DOITT TOUCH HI I "IU scream if you touch me!" Viri.hn.il a pert miaa Whoa lover n aeeking An inoooaot kiee. By this prudish conduct Cold water iu thrown -t The lover drew backward And lot her alone! Til ecream if yon tooch me She hollered once more. He cried: 'I'm not near you !" And found it a bore. She quickly subsided, Grew tender to view. And whispered quite softly : Til scream till yoo do i" Tke (.ladlwlers nr ladta. Aootber sort of combat, much more terrible than those already mentioned, and which is only to be seen nowadays at baroda, is the Xocki-k-koti8ti; that is to say, "fight with claws." Here the combatants, almost naked, bat adorned with crowns and frarlands, tear each other with claws of horn. These claws were formerly of steel, and caused certain death to one or other of the combatants; but they have been abolished as too barbarous for modern times. Those now in use are, as I hare said, of horn, and are fixed on the closed list with thongs. I was only onre present at a combat of this kind, for my heart was so moved by the horrible spectacle that 1 retused to go again. The wrestlers, intoxicated with bang liquid opium, mixed with an infusion of hemp sin? as they rush upon one another; their faces and heads are soon covered with blood, and their frenzy knows no hounds. The king, with wild eyes and the veins of bis neck swollen, surveys the scene with such passionate excitement that he cannot remain quiet, but imitates by gestures the movements of the wrext drrs. The arena is covered with bloo ; the defeated combatant is carried off, sometimes in a dying condition ; and the conqueror, the skin of nis forehead hanging down in strips, prostrates himself before the king, who places round his neck a necklace of tine pearls, and covers him with garments of great value. One episod, moreover dinguHted me to such an extent that, without any heed of the e fleet my sud den departure might have upon the gnicowar, I at once withdrew. One of the wrestlers, whom the bang had only half intoxicated, after receiving the first few blows, made a show of wish ing to escape; his antagonist threw him, aud they rolled together on the ground before us. The victor, seeing the unhappy wretch demand quarter, turned to the king to know whether he should let the other rise, but, inflamed with the spectacle, the monarch cried out, "Maro P "mnro .m (strike ! strike! ), and the scalp of the unfortunate fellow was torn without mercy. When he was taken away he had lost all con ciousness. That same day the king distributed amongst the victorious wrestlers necklaces and money to the amount of more than four thousand pounds. - Elblcs ef the Heataekold. There is a disposition among ns to look down on household work as some thing menial and unworthy of women. In niHnv instances thev prefer to em ploy help and increase the expense of living until bankruptcy arrives, then evade the payment of debts thus con contracted. Those who puisne such a course, it is hardly necessary to say, would keep their hands aud souls cleaner by scrubbing their own floors and basting their own roasts. This is the pride of wearing line garments, and teasting on woodcock axd cham pagne without heeding how they are to be paid for, yet disdaining the use ful and wifely work of a family. Here is presented an interesting question in ethics. The moral sense takes differ ent forms in different countries. The Greek pilgrim, having bathed in the Jordan where Christ was baptized, be lieves himself sure of heaven and en titled to a large license in the couduct of lite. In .Sparta it was not so much the crime of 6teahng as the discovery which was culpable. In France bank ruptcy is social ostracism, aud in the United States it is an event which hardly affects the social position. The married woman of France who distri butee her favors to others than her husband may possibly be regarded with indulgence, but if she attempts to cheat her creditors she is burned be fore the tribunals of justice. In Am rica she may connive with her husband in evading creditors by having proper ty transferred to her, but she may not put stabs into the marriage contract. It is welL therefore, not to assume mo ral superiority, for virtue is more or less lelative or conventional. The Ga laxy. Anklnc for Momrf. There is a time in every pure high sou led woman's existence, when her whole spirit revolts against a necessity which compels her to sjieak. It is the moment when for the first time she is obliged to ask her husband Tor money If his thoughtful love, aud kindness have provided her purse for weeks with a gutliciencr. the hour will inevitably come when by some neglect or oversight she is left without any at all. How long she will go w ithoiit it. How she will plan and arrange to make something she possesses answer her need. How, as day alter day passes, and the accus tomed courtesy is forgotten, she grows more desjierate as she is pressed by the thousand and one trifles w hich she can not wisely do without. At last she makes up her mind to speak. She argues with herself : "I need not fear a refu sal. He will rather make excuses for forgeUulness. He wiil be perfectly willing, I know. He does not know I have been so embarrassed. He would feel hurt if 1 did not tell him. I will ask hint but oh! 1 can't, I cant!" She finally is driven to it. With flushed cheeks and a brilliant light in her eyes, her steps half-haughty, half timid, the delicate, keen stabs of her thoughts pricking her, she half demauils, half pleads lor the great divider of loving men and women money. True gentle man! If you knew what that request cost you would never compel the woman vou love to humble her pride so again. For the feeling never dies out. We have heard women of all ages, and who have been married more or less num bers of years, declare, over aud again, that the hardest thing to bear, iu their whole married life, was the being obliged continually to ask for money. If a man does not voluntarily supply the necessary demands o her purse what is a wife to do? She must ask. We do not mean to say that a husband should provide his wife with amounts beyond his means; or if she is naturally extrav agant, that he should make no sign. It is not the amount of the allowance at all. It is the manner in which it is placed at her disposal. We will warrant that two thirds of the women in this city would agree to receive one third less than they annually spend, if it might only come to them regularly in the form of an allowance upon which they could draw as upon a bank, and "no questions asked." The mortifica tion is keen enough when a husband acknowledges his wife's right to a cer tain portion of his income, but still obliges her to mention from day to day the extent of her necessities or desires; when he adds faultfinding, questioning and refusal, he plants rebellion upon his hearthstone. Nothing kills out love so quickly as the bitterness of injustice and mortification. Sir, you are taking care of your father's estate, with merely a tacit understanding that you are of service and indespensabletohis interests and without a settled agreement be tween you. Would it not oe extremely disagreeable to be obliged to ask him every day or week for what you require for personal expenditure ? So it is with your wife. Just think about it a mo ment. Xow that your kindly heart has perceived her position, and your just aud generous qualities have led you to look deeply into the fine, woman- pride which keeps her so pure and sweet, so attractive and yet so irre proachable, say to yourself: "She shall never suffer so again. I will tell her to-dar lust how much I can afford to al low her, and we will have a better un derstanding henceforth. Be sure that me glow on ner cneek wiu uien ue one of pleasure, and that she will never take undue advantage of so appreciative an act. The Gvtden Utile. Oraajre Cwltetrw 1st tke leatk. The people of the South, true to their own Interests, are trying to make tnetr land support them, 'and their effort has been to find what could best be raised with least labor. This effort may have been construed to their detriment by those who have labored under the mis take of believing that the Southern people as a class were lazy people. They are the owners of a great section of land with far more scattered popula tion than la the case North, and to cul tivate their land to advantage under the old system of farms or plantations has been proven an imossibility. The nagroes will not work in the country il they can live in the outskirts of the city or village, and the people have as far as possible learned to do without their presence in the fields. Florida, which from its early settlement till the close of the war was a cotton State, has be come now the orange grove of the South, and the large places cut up into small farms have left the people time to turn their attention to orange tree cul ture. It take several years to plant and perfect the growth of an orange tree, and until the old state of affairs was discarded the ieople had no time to at tend to the rearing of groves. In fact, so poor were they, and so necessary was it for them to earn every stock of cotton that was possible, that they could not even consent to give the land over to a crop that would not pay in three years. ilh the lapse or tune, however, the trial of the people have been lightened. and with the influx of Northern people, who have gone there to spend their winters, the sale of some )ortion of their lauds has followed. This has placed means at their disposal, and, with capital in hand, they have accom plished marvels. Now Georgia lias adopted a like plan, and this season her orange crop will come next in value to her cotton. In time the banks of the Mississippi, from Memphis to New Orleans, will be beautiful iu their green and yellow dress, and where now for miles upon miles nothing is seen but cotton, will then be seen the golden fruit of the orange as a companion picture to the white poiw of the cotton plant. IVr haps in the first flush of success the people will plant too largely of the orange, and neglect, perhaps, other as much needed things, But the variety or products will but enhance the value of the South lands and rotation in crops will most assuredly increase the income of the people. The adoption of every measure that will bring immediate pros perity is the one aim of the people of the oouth, as a people, aud the devo ting of so much of their land to the planting of orange groves is proof suf ficient of their determined intention to do that which will yield them the most profit with the least sacrifice of laud and money. With the successful cul ture of the orange will follow the same experiment w im other kinds of more tropical fruits, and in years tocome will be developed all the resources of the soil of the South which, until now, seems to have been but half appreciated -V. T. Times. A Brief History er the l ac of Window Glass was first moulded instead of blown. Writers. in the fourth century were the first to say anvthinir of it and then it was only casually mentioned as "the soul sees objects through the eyes of the body as through a w indow furnished with glass." When the oiieu ings for admitting light first began to be covered with i-uelhiiui, waxed linen or oib;d paper was in common use, while for the dwelling of the royal and most patrician, a very thin shell was nsed in small quantities, and also a certain "white stone," formed from leaves of talc, such as is still found iu the bouses of the peasantry of Kussia. It has long been a mooted question whether glass was in use in ancient Kome for w iudows, but by late dis coveries in the ruins of l'omiieii it is evident that there was window class but that it was moulded instead of blown. Glass-blowing was known in France as early as the thirteenth century, and yet so rude w as the art that for two hundred years after it was rarely seen even in royal palaces. When the Duch ess of Kerry retired to the chateau of Montpensier special mention is made of the waxed linen in her window sash Even at the end of the eighteenth cen tury there were men in the provincial cities of France who followed the pro fession of ehitmititrra that is the pro fession 01 pasting oi led paper in w indow sasii. I'archment and horn have also been used to admit light. In Japan now, a transparent paper nearly like white silk is in use. It seems dinicult to be lieve that what seems now so iinlespen sible to our comfort, was until so short a time since a great lnxury. Afewrliclwal Wwexleat Iarn. A discovery has lately lieen made on an island in the Mississippi which shows that the aborigines of America were not wholly ouactiuaiuted with mechanical surgery, but occasionally wore w ooden legs when deprived of their natural limbs. In a subterran ean cave hewn out of solid rock, many thousands of years ago, was found, among other remarkable articles, a skull as brown as a polished walnut, pertect in every respect, and ot extra ordinary size, also an almost complete skeleton with a wooden leg. 1 lie fas tenings of the artificial limb consisted of petrified leather aud bronze buckles. 1 he original leg appears to have been removed half way between the hiD and knee. This discovery is regarded as extremely interesting, as not only proving that wooden extremities were fashionable in early ages, but that a knowledge of bronze was among the learning ot the aborigines. A Fable. Once unon a time a man. somewhat in drtnk. belike, raised a dreadful out cry at the corner of the market place. that the world was all turned topsv turvy ; that the men and cattle were all walking with their feet uppermost: that the houses and earth at large would tall into the sky ; in short, that unless prompt means were taken things in general were on the high road to the devil." As the people only laughed at him he began abiuriDg.foaming. impre cating; when a good-natured auditor, going up, took the orater by the haun ches, and softly inverting his position. set him down on his teet. ibewtiich, upon perceiving, his mind waa stag gered not a little. "Ha ! deuce take it !" cried he robbing his eyes, "so it was not the world that was upside down, bnt I that was standing en my head !" Censor, radical reformer, by what ever name thou art called, have a care : especially if thou art getting loud ! itipay Junior. The majority of country people I have observed eating fruit, eat the skin of it also. Their children eat it In the same manner and seem never to have been taught that the skin of fruit be it apple, peach, pear, plum, or grape should never be eaten, especially if un cooked. Fruit skins are so difficult of digestion that there is probably not more than one stomach in a hundred capable of performing the difficult task The skin is to fruit as shells are to nuts, hides to animals aud husks to frain. To oblige or allow a child to eat is apple or pear unpeeled, is unkind and wrong, for it is no question of daintiness, but of health. AGKKFUTJaUL Aprxs po th Family. There are verv few localities in the country where a good supply of aome kinds of fruit may not oe naa mroiign a large part of the year, if not for the entire annual circle, by taking a reasonable amount of care. It is true, there is no place where we can figure on the profits of a commercial orchard as we can on a farm ; but this is no reason why every owner of a piece of land may not have a comfortable supply. A correspondent in the tiraf A'ete Yorker, gives the fol lowing account of what he found on the half-acre lot of an acquaintance at Port Byron. N. T. : My friend's hair- acre lot, beside his house, with two rods wide of grass all around, contains 23 bearing pear trees, 8 large apple trees, 7 plum trees, 6 cherry trees, 6 granevines. a row of blackcaps across one end, a strawberry bed 20 by 40 feet, with plenty of room Tor nowers and vegetables. Judging from appear ances, fruit on the trees, on the ground in the pantry, in the cellar, on the table, everywhere, more fruit was grown on this one little lot than in ail the village of , apples excepted. Enjoying the freedom of the place, I rest from my writing occasionally to sample the melting Seckel, Duchesse, Virgalieu, and Liouise Bonne de Jersey pears, too luscious 1or description. Were I not a nursery man, 1 should say that every man, whose home does not afford such healthful luxuries, should forthwith make out an order for trees. . ,; A Clean Poultrj- House. A clean sweet fowl house is a very desirable thing. A building infested with ver min is a wretched place to confine fowls in; and however generous may be their feed or the attention given to their needs otherwise, the neglect to keep the laying and roosting quarters free from lice overbalances all attempts to maintain poultry in a healthy condi tion. Purity and cleanliness are abso lutely essential to the health and com fort of the fowls, guarding them from vermin, and rendering even narrow quarters comparatively comfortable. Whitewashing is one or the most im portant aids to secure these results, and should lie perforated twice a year, Spring and Autumn, at least, and oftener if necessary. The best wash is maile from fresh lime slacked witn boilius water, to which is added one ounce of carbolic aeid to every four quarts of water. Some say that the buihlinsr should be cleared of low is, closed, and thoroughly fumigated by burning iu it sulphur or tobacco stems In an iron kettle, previous to white washing, but we have not found this necessary. Whitewashing every por tion of the interior with the alwve mix ture will do the business. The lime besides purifying the building, covers unsightly stains on the walls, and greatly improves the general appear ance of the room, while the acid de stroys lice, fleas and other vermin. Onions ix Winter. "The best way to keep onions through the Winter" is to have them thoroughly cured in the Fall, either by spreading them on floors or scaffolds in well ventilated buildings, or by leaving them in conical heaps of about 50 bushels each in the field, covered with straw to exclude the rain. On the approach of freezing weather thev should be placed in a dry cellar, 12 to 15 inches thick, on loose floors, not less than 30 inches apart, giving plenty of room for ventilation. Before Winter sets in," or the onions freeze, the cellar should be closed and protected so that the temperature will not fall be low 28 degrees. In this manner they will be in readiness for market during the Winter or Spring. I have also kept onions well by spreading them eight inches thick on tight floors, in a tight building, and covering them with hay. They are not injured by being frozen once to a temperature of 20 de grees if they thaw gradually, ir the onions are to be marketed in barrels they may be put up in the Fall, cutting holes in the sides and ends ot me pack ages and storing them on the sides in any suitable building. Care must be taken that the onions are perfectly sound and dry before storing for Inter. Pkt the Fki it. Dried fruit, of al most all kinds, lias ruled low for the past two years, but it must certainly be high the coining year, for there is no kind of a mistake but that the fruit crop is light. Those who have orchards w ill certainly dry all they cannot sen green, but the amount in the North est cannot be large. The southern ncoDle have large crops, and they will do well to engage in the busiuess ener getically. They should, however Im prove the quality, for they nave anea I .caches on kilns poorly protected from wet, and apples on sealtlolds that could not well be covered. Their best plan by far is to construct light drying houses with well shingled roots. Shelves of slats are to be made inside, conveniently arranged, and the bouse being heated by a stove, fruit can be perfectly dried in from 24 to 30 hours, aud being so dried it will bring a price more than sulhclent to pay ror the house, while the expedition with w hich the work can be carried on will afford an additional profit, la this 1 say nothing of the several steam drying processes. I only urge upon farmer to do the best they can tins season. Arab Horse Maxims. Adirondack Murray, in his "Golden Kule, men tions these as Arab horse maxims "Whoso raise til and traineth a horse for the Lord is counted in the number of those who give alms, day and night, in private as well as public. He will find his reward. All his sins will be forgiven him; never will any fear come over him and dishonor his heart. Ob serve your horse when he is drinking at the brook. If in hanging down his head he remains square, without bend ing his limbs, he possesses sterling qualities, and all parts of his body are symmetrically formed. Let your colt be domesticated and live with you from his tendcrest age, and when a iiorse he will be simple, docile, faithful and inured to hardship and fatigue. If you would have your horse to serve you on the day of trial, if you desire him to be a horse of truth, make him sober, accus tomed to hard labor and inaccessible to fear. Food for Tocxo Chickejcs. They want no food for many hours after they are hatched, as they are then di gesting the yolk of the egg, which con stitutes their first lood, and acquiring strength to run about. When they be gin to pick they should he red with soft lood and very small grain. Un questionably the best soft food is an egg beaten up with a tablespoon fill of milk, and heated in an oven or by the side of a fire until it sets into a soft custard. Chickens fed or partially fed on this make wonderful progress. If they are to make large fowls, they must be fed before daylight; if, as is often the case. they are left hungry for three hours in the morning, they are often stunted in in their growth. They must be fed the first thing, and, while they are young, every two or three hours during the day. Save Your Plum-Stones. A Ger man poraologist gives certain figures in regard to the cultivation of plum trees, oy w men ne snows mat seedlings ob tained bv planting approved varieties are much more hardy and resist cold and the injurious agencies of insects much better than cuttings or graftings. This is supposed to depend upon the more equable nature or the roots and their more perfect penetration into the soil to such a depth that they are ex posed to the action of frost and other injurious agencies. - The widow of the Rev. William' Livezy is preaching in the Methodist pulpit in Braintree, Mass., made vacant by the death of her husband. wrnrnnc. Tendency to Crime im tks two Sejet. I ne tendency to crime, as exhibited in ita actual commission, for males at all ages, until sixty, diminishes at the rate of 33.333 per centum. For female un der similar conditions ot age, it dimin ishes at the rate of 25 ner centum. Keeping in view the liability to error in a search through the obscure under lying forces which seem to regulate human conduct in tne aggregate, it nevertheless appears reasonable to ex pect an explanation of this phenome non to lie in the physical rather than the mental conditions of the sexes at the terminal periods of life. In the decade which waa above distinguished as that of physical equilibrium, the governing principles seemed to be the expression of mental forces ; bat, on reaching the sixtieth year of life, the the conditions are reversed. While in the former the conditions of waste and repair were equal, in the latter me repair ot toe physical torces is ex ceeded by the waste. This is a law which applies eqnally to both sexes, bat with this difference in the result: the occupation and the crimes which belong in such great excess to men are those which - reaaire more physical strength than the occupations and crimes which are adapted to the lesser strength ot women. Let us take a ia miliar illustration : after a man at six ty years of age has retired from the scenes of his labor in the mine, or field, or workshop, the wife of the same age, or older, is vet profitably engaged in her lighter domestic duties. . She is yet contributing as materially to the comforts of her family as during the more active years of the husband's life. Now, while it is quite evident that we must regard the cause of the sudden more near eqnality in the pro portion of the sexes which presents it self in the period of life between forty and fifty years as due to physical chan ges, the evidence is yet stronger that the ratio of the more rapid decrease of male criminals at the more advanced period of fifty to sixty years is due to the cause I have named the rapid im pairment of physical energy peculiar to the period. 1 opnlar ticienre juonin Printing Ink that eon be Bleached The ordinary printing iuk.as our read ers well know, is made from the finest kind of carbon, namely, lamp black, mixed with oil, and is proof against air and all bleaching agents. The only method by which it can lie removed from the paper on which it has been printed is mechanical. In the man u iacture of white paiier from old news papers, the difficulty of removing the ink is considerable. We learn from Dingier' Journal, that Kircher and Eb ner have invented a new kind of iron ink for printers' use. whicn resembles oar writing ink. Iron is dissolved ia some acid, such as sulphuric, muriatic, or acetic, and oue half of the solution oxidized by nitric acid, after which the two portions are mixed and the Diack proto-sesquioxide precipitated by means of soda or potash. This preci pitate is filtered out, well washed, and mixed with equal parts of a solution of tannic and gallic acids, which produces a beautiful blue black or pure black pigment. This pigment is well washed and dried, and then mixed with linseed oil varnish, forming an excellent ink for letter press as well as for lithogra phy, wood cuts, and steel and copper plate printing. Paner nrinted with this ink can be bleached by putting it into a bath of pure water to which 10 per cent of caus tic soda or potash has been added. It is left there 24 hours ; then put into a rag engine, cut fine, the pulp thrown on a cloth and allowed to drain, wasned with clean water to which 10 per cent of hydrochloric acetic, or oxalic acid has been added, digested 24 hours, and again used for making paper. Xete Kind of Carriage Wheel. A new principle in the construction of carriage wheels has been brought to notice by an Lnglisb inventor every part of the same consisting of wrought iron, with the exception of the tire, which is formed of the best cast steel. The method of fastening the spokes which are hollow both in the rim and in the boss, is such, it is claimed as to insure safety, by the simplest means. The tire is so constricted as to protect the other parts of the wheel when it runs against the curbstone, or comes in contact with another vehicle. Neither in putting on the tire, nor indeed in any portion of the work, is a single bolt or nail employed, the spokes be iug sliuped into their places in the rim and boss, and afterwurds locked up by a nut, while the tire is firmly inserted into a groove in the rim. The strength of the axletree is increased at the points where it is most liable to give way, and the boss is made to accommo date about four times the usual quan tity of oil for lubricating purposes. Although made of iron and steel, the wheel is not more than two or three pounds heavier than the ordinary kind. Procuring Fresh Water from Sea Wa ter. A method of procuring fresh wa ter from sea water through the direct action of the sun's ravs is among the foreign inventions. The apparatus consists of a box of wood one inch thick, about fourteen feet long, two feet wide, and an average depth of six inches. The upper part of the box is closed with ordiuary glass, which has an inclination ot an inch and a half. At the lower edge of the glass there is a semi-circular channel, destiued to re ceive the fresh water which is con densed on the interior surface of the glass. The operation is entirely sim ple. The salt water is let into the box for about an inch in depth, and it is then exposed to the rays ot the sun. A very rapid evaporation then begins, and it is found that a square metre of glass will condense daily the amount of two gallons of pure water. A IM irate Radiometer. At a soiree of the President of Koyal Society Dr. William Crookes exhibited an extreme ly sensitive radiometer, with which he was enabled to perform the novel ex periment of producing mechanical mo tion in racno through the agency of the rays proceeding from a candle flame at some distance from the apparatus. The following is a brief description of this ingenious device: It consists of a glass stem supporting a four-bladed wind mill carrying four disks, one at each extremity of the four slender glass rays. These work horizontally and are supported by a steel point on a small topaz. The apparatus is placed in a small glass globe exhausted of air, and the radiations from the flame of an ordinary candle placed at some dis tance away ia sufficient to cause it to rotate with great liveliness. . . Eydratcd Cellulose. It has long been remarked that under the intiuenee of acids, cellulose becomes extremely fri able. Paper bleached with a too large excess of chloride of lime, and linen, submitted to the action of sulphurous acid, which transforms itself into sul phuric acid, may by the least pressure be reduced to powder. M. Girard. af ter a series of elaborate exDeriments. concludes that this transformation is due to the fixation of an equivalent of water by the cellulose, and be has pro duced the hydrate synthetically. M. Girard considers that this hydration of cellulose plays an important part in tne economy ot nature, and that tne production of rotten wood, nlmine, and ulmic acid is always preceded by that of the newly discovered hydrate. According to Dr. Sea tiller of London, the bad effects of chloroform on the pia mater are neutralized by nitrate of amyL . This substance, it is stated, even in cases of complete anaesthesia, arrests suffocation, reestablishes nor mal respiration, and allows the pulse to regain its vigor. This, if demons trated beyond doubt by farther neces sary investigations will be an import ant discovery, since il tends to neu tralize the serious danger which now In many instances attends the use of chloroform. : The ladies of Richmond treated their New Tear callers to buttermilk. Mil f . ' Health Notes. It Is a cruelty to uesrlect the teeth of children. Bodily activity and bodily health are inseparable. If we dink anything at meals, it should be first wanned. than retard the progress of consump tion. Often a child bears a striking resem blance to a grandparent, without a lineament of parental feature. Many have retired on a fortune, and died from fear of coming to want, and from having nothing to do. Let man imitate the brute creation, by eating only when he is hungry, and drinking only when he is dry. Every grain of sand must be taken care of. or the universe would dash to atoms, and so with the little things of the body. . TVha nnunvu nnnr finuldta In ntilMtrn. ing much tliat is old, and in acquaint ing one's self with the new, In order to be able to determine its worth. . Be assured, ye poverty-stricken, that the necessity of a vigilant activity is a happier inheritance than that of piles of glittering, neart-hardening gold. My Idea of a true man is, one who is prompted to do right, when the moment lor action arrives, purely Because it is right, and he loves right acting. All children under five years of age, will- be made the better, healthier, happier, and more good uatured, by an undisturbed sleep of one or two hours in the forenoon. Never send for any other than an educated physician, in an emergency, for with such eidy are you in safe and efficient hands; and if relief is possible, he can give it. The effect of constipation is to thicken the blood, to make it impure; hence more unfit for healthful purposes. The more impure the stood is, the thicker does it become, the slower U its pro gress, and if nothing is done to alter this state of things, stagnation and death take place. 1k. Hall. Watering PlaHts. 'lite Providence Journal very correctly remarks: Seeing the other day a very Intelligent iierson sprinkling not watering a bed of dowers at 10 o'clock iu the morning, under a bright sun. we were moved then and how to say that not only was the time and labor lost, but iu case of delicate plants, with surr.ice roots, actual injury might have been done. The theory of watering plants is this: The roots are to be thoroughly wetted without leaving any standing water; this, well done, will answer the purpose for several days where the plants are in the ground. It should be done on cloudy days or at evening. The mere sprink ling of water on the surface does no good ; the water does not get down deep enough, and besiiles, in a hot sun the evaporation .cools the ground so as to threaten, if not injure, the most sensitive plants. What Is best is to mulch plants with the short grass cut from the lawn, or dry dust from the street will answer; give so much water and such protection that there shall be no quick evaporation. So far this year we have had no severe drought for plants having deep roots, but in this and next mouth we may expect dry weather. It is below, aud not on the snrface, that water is needed and bene ficial. The Best Pisispkctaxts. There are three powerful disinfectants; carbolic acid, but its smell is objectionable, chlorine and permanganate of potash; these last two are quite expensive. These disinfectants act by combining witn dcletrious substances and render ing them harmless, while antiseptics prevent and arrest the decomposition of animal substances. I he mo?t common and available disinfectantand deodorizer is copperas, crude copiieras, sold by druggists at a few cents a pound, under the name of sulphate of iron; one pound to two gallons of water, to be used as often as necessary to render all odors imperceptible, acting at the same time as an antiseptic, deodorizer and disinfectant; aud if instantly thrown over what passes from the body in cholera, is one of the cheapest aud best means known for preventing its com munication to others. The only per fect disinfectant, however, is habitual cleanliness and thorough ventilation; next to that is a dry heat of two hundred and fifty degrees. Tea-Cakks. Rub a quarter of a pound or butter into a quart of dried dour, then beat up two eggs with two teaspoonfuls of sifted sugar and two teaspoonfuls of yeast; pour this mix ture Into the middle of the dour, adding a pint or warm milk as you mix it. Beat it up with the hand until it comes off without sticking, aud set it to rise before the Ore, covering w ith a cloth. and after an hour make it into cakes about an inch thick, set them on tin plates to rise before the fire for ten min utes, aud then bake in a slow oven. Better thax Short-Cake. Make uice, light, w hite gems by mixing dour aud milk nearly as soft as for griddle cake, ami bake quickly in hot gem pans. Break, not cut them open, and lay in a deep platter aud pour over strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, or even nice stewed apples, mixed with sugar and a little rich cream if you have it. fen times better than any pastry or short-cake and you get rid of soda or baking powder and shortening. Uirt Of iAjf, Cors cobs are extensively used iu Kuroiie for fire lighters. They are first steeped in hot water containing 2 ier cent of saltiM'tre, and alter being dried at a high teuierattire, are saturated with iS) er cent, ofresiuous matters. These lighters, which are sold at from 3 to $1 the thousand, are employed with advantage and economy in private bouses and for lighting furnaces. To Clean a Carpet. Shake and beat it Well ; lay it upon the floor, and tack it firmly; then, with a clean flannel, wash it over with one quart of bullock's gall, mixed with three quarts of soft cold water, and rub it oil with a clean flannel house cloth. Any particularly dirty spot should be rubbed with pure gall. f Green Corn Pudding. Take twelve or fourteen ears of corn and grate them ; to the pulp add oue quart of sweet milk, a piece of butter as large as a walnut, four eggs, and salt to suit your taste; stir the mixture thoroughly, and bake one hour. Serve with sugar aud butter. Graham Mcfpixs. Two eggs, one quart of sweet milk, two table-poonfuls of melted butter, a little salt, one-half cup of home made yeast, or two table spoonfuls of brewer s yeast, and Graham flour to make a thick batter : bake as soon as light. Laplanders, One quart of milk, one quart of flour, four eggs, two table spoonfuls of melted butter, one tea spoonful of salt. Heat iron-clads, then butter them. Put them in the mixture and bake in a quick oven. Corn Drop Cakes. Very nice ones are made by mixing corn meal with boiling new milk until you have a thick batter ; put in the patent pans (if you have them) at once and bake for twenty or thirty minutes. Sour Milk Cakes. One pint of sour milk, one pint of flour, butter size of a small egg, one tablespoonful of sugar, one salupoonful of salt, half teaspoonful of soda. Bake in hot and well buttered iron-clads. Water CitAr-cvRa. . OnA nnnnH rf Sklll An tMITlMinl 111 Af . u 1 . half An ounce of soda, even tablespoonful ot lard. Make up with sweet milk ; beat 11 ,1 .ii , . weu, run miu anu uaite quick. Sausages. Forty -lx pounds of meat. three-fourths of a pound of salt, three ounces of black pepper, half an ounce of sage, and a tablespoonful of red pepper. BTCIOBOC. KoTHixa to Live Fob. A negro planter came to Vicksburg the other day, sold his cotton, put his money in his vest pocket-book and started down the river. Leaning too far over the guards, as the boat backed out, he fell overboard. His portmonnale, which was in his side pocket, floated out and rode with his hat on the surface of the water, while the current carried the negro away. The yawl waa lowered, and assistance at once started towards the drowning man, who, perceiving his treasure floating off, raised his voice and shouted : His head went under and he disap peared. As he rose up again ne g-Fw un..i. 1 1 a In jt at ntvekAf-hnok !" W W fllu 1 u. Scarcely had he uttered the words be fore be sank a second time. Tin nrl m within reach lust in time to rescue the drownlug African as . . .... A., tli. last ne came up w me Buru.x v A a aa tliA vtpr VII wined from his nose and mouth so that he could see and speak, he asked : "Hid did you save dat pocket-book t "Xo!" was the response. ttxir ..1 1 .1 t -..;.! rli. nAtrrn rpm-ef- iicil, lieu. - II fully, "what tie debbil was the use ob savin' me?" ' "Well. said the livery stable keeper to the anxious young man, "perhaps I can let you have a team for New Year's Day, seeing It's yon, though Its pretty late in the season to come round to en gage one." "And what'll you charge?" asked the yonng man. "Well, teams is in demand, and so prices is pretty high, but seeing as it's you I'll let you have a horse and cutter for the day for $o73." "Jerusalem I" said the young man. "Besides." said the proprietor of the livery stable, "there's a good deal of risk, ror when a young lenow gets 10 histing in too much of that ere chicken salad and beef tea and sionge cake, he may let the horse run away and smash things. You'll have to deposit Die full value of the horse and sleigh that'll be t2M." "Thunder!" said the young man, reflectively; "I'll save $123 if somebody steals the Imrse. Ail rignt; keep one for me." Rev. Dr. RrrcHKY, of Edinburgh, though a very clever man has met with his match. When examining a student as to the classes he had attended he said, "And you attended the class for mat he matics?" "Yes."- "How many sides has a circle?" "Two" said the student. "What are they?" What a laugh in the class the student's answer produced when he said, "An inside and an out side." But this was nothing compared w ith what followed. The Doctor hav ing said to this student, "And you at tended the moral philosophy class also?" "Yes," "Well, you would hear lec tures on varions subjects. Did you ever hear one on cause and effect ?" "Yes." "Does any effect ever go be fore a cause?" "Yes." "Give mean instance." "A man wheeling a bar row." The Itoctor then sat down, and proposed no more questions. "Shrinkage in molasses!" said Mrs. Partington, smiling, as she heard read the reason for the great failure in Balti more; "what a thing that is to be sus pended for, and if all were to be served the same who do the shrinking, there wouldn't be gallowses enough to sus pend half of 'em on. Mr. Spiggot, mv grocer, says there's a tenderness of molasses jugs to expand in hot weather, which settles the pint so far as he is concerned, but it has quite a different effect on the molasses." She rather got things mixed up, but Ike was immersed in a base ball account, and didn't ex plain. Some Consolation. A Detroiter got home at midnight with a black eye and a boozy step, and as his wife met him at the bead of the stairs she ex claimed: "Why, you've been fighting!" "Yes'ni," he meekly replied, as he leaned on the rail. "And some one has blacked one of your eyes!" she continued, as the tears came. "Don't cry, zarling," he said, In a coaxing voice, as he put his hand on her head; It hadn't had a chance to run he'd have blacked bofi of 'em. Ingenious Flattery. An exemplary clergyman, who is somewhat veak in the pulpit, relates with much good nature how an "elevated" drover whom he met in a coach did in all kindliuess try to gloss over this inferiority. "Ah, Dr. B.," said the drover, his heart warmed by good bargains at a great market, "ye iliima ken me, but 1 ken you. I'm whiles in your parish. There's no abetter likit man onywhere; yer own folk jist adore ye. Who cares about preaeliia." The attitude of Kurope toward Turkey reminds one of the old caricature in which the housewife is represented as coming into the poultry yard with the remark: "My dear chickens, 1 was just thinking whether I would have you served up roast or stewed." .Whereto the chickens respond, "But w e don't want to be killed." "Ah ! But my dear chickens," says she, "you w ander from the poiut." A gentleman who has a thrifty cherry tree iu an insecure place put a capital stone imitation of a dog under it to irigtiten ou boys. 1 lie other morning he went out to find the legs and tail broken off the image, and the bodv st.icking ill the ground, and labelled : I his credorg leels sick. A purcbaskr of a river-side procrty asked the real estate agent if the river didn't sometimes overflow iLs hanks. "Well," responded he, "it isn't one of those sickly streams that are always con lined to their beds." "Go out, young man, ke, not here!" said a Pennsylvania preacher last Sun day, iu the midst ol his sermon, to a youth whom he saw standing hesitat ingly iu the doorway. Wantet a cover for bare suspicion, a veil ror the race or nature, buttons ror the breaches of privileges, binding for a volume of smoke, cement for broken engagements. Probablt one of the most trying times in a man's life is when he intro duces his second wife, seventeen years old, to his daughter, who is past twenty. "'Liza, what did Jake die wid?" "Laws' honey, it was de serious-ole-final-coine-an'-git-ns (she meant cerehro tpinal meninjitit), and he died hard." Wht can a young lady who was too weak to stand up during prayer-time in church, dance all night without being tired ? This is a conundrum. Ir the devil should lose his tall where would he goto get another? Why, of course, to the saloons where they retail bad spirits. A sportsman thinks that because he hooked a trout three times within a half hour that fish has no feeling in his jaw. "Ir there Is anything which will make my mouth water," said an old toper, "1 don't want to see it." "Laughter," says a philosopher, "is one of the products of civilization." how abouf'smiles." It is impossible to have the last word with a chemist, because he always has a retort. A relative position Standing god father. Ouohtx't a bell-boy to be a wirev- chap? A spirited youth one dead drunk. Spirit of the press cider. so v..?rJ&J!ZJt& ages that donation- .nerving at acts of signal generosity, Jy "f perpetual remembrance. In 690 tne Kof XortfcamberU Iw of lana lore. , AnioH of the woriu. -. f gave 200 sheeP and uu ' - Lrvy ; lou crown. - - rr, " m ."'ii Af .he Rose." In caiieu mo . . cn t 1720 a Latin Bible was mu -j - ' ., .rohea of London Bridge were built o. time, too, wuen hk - , were only three half peuce a day, and when, of course, it would have cost wn7 ? nf labor to buy sucn a man "'"' : - - - -. T H -a Bible, which, after all, being in Latin, he could not have reau. , 1. 1 . t kia last Illness shows a An IllCI'iem v . love of or..ersogreat to be almost monomania, aiis "r"" k- VnH marked with consecutive numbers, and he used them accordingly. As he lay on his deathbed, w ith the cold sweat on . . . it-ith him a clean handkerchief, which, unluckUy, did not . .. .1... ,;.,hr ..ne ami he at naipe m e me ---i once refused It, and asked for number seven. -' the kin of terrors that he mani- WSlcU IOWJUU iuv - out again aud again. "J ne rent piu .. .... .r -.,. .i:- " lint Ir was mourir; t"i w ' - - " r in vain; he died on the loth March, l!42, in his eighty-second year. Pnm A (fmn SrMrt- ( " A. Slrajwrkiabl rn(nlnl Among the notable professional men of this country who have achieved ex . a. U lr. K. V. Pierce. LI .1'-' Mill.' T i-iiv' ' of Buffalo, . Y. The prominence which he has atlaiueu nas htvu rt i. through strictly legitimate means, and, so far, therefore, be deserves the envi able reputation which be enjoys. This large measure of sin-cew is the resnlt of a thorough and careful prearatlon for his calling, ami extensive reading dur in" a long and unusually large praetn-e, w hich have enabled hint to gain high commendation, even from his profes sional brethren- Ievoting his attention to certain sieeialties of the science he has so carefully investigated, he has been rewarded in a remarkable degree. In these specialties, he has become a recognized leader. 'ot a few of the remedies prescribed by him have, it is said, been adopted and prescribed by physicians in their private practice. His pamphlets and larger works have been received as useful contributions to medical knowledge, lie has recently added another, and perhaps uiore impor tant work, because of more general ap plication, to the list of his published writings. This book, entitled "The People's Common Sense Medical Advi ser," is designed to enter into general circulation. Dr. Pierce has received acknowledgement and honors from many sources, aud especially scientific degrees from two of the fiil medical Institutions in the land. 10 Caswnastlve, Take SaXIcet Every moment of delay makes your cure more hopeless, and much depends on the judicious choice or 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 anility, bebenck s 1 uluionic 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. scbenck provides for the purpose. These addi tional remedies are Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic aud Mandrake Pills. By the timely use of these medicines, according to directions. Dr. Schenck certifies that most any case of Consumption may be cured. Dr. Schenck is professionally at his principal office, Corner Sixth and Arch StreeLs, Philadelphia, every Monday, where all letters for advice must be ad dressed. The People's Remedy. Tha Universal Pain Estractor. Note: Ask for F0.DvS EXTRACT. Take no other. E3r ar lurk I 1 .' k ui viritl'-ut thine.' PUD'S KTSAST-itors cta.lr Pi lnirvi r. H- l-i in ti nvrr thirty 3rnrk:iUtl f t cU2iii.n- dik! k.otup& cut t - v -:u -v ".nt ! crt il CHllCRE.- ' t im i'y "in -H. wH tH wfti oct riitT l-xiri. Art-ieirutu, lirnienv nltnutt iusMTrily hy rxu-m il ppiimtton. F-Tri:iritftH t hnfinj;., 4Ht Sore lttil l srus te. ArTrr lu-Cni-t'on, ivtlno'M !nr. nf iMfriiij, fIMUEWUIVSS&.-!i r ii.-T..rin li:l 4' k i:ni--iu-.r.. in--.- aiittpr t.d Jiu.n In It'C l;-rt. I rm-a, v.-rctpi. IH If Jf " ..-i.mU J!l kir.1. . I nl. i-irtiMi 10 wiidi l .fli-. an p-jhyM-c ane T..ni:n . n . ,!. Kulk-rik-ti. Ism Ukatcwn- PI1ES -fcliiol or ftlrrlii.ar affl pmnpt rWW and rt-ji'1 r'tr. ftii:. lumt-vi-rcitniuxor n!t.rn.i! c-n !onif rf-.L its rrjiiLrt. VARICOSE !. ' Hil'nr r-m tot ' ut-:- .p. i,' auil d.-nct-Tt,Hi!-iirtU.n. I13if DISEASES. It hu no ic:I lot j-rm. II- . t r i,f, BlItSiSB '"'" ' rin--. Fi-tli; I. a mjtr. inc. It Immfnl hnnlTv-rf of live whrra :l il:i-rr-iueji's failed tt arrrl hli-txliu irtuu Tmn''li. Iinvu nixl t'ti--whrr.. IIEUMATISM, SEl'RAISIA, Tcwhuk. nd fr.wri!'-Me fcr-:.,! nlik.v i.-l l-vi-U, a-iU oilT -t-r- fHTS!t!AXS ot rllv-Wi wboftre -irqu-iiir-' n!i -ml Tin ran af W in la llus.,-1 r. . omm-fiditin umr prar-t.r. WlrYW.t.tur roniiLviM-mM-tu (nun bandrvdsif fhvjticaii-.. riau'ot irh.iel mrl-T kW tvln tfieir ma !--i.c. l:i M:tMa to i&e t.,n -'ii, llu-y erdr it no for rrlliitit of : il k mln, t(iiiw),Nrf Throat, laUatued TtMMiU, s.mjle tut! ctin:tu I'iurruit-M Caturrk, lor wh!rnt i-1-lH-rd. bilMnln-, Krtnt d el, Mina-iariaM-rl..HaiMnMa, Mo, 4 hayiH-d lluafU, Fiut, uia idc-wi fi'l n-innrr ol fkln c!j-nrK. TOILET BSE. ) rrar-s Koaikimi, ud .martinet hails t at. l:riiliu, atid Piottl-. . It oriiMi m,,,,,! r wtiiM wuudxiulij iiar rov jig tin- Cftiila'li4MI. Z ! TO FilR. Extract? .Vo Rfnrk b.-fetlur.uo Ljtctv Man cau a ttord to be witanat it. It k nx-d by nil tlw Lradin Livery Stablra, ftri-et Kailmada and fint Hirana in N York City. It ua no eq'tal f-r Kpraiim, llar pm or Hd:!I- kaNDa, MiUnrws fc-ra!rhfs Kwellina-mCato, lerrwtiam. fllJT,'iim.''l!'-,m';n'M' 1 ' IM-rrha-m, l'Jh T'" rnof action ia tr. fc, and tne rtltrf a afford U prompt that it Is lna!nb.e in ctctj Karm-;rd wrti aa tn errrr Farm -botw, I it W tried oow. and t-vi will m-rir be witbuot it CAOTiai. Hawrt'n Kali-art la V ItnHatfS. 1 in vn line art:cle ha tre word Paaal'a K trmrt blown In each bottle, ltia nrruami br the ly peraama living who am knew how to preiara it properly. Refnaa all other preparation ol Witr Haul. That at the only artKle ml ty Phyiw-iaaa. aad ia the huapitala of ihie country and Eiroo- BISTORT Via CSE OF HD-8 IXT1ACT in tmT-M-t form, rnf fre oa arolkatluei u POMIJS -XT BAIT C0JrA. d31 CORBUBATE) IRON BUILBISBS. HOOPS Wromrtit lroa Brldtm vorraa-aied lion Soe-tau Shutters. Doors. r Xmiiylra S.-dji lx!Za ' o wj ot.. ew Yora. send tor circular. i-;-sm SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! AD atrlea,airear Wowed and Walamt.nww a ateond-haad. Heenraly packed for ahiprtni COLallkJtS, BaitWvUUa, Kk TO Tne larKeet and beat nnnrlia atoak. laewTSi Krad-tiand in tha Ortv. LKVPW Me BRO, M IU. ISM. ISta aad Ia7 IIMK , pal& -rl i 1 'unnrnjai sal w m v '-" . BTtaaoa Co., Pertlaad, ate. V I f yvX)onii'OOOQonncoonnoorxyxxinrVxooooo QQIIOQOO)OOOOOOOOOOOOOt''IOOOOW'WJOUOOIIOTO ooooooooooooooooooooo o oootwouorooooocwn om - :'.;" .'. t 000 2 Only 3 tots a Week H ooo . "- oroooooonooooo . o -r ooooooooonooooo OOOOOOOWOOCiaJ " I S 7 U suojiooooooooooa OOOOOOUOWOUVO OUUUMUUUutMOOO ooo uoo S r"in.l lnviwtnnt oou ooo ooo noo ajiitaaaia ataa tu.aaim uuv ooo ooo oooooconoooooo ooooooajpoooeoo OOOOUOOUUUOWjO onoooouououuoo BRINGING ocxjoou&jooao oooououoouoooo ooo ooo ooo Splendid Returns. OOO OOO ooo 0OO00OOOO0O0O.-W0 oooot-oooooonoowio orwoooouooouocouo 0000000000000001)0 OOOOOO0OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOUUOUOOOOOOOO FOB ooo 5 City, Village, Country OOO ooo OOO Mio one ,.KX)oooooooi)0xxxKiooooooocoonoooooooiio ta10KHXIOOJWOOOM10010llOOOOOOOOOOUO u, aMJW.juouUWHWXWOO 0 OUOOOOOUMMUUDOUOOOUO OOO ouo BE AXE at, you want tor Yourself ouo o ou ouo and Family, lor l7S, the Boat Praa- ouo ouo 000 ooo tacul toe must Vfmt, the most Samtf- uo ouo Ouo ooo JW, and jet evewpew JaaraaJ la ouo ooo ouo ooo Amfrtrtu You will certainly dnd that ouo ooo ouo oovi Journal In the Jmtrutm Afncmttmria, ouo ooo ooo issuing- its 13II Aaataal Volataa ouo ooo OOO law durlEiftUrCenlennlal Year. Two Hum- ouo Ouo ooo bt-rs now rt-aoy lor xww.www ou reau- OlAt ouo ooo era, and IH , w ouea- " ooo ouo ouo will have It, If tbey learn Its rrai aula, ouo ooo - - - ooo ooo Ol-O 4 lit mMe (or tiaartu) page In every ouo ooo ouo ooo number, beuutuullj printed oa ana ouo ... ouo ooo paper. . oo " OI'O ouo ooo 43 to r.wral". beautiful, ouo ...I ouo ooo pleasing and .a-b-wrf.a. tnrerry number, ooo ooo ooo ooo noil Out OUO A-ret Variety jf iVaiVa, rff- ou aU. Ierrtw Heading, wfid to every -Mat) W I HI Ml ooo CITY, iltLAVE, and Ol. oou ooo ooo ouo o OuO Ouo O""- TRY. ooo OOO 000 " HON EN r T FEOFI.E. " Every number of ouo g-tves engraved Ilotise Plana, common- JJ 000 sense ones, with all mat. rials, and the JJJ 000 eoat HreryWy wants a House, or to lia- ouo ouo a-at hie j prove one. Hero Is a world ol utv-i, rMtbcml miormatlon. ooo u" t'HILDBE Ot ail aires Bnd to 000 every number mmdt to interest and - JJJ 'H -r-dtnem. Z ooo " A CA1.ES dab of -mouu. witn 2 useful binta thereon. In H. bard-, Odkarrf. Iiry. on the wr-, etc. given J00, In every number. Is alone worth tne ouo OOO OOO ouo Ooo ooo ooo cost. fafafn ooo " 2 HTXBlCSEXrOSED. -Soother 2 Journal tn the world so eraufcw and !', exposes the tricks and schemes 2 of the awlndlera that prey upon every 2 !ndlvldual.Theaeeapoareaalonesave 2 Its reailurs millions of dollars, and will JJ 12 save every reader many time the cost 2 J00, of the paper, to bad ptuvha.a and tn jj vestments. It not in avoiding bare oou oou ooo OUO Ooo OOO ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo swindling. Tb Abate are only a few of the goad MOni of the Javneaa A ncattar- ooo ouo OOO ooo ist, that for 34 years have made tt so ooo ooo acceptable and aerW tolta aubsi rlbers. ma. Ouo OOO Y. ,...,., I hi ttio Pul.l1l.h- "" U t-o Ol o oou I oo OOO era can supply the paper at s ""'- J"? afew price It combines Braafy andracrwlweaa to a wonderful tie- J oou ouo oou ooo oou oou OU gree. and fcthe heataea( Jaxtrwal la tke t eeldl re. We wanl.-t and ooo ooo JJJJ should have U. The tenienalal Vol- Jo ooo ooo ooo ame (lor all ol !? will tar i-s el Iu ouo oou ouo m-o ooo oou wuo 0"0 Oou TIT IT. ooo OUO ooo OOU 4f;4tOtCOp1v1.36ettCb;101p!4 JJIo H r-aoeh. 2 ono - ooo oo OBAS4.E JrDD CO , Publthf rs, ooo fmo 'ooo ooo 9 4 A BroMlajr. New Turk. ooo OtiO ooo ouotioriorx-onoonfiirro vinonono iooooafiooooi too OIMSliMIarHM:w)paiall.HtrelHM OOttfM K M -4 M It H Jle MM laJSjtMJO Oboouooouuoouoiooou'u ouom-oooonioi-joooeuuuo $77 a week ta Aeeata. CM and Tom nr. Hale aad rmale, in tbeir kwaltty. Trraa. and ot'TUT FKKK. Addreea t. u. TK'KKKT A CO., AB- rata, Maiae. 11-1 PCRMABHTandpToataMe eaiplnyaarat raw be earured by ewe btuy in every tuwa ta the taiUel Sutfea, Addri-ea J. UKNRY LYMOMttt. 6H ba voaaaua St , kuatua, Maae. U-S.-U BROOMS! BROOMS! JOHS J. miCEE & CO., SS3 Waaklaia-tew attract. Hew York. Principal Depot la Mew Yerk Sir the beat Broua hUaw faetam ia the United Btalee. Brooms from $2.00 pr dozen and upward. The hiweet pricee aad areeieat varietv to be fbaad anywhere. Al. an entire new etork of WOOD aed WILLOW WARS, earn aa Pal la. Tube, Baaketa, Mate. Twiaee, tiUK W irk. Ac.,lor-tber with a hill line of Apple, Briar W od aad I'hty Pipea, Faary Peape, Yankee Nw tkae,Callery,Ac Srgara Iron. li $rio pr Mitt. A fall line of the beet quality eff TIN WARS. F. . We eell war guuk. at prirea that do But require any drneaaata em the iwaa. Urdere by awed will ra eetvearaniptMleatlva. Retaliliehed leas. S-t-lJ 20! CNOWrLAKRor DAMASK (MUM. with waaie. So eta. Addreaa J. k- HL'.tTeUi v.- n Ok, . Y. 1-al-lt H mn S K e-5 H c ea K a e eC e CL J. M w4 H S O 5 CM z S Kj g w o - 5 o o o 13 m ' t ewW M aiVal I , m g f-s a IS B 'j' X a. O M W a SO 3 SB "J 5s r5 o If o o u 4 JOB PRINTING irRATXT XXM1UTWD AT TMIS OTICI,