DESOULTIOl - . ' My Ufa is like the drifunt; wrack. Cut by the wares upon lb abort, Wboee tvokea span and floating deck Tell of toe ahipwreck that o'er, let fruca thoae relica of the atom The anaiiner hia raft will forai Again to tempt the f akhleee aea : But hope rebuilds no bark for dm. Mt Ufa m like toe blighted oak That lift iU aere and witherrd form. Scathed by the bicbtnin'a sodden stroke. Sternly to meet toe oomiiw atom. Yet rouud that aapleae trunk entwine Tbe earlinc tendrils of the Tina, And Efe and freshness there impart ; Not so the passion blighted heart. My lif e ia like the desert rock In the mid-ocean lone and drear, Worn by the wild wares' ceaecleas shock, That rooud ita base their nqiM rear. Yet there the sea moss still will ding; Some flower will find a cleft to spring. And abed aroond ita sweet pert tuna ; For me life a flowers no more will bloom! Cklaeae Arrotsata. A party of Chinese tumblers, lately introduced into the Chinese theater, San Francisco, are indeed marvels in their line. A number of athletic Mon golians appear, stripped to the waist, and begin a sort of combat on tbe stage. At first the fighting appears to be pro miscuous; but Fix or eight finally ally themselves against one man and try to overcome him bv springing against hint and striking him full in the breast with the soles of their feet. He meets this curious mode of attack by standing like a statue, while the others fall heavily upon the floor. A number of tables are next brought out and piled or.t above the other until a height of abotn twenty feet is obtained. A performer, whose weight in no less than 150 lbs., mounts theui, and, springing in the air toward the lloor and the stage, strikes both feet with a heavy thud upou the bare breast of a man standing about ten feet from the foot ot the tables, throwing him vi olently to the floor. How a man can tand such a blow is a mystery. Again the agile acrobat ascends to the top ta ble, and. springing upwards, turns a somtrsault, while all the tables, except the lower one, are suddenly taken away. Upon the only table left he falls with a force apparently great enough to break every bone in his body; but he leaps up again immediately and turns back hand'iprings across the stage. Again he climbs to the top of the tower t tables while a second lies down upon a table a few feet from the base of the tower. Turning a somersault in mid air he falls upon the other body, the two breast to breast, and bounds oft again with a second somersault. Other acrobats climbed to various altitudes and fell upon the stage, alighting square upon their backs with a force which was astonishing. These feat are all executed by meu in a semi-nude condi tion, so that there is no chance for pad ding their clothes. While the Ameri cans iu the theater applaud, the Chinese make no demoiii-trations of approval, but sit looking stolidly on. The mana gers informed the reporter of the ban Francisco Call that the tumblers are trained from childhood, and become habituated to tbe terrible concussions only by years of practice. He added that many are killed in training, or iiiaimed for life. None of their leal are graceful, but simply indicate a tre medous amount of strength, nerve, and endurance. Tke Tare fer tteeelp. What is the cure for gossip? Simply, culture. There is a exeat deal of irossin that lias no malignity in it. Good natured ieople talk about their neigh bors because, and only necause, mey have tiotliine else to talk about. As we write, there comes to us the picture of a family of young ladies, " e nave seen them at home, we have met them in galleriesof art, e have caught glimpses of them going from a bookstore, or a library, with a fresh volume in their hands. hen we meet them, tbey are lull of what they have seen and read. They are brimming with questions. One topic of conversation is dropped only to give place to another. In which they are interested. We have left them, alter a delightful hour, stimulated and refreshed; and during the whole hour not a neighbor s garment was soiled by so much as a touch. They had some thing to talk about. They knew some thing, and wanted to know more. Tbey could listen as well as they could talk. To speak freely of a neighbor's doings and belongings would nave seemed an impertinence to them, and, of course, an impropriety. They had no tempta tion to gossip, because the doings of -1 " 1 1 l - V. ! Liu ir iieignuurs iouiiu a suujtrtrv very much less interesting than those which grew out of their knowledge a:id their culture. And this tells the whole story. The confirmed gossip is always either mali cious or Ignorant, the one variety needs a change of heart and the other a change of pasture. Gossip is always a personal confession either of malice or imbecility, and the young should not only shun it, but by the most thorough culture relieve themselves from all temptation to induge in it. It is a low, frivolous, and too often a dirty business. There are country neighborhoods in which it rages like a pest. Churches are split in pieces by it. Neighbors are made enemies by it tor life. In many persons it degenerates into a chronic disease, which is practically incuraDle Let the young cure it while they may, rami It. It is odd to think that a bit of chalk has to be brought all the way Ircm the clitls of Dover. Ltntland. before it can make marks on your walls; but it is wonderful to learn that that bit of chalk is composed of the elytra, or shells of myriads of little animals, the SUibiycrinoe, that lived and died in the ocean, year after year, age after age, tor hundreds of thousands of years. and then, solidifying into compact rock, wei pushed five hundred feet above the surface of tbe aea. The bed of the English channel is supposed to lie of solid chalk, many hundred feet thick, exunaiiiK over to trance, and croppiu op near Paris. Through this soft material the contemplated tunnel is to L bored, the bill author izing the woik having already passed through the liour-e ot Commons. There is scarcely a trade or manu facture, wot ksiioD r school, that does not tiud use for a bit of chalk. Great quantities are irrouud up for whiting and patty, and, though it is an humble mateiial, yet nothing can supply its place. 'I'lieie i little or uone found in this country ; all that is used here being imported from England, either kiln-diie or in blocks as it is quarried, at about .?lUa tou. ("Bines Habltstloa'a. Eastern arcititectsmay get some bints of tilings to follow or avoid from a de pciiptHin which the Virginia City Chronicle gives of the structures erec ted i.y the Chinamen iu that city: "Be tween tights tbe Cbmaman is an iu lutrMUi animal. Just now be is toruiug his t-uerie to buildinar, and like hie tittbtioa-.-sotue of it W coutrary to law and also shocking to a correct an luteciuial taste. Ou the north went corner of I and Union street, Joliu has created a marv. Hons affair. It is built out I ar enough to occupy third of the roadway. The front ele vation (heiirht five feet) is composed of odds aud ends ot atone picked np in the neiKhbourhHid. The one wiudow is formed of three oil caus two up riut aud the other laid acroxs the top. The roof of this edifice which baa a fiontnife of about !Wruty-fle feet and depth of thirty or more would make :i sndime play around tor a school, as it is pet t ctiy flat and composed of earth. Toe "inu rior, which tbe lepor ter doubled himself np to enter, la di vided into numerous little dens and a apaciong saloon, with earthen floor and one oil-caw window. Tbe place is ahiirtW to be ooened aa a restaurant. provided tbe police don't interfere, which tber should do. The idea of utilizing oil-case for bnildiac material has been eagerly eeiwd by other Celes tials, and tbe consequence is numer ous fire-proof ansa tie. The cans filled with earth and piled one upon another, make a solid wall, and no bul let can penetrate, them not a si i trot consideration these times. Under rround residences are alao popular. A big square bole is dag into tbe hillside, covered in with sticks, straw, and an occasional plank. The door is natu ral It famished by the eastern slope. Although such trifles as light and air are left oat of consideration, tne Dorno proof character of tbe underground structure has a charm for the Chinese inhabitant. The only drawback to such a boose is the probability that on some rainy night an enemy may take into his shaven bead to dig a trench and direct tbe wator of tbe street down tbe chimney." Eawllsh AbsIIbw Matches. An anecdote is told of a fishing match which took place in Sussex, on a river rendered somewhat difficult to fish by reason of the rising and falling of the the tide, tbe peculiar objection being that dming ebb tbe receding waters most be followed np through deep mad. One competitor was be wailing bis hopeless chance of winning the teapot which was ottered as a prise, his only take being a diminutive eel weighing a little over three ounces. Preantlr some arjectators. on a tour of visits to tbe competitors, arrived, and inquired after tbe nature of bis sport. "Oh, I am completely oat of it this small eel being all I have taken." "There we differ with yon," encourag ingly replied tbe visitors: "for this and another eel of about the same size are all we have seen taken to-day." The hopes raised were, however, dashed to tbe ground, for tbe other eel weighed a bare eighth of an ounce more, and took the prize. In tbe late Sheffield contest, 4 pounds 15 ounces won the prize of forty guineas. The emalluess of tbe take. 1 perhaps, to be explained by the fact of the competi tors forming a line on tbe bank to tlte distance of three and a half miles, the fish being rendered powerless to teed from shear nernlexitr. Fancy a ttsh coming suddenly upou an array of food banging in mid-water as far as the eye can reach, looking to a human rye like an endless street of butchers shops. Fancy, 1 say, a fish coming upon such a scene. Here a bunch of gentles at tracts its attention ; bat. before it nas made np bis mind, a lively brandling wriirirlM itself into notice. Then a choice piece of jrrares te triple tbe palate only to be supplanted by a wasp grab; until tbe bewildered creature attempts to fly the scene, but in vain. Turu where it will, food still meets ita view ; for miles nothing but food, food, food. Wlater Aaaaeeeaeata. Dr. Holland writes as follows In Scribner' Monthly on the subject of winter amusements : It is an easy thing to establish, either in country or city neigh borhoods. the reading club. Twenty-five young men and women of congenial tastes, habits, and social belongings can easily meet in one another' houses once during every week through five or six months of the year. With a small fund they can buy good books, and. over these, read aloud by one and another of their number, they can spend an hour and a half most pl-asantly and profitably. They will find in these books topics of conversa tion for the remainder of the time they spend together. If they can illuminate the evening with music all the better. Whatever accomplishments may be in the possession of different member of the club may be drawn upon to g ve variety to the Interest or the occas.on, This is entirely practicable everywhere. It Is more profitable than amateur thea tricals, and less exhaustive of time and euenry. It can be united with almost any literary object. The Shakespeare Club is nothing but a reading club, devoted to the study r' single author; and Shakespeare ma well ;iiggaclub for a single wi ter. iii club would cultivate the art of good reading, which is one of the best and most useful of all accomplishments It would cultivate thought, imagination, taste. In brief, the whole tendency of the reading club is toward culture the one thing, not withstanding our educational advan tages, the most deplorably lacking in fie average American man ana woman. The exercise may take a great many forms which it is 'not necessary for us even to suggest. .Books may be read. original papers may be presented, musi cal rehearsals may form a part of the entertainment, products of art may be exhibited, there may be dramatic and conversational practice, and practice in French and German. There is no limit to tbe variety of exercises that may be profitably entered upon. The Teaeela f the Temple. An Italian correspondent writes: "Garabaldi's scheme to regulate the course of the Tiber has probably now here met with such approbation as in the Ghetto of Rome, for the Jews hope that by dredging the mud at the bottom of the river, the silver and golden vessels once used in the Temple at Jerusalem might be found. These were carried to Rome by Titus after the destruction of Jerusalem. There they remained for full three centuries, until the days of the Vandal KingGenserich, w ho sacked Rome, and put the vessels of the Temple together with the rest of the booty on ships, in order to carry them to Africa. One of these vessels was wrecked be tween Sicily and Africa, when most of tier contents, and among them a dish ot pure gold made by King Solomon, weighing five hundred shekels, went to the bottom of the sea. Another of the ships is said to have foundered on the Tiber, opposite to Rome, when several of the vessels of the Temple went to the bottom of the river." Jeaish Chronicle. The Last Tenants. The last European temple in which public worship was paid to the old di vinities is said to have been that of Apollo at Monte Casano, which re mained open uutil its destruction by Benedict iu 529. Since then the human mind has wandered iu many mazes and labored under dreary hallucinations without end. Who shall say, in these days of decaying faiths, bow near Vol taire's prediction may come to fulfil ment f Day by day the claims of science to universal priesthood are urged with increasing confidence. The old my thology stripped of its imagery, (it may be said, unrealized aud resolved into its pristine element, is a system of uat ural philosophy ; and modern science in iu latest phase is little more than a re turn to the old opinions under a new nomenclature. It woulu he strange, indeed, If the rumor ol Pau's death, promulgated so long ago, t-hould prove uuf ou tided after all T f'niser't Magazine. Age aaxt Crises Age materially influences the extent and degree of crime iu both sexes. In relation to physical and functional de velopment, age exists as s defining force. It apiear to affect the criminal careers ol the sexes In two ways; by permitting such a degree of bodily power to be reached as to render possible criminal acta in different degrees; and, tbe bodily powers remaining the saioe, tbe varying rueutal conditions produce changes in the force and direction of the criminal impulse. Each period of lire, therefore, Is characterized by degrees aud qualities of crime which belong to It. In other words, certain phases of crime are per petrated at one period of life in excess of any other period. These remarks do nit apply to both sexes equally, for luese periods do not correspond either as to age, or In the nature ol the offense, tbe excess of which distinguishes one period from another. ; AwBICTLTTUIw Planting Graib Vises. The In crease in the production of grapes In this country during the past few years is simply enormous, snd the indications are that at no distant day the quantity of wine which can be supplied from our own vineysrds will supersede the necessity of importing at the expense of so many million of coin, or its equivalent, the product of the vine which we now buy from foreign coun tries. The great secret ot the wealth of a nation is the supply of all its wants within Iu own borders; and the people of the South are now discovering the mistake they made In former times or discouraging manufactures in their States, and which, happily, they are now endeavoring to remedy by the es tablishment of cotton mills and other factories alongside of the products of the soil required for their operation. What we want now to Impress upon every householder, as well as the far mer, Is if they can do nothing more,; they should at least plant out a vine or two In their yards or gardens, as every one who owns a small . piece of ground can have plenty of the best varieties of grapes, at no cost at all, simply by going in tbe fall or early in tbe spring of the year to farmers who have them,and get ting some of the trimmings. Take them and spade up a strip of ground on the north side of the fence: take the vines aud put two or three buds in the ground leaving one out; keep tbe ground loose and the weeds away, aud when the shooU get ten or twelve inches long, pinch off the end so tbe stalk will ma ture better, and next spring plant out eight feet apart each way. But before planting, gatner up oiu oones otti oi the woods, etc. Dik your holes three feet square, aud two feet deep, throw ing tbe soil n otw aide to itself. Xow take the bo.. es, throw Into the holes; next a little ashes, then the soil, then the crapes, and las: fill with other soil close around, not using the clay. We will guarantee grapes to thrive and no well, and always bear when treated this way. Wixter Foals. Like all other young and growing auimals, they require an abundance of fresh air aud exercise, and should have free opportunity of indulging in the gambols and lrollcs. and races to which their nature prompts them, and which is so essential in order to propeoly distend the lungs, swell the veins, invigorate the entire system, and make a hardy, healthy, active horse. Give muscle aud bone-forming food in abundance, but feed corn spar ingly, and, if at all, only in the coldest weather. Oau and wheat, bran and grass, and bay In abundance will make the colt grow ; and exercise, with pro tection from severe storm, will keep him healthy. It it is indispeiisible that he should run ont and take all the s orms as ihey come, which, by the way, should never be permitted, give more com with the feed, as that pro duces fat, which is a protection from the cold. Wi re we to be couielled to chouse be. ween the two extremes of close confinement, with high feeding on beatiug graiu, aud uo exercise, and the other ol running at large in me fields, exposed to the merciless storms of winter, with free ac-ess to the corn crib, we should unhesitatingly take the latter course as likely to develop the hardier, healthier, stouter horse, be-cau.-e we regard the opportunity for abuudaut exercise as absolutely ei-eu-tial to a healthy, h-iroionious develop ment in all onng animals. But gen erous feeding aud secure housing I ruin incleuicut weather is not at all incom patible with pleuty of exercise, and such a coarse of treatment will bring tbe youngster through the winter iu perfect health, with constitution unim paired, aud growth unchecked. H'tUeV Spirit. Kerosexe Hobse Liniment. A cor respondent sends the following : ''It is not as generally known as it ought to be that kerosene oil is one oi the very best remedies for strains, spraius, or bruises that can be applied to the nV-'i of beasts. I knew an instance in wh cli a young colt got cast on its back iu a manger; when taken out it was utterly unable to stand or move iu hind limbs, and so continued for some time, when two or three applications of the oil, twelve hours between, completely re stored iu Tli is and similar facta led me, when studying drugs several years ago, to concoct the following, which I named kerosene liniment: Kerosene oil, one ounce; aromat spirits ammo nia, three drachms; tine, stramouii, two drachms; oil origanum, ' two drachms; olmenthe, twenty drops; chloroform, one drachm; spirits cam phor, two drachms. This article is in comparably superior to anything of its kind for bruises, soreness of the mus cles from any cause, or nervous pains. Iu value however, will best be known by iu use. Many a prescription has been sold for $50, which, compared with this, was not worth the paper it was written on. Equally good for beasts or men." Scvmeb Fallowing. This practice is gradually and deservedly falling into disuse. Farmers are beginning to find by experience that there are other methods of cleaning the land and get ting rid of weeds that are equally ef fective, and less costly. The plowing and cultivation which are found useful in cleaning foul land can also be made equally useful in producing a crop at the same time if the right crop is se lected, and the proper culture bestowed. For the loss of time needlessly incurred iu summer fallowing there is neither reason nor excuse, as we intend to show hereafter. The farmer's land is his capital, and if he expects to suc ceed in his business he cannot afford to be carrying over idle capital from year to year for a purpose that may be equally effected iu another and better way. The amount of loss incurred by this practice is much greater than we supposed, and it is quite time for far mers to look into it. Fall Plowixq. A correspondent of the Jtural Home argues thus about fall plowing: If land where there is no sod is plowed in the fall and a heavy snow comes upou it before being frozen it is found about as hard as land not plowed and no good comes of it ; but if a clay soil is plowed when dry in the fall, and is frozen hard during winter it will be finer, aud work up lighter for spring seeding. Clay soils uot well drained and so situated that the surplus water cannot get off w ill be injured by throwing thetn up loose iu the tall, for the raius will so saturate them that they will be as hard as a bed or dried mortar, and no after culture can bring them into condition for a spring crop. But with good drainage the opposite conditions prevail. Save hog manure now, as it is espe cially valujble from fattening hogs. As nearly all the nitrogen of the food is contained iu the liquids voided, none of it should be allowed to waste. Lit ter the pens with an absorbent dry earth or muck, or cut straw. Much of the net pro-its ol stock comes from the manure, bog included, anil yet not one farmer iu ten saves half the hog ma nure made. This is the kind of econ omy that makes hard times. It is esti mated that if all the mauure a pig makes was saved proierly, it would add, on an average, about two cents to the value of each pound of pork. Ohio Farmer. Sats an old grain-grower: "In gath ering corn, take such ears only as are finest and from the most prolific stalks. Never take from a stalk having but one ear. If large, thrifty stalks can be found with two or more good sized ears. Generally one of them is fit for seed, snd that usually tbe second from the ground ; but if 'the lowest is the best take that. Always take the ears that are tilled out to the end, and that run beyond the husk, if such can be found. When you come to plant, brfore shell In&T. break every ear. aud see It the I pith of the cob is dried np, for if it Is 1 not, the corn Is not ripe' i aciEynric. The Com-Market And Sun-Spot. We have heretofore recorded the ef forts of sa rants to establish a relation between tbe recurrence of sDJta on tbe van and the fluctuations of tbe potato disease. Mr. Schuster, studying the same series of phenomena, has pointed out that the years of good vintage io Western Europe have occurred at average intervals approximating to eleven years, the avers ire length of the principal sun-spot period. Later, Prof. Stanley Jones, F. R. S., has endea vored to prove that the price of corn and tne variations of the sun-spots are inseparably connected. A paper was read by bim on the subject, a: the re cent meeting Tf the British Associa tion. The data regarding the price of corn were taken from Prof. E. T. Ro ger's History of Agriculture and Prices in Enitland." in which is given the prices of eotn modi ties in all parts of EDglaud between the years 1359 and 1400. From calculations . based Ukd the facts thus afforded, it was found by Prof. Jones that the price of each kind of produce examined rises in the first four years of tbe sun-snot cycle, and thence declines. The maxima prices occur in the tenth, eleventh, first, se cond, and third years of the cycle. These reults, however, are considered as merely prelininary, and requiring further investigation. Yet more ex tended consequences are indicated by these observations. It is found that commercial puics have tended to re cur during the last fifty-four years in a distinctly periodic niauner. The aver age ltDgth of interval between the principal panics is about 10.8 years, nearly coinciding with 11.11, the length of the solar-spot period. Ere long, it annears from this, our commercial men will look to the astronomers for a cer tain prediction of the price of corn. Another Application of Machinery. The little machine sometime sioce in vented in France, by the aid of which steuographic writing may be accomp lished at the rate of between two and three hundred words per minute, is claimed to have proved a practical Hiicrrss, It seems to be very simple. There is a keyboard, operated by the hand, aud composed of twelve black and an equal mini tier of .white keys; and ou each si do of the iustrument is a large key. moved by a pressure of the wrixr- and serving to give suonleiueot- ary signs which simplify fie reading of the characters printed. All the ke s. when operated, produce indications in ink on a roll of paper, which is taken from a reel in a niauner similar to that on the Morse telegraphic apparatns; the black keys however, give long marks, while the whi e one cause sim ilar dots to lie tran-cribed. At each pressure of the fingers on the key lMird, the paper is automatically nu rolled for a'xiut 0.03 of an inch, so that on each line any eotn binatlon of twelve double sigus may be imprint, d, aud the-e sin- are arranged in thiee griinps of four each, and read from left to riilit in the onliuary ni.mner. The nuiulier of characters w hich may be made ou each divi in of four is more than sufficient to require a single movement to form a single letter ; in other words, with practice, three let tetsorlesscan lie wntten at ouce If the useless let.etsbe surpressed, such hs double letters, e mute, e'C fre quently a siugle movement will pro duce an entiie word. Tbe manipula tion of the key board requires about six months practice to insure skill. The fact i now quite conclusively shown by Prof. Laugley, who has gi ven such careful study to the solar spots, that in the penumbra there are not only numerous small cyclones, and even right and left-handed whirls in the same spot, but probably currents a-cendiug nearly vertically, while tbe action of the 8uperposed approxi mately horizontal currents is so gene ral that they must be considered a per manent feature in the study of meteo- ology. The outer penumbra is, he concludes, formed by a rupture; and the penumbra is all but wholly made up, it sppeats in a first examination, of cloud-like torms. lue normal aaiK ness of the outer pen n mora. Prof. Langley declares, is nothiug el.-e than the darkness of the grey medium in which the granules float all over the sun. though much deeper tints are here and there fouud. which sometimes make the penumbra itself resolvable into a ring of little soots, and he thiuks that filaments and granules are one and the same thing in tact, though presenting themselves in different as pects. has been usually supposed that in sects of the moth and butterfly sorts contiued themselves to food that was accessible to a socking apparatus, without any aid from a peuetrating tool. The British Royal Microscopical society have a elide containing the proboscis of a carious unknown speci men, which sets at naught the com monly accepted idea. It terminates in a sharn chitinous tooth, above which are several saw-like teeth, and also some teeth set the reverse way. Mr. Mclntire who presented the slide to the society, says that the insect from which he obtained this organ was "a drab colored moth, inclining to a red dish brown." which he bought, with other damaged specimens, "said to come from West Africa." As be ob serves, "this instrument would pierce most vegetable structures, and wnen penetration was atfecteil, the recurved spines would act as hold-fasts, and en able the insect leisurely to obtain its food..' A Seie Lirl; in Evolution. Prof. E. S. Morse, of Salem, occasionally turns from his specialty, the brachiopods, and amuses himself with the study of oilier recondite subjects in natural science. Some time ago he determined the fact that in embryonic birds there are four taisal as well as four carpal bones, the presence of the intermedium being the main point He has since discovered that there are embryo claws on two of the digits of the fore-limb, the index middle finger. Hitherto only a siugle claw has been known, and that in hut few cases. These interest ing results throw new light on the re iaiionship between reptiles aud birds which Mr. Huxley has insisted upon. Conduction of fleut by Buildina Ma terials. The coetlicieut of conduction for heat of various building materials has lately leeu carefully investigated by Lang. who. iu his studies, has en deavored to exclude tho iudueuce of adiation, aud has made measurement by means of the thermo-electric multi plier. He buds that the stones eousid ered by him are much bettercouductors of beat w lieu wet than when dry, aud that various classes of stones such as marble, sandstone, granite. Ac. have approximately the same coefficients of cououciou, while bricks of all kiuds are much worse couductort thau the natural stoues. Enamel Colors. la making enamels the ltd OAing nnxtu es hive Is-eu found s- rvict abl- tor purples blues SiK.i Take 3 parts nf sand. 1 of chalk, ami 8 of t-alciu- d borax, or 3 nana ot glass In ok' u costal g'a-s and of calcined i-orax. i part nitrate "f soda aud 1 part of white ai'timouy or tartar emetic. A vitreous mass of enstnel o,.taiuiiit copper, wheu removed from the snieltmg iots. sometimes only ex hibits a faiut greenish hu-; iu .this state a -ingle exiMsare to a gentle heat is all that is required to produce a tiiiuiaut red. The Proper Time for Cutting Tree. An exleusive inquiiy has beeu made in Prussia into the effect upon the dura bility of woods of the season at which tbe trees are cat down. In general, the wood felled when the sap is not running has a decided preeminence as to iu durability, strength, and density. The heat given out in bumiDg wood felled in December and January is also, according to theseexperimenta, greater than from woods cut in February and March. ; - Pullman Palace Car company's took is selling for 173 s. share. aolKxTlu Different Wats or 1'bipaiuno Cab bage for the Table. An excellent cold slaw is made by shredding a solid head of cabbage with a thin, sharp knife or a slaw cutter, then placing the cut cabbage in your dish, pour over it a dressing made by heating a pint of vinegar scalding hot then beating into It quickly one beaten egg, with a lump of butter as large as a walnut, aud a tablespoonful of sugar. The cabbage should be slightly sprinkled with salt aud pepper as it is put in the dUh. To fry cabbage, chop or shred quite fine, have a spider hot on the stove in which is a small quantity of butter or meat. drippings, season, and put in the cabbage, and corer tight, stirring often and taking rare it does not scorch on the spider. Cooked iu this way it is very sweet and nice. Cabbage makes a nice dish also cooked by dropping into salted boiling water, and when tender taken out, minced fine w ith a knife, then pouring over it a dressing made by taking a piece of butter the size of an egg, and a coffee cupful of boiling water; cut np tbe butler with a half teaspoonful of dour, and stir it gradually into the hot water. When it boils, stir in a desert-spoonful of vinegar, and a dust of pepper, with a little salt. For the sauce, thick, sweet cream is an excellent substitute. To Make Boiled Custard. Take a pint and a half of milk, twelve drops of almond flavoring, a bit ol stick cinna mon, three ounees of loaf sugar. Beat up the eggs with their whites iu a half pint of the milk. Rub two of the lumps of sugar on the rind of the lemon till they are quite yellow ; then put in the whole of the sugar, the pint of milk and tbe cinnamon Into a saucepan. Let tbe ingredients boil for five minutes; then throw the whole out to cool for a short time; then beat all up together with the beaten eggs; return it to the sauce pan for a few minutes, stirring over a very slow fire till it thickens; then strain it through a flue tin strainer into a jug; put the almond flavoring into another jug, and keep pouring the custard out from one jug to the other till it is cold. If it should be inclined to turn to curd, which it will do u boiled too rapidly or over too fierce a lire, keep pouring it through the strainer into the jug; w hen cold pour it care fully into the glasses. Over the top of the custards may be grated some very fine nutmeg, or some blanche 1 almonds cut np Into fine shavbig. The above quantities will till from twelve to four teen custard glasses according to the size of the glass. A Tf.st ron Eggs. Among the minor trouble of city life Is the difficulty of procuring a regular supply of iresn eggs. lien we cannot remove our woes, the next best thing is to try to uiidertand them. So we devote this paragraph to what will interest all out of hearing ot the cheerful sounds of the barn-yard. An egg Is generally called fresh when it has been lam only one or two days in Summer, and two to six days in "Winter. The shell being porous, the water in the luterior evaporates aud leaves a cavity of greater or less extent. The yolk of the egg sinks, too, as may be easily see u Dy hoMIng it towards a candle or the sun ; and wheu shaken, a slight shock is felt if the egg is not fresh. To determine the precise age ol eggs, dissolve about four ounces of coin mou salt in a quart ol pure water, and then immerse tne egg. If it is one day old it will descend to the bottom of the vessel ; but if three days, will float in the liquid. If more than five days old, it will come to the surface aud project above la proportion to its increased age. Er. Leaf Photographs. Dissolve an ounce or two of bichromate of iiotash in water, making the solution as strong as posstDie, turn it into a snanow uisn ano soak sheets of white paper in it. They will be a bright yellow color, and must at once be put fn a dark p a e an-l dnea On a thin board lay a little cushion of paper, then a piece of the prepared paper, place the leaf on this and a piece of glass over the whole, and clamp them together with clothes-pins. Carry it into the snnshine, and in a few minutes all the yellow paper, except that pro tected by the leaf, will turn brown Take out the picture and wa.h it re peatedly in pure water to dissolve all the unaltered salt, and w hen dry the process Is complete. Little sprays of ferns make pretty pictures for spare places iu the album ; some leaves show the veins perfectly, and a great many combinations ran be made by cutting letters and placing them in a little wroath or ferns, photographing dried bntterflie, etc. The UonteWfpfr. A recent writer on household furni ture says: "The next great comfort, apart from a good bed, is a well made chest of drawers or wardrolie. Have you ever been aggravated by badly made furniture? 1 have; and 1 know of nothing more vexatious and torment ing (in a small way) than to pull at drawers that will not open, or w hich come out all askew to push at those which will not shut wuoe handles come off chests which creak and shriek and totter on three legs because the fourth is rather too short. Don't buy chests of drawers which are bauly put together, even though they have a tempting appearance may be inlaid or with superior haudles, but are in reality manufactured simply with a view to catch the eye, and afterward displease the owner in a dozen respects." Practical Suggestions. Every little while we read of one who has stuck a rusty nail in his foot or some other por tion of his person, and lockjaw has re sulted therefrom. All such wounds can be healed without any fatal consequences following them. The remedy is simple: It is only to smoke such wound, or anv wound or bruise that is inflamed, with burning wool or woolen cloth. Twenty minutes in the smoke of wool will take pain out of the worst case of inflamma tion arising from a wound we ever saw. In caring for your fowls provide them with a vessel of lime water for an occa sional drink. It is prepared by pouring hot water over quicklime, aud after the lime is settled and the water covering it has become clear, pour it off. It w ill keep fit for use a considerable time. To drive away rats, an English jour nal gives the following recipe, which it says hits proved very successful : Take s ijne glass and powder with pestle aud mortar, then mix with some lard into pills aud drop into the rat-holes. It will drive rats and mice out of the place; they die of decline. Dcstisg articles of steel, after they have b-en thoroughly cleaned, with un slaked lime, will prevent tliein from riHU Tiie coils of piano wires thus sprinkled will kjep tuein from rust many years. Molassm Sponge Cake. Take 1 cup molaa-es, 1 ssjouful melted butter, 2 egiS beateii very light, 4 cup sweet milk, I teaspoonful cream tartar, '.j tea spooufut soda, 1 cups flour, a little ginger. Raisin Cake. Take 1 cup flour, 2 cups cream, 1 cup b.itter, 4 eggs, a pound of raisins, cloves, cinnamon, candied lemon cut fine, 1 teaspoon of soda. Stir well. Corns ran lie cured by putting on them a bit of cotton saturated with sweet oil or glycerine. Keep making fresh applications for a day or two, and wear no boot or shoe. Acid Staiss. Sal volatile or harts horn will restore colors taken out by acids, and may be dropped upon any garment without doing barm. Brown Bread. Take 3 cups sweet milk, 1 cup sour milk, 3 cups meal, 1 cup flour, Vj cup molasses, 1 teaspoon ful soda. Bake two hours. uvwnmm. a r.rrir TTteviToB- There Is a man In Jersey City who owns an eleva- i -.1 h. mrmm salssin. anil tor. IDO IMKI O'S"- r ' his wife was awake. He dreamed and uttered words In his sleep, ane usieneu. lie said: . Dear Ella, darling Ella, sweetest Ella!" vw . Ck. arAnlJ flMV MA mnM. fih ffTSbbed him by the shoulder, shook bim till be awoke, and then shrieked : "Who Is dear fcllaT" Who la dear what?" he asked, wllh s surprised look. i.Tk. !- Fits inn'n hnen calling darling and sweetest in your dreams" "Tll, A suppose a must us tktnLlitir nf ! Hair slovstnr which ha . ..'f, V. - cost me so much thought and trouble ror tne past two mourn. At s n rou out-go and no income with it." The wife subsided. She may be fully conviuced that be was wholly truthful, but she keeps a very suspicious eye on him. He chuckles wheu he's aloue and "By George ! that elevator was a lucky thought. If she only knew !" Then he chuckles a little more and goes and elevates his elbows That Jewel. Detroit husbands and wives sometimes once in a great many years have disputes. The other day when a Beecn street coupie were noiu iug an angry argument the husband raised bis bands aud exclaimed: "Oh ! Consistency, thou art a jewel : The wife at once broke down, and as she sobbed she gasped out: "You saw her at tne opera, l suppose, bnt if she had tc split wood, wash dishes aud take care of six children she wouldn't look any better n I do boo.' 1 nr Trrrrn-iivikivi! hen stenned into a down-town grocery one day last week and asked the price of eggs "Thirty- five cents a dozen," replied tne store keeper. The hen cast her eyes to Heaven as she went back to her nest, remarking, in a delightful tone: ''At last a hen has some incentive to doing a full day's work," and with this con soliuz thought she cackled over her diurnal egg, grateful lor the fact that it was worth nearly three times as much as a postal card. "IT.vr. von mailed that letter I gave a-svis vauirairld nAPillndT mw rLP V altt iff Mrs. Youug-bubatid, last evening, as she handed her mate his cup ol tea. "Well, no," said Mr. Y. H., "I can't say that 1 have mailed it yet, but Tr mile all the preliminary arrangement. He was made to surrender up the letter forthwith, and five minutes later Bridget completed the arrangements" oy dropping it into tne post oox on ine corner. "Yoc see. grandmother, we perforate an aperture in the apex, aud a corres ponding aperture at toe base; and, Dy forcibly inhaling the breath, the egg is e itirely discharged of its contents. -why, Dies my souii" cried tne oiu lady, "wnat wonderful improvements f tiev do make. "Now. in my younger days, we just made a hole in both euds : and sucked." ew Orlean lime. A Tn . i-.i nn vlatfrtniv f Vi twl r- 1 t. . 3 SHOW It OJf .IIC Mil IBWtll, tmillVllg WUll marvels, a dirty, opaque glass phial. After eyeing it some time, the traveler said : "Do vou call this relic? Why, it I empty." "Empty !" retorted the sacristan, indignantly. "Sir, it contains some of the darkness that Moses SDread over the laud of Egypt." Tiuc literary color Read. The news boy's color Yeller. The undertaker's . color Done. The color of a hurricane Blew. The apothecary's color vial-! It. Britannia's color Sea-rule-I-oii. j The agricultural color Reddish. Albert I Edward's color Indiago The color of a Slavouic dinner Russ-et. Ixdian corn in North Germany often assumes a place among household plants. It is regarded there as tropical. In the United States it becomes tropical only under the' name of Bourbon, and then it warms a man up so that he feels as if he were uuder the tropic of Capricorn. The latest addition to the umbrella is a pa.ie of glass inserted in the front breadth. This must prove a great con veuie.ice. Through this glass tbe um brella fiend can see the owner approach and have time to dodge around a corner and escape his interrogating glances. PsrtAw! It's easy enough to put up stove-pipe! All you have got to do is to put on your kid gloves, take up your cane, and leave word at the tinner's and when he gets ready, and can't think of any other job, and doesn I want to go fishing, he will put your stove up. A Qcakertown man has solved Mrs. I.iveruiore's query: "What shall we do with our daughters?" He has pur chased two washing machines and will take in washing. His wife and seven daughters are to do the work aud he will superintend the business. "Mrs. nENRr," said John to his w ife, the other morning, "if you give me a Christmas present this year, please ar range it so that the hill won't come in till the next month. It's just as well to keep up the illusion for a short time." "Was the crowd tumultuous?" in quired one man of another who had just come from a mass-meeting. "Too raultu ou.," replied the other. "Oh, no, just about niultiiotis enough to comfortably till the hall." "Jcijfs, why is de gettin' ont o' bed ou de 31st ob August like one ob Moore's melodies? Docs you gib it up, my 'spected cullitd friend?" "In course 1 does. Why ?" "Bekase it's de last rose ob Summer !' "Has Torn son Timothy failed?" in quired Gtibbens of Stubbens the other day : "Oh ! not at all, he has only as signed over his property and fallen back to take a better position," was the reply. A deaf old Yankee lady being asked if she had ever had her ears pierced by the wail of distress, said she couldn't exactly remember, but she believed it was done with a shoemaker's awl. "The prisoner at the bar seems to have a very smooth face," said a specta tor to the jailer. "Yes," replied the jailer, "be was Ironed just before he was brought iu." A resident of Ecuador, being asked what kitid of soil his country had for agriculture, answered, 'Excellent if it would only keep still for a mouth or two at a time.' A cobkesposdext of a Western paper having described the Onio as a "sickly stream," the editor appended the re mark : "That's so it is confined to iu bed." "What is that dog barking at," asked a fop, whose boots were more polished thau his ideas. "Why'saysabystander, "he sees another puppy in yonr boots." "Mt son, pnt away that ball. Do you know where the wicked boys go who play base ball on Sunday ?" " Yes'm ; they go down by the fair grounds." "Can you spell donkey with one letter?" asked a silly JJUiig man of a bright girl. "Yes," sue answered, "LV What requires more philosophy than taking things as tbey come? Parting with things as they go, A gentliMan of strong attachments The Sheriff. Easily put out : Tbe gas. Girls' rights Kisses . . i i. . tistrrlresser in sarcisse riocui - ,i, Paris but be is also an amateur portrait painter. As ne com" five francs a portrait, he has a (Treat mAIIT Orucm iuivuk - . FecenUy he was called upon to paint r-nxnuj "..., d i.,ic hnxom the portrait oi am. . V7 " s. laniireM. She was painted In P .ional posture, seated with one hand on the corU and the other resting npoai the back of her pet cat, a handsome Angora, which reposed, in her lap. 1 he Prtrait was excellent, the Angora being par ticularly good, as in this particular the artist's knowledge or hair was of ad vantage. But after the first compli ments the scene changed. Muie. Beau logls drew a Louis d or from her purse and handed it to the artist. He pocV eted it and asked, "Where istheother? .. ... l . .... aoi.l rhs surnrisetl ianl- tress. "The other Louis; your portrait is forty francs." -out you would be twenty francs." "By the head. There were two beads yours and that of your cat." "But the cat is an ornament, a mere accessory like the cord.- Do you want me to pay ior me cord, too?" "The cord doesu i coui.j, but the cat counts; that is a head. Count bv heads. Will you give me tne Other louis?" "Xo." " ell.tnen, t u take away the picture," and be d id so. Mine. Beaulogis seeks to replevin it. 'arci.se in leturn demands his two louis d'or, and the Paris District Court will soon have to decide this weighty lawsuit. The OvIaTf ai ei Lite, like the future of life, remains an un solved mystery. Science has tried in vain, by analyzing the phenomena of Spiritualism, to read the future. The ... . i... kun rrl fi the renutation of Crookes, and has injured that of Wallace. Battled in tne iuiure, i, sa wsinlv to read the rlu- dle of the past. How did life originate f . I ...... I In. .tllia Basttan inougm ne iiau iuui iu inorgauic matter, but Pasteur and his kettle wrote and boiled the "prom ise aud potency" of life out of Bastian s soulless germ. A new theory, first broached in 1SC3 by Richter, ascribes the origin of life to atoms contained in meteoric stones that have been hurled upon this planet from other parts of the universe. These atoms are sup posed to have coataiued the mysterious principle of existence which we call "lite." But the proof advanced is of the slightest, and the demonstration ir t, ...... 1. 1 h mule would still leave the puzzle as much of a puzzle as ever more so, iu iaci, wiim - " trausfer it from the earth to the uni verse. How did life originate Iu the infinite space from which the meteors whirl f t. Fartalata Heaisea. The construction is fire-proof. The outer walls are solidly built of bnck or . ....... ..A tht. itir.r'or nAi-titlous Ltld wuvi muu .mv . .... .. r ;n ni,,i.r ..r Pans Ifthevamto Up IU v. - be permanent, iron ribs are first set and the piaster put, un sin. u h . Km.vu Mittf. and white coat style of plastering which we have is uuknosrn mere, lunauwr iur m- . ... i...n lisms an fimi c . . u v. ...... nsed. aud one is piecisely as fire-proof as UIO IHtlcr, jiiwoueu Ab o piwiiv protected. If wood ia employed a n,A nF slat is itronrwHl Iw-t Wt-en the beams ; n this airain a layer of cement . j .1 1 I I A . is spreaa auu mwru rein, nu iw-u IIIO U"" l. ' i " J - - r plaster is alone used, and a ceiling is secured wiiicD never buub m biku vi craekioir be the boaae ever so old. Wbeu partitions are put io tbej m-ta fire-proof tnirfure at floor and ceilioff. I rumumltair Hllrinir WinW atJtV At P 111- PTXIIia. am uuuwv sa u v "s Tkn f,t it-n am vafl arni n I sralv tfVsn- aV A US UllUIV vnujuvivy UT BUflieu, sou yet mo uiutr biui is-n wwr i rtuixtar arum nni iniiirtii alii Tiir-in 1 1 v to warrant the putting in of a claim for aamAges. oeuuer water nor uic could work their way through the nuor or ceiiiuirs. . 'Hesl Thyself The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser, a book of about 900 pages, il lustrated with over 200 engravings and colored plates, and sold at the exceed ingly low price of $1.30, tells you how to cure Catarrh, Liver Complaint," Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, Sick, B.lious, and other Headaches, Scrofula, Bron chial, Throat, and Lung Diseases; all diseases peculiar to women, and most other chronic as well as acute disorders. It contains important information for the young aud old, male and female, single andmarried, nowhere else to be found. Meu and women, married and single, are tempted to ask their family physician thousands of questions on delicate topics, but are deterred from doing so by their modesty. This work answ era just such questions so fully and plainly as to leave no one in doubt. It is sold by Agents, or sent by mail (post paid) on receipt of price. Address the author, K. V. Pierce, M. D., World' Dispensary, Buffalo, X. Y. From (to LmfaftH Dailf nirr. A VALUABLE WORK. Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, distin guished in surgery, and the general practice in the profession he honors.has made a valuable contribution to the medical literature of the day, in a com prehensive work entitled "The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser." While scientific throughout, it is singu larly free from technical and stilted terms. It comes right down to the com mon sense of every-day life. Dr. Pierce is a noble specimen of American man hood. He has sprung from the people; and, with many sympathies in common with the masses, has sought to render them a substantial service in this the great work of bis life. s Ceaaaoaptlvea, Take Settee I Every moment of delay makes your cure more hopeless, and much depends on the judicious choice oi a remedy. The amount of testimony in favor of Dr. Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup, as a cure for consumption, far exceeds all that can be brought to support the pre tensions of any other medicine. See Dr. Schenck's Almanac, containing the certificates of many persons of the high est respectability, who have been re stored to health, after being pronounced incurable by physicians of acknow ledged ability. Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup alone has cured many, as these evidences will show; but the cure is often promoted by the employment of two other remedies which Dr. "Schenck provides for the purpose. These addi tional remedies are Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic and Mandrake Pills. By the timely use of these medicines, according to directions. Dr. Sehenck certifies that most any case of Consumption may be cured. Dr. Sehenck is professionally at his principal office., Comer Sixth and Arch Nreets, Philadelphia, every Monday, where all letters for advice must lie ad dressed. ttnurouRi iara mtdisss. pnnva Wronirht Im- hrldm Cnmtutwl Inm Sbsria. Kbntiera, Doors. c. S Defst. New Tor. Send lor Circulars. -Z-sim SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! an stTMsLSIrsar iM as4 tisn.M coad-baad. tmnlf naeisd for aklpMao. COUNT, Baa&guLvijiu aruKl m nouaa sun orTioxrcujirrtru an Ths araat sad bast miih TZTT ind Is toa citf . LKW18 BRO, ui. ss ias nrassv in MB-1 A.1TKD AMSNTS! Csasaaaar aboald son tor- ' -.w mw arm .ITC WW mol .WS S J " tba pnblfebsr, i. B. ATS! ELL, BosM. Mass. 131-1 U The People's rerredy. Ths Universal Pain TVractar. Note: Ask tor POSITS EITRllT. Take no other. tTucau, ,ar 1 Mri I sWwaTSl excellent tkiaa'a." aasa't rtTIIACT - ran if rent yetrtaMe Pnla uiSj" "is Imii In e over thirty y9Mr,ud t irclirml ne-s riiprotnpt cars- -71 I f L Mi II J C IB IDKU U 1 Il.nni. JMi.'a ICxtrs.ru jii-ciies, ttrsisrs, 1 satsslr--i rwairs, are relieved almost uhmhh'17 r n.i .mu. Ptum-tlT rW.evi.-s ;iD or lsr"S trald , Exroriatioa, t bsHsips VIA More. Bails, I els-", oms, etc Am io a.4BMtwi. rrrtnres wellir.rs "x;s b rrmor.,t.olnriiiouiujM le jnnnr. in" "Its suai..iu,fn lts sod prvaigpa.B lnfiehe-d.r.siwes.Tor, go. MirBCD.RflHQ'A i:h isroe.r.w- ATI kt-xl rf u rmtisss to which lirt-. are a-ihjeet rj ptoniiillyro-eil. FuJer detaUs in buokaixom psnytsnesch Nrtlle. .... njl-aJiad or Mrr-Ha wt prompt rr.lef and rendy core. Io esse, however c .i nuc or olx'inate. e m kn rrsi.'. its mri:i .rn-t. TAIIMSI aiiS.-'t? th yn-. rare UVM CIsttSES. 11 snoel!t-1 'orptnn. irl.tC.llS. ... . RtliDls! '" arv rm". Forth: U a s?e " risr. it Biassvrd liBislmU ot live wra ail oturrreaieiir failed t a're-t bWin irom r, (MemrH. la"-, nod e.-when. UEUMATItM. "EUsAIbIA, Tr,,,", "d fcsrmrsw ore mil si-ke rd-evul, aud ottcr;.er maneDtlr cured. MVIICIilt ot llrhoo!s wliosrs arotwinV,! s'lb rlsj'iEiirarisf itra llswl re.. aamMaditiat.snrursct.ee. ve!uve !i-.i.t commda:ia from lioD'Iredol hhvjir ari-. auayoi whom order I: lor nseln I'.i-m.wii practice, in siidiuon to lrie I .r- thi y order ita lor wellls ot ll k.m:-. Uainsy. !ore Tbrsni, iDlmisni TcmmU, aiiobis aud chronic llturrbn-s, ( alKrrh, or which it i a pHe!flc.i 4 hilbliiis, I rs-l-c4 "reu Htiaa mf lserts. .Haaaaitse. etc, hspsed llsads. tare, sod iudi-ed !1 minuerof skfn d s--es. TSlLfT if. hmiovt-' ?-oi rnr. Rnranen, ltd rMamrtiaay reals I rpl's ud Piaaahrs. It ir. irrs .; d r J.mJv. wliils wondcrloiiy unoviu t ie fswitttevftsa. J (aMc8S Pane's Extract. No Slnrk B eedur.uo'LreervMaBrsnanordtobewiihont h. It it nsed by til tlie Lesdin Livery Mah!e-, Beset Railroad snd flint H -r-erm-n in New York City. It twuoeu'ialfor Msraim. Ilar t or Madtlle lliatsrs tttlnr. Nrratefcra, sweHrn.ti, Lareratioas, Bleedlaa, Pae.tmsnin. t our, lliarrhara. Chills, t slits, etc loranireaf scrionta w;. and tne rtHef & affords is so prompt that it is invaluable la every Farm-vard a well ns m ev-rv Prm -honse. Let it be tried once, and ron will s-Tcr be without ft. CAlJIall. Pswd's Kxtrart has been iml'ed. Targeo'iine article has the word PosdN Kx trart rv la e-- tio -le. ! m Deosred hv tas ataily peraoma llvimx; who ever knew au Io pretsrs it properly. Kefnse all uthrr prspsrsUoa off Witch Hazel. This is the not. articls ass sy Phylriaa. and in the hoNpiui off thsi omnrre nil En-nr- hibtobi am ri ok roDs extract, iu n.M t ', m f -e on m pltml.t-s l ID!! EXTKACT tOaPASi, Mxiden lane, tisw Xvrm o pv. FT O - x SSI O o iO 12! o 2 w I a m 2 a S C3 P W z ?" z p z s ft Q O d if ft H 5 A aJL w - 5 St est 0B H S3 O K-i PI "3 -i - V3 n H-3 o 8 X- jaw. HORSEMEN ! OWNEBlt OF STOCK! SaY6 Tour Horses and Cattle I CTTM THBlf Or DIS1A81 aiTD KEEP HUM IH a HIALTBT COSDITIOH BT TIK0 THIaf M. 8. ROBERTS' CELEBRATED HORSE POWDERS. 0 USB OYTft FORTY YEARS X sit rawsaas ossraiaiae TC27I3, LAXATT7Z FUH177 1173 FS0PZ2TIS3 evsina, massy BAXiaa raaa fata BIST CONDITION MEDICINE ' IS THS WORLD. Tsay are wad af Tm MaiariaJonlj, on tables pooBful going as tar as aae aeud sntiaary settle powders. Bay package sad after asicg tea few will aerer gat deae praisug tkZm. Far aaia i all tiers a pars. U8X M. D. ROBERTS' Vegetable Embrocatio.n BOB, ALL EXTIR5AL DISKAS81 Milt MAJV OR, BEAST. a week to A rents, fid and Too nr. M!ear4 resole, hi Ihetr heal ty T.in.. and III 1 1 IT kkkK A.ki s ft vl.-i: ktiv & .... (ssta, stains. 11-4bi k rHM IM.TT asd prtflthl esiploynent can he r saemsj by see lay is -rerv tows is Ihe I'mted States. Adilrne J. HE KIT LIjiW.l.- l TOMaua St , Boemx, Hut 11-2 -tt BROOMS! BROOMS! JOHI J. EEEtTB k CO., Waakiaartoa htrert Saw Tork. rrlacrpal Dep. is K,w York lor tbe best Broum 3Un . henm la tba luted stales. Brooms from $2.00 per dozen and npxiri ts kiwmn prfcaa sad gnatavt Taritty to bm kond anywhere. eatrre sew stock of WOOD a, d WILIXIW WAkaVancb as raikv Tnle, Baekrla. Mta, Twines, C rdaae w icka. sehetner ns roll line off Apple, Briar a ed and tUy Pipes, Fwy nf, Vaak No lans, Cattery, ae. SVgara hoe. li a. (bu par HilL Ahdl ItseethsbsstaaalityafTlNWARs. r B Wesall ear giwdasl price, that do nut rrqnire ay drnaaauac ua the road. Onlera by mad will re ceive eieaapt attaaiWa. Aatabliased ltev 3-xt-ly nriSSOWFLAKC or DAMASK CARDS, with name. CIS eta. Address J. B. ULSTkD, Naaasa Beoaa OS, M. I. 1-21-H J-ia P-drsiirtw SBAitT iSKcrrKD at Tins omrs.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers