroof airainst mil dew, by the addition of a little mustard oil, or other vegetable oil possessing antiseptic properties. . About ' four ounces of oil to one gallon of size is usually sumcient- . ... A rind tnrbiae baa been -patented in Denmark. It is said to work in amneh lighter breeze than the ordinary style of wind-mill, and to be well suited to a variety of industrial use. -Brus roa Th Carx or tux Em. When writing, reading, drawing, sew ing, etc., always take care that (a) tne room Is comfortably cool and the feet warm; (6) there is nothing tight about the neck; cj there Is plenty of light without dazzling the eyes ; (d) the sun does net shine directly upon the object we are at work upon ; (e) the light does not come from In front; it is best when it comes over the left shoulder; (f) the head is not very much bent over the work ; (jr) the page hi nearly perpendicu lar to the line of sight; that is that the eye is nearly opposite the middle of the page, for an object held slanting is not seen so clearly; (A) that the page or other object Is not less than fifteen Inches from the eye. Near sighted ness is apt to Increase rapidly when a person wears, in reading, the glasses intended to enable him to see. distant objects. In any case, when the eyes have any de fect, avoid fine needle work, drawing of nne maps and all such work, except for very short tasks, not exceeding hair an hour each, and In the morning." Never study or write before breakfast bj candle light. ' Do not He down when reading. If your eyes are aching from fire light, from looking at the snow, from over work, or other causes, a pair of colored glasses may be advised, to be used for a while. Light blue or grayish blue is the best shade, but these glasses are likely to be abused, and, usually, are not to be worn except under medical advice. Almost all who continue to wear colored glasses, haying perhaps first received advice to wear tlieni from medical men, would be better without them. Traveling venders of spectacles are not to be trusted ; their wares are apt to be recommended as ignorantlv and indiscriminately as In the times of the "Vicar of Wakefield." - If you have to hold the pages of a book nearer than fifteen inches in order to read it easily, it is probable that you are quite near sighted. If you have to hold it two or three feet away before you see easily, you are probably far-sighted. In either case, it ia very desirable to consult a physician before getting a pair of glasses,-for a misfit may permanently injure your eyes. Never play tricks with the eyes,- as squinting or rolling them. The eyes are often troublesome when the stomach is out of order. Avoid reading or sewing by twilight or when debilitated by recent illness, especially fever. Every seamstress ought to have a cutting-out table, to place her work on such a plane with reference to the line of vision as to make it possible to exercise a close scrutiny without bend ing the bead or the figure much for ward. Usually, except for aged persons or chronic Invalids, the winter tempera ture in work-rooms ought not to exceed 60 deg. or 65 deg. To sit with imponify in a room at a lower temperature, some added clothing will be necessary. The feet of a student or seamstress should be kept comfortably warm while tasks are being done. Slippers are bad. In winter the temperature of the lower part of the room is apt to be 10 deg. or 1 K Aatr Iawaw ion tHfr jifrliA linn. It is Indispensable in all forms of labor re quiring the exercise or vision or minute objects, that " the worker should rise from his task now and then, take a few deep inspirations with closed mouth, stretch the frame out tnto the most erect posture, throw the arms backward and forward, and, If possible, step to a win dow or into the open air, li only lor a moment. Two desks or tables in a room are valuable for a student; one to stand at, the other to ait at. - Oatmeal as Food. A powerful com petitor for the patronage of the dyspep tic is oatmeal. This, however, is popu lar with classes not likely to be anlicted with indigestion. It is, and has been for years used extensively by the Scotch and Irish. Laborers drink it freely with water in the Summer. But of late years the use- of this food has greatly increased among families reasonably wealthy, and many a breakfast table of this class of people, would be incomplete without a steaming mess of this humble but wholesome article. The advantages of oatmeal as an article of food are get ting to be tolerably well understood, and all persons who have commenced its regular use will agree that its nutri tious and health-giving properties have not been overrated. Chemical analysis shows that oatmeal is richer than wheat in starch and the nitrogenous com pounds, the first being fat-forming and the latter flesh-forming constituents. As compared with barley and corn, oat meal is round to be still richer in these elements.- .--i ., ;.'. . Restoring Fa pep Dresrks. Busty goods of any material except silk can he restored with slight cost and little trou ble. Collect all the old black worsted material you have, and put it into about two pails of boiling suds in which have been dissolved two spoonfuls or the ex tract of logwood, sameof copiieras; boil the goods five minutes, stirring all die time; drain and rinse out all tne dye, then dip in a pail of water in which an ounce of gum Arabic has been dissolved Iron wheu half dry on the - wrong side. Faded drab or slate colors can be re stored by saving the grounds and slops or the tea-pot until you nave a patitui boil in clear water and finish same as the black. . The bark of the peach tree colors a fine drab, set with copperas, and neither will fade. They color cotton as well as woolen. . ' JrpfiE's BiscvtT. ITaving broken six eggs into a basin, whisk them well for five, minutes; put in half a pound of powdered sugar, aud whisk again lor ten minutes. Add gome can-away seeds (if liked), and half a pound of dry sifted flour, mixing all thoroughly with a wooden spoon. Drop tlie mixture on paper, each being the size of about a crown piece, and high in the middle. Sift sugar over them, and bake them if iu a brick oven it will be better, tie move them from the paper while they are hot. t - Tomato Uonet. io eacn pound of tomatoes allow the grated peel or lemon and six fresh peach leaves. . Boil them slowly till they are all to pieces, then squeeze them through a bag. - To each pound of liquid allow a pound of sugar and juice of one lemon. Boil them to gether half an hour, or until they be come a thick jelly. Then put them iuto glasses and lay double tissue paer over the top. It will scarcely be distinguished from real honey, t. .New Wat of Maklno Saspwiches. Boil a few pounds of ham, aud chop it very fine while it is yet warm fat and lean together rub dry mustard in pro portions to suit your taste through the mass; add -as. much sweet butter as would go to the spreading of your sand wiches, and when it is thoroughly mixed, split light biscuits in halves and spread the ham between. These can be eaten without trouble, and will be found excelleuU A child's bud should slope a little from the head to the foot, so that the head may be a little higher than, the feet; but never bend the neck to get the head on the pillow. This makes the child round-shouldred, cramps the veins and arteries and interferes with the free circulation of the blood. Even when a child is several years old the pillow should be thiu and made of hair, not feathers. Isdiax Cakes Wrraorr Eoos. One pound of Indian meal, one pint of cold milk poured over it twelve hours before using. Just before using add one pint of milk, a pinch of salt and a small tea spoonful of soda ; then add wheat flour enough to make it a proper consistency for baking on the griddle. Milk Lemoxabe. A pound and a half of loaf sugar dissolved In a quart of boil ing water, with half a pint of lemon juice, and a pint and a half of milk added, makes a capital summer drink. Had Bexx Abocud. At the . City Hall market yesderday. while a lady was purchasia g a whlteflsh, a man about arty years old, and a stranger to ner, approached and remarked : "Missus. I have travelled over Europe, Asia, Atrica and the Holy Land. I have viewed the pyramids, sailed on the Nile and fished In the Tiber. Permit me to offer you a word of advice. Dou't cook that fish with the scales on." "I didn't mean, to, sir,"-she Indig nantly replied. - -"Very well, missus'. I have crossed the Atlantic ocean fourteen- times ; as cended the Andes: sailed up the Mis souri and down the Mississippi, and tramped across the Great Sahara Desert. Let me say one word more :' Cut the head otTberore you cook ttl" ' ' . "Do vou think I'm a heathen . she retorted. "1 guess I know how to cook a fish!" ' ' ' , "You may, madam you may. I have soldiered for Queen Victoria, fought for Uncle Sam, drawn a pension, kept a poft-oltioe, learned to fiddle, and was never sued in my life. I beg your pardon, madam, but let me advise you not to eat the bones- of that fish. Some folks eat bones and all, but they sooner or later ooiue to some disreputable end '." "I'll thank you to miud.your own business!" she said, as she picked up the fish. -: - "I have travelled over the smooth prairies," he replied with the greatest politeness, "climbed 'the Kocky moun tains,. killed Indians, fought grizzlies, suffered and starved and perished, ami I leave you with the kindest and most earnest wishes for your future welfare. Also, cut off the tail before cooking!" - And be went away. ." " - ' Some Witty Sayings. "There was, some time ago, a famous English wit named Foote.- Foote saw an old gentle man rowing iu a boat near Kingston, and asked him what business he bad in it.'. - i.. i - ,.. ... , -.: : " 'Business, sir, business,' replied the old gentleman. 'Do you know, sir, that this is my pleasure boat 5f" : -.. ' "'Exactly,' savs Foote; .and how can you have any business In a pleasure boat?" i;;. ; . i - "A good tale is told of Curran, an other witty Englishman, who was once engaged in a legal argument; behind him stood his colleague, a man. whose person was remarkably tall and slender, and who hail intended to be a'minlster. The judge observed that the case under discussion involved a question of ecclesi astical law. 'Then,' said Curran, 'I can refer your lordship to a high authority behind aie; who was' once intended for the church, though In my opinion fitter for the steeple'. - "Aiother "was Charles Young, who was a great practical joker.. A good tale illustrative of this Is the following: Young meeting a friend in a busy Lon don thoroughfare, told him, among other things, that he was going to have a trie snpiier, upon which nis friend stated that he detested tripe. , Young then said, in a very loud voice, .'Not like trie ! Do you mean to Observe, sir, that you. don't like- tripe?' . His poor friend, seeing a crowd attracted by such loud and unusual conversation, begged him to be quiet. - But he continued the more, and the friend took to his heels Young crying out to the crowd, 'There goes the man that don't like trine.'" ' ' "I'm Awi." Dean Bamsay tells an amusing story of the cool self sufficiency of the young Scottish doiueAic a buy who, in a very quiet, determined way, mai'e his exit from a honse into which he had been very lately introduced. He hail been told that he should be dis missed if he broke any of the china under bis charge. On the morning of a great dinner party he was intrusted (rather rashly) with a great load of plates which lie was to carry up stairs from the kitchen, to the dinning room and which were piled up and rested on his two hands. In going up stairs his foot slipped, and the plates were broken to atoms, lie at once went up to the drawing room, put hi head in at the door . and shouted :. "The plates are a' smashed aud I'm awa' !!'. ,, .. . . . . ' . ill i - CoMi-RKiiE-Nptui It. A . clergyman having been inducted into a living in Kent, England, took occasion during his first sermon to introduce the word "optics." At the conclusion of the ser vice a farmer who was present thanked him for the discourse,, bnt intimated that he had made a small mistake in one word, softening down at the same time Uie severitv of bis criticism bv saying; "Yet we all know very,, well,ir, what vou meant, un tne clergyman making further inquiries about this word- the farmer said: ''What you .called hop- sticks, in mis part ot tne country we call hop-poles." ' "" ' " ' SHE wai a romantic "young lady, and he, her father, took a practical view of everything. She looked up from, her book in botany, and inquired: ' "Father, did you everstiufy botany f" , He was interested in - bi paper, and did not reply, and presently she con tinued f- ' ' e ' ,; "Papa, what flowers do you. prefer?"' "Flour,.eh?" he replied as he looked up, Why; l aiwsys get mat maite-irom winter wheat, if leau I think it makes better bread 1" ' She sighed and wished there was a young man on the other end of the sofa ' Two "'colored ' citizens' hiuf a little trouble at ihejMMit syfiice corner on Saturday. , . ',.'' 'Sir, I stigmatize you as: a falsehood tied, exclaimed the first. . . . .'.-.. , "And you, sir, are a cantering hlpel crite!' replied the second. - Ah I talk away; but my character is above disproach, growled tlie first- . 'And your influence don't detach from my reputation one IowaT growled the other. , .... V . , L , And thus they parted. A little 3-year-old, who hat? often been reproved for eatiug the inside and leaving the crusts of her pie, was re cently afflicted with a sore toe. One day, when at dinner, she was observed to slyly remove the crust of her pie and place it under her plate while eat ing the inside. On being distmvered she innocently replied : "Well, papa, my toe is so sore I couldn't eat the crust. Two sons of tlie Emerald Isle paid a visit to Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, recently. They visited tlie water-works. Looking on with amazement at the great turbine-wheels while in motion, one ex claimed to the other: "Faith, Pat, the Americans must be square people: they must have their .water ground before they can drink it-", - . . v t . I It was a rich old widow who wondered that the handsome young man bad fallen in love with her. "Yes, it is wonder ful," said Mr. Spruceup; "but I de love you to distraction; why, I even love the ground you walk on." ,'I thought so,' observed the widow ; "but I am not iu want of a landlord at present." !"I itKCLABK," said Susan, as she watched the people coming iuto church "that man looks like a piece of dried beef." "flush !" said her sister, "it isn't meet in you to talk so." . - Maxt a' woman who Is too feeble to peel a dozen potatoes for 'dinner, will walk four miles past a rival's house to display a new dress, and prance back home like a 3-year-oid nily. Why? is "naming the day" for the wedding, like a naval battle ? Because it's a marry-time engagement. DiscorasnfO- sweet Music blowing your own trumpet. . ; Trocble never comes singly, said mother of twins. DessebT for golden weddings pre served pears. LrroxiCATtxa music "'Ale to the Chief." AaAsUlsjaeCaraet.' . ZZZ t :..! . r... . . ; ' ' At a reunion of the pioneer of Cuya hoga county, Ohio, various bits or an tiquity were exhibited, and among them "a woman's corset made tn 1763, and marked . "Knth Jlancbett." It would be easy to write a sweet little piece of poetry about that garment, and the pretty form which it once encir cled; but on the other hand, Ruth might have been dumpy and ugly, with that peculiar sallowness of com plexion which tight lacing produces. As the corset is said to be "extremely old-fashioned," it was probably a piece of armor which Kuth didn't find over comfortable; and we are sorry for her. There was also a red cloak, a century .r.i4 hihitwi fnrmrlv owned by Mary French; and about this we have no misgivings. -' enave no uu r th little Red-ridi lilt. 1.1 V. v. ...v - hood of Cuyahoga. A girl named Mary with a red cloak couldn t have otherwise than charming. The very Dear Kiliea ny a pioneer, wnwc ull was also extiioiteu, woukj nave gone if he had met her. without touching off or tasting her. A'Aiiv "-"'' Btesaaval t I a, panties freaa Water The London Ckmieal Jnurnal com mends Prof. Brschofs arrangement for removing organic and ether- impurities from drinking water this arrangement consisting, essentially, in filtering the water through spongy iron and pounded limestone. The iron is placed in the upper chamber of an earthenware filter, and oowdered limestone is arranged In a separate laver below. The iron is procured irt a powdery.' spongy state. by the reduction of an ore without fu sion, after the extraction of the sulphur and -copper by heat. It removes all al bum inoid and nitrogenized com poo nds and also all bad contaminations from the water, and a trace of Iron taken up by the water is separated by iu subse quent passage through, tne limestone. This method is found to be not only re markably effective, but the cost is also so inconsiderable as to give it tne preier ence over all other modes one charge of the material, costing only twenty five cents, being sulllcieut for the filter- nig r ten gallons per day ior a period or two nur.dreu days. The Great Pilb Kemept. AXAKE-SI-S, the discovery of Dr. Silsbee, is entitled to lie called the wonder of the age. 30,1X10 grateful snfferers bless the only infallible remedy for Piles ever introduced, only those wno nave usea lotions, ointments and internal reme dies in vain, m ill understand the grate ful feeling of instant relief from pain and blissful hope of certain cure for the terrible disease, that ANAKES1S a'nrs. It is used bv Doctors of all schools. Price fl. P. Nenstaedter Si Co.. 4 Walker St, Xew York. 13 flTlKSH. DEAfSFMS. CO SS 17 JIP- TIU1, NMttiYy carsi ty nr. mmw-s sew HetnaL llUli M ly smii. lr IT. s. V. SmMsrd, Medical Director, S Wast 14th St.. New IO. . ...... Tsraw mm. ASdiss 4 MUli. STiiaos a Cos Fortius, Mm. j. 5 The People's KemeJy. Tha Universal Fan Extractor. Notk: Ask for P0XIFS EXTRACT. Take no other. . Iar I will averts; al czcelleait hinga.' FORD'S EXTRACT Th Kf TwtaMePala vrntwmyrr. has D4a m me over isjirt . yrmr. Slid frft-clemlilims )mf prompt cars tire vtrtut-s cannot becxceU.-d. CHUDRER.-Na rnadlr enn aitnrd to hr without . . I'watl's Extract. ArriurnCH, Braiwrw, ' C'aataslrms, Cars, Sprains, ars relieved . . almost iuHtnnllr by external application. Promptly relwves pains or Bam, Kralax, Klroriatloaa, ibaSaga, Ula Parra, ' Isslla, leli.au, 4'arsa, etc. Arrents h- fliunatioo, ratlurrs swellinc. tops bleeding, remove li -rolnrat imia nun lieala mnMlv. FEMALE wttlRESSES. It alwa.a relies pain iu i toe iai a suit iouis,f nilneia and prewin lain In the hd. nauwa, vertigo. II LEBCBRRHC it has noemiaL AH kind, nf al. . t t-eraiiaaa to vtik-h laaie are subject ara -prompt lyrnred. Fuller details ia book acrom- nanyiotrearh bottle. PIUS anas' or UmHasr meet prompt relief . u autt ready core. io cam?, bower er cbtouic or - orerthiate. nn I on if resist lu reirularne. fARICOSE VEIRI. It is Iha only .ore cure for thl uitiva-thj. and danseroaa condition. IIDIET llSUttX-U aaaaoeaiul loriKrma. nntrure. , ILEEptHB from any tmum. Forth- U s kpt- ntit. It hWMvtH. hundmlrt of live when all . . . T elisor rfiDe Jte tale! to arrest lWiints from f ffmarH, l-mc. and eWwbejv. RHEUMATISM, RCUIAIBIA, Taathara. aaa fcararbe are ail alike rtLcred, aud olten ber- aiaoeatlv cored. . . FHTSICIARS of allarnonla who ara arqnain'cl j r. aiui rasa's Eslraea at W itch Haass rer- oinmend it in Uieir practice. Wehareleitcniof. ! . coroniesdatioa tnsn hundreds ol Fbrakrians, many of whom order Ktor saein their own practice, la addition to the focoroe, tbey order its no for fewrlliNS of all kin.ls, .i falir, Hare Tarsal, laMassraVTaaaila, simple snd chronic Oiarrbaa, Catarrh, - torwhicblt iepeciric.) bilbhia, r'raat- ea Frrt, Ntinc af laser!, .Hwwiailara, . : -etc., Xaaaaea llaaaa, Face, and aioued all manner of akin dtaeaees. TOILET . KtaoaWaraaa, RoaaWaa, aud KaiartiBsTI heals fata, IruptHun, J and Fiaaptr. It renna, tMevaa-sAa. and re. , rasa, while wonderfully improving the f'aaipleitas). T0 FARMERS.-Psa' Katrart. No Stork ' Hrcder,iiu UvertManraaaltfirritohcwithont It. It b nard by all tlie Leading- Livery Ma!-. - - Street Railroads and 11 ret H.iraemen In New York City. Ithaanaanualfia-Spraiav.Ilar- aeas or ataddla a'haSsaa, pUiUnraa, Hrratrhca, Hwrlliaainl ala, LarrraliaBa, 1 nfcrealaaT. Paemaaala, t'alir, INarrbam, killa, ( alda, etc. ltaraaireof action is wide. and the relief it affords in so prompt that it Is tnrainahte In ever Farm-rard ea well as in . - every Farm -bouse. Let it be trk-d once, and von will never he wit hoot It. CASTIOa. Paad's Katrart bas been imitated. TDc renaine article haa the word!, Pnaa'a Ki ... tract Moan tn each bottle. It at prepared by the aaly arraaas HvbM who erer knew how prepare it properlr. Kelufte all other pre parations of Witch HazeL Th! is lhe only .- art Kir naed by Phyaiciana, and in the bospC taN Of thw cornt-y'and Enr-r.e. RISTQRY ARB ISES OF FBRB'S EXTRACT, in pmimit-i foniipiMif fr- on aprlx.ntiou to JLITRCjT COMPART, Maid "NATB?.E'S GREAT F.EJ.2DY." This Cordial la a CERTAIH CTJRE tar feaaaaha. raids, laaaaiaaattoa aC lbs I a ware i bare Throat aaa Brraat, Braachk. lis, aad U tab. cm la time, will arrest thaS fatal dlarass toaaaaaptloa. The basis al tats saedkeiae Is a prrparatlaas at Tar an tslassl ny a Becauiar prase as (rasa us) sap ef the Ptave Tree, the ansdkrlasJ araser. ties ef walrh ara well kaowa. With this pa w ei fel elisaiiat ara thai eaaaty bms. paratad several etaer wea-etabts iawrredt- eats, each ear which imiiK saothlac auad heallna- attrlbatea, Laaa maklna; It the aaaat POTENT ANTAOONIST ta all alia rans at aha aaali has wet harm taaaadi I2..L & C 'rvTSTTAT.rS PINE .TREE TAR CORDIAL Is as4 a sua) retard that has heard at Before, bat aa OLD, HT.T.l ABI.F., AND WELL-TRIED aaedirtwe that has bee ta dally aae by fa sallies aad isnuifcsi payunasj sar ta las Tears, aavd ta saehi ear tat tha tai saa by all wae have aaed tt, aa tb. saads ef UNSOLICITED TESTIMO- JIUJB ptreve. If yea eaSTrr frees) aaiv ell Whscet UUs Cardial aa reraaa aalnaHatlaaty sari TRY IT, WE SHOW TT WILL DO YOU GOOD." A staajla battle will disasaalisla Its ratal SO IT HI IHISC1STS CI ST.SEHEPtHl PRINClPa.IL. DEPOT S32Sorth.8ecomt St.. rhOatVA, "TTslsl r)K ALL ta aarek orenploytaenl . f Make year eea awes, sas have all ttm pro lit Swd scamp Is- dreular, J. S. LAjiO, Luck Bos 4u Paba (a. fa. 11-4-lt rril.Lt BHCTCLOPJiDIA. Hsa aUrtaaa truth.. i UpU.'MI ArtieUa, 1IUI Knawinxa asd la Spieadid htaua. Ar-sta Wanted. BAkKR, DAVIS Ou, PhU- TaaaNJSjfUjjjrtgJS mams. seipast. ra. 11 H-tt Godeys' Lady's Book ! TV Msswns In America. "A Panma Casiaffi" " MoaNUitt-CAfalowiit aptes to m sstacntxr, wbeUMr or is s clnh, who pay l- J-, o X nl rnnit. rfiraet toihsiaSMS. Ail SLVITa, MST. rkUav. Fav il-s-u BB002XS! BROOMS ! JOHJ 1. BEI-fEE A COL, 253 Washlnctoii Bfc, Haw York, principal Depot ia New Yerk tor lbs baa Braaa Jfaaafrctaraa ia the Untied Stalaa. Broosii fro at S2.M per dozea ' aad pward. The lowest prices aad greatest variety ta be (bead ' . b . arraSn "mA wtt.tjw STARS, sack ss Pa la. Tubs, Baskets, sUta, Twaaa, Oordsre. Wicks, at, tocetaer with a tall Una of Apple, Braa Wood and Clay Pipsa, faery Soaps. Yankee Ha. teas, Cetlary, so. Ileaars ntoa) us s w per salt, A Ml Baa ef tha beat ewallty ef TIVWARt P. S.W. sell ear fsees si pnsaa sassae suv aramaJne ea the read. Orders by a mJmmTmTiammtkm. aatablbaed 180. will re 3-aVlr 500,000 ACRES ..... . -OP . .- . . MICHIGAN IiAHDS Ta laada af the Jar sees. Laealar k Bartsaw lUllresd teai seal are w offered t ar bale. They are attested alone Ita railroad and eoataia kvgs tracts of excellent FARMING asd PINE Laada. The nu-mlnr, buida Inclsde son ot the stoat Settle and well-watered hardwo.d lenda in the State. They are Hatband sternly with bard-eOe sad beteh: mnl l,lack. sandy loam, aad abiwinfls in sprinca of pereat water. MiekiaaB ta see ef the heat isatebted asd mom piuaperoaa Stales m the I'nate. aad tie hrsMis save a areater variety of crops and neuvrcea than any West ers Stale. While araaeef the prairie States aay pru. deeecors ra rrost abeadaare. they have as ether re. aaure,ed whea tha crop ntila, deatitauoa Mlowa, as baa here tbecam the past rear fa Kansas snd Nebraeka Price front a9.M to )&.) aer srrs. frmt r M tnatnsstp psmraaee. aaew 4P H. BAVBBiKM, .aaaaaisalaaer, Laaslac, Sileh a-n-susew FREDERICK SPIECKER, ft7 r?r'- f !-:. jr' 'Li. pirmy'ttMi ii! - WHOIHAL1 DIALCB IW Leaf Tobacco, Cigars, Pipes, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco, 0P THE BE3T BRANDS. 1,0. 152 TAIEJICTOT AVZOTS, PHILADELPHIA. Only Agent for U. S. Solid Top Cigar MntlfiL Cigar Stores can be supplied. . m-iy H ha H mm BO eSeO am o p sp in o g Oh sal -i V a a ft 7 has o eO B at I 5 CM 5 PI z ft -j W-i PI H P5 S w 1 w 2 S?o mm H-rJ . SrJ r"5 T. O 5 Pa .e 2 if- H 10 3rf o o HORSEMEN I . OWAEIW OF STOCK ! Sate Tour Horses and Cattle I CORK THBM 07 DIHIA31 AKD Kr THIU US A HIALTHT CONDITIO! IT 81TIS0 THIU M. B. ROBERTS' CELEBRATED kVUOC HORSE POWDERS. nr rsi ortx FORTY YEARS! TSTl AT POWDBBS aWBTAIBrM TC2TIC, LAT.MT72 AKD FU1117T , IN rLC?Z2THS OBBMBO, TaiBBBV MAH) TUMM TU BXST COXDITIOX MEDIUM LS TBS WORLD. Taev ars saada af fmra UsleTtalonly, cm tablaapoosful going as far a eae) fsttad sraioarj sattla powdara. Bar sms eaekars and aftsa aejne aba yea win ssver gat Sana praiaug I sr aaia bj au ruraiaepars. TJSI M. D. ROBERTS' Vegetable Embrocation FOB ALL IXTIR5AL SUIA8U aitasa MAN OR BEAST. Jsally SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! ra a tacsed for sbiDDtne-. UUbaTaUa, hXaMVlMi. BTUKa. fTI HOTJ8B AKD OFPlOa C i! ITtJKB aa klads Tne lartreat and best isintnl saues. asa aad mi's a Bins Ba laa Ouj. IaBTWIIBI V. BR(K Il ly let!, , toss ud lne7 ItllMil ITt, nils. y 1 :f) ri; --sr.. tlT- -- en
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers