" " '". ' , " , 1 iraotow- 1 w.-jJ I ZROS. bt too. amo. Di-ia and dor, fair aa the mora, Eroa of Aphrodite born Ctoes mea on aarth to each and all. And apreoda the beait'a high festiraL Ha ia tha BMaaenger of Gives gifts onto the deaolata ; And where ha walka the atmriaa poora With Uriah hand lta rosy atorea. Lot harbor neither fear nor doubt 11a more than all the world without ; lta rairsrioa on wondering eye Fall with deliciooa, aweet aorpriae. In way of old, in method new Fanned, or whether it paraae, Lot firmly apeaka nor plana, nor wait ; That ia not Lore which heaitatea. Hia light is finer than the ann'a ; Hia face ahinea like Endymion'a ; Hia )oy are heired from all the apherea. And grief goes out when he ppeara. ScrSmer's JiWWy. Tka Life af Waaaea Mlaelaaariea. At the recent meeting of the Woman's Union Missionary Society, in Associa tion Hall, Mr. E. Warreu Clark, lately returned from India, gave some account of what he saw in the Society's mission house In Calcutta. "I would gladly give you a little peep if I could," he said, '"into the quaint but agreeable surroundings of your Home in Calcutta 140 Dhuramtollali street; for although as a man 1 would not gain an inside view of zenana life and work.yet I could see the way the ladies had of doing things, ana tne ciocK-iise regularity with which their duties were performed. I arrived there in the hot season, and at times when the thermometer remains stubbornly at 130 in the shade. It is calculated to throw everytning eise into the shade. It is calculated to throw evervthine else into the shade, too, ex cept the difficult question of keeping cool! But the ladies only got up the earlier for all that, and drove out two by two in their gharies, or utile cans, visiting their zenanas between six and nine in the morning instead of staying indoors, as some oi us wouiu nave wru tempted to do. When I first drove through the gateway, of the Calcutta Home I saw before nie a substantially built bouse of verv different style from what I had seen in China or Japan ; but on alighting at the vine-covered vn traitoe, and stepping into the open and airy hall, there seemed something fa miliar about it nevertheless, aiinoiign i wondered how eople made their pres ence known in Calcutta houses, for no body was to be seen. While reading some chreuio texts In the hall, such as 4God bless our home," &c, peering in at the dining-room with iu long table, a pleasant young Hindoo appeared who said his name was Tommy, and whose bright, intelligent face told me at once that he had Christian sunshine within him. Tommy led me upstairs and seated me in a large, carpeted and nicely furnished hall, which was square, hav ing two rows of pillars in it, and tak ing up most of the second story while various rooms were ranged around three sides. Miss Buttau soon came forth from one room and some other ladies from others, and the welcome was so warm that we bad to sit down under the punkahs, and be fanned all the time we were talking. After a while I was seated with the seventeen ladles of the llouie at their large tea table, and for the time being I almost imagined nivself in a zenana, although rather a civilized one. I attended Miss Ward's Sunday-school of about fifty rirla all Ma,-lr a sttmn?. hut. robed in white. They sang and recited in Ben galee, looked a little strange ranged on benches, with white sheets drawn over their heads, and their wrists, ankles, ears and noses ornamented with rather more profusion than taste. I attended service four times the first Sunday, once at the Calcutta cathedral, where a fashionable English audience was as sembled, and long punkah fans were kept swinging across the whole width of the church, cooling the congregation during the sermon, and superb music These punkahs are moved by black Hindoos, who squat on the pavement outside of the church with long ropes in their hands. I visited several col lege and missionary institutions in Calcutta, the extent of which .aston ished me. The one that most interested me was the Hindoo girls' school, under Mr Chaterjee, where I found sixty girls, bright, pretty and bedecked with jewels, who, although very small, an swered my Scripture questions very promptly, and afterward listened with treat interest while I told them about the little girls in Japan, and the bright classes at the .Mission Home in l oko hama. I visited other girls' schools in India, but cannot refer to them now. As the hot season became hotter five ladies of the Calcutta Home wisely con cluded to flee to the mountains for re spite from the insufferable heat. 1 he iourner was a long one, nearly twelve hundred miles, but the ladies set out and reached their destination at Mus- aooni, on the Himalaya, in two days. At Saharunpore they left the railroad, and rode or jolted fifty miles in a wagon. They then ascended seven thousand feet through the mountains to Mussooni, riding in dandies or jam pons peculiar hammock-like chairs, born by coolies, like the kango in Japan and palanquin in China. Miss Seelye was weak and unwell when she left Calcutta, but the typhoid fever did not develop itself un til she had been several days in the mountains. She took a long and fatig uing walk one afternoon down into one of the deep valleys; she returned completely exhausted. She said to Miss Lathrop, 'I feel as though I should die.' Every attention was shown her during her illness; she had kind friend expenenceu nurse, uiv iapl ui ucuhm skill and the fresh cool air of the moun tains. She sank rapidlv, died the tttli r i . i . r , .i : 1 of June, and was buried the following day at 6unrise." Caavaraatlaa Waal tt Itepeads. The fact of a man beine a rood tal ker, presupposes a good audience, and a good audience is uecoming uauiy more difficult to obtain. The reason may easily be understood by the rea der ot Bosweu. J on n son, we may fairlv assume, was the best of all tn? lish talkers on record. Now Johnson was snrrouuded by a little court of fa miliar friends, each of whom BUatained a well-understood character. A party consisting of Johnson, Burke, Rey nolds, Goldsmith, Garrick and so on, was like a company of actors, each of whom understands the powers of all bis colleagues, and is able to co-operate towards the general effect ; the humo rist was in no danger of being taken to speak seriously : the man of special information would not have his pet subject snatched out of his mouth ; the tender points of the irritable man were thoroughly understood, and his friends coma avoia kividk nun unnerossaiy offense. On the other hand, there was a sufficient amount of variety to save the members of the little circle from boring each other too much. Some new comer was always turning up who could introduce new topics from toe world of art, or politics, or literature. or travel. And it is on the fortunate balance between these two elements that the power of producing good con versation depends. There should be a nncleus of sufficiently Intimate friends who should form, so to speak, an or ganic body, instead of a mere collection of incoherent atoms, and vet the circu lation of its constituent parts should be rapid enough to preserve a certain freshness of interest. Now. the dif ference between the society of to-day and the society of a century a so is pre cisely that all these little eddies have . . . . i j m, Men. swept into uie man buviuii. x u rash of the torrent ia too furious to al low of the formation of those pleasant little coteries in which alone good con versation can be orurinaiiy lostered, There hare been great talkers since the days of Johnson, bat men like Mackintosh and Macanlay seem to have been rather lecturers than con veners, because they could not come into the same close pereonal relation with crowds who were for a time fellow-occupant of the same room ; And others, who have had some talent of the Theodore Hook kind, were rather actors in a private theatre, than, in any proper sense of the word, talkers. HMBltaUltjr. HOW TO ENTERTAIX GCESTS. Emerson says : "I pray yon. oh excel lent wife, do not camber yourself and me to get a rich dinner for this man or this woman who has alighted at your gate, nor bed-chamber made ready at too great a ecst. These things, if they are carious in, they can get for a price at a village inn. But let this stranger see.if be will, in your looks, in your ac tions, in your accents and behavior, your heart and earnestness, what he cannot bay at any price at any vil lage or city, ana wtiicn ne may wen travel fifty miles and dine sparely and sleep hardly to behold. Certainly let tha board be spread, and the bed dressed for the traveler, bat let not the emphasis of hospitality be in these things. Honor to the housewife where they are simple, so that the intellect is aware and sees the laws of the Uni verse; the soul worships troth and love, and honor and courtesy flow into all deeds." Tha moat obtnse must see in this q notation the whole philosophy of hos pitality, une oi tne greatest aeugnts of having a home of our own is to have a place in it for friends and strangers. W e do not bnild a house simply to meet the wants of oar own families. We h&ve one or more guest chambers, and the extension table, to which we may welcome our friends. The larger our means, the more liberal provision we make for hospitality. They are greatly to be pitied who can barely supply their own physical wants, who dwell alwavs in narrow quarters, who have no pillow or plate for mend or stranger. There are some homes that we wot of, that have room enough for all, and an indefinite power of expan sion. There is always room for one more, and where the welcome is so hearty, the one more sends Lis regrets for absence and comes next time. There are others with houses roomy enough, but nnblest with friends the year round. No one breathes the frag rance of their roees.or wipes tne oioom from the clusters that are supposed to grace their tables. They live to them selves very elegantly ana comionaoiy, it may be, but very narrowly and sel fishly. The door-step is always clean and the lawn always shorn, it is kept for the eyes and not the feet. No chil dren play there, and the dogs are not at home. We hope the folks are happy and enjoy it. There are others that would like to make their friends welcome, but spoil their pleasure by over-exertion. The guests are made to feel uneasy by the visible effort put forth to entertain them. The whole secret of putting oar friends at their ease, is to be at ease ourselves ; and in order to be thus we must not misinterpret their visit. They haven't come to see oar furniture, our surroundings, our dress, but our selves. Courtesy, then, rather de mands oar society and conversation than our silverware and crockery. There is no objection, of course, to the best tea-urn, and enps and saucers to match, but they should be set upon the table as if tbey were every-day ware. By all means kill the turkey if that is your humor, bat do not tell your guest that the bird has been waiting bis com ing a month. Let the rare dish be served np with as much ease as if it were always upon your table. Keep your art, whatever it may be, out of sight. Do not let your guests suspect that you are making an effort to enter tain him, lest he go away pained with the feeling that he has been a harden to you, and never come again. Nor should we tarn aside wnouy from the routine of our daily life to make our guests welcome. Every one worthy te sit at your table knows that life has its necessary duties. Do not burden them with the thought that your business is suffering derangement and loss by tueir coming, lour inter course will be all the sweeter and more profitable for coming in the intervals of your regular cares. Give them to day only that which yon have to spare to-day, tnat tnere may tie do strain to morrow for your lost possessions, and no wish in your heart that they had not come at all, or at least when they did. The Ear of Diaajslaa. In the neizhborhood of Syracuse, iu Sicily, Is a cave of great depth, which Is said to have been built by Dionysius the Elder, a tyrant, or usurper, who was born about B. C. 4:10, and died B. C. 307, In the sixty-third year of his age, and the thirty-ninth of his rule. This cave was two hundred and fifty feet long and eighty feet high. It was fashioned In the form of a human ear, and the faintest sounds were carried from all parts to a central chamber which corresponded to the tympanum or drum of the ear. In this remarkable whisrierinff eallery Dionysius impris oned all who were tne oDjecta oi nis suspicions, while he himself was in the habit of passing entire days in tne in nermost chamber, listeuiug to.the con versation of his victims, iu order that he might ascertain for himself who were really his enemies. Ancient writers tell us that the workmen who con structed the cavern were put to death to prevent them from divulging the use to which it was to De put, ana tnat whole families were sometimes confined In it at once. Modern travelers relate that even at the present day, notwith standing the changes which have been wrought by time, the echo is such that the tearing of a sheet of paper at the entrance can be distinctly heard in the remotest part. 1'ieces ol iron and lead have been found in making excava tions, and they are thought to be the remains ot the chains and staples oy which the prisoners were confined. Oliver (g'Ctc MaijnziM. Michael Aaaela aa a Warkaaaa. Through his impatience and enthu siasm, Michael Angelo rained block after block of marble by working with too great a vehemence near the sur face. He had a wonderful tacnity as a mere workman in marble .but his geni us and impetuosity of temperament would not brook the opposition of so stubborn a material, and unfitted him for those processes of roughing out into shape the block, which requires patience and precision. Too eager to arrive at a point where his true genius would hnd play, he assailed the marble with such violence that he often struck off pieces whioh trenched into the just iimus oi ine aunace , auu as uiej could not be replaced, he was forced to finish as he could not as he would, liad he confined himself more to, ela borating his work in clay, and then intrusting the blocking oat in marble to a mechanical workman, we should have had not only a much larger num ber of grand works by him, but they would have been freer of great defects. For instance, the back of the head of, Moses has been chiseled away until it is an impossible head. Again, the Da vid is sacrificed to the exigencies of the marble. And the head of his fa mous Day was probably left unfinished because he perceived that it was turned beyond the limit permitted to nature without breaking tne necK. Self Help. A doctrine that cannot be too forcib ly announced in these days was taught according to an incident going round the papers concerning him. A young men's club is said to have written him asking him for a free copy of the Tri bune for its use. The sensible old phi losopher replied, declining and saying that one of the worst ideas for a young man to get into his bead was that he could get something for nothing. Tbey needed to remember that what was too eafcily got was not valued, and also that life was no lottery, and there were no prizes but those that men work lor, ACsUCCLTtBAIs A Chkap Wnrro Shkdmno. A far mer says in the Ohio fanner; In a sec tion where there ia a scarcity of boards or lumber of all kinds, or even where they can be had for a consideration, it Is a nice thing to know bow to build a shedding which will answer the pur pose of a shelter and at the tame time cost bat a mere nominal amount of cash. The profession of the farmer la not marked by rapid and large gains, but by a slow though sure process of little by little, and it is not what he makes which render him comfortable in after life, but what he saves, and the apparently trival items are, in the ag gregate, of vast importance. It is very nice to have a common shed nicely made with lumber, but if the cash is not at hand to make it with, it is far better to have the shelter anyhow but substituting a cheap one one re quiring labor only to put it np. We have just put up for our own animals what we consider one of the cheapest effective shedding for young horned stock or sheep, during the day in winter, that can be made. Our stock numbers too many to put them all in the stable ; we like to let all have the entire day to themselves out In the barnyard, as it does them far more good than keeping them penned up continually, only permitting them to come out to get water and then put ting them right back again. We do not claim originality in the idea or con struction of this shed, but wish to call th attention of other farmers to its cheapness and advantages. Tne site lor tne sneauing was smuei one of the buildings, in the barnyard, and was a skeleton shed with fodder as a roof. We went into the woods and imaiI 1iaot nfAPM frr nrotchea. These were planted in two rows par allel wiin me our Buuuingjuunivn iro Ing against the building, and the other row being about ten or twelve feet from the first row. These crotches should be set in the ground about two feet and well rammed to make every thing secure. From one crotch to an opposite one stout pieces are laid par allel with the building, and also along the outer row the same way. When this is done other pieces are laid across or butted up against the building which prevents them from getting out of place. If the posts are not too far apart, old rails, laid thickly on, wUl do just as well, and new rails, not needed for immediate use elsewhere, can be used, as they can he taken off in the spring for other use. On the tails corn fodder is nicely 1 -1 I 1 - ! 1 .1 .A .InMil aa ,A carry off the water. The fodder on the shed should De used last, or at least uw until the winter is fairly broken, so that by the time it is used the weather is fine enough and warm enough to dis pense with its invaluable winter ser- ri -A ahwl ltlra this answers all pur poses, and has the advantage of costing Homing out a nuie iauor. Growth of Plasts. Plants grow much better where the temperature runs lower at night than during the day. It never should go below 40 de grees Fah. in the first case, or below 50 degrees in the second case. If plants stand near a window, a screen should be made by pasting papers to a frame, similar to that used for mosquito screens, placing it between the plants and the window every night. A screen made in this way can be inserted in a moment, and may consist of several thicknesses of paper. A moist atmosphere is indispensable to the healthy growth of plants, and is obtained by keeping the pan in the fur nace filled with water ,or an urn or some other vessel upon the stove. The at mosphere must be free from sulphu rous gases, and to accomplish this end the back damper in the stove must oe kept open enough to allow Its escape, and the windows raised a little every day for a short time when the tempera ture outside will allow. If small plants, taken from the green house, be carefully potted in suitable soil placed in a room with a somewhat moist atmosphere, free from poisonous gases, carefully watered, exposed to the sunlight a part or the day, no in sects allowed upon them, and the tem perature kept as directed they will grow and will repay the labor of caring for them, and homes be made brighter and happier by the presence of an abundance of flowers. ADVANTAGES Ot DRAW AOK. What are the effects of drainage t Thorough drainage deepens the sou. Of what use is it to plow deep ana manure neavuy, while the soil is full of water? The roots of plants will not go down into stagnant water; the elements of plant food are not all on the surface, many of them have been washed down by the rains, some of them are found In the decomposing rocks themselves. Take away the water and the roots will find them. Drainage lengthens the seasons. In our climate this is an important point to be gained.' If by drainage, one or two weeks could be gained, it would be quite a relief in our backward Springs, when there is so much to be done in so short a space of time. Drainage increases the effect of the application of manure; the soil being dryer, is more easily worked fine; the manure is also more evenly distributed. The water also passing through the soil, carries fertilizing matter down to the roots of the plants. When there is stagnant water, manure must decom pose slowly, if at all ; but let the water pass off, the air is admitted, and decom position takes place. n hat observing man is there who does not know that his crops are im proved in quality by drainvger Sweet English grass and clover take the place of sedge and rushes. Jfass. Plowman. How to Test Vegktablk Seeps. It is a very matter to test any variety of seed, and thus avoid imposition and loss by the purchase and planting of an inferior article. Purchase of your seed man a very small quantity of the seeds you intend to plant, and submit these to the following test ; Take two thicknesses of woolen cloth either flannel or fulled cloth will answer. Dampen them with water, and lay them in some shallow dish, as a plate or saucer. Then sprinkle a few seeds on them, being careful not to spread the seeds, so thick that they will lay one upon the other. Now dampen another piece of cloth and lay over the seed. Keep the plate or saucer in a moder ately warm place, and by removing the upper cloth at will you can watch the result. The good seed will gradually swell and finally sprout, while the seed that is too old, or that is bad from any other cause, may swell at first, but in stead or growing like the good, will mold and rot. By a careful test in this way may be learned the exact proportion of good and bad seed In the lot offered you, and thus you may avoid not only the loss of the money asked for the same, but also the greater loss you would sustain by planting bad seed and experiencing a failure of the crop. Test the seed De fore buying. -Ileeord Union, Salt for Animals. Is salt needed In the animal economy in larger quanti ties than It exists in the general food f In 1854 a French scientist (Boussin gault) experimented on six bullocks. He treated them all alike in every re spect except mat tnree were fed live hundred grains of salt each day, while the other three had no salt. These ex periments commenced in October. For six months no noticeable difference ap peared ; bat in the succeeding April a difference was noticed in the Took and actions in favor of the animals receiv ing the salt, which continued to be more striking, till finally the animals not receiving any salt appeared sick both as to looks and actions, while the others were as fine in appearance as could be desired. Mr. Vailley. of Eng land tried similar experiments with sheep and with the same results. Ctesae of 8potanm$ Combmtion. An account ia given in the London Jinoineer, of some experiments mad with a view to determine the caosea and operation of spotaneoua combua tion. It appears that in one instance, a small quantity of cotton waste, soaked in olive oil, was loosely packed in a paper box, exposed to a tempera tare of about one hundred And thirty degree. Fah. Active combustion took place in Little more than five hour. And a second experiment yielded the eame result in leu than aix hoar. Cotton, soaked in rape oil and put in a box subjected to a temperature of about one hundred and seventy degree, was found both box and cotton in Ashes within ton boor. Cotton waste aoaked in seal oil, with An Applied tempera ture of one hundred And thirty degree, exhibited ignition in one hundred min ute; the specific gravity of this oil waa.838. Lard oil, with a specific gra vity of .916, produced combustion in four hours, the applied temperature being a Above. These temperatures, as ia well known, are uch as f ten oc cur in the neighborhood of a steam pipe, or under exposure to the son's' rays, involving, -therefore, imminent liability to ignition And disaster. Mention ia Also made of some expe riments conducted with silk instead of cotton, and, although neither name nor incandescence took place, yet the heat engendered was of sufficient degree to explode gunpowder, and this tempera ture was reached more rapidly in the A n ;tk- tin tf rattan In view of HMD V OMm " " " these facta, therefore, the following conclusion are regaruea as cicouij established: First, that oiled waste, ;ik- a aaMaii. ahAiild nnder all circumstances be looked upon with suspicion, A uaoie to pouiuw ig" tion nnder moderately elevated tem perature; and, secondly, that ailk waste ia at least a dangerous as cot ton, or even more so, in a building -; ; HhihiawjIai- nr nfhAr ml- CUUWIUUI ll' " v.... , - : tonal which ia capable of being ignited or exploded without the actual appli cation in flame. Improvement in Soldering. Dr. A. W Hoffman think it possible that oxygen lu-ninu nl .niur,tB miirhE be ln- vented, whereby the eolderuig of me tals, without alloy, can oe none, xie says : "It would be useful to turn our A tk. antjuMiioni anlderinir IWUblVU WV ,uw mmwvf l of metals, with the aid of the oxy hy drogen name, A principle wuicu use achieved such signal triumphs in the treatment of two essentially different metal. Should it not be possible, by the same means, to solder every metal and alloy with itself, as tin with tin, copper with copper, brasa with brass, silver with silver, gold with gold, and even iron with iron, jus. as we aireauj older lead with lead, and platinum with platinum I The probability is present, and the advantage of such a procedure are manifest. Let us try to conceive the neatness of a workshop in which soldering is performed, not as heretofore, with soldering iron at te forge, but with a light elegant gas burner. Imagine the artisan no longer annoyed by radiant beat and by the fames of charcoal, and able to produce in a moment any temperature required, even the very highest, and again to pnt an end to it by simply turning a cock. Conceive the solidity of the sol dering which no longer depends on ce menting two pieces of metal with a foreign matter, bnt on an actual inter fusion of two portions of one and the same metal, and which involves the utmost economy of materials and dis- K m 1 1 .ntuAfinnntjvArk. anr.h as trimming the soldering place with a file. Such evident aavantagee mum overcome every prejudice, and prompt ue num. mi jjuwj v. oagh experimental investigation of the qaesuon." The Temperature of the ir.-The interest which attaches to careful ob servations of the temperature of the earth suggests that the apparatus which is used in Germany should be better known in this country, in order that, when practicable, it may be introduced here. The following is A description of it as nsed by observers in Hungary. In its general outlines it does not dif fer from that recommended by La ment. It consists principally of a rec tangular tube buried permanently in the earth, in which five rectangular prisms of wood are placed, one above the other, at. different depths in the ground, and which by a simple ar rangement can be easily and quickly drawn np. Each of these tubes con tains a thermometer, and there is a hole in the side of the main tube, opposite to the bulb of the thermometer, where the woodwork is cat away, and the opening closed by a plate of thin sheet copper, whose temperature may be presumed to be the same as that of the adjacent ground. The depths at which the thermometers' bulbs remain are 4, 8, 13, 16. and 30 feet. ShenzLas the result of observations made during eight years, finds that the time required for heat to penetrate to a depth of one meter is, on the average, 31 days. Condensed Beer. Mr. Lock wood de scribes, in the Journal of the Society of Arte, his patent solid or condensed beer. Beer is taken at its best condi tion ; its alcohol is separated and saved by a methed of gentle distillation in vacuo, and the residue is condensed in a vacuum pan, like milk ; when finished, it is enclosed in hermetically sealed packages, the alcohol first being added to it again, anu cuiigniiiiawii tive. The fermentation, which was present in the beer when it was taken, is suspended by the heating, and the condensed beer remains sound in this condition, apparently for any length of time, as some exists that has now been kept for nearly two years. VV hen re-made by adding water, it is not wort, bnt real beer, having all its fla vor and alcoholic strength, and lacking only effervescence, which can be quick ly imparted by reviving the suspended fermentation in order to aeveiop ut ficient carbonic acid gas to give it the required briskness ; or it is fit to drink immediately if charged with carbonic acid gas, like Aerated water. New Inveetiaation im Maanetitm. MM. Treves and Darassier have re cently investigated the question of whether, ana how, in a steel magnet, the known portative force varies when the weight and section are affected by the gradual dissolution of the magnet in an acid. The result is that the force is always proportional to the section and to the weight, so that a curve re presenting the variation of weight and section would be parallel to one indicating the diminution of intensity. As the dissolution progresses, the me tal shows serrated inequalities perpen dicular to the axis of the bar ; and if a horseshoe magnet be treated, the curved part is found to dissolve incom parably quicker than the straight por tions. Oryehhmde of Sulphur. faul Ben- rend, of Leiosic. has recently discov ered a new And convenient method of preparing the the oxychloride of sul phur, also known as sulphuryl chloride, SOj, Cls. This was accomplished by taking sulnhnrvl orvchlondn f S H HO. CI.)which is formed by the union of sulphuric anhydride with hydrochloric acid, and sealing it np in glass tubes wmcu were nested tor 14 or 14 hoars to a temperature of 338 deg. to 850 dee. Fah., in a paraffin bath. On distilling me contents of the tube, pure salpbu ryl chloride was obtained. Incombwttible Wood. The invention of Mr. A. F. Richard, of Dax, France, relates to toe preservation and incom bustibility of wood by the aid of crys- uuukq cmonae or soaium in solution in water at between 6 deg. And 34 deg. by Baume's aerometer, and at a solu tion of chloride of sodium and alum at between 4 deg. and 37 degrees, either mixed in variable proportions or em ployed separately. Some Californians who own 100, 000 acres of land are enclosing it with a single ience ivu miles in length. The Omelet as It Should Be. The mind that invented the omelet was capable of greater things. Many per sons think they have made and eaten omelets when they have not. Anything that is made of eggs stirred npand solidified over the fire Is supposed to be an omelet, but It isn't. I have heard of people who put flour in it. Flour takes fifteen or twenty minutes to cook, and an omelet Is made in one minute; and raw flour is not wholesome or appe tizing. The true omelet is a pile of terror-stricken eggs and milk; it trem bles with every Jar, and crouches in a delicious, quivering mass upon the plate; he who puts a silver knife into it will find a porous flaky material, most Impalpable to the touch, that will melt as quickly as a snowflake In his mouth. Upon reflection he will be willing to admit that hens were not made In vain. Proceed in this way, if you wish to make an omelet: Have some fresh eggs, not omelet eggs. All eggs that will not by any possibility do to boll are put away in restaurant to make omelet with. Break them into a china bowL If they are fresh the white will be as clear as a maiden's eye, and the yolk as round as the pupil of it. Add a table spoonful of milk for every egg. and whip the whole as thoroughly as you would for sponge cake. The omelet pan has previously been put on the fire and made so hot that butter will melt and almost brown In it, but not quite. When in this condition you are to turn the whipped egg and milk into the pan, and put it directly over the fire. Get a thin bladed knife, and run it carefully under the bottom of the egg, so as to let that which is not cooked get below. If the fire is right, the whole mass will swell and puff and cook in a minute; if it Is not carefully attended to, it will barn on the bottom, and burned egg is most offensive in smell and taste. It Is not necessary to wait until the whole mass Is solid, as Its own heat will cook it after it has left the pan ; but begin at one side and carefully roll the edge over and uver until It is all rolled up, and then let it stand for a moment to brown, and turn it out on a hot plate and serve it, or what is better, eat it yourself immediately. You must not put one grain of salt In it while it is cooking, or all your hopes and your omelet will flatten down together. If it is properly made it will be like a Summer sunset, rich with crimson and yellow hues, and the savor will gladden the heart. If any one has a fancy for mixing finely minced ham with the egg batter, they will make a ham omelet; or for sur-lino- It with atwed kidneys and smearing a little of the sauce thereof about the egg arter it is cookbu, uiey will have a kidney omelet; or by pour ing rum over It and setting the same on fire, they will have an "omelet au rhum;" or by sprinkling granulated sugar over it, It will be an "omelet sucre;" but all these are simply Inven- rlfina nf tha atnmv (AIM how vilely they can ill-treat a good thing, and yet . . i i . n i 1 : -1. not utterly ruin iu trm anu may. Max Diet. "I find by experience," says Dr. E. N. Chapman, "that lime water and milk is not only food and medicine at an early period of life, but also at a later, when, as in the case of infants, the functions or digestion ana assimilation have been seriously im paired. A stomach taxed by gluttony, irritated by improper food, inflamed by alcohol, enfeebled by disease, or other wise unfitted for Its duties, as is snown by the various symptoms attendant upon indigestion, dyspepsia, diarrhoea, dysen tery and ever, will resume its work and do it energetically, on an exclusive diet of lime water and milk. A goblet of cow's milk, to which four tablespoon fuls of lime-water have been added, will agree with any person, however objec tionable tne piaiu arucie may ue, w in be friendly to the stomach when other food Is oppressive, and will be digested when all else fails to afford nourish ment. Of this statement I have had positive proof in very many cases. "The blood being thin, the nerves weak, the nutrition poor, the secretions defective, and excretions insufficient, the physician has at hand a remedy as common as the air, and as cheap almost as water. In it all the elements of nu trition are so prepared by Nature as to be readily adapted to the infant or the adult stomach, and so freighted with healing virtues as to work a cure when drugs are worse than useless." Imitatiox of Walsct. The follow ing Is said to be a very superior method for staining any kind of wood in Imita tion of walnut, while it is also cheap, and simple In Its manipulation. The wood, previously thoroughly dried ana warmed, is coated once or twice with stain composed of 1 part, by weight, of extract of walnut-peel, dissolved In 6 parts of soft water by heating it to boil ing, and stirring. The wood thus treated, when half dry, Is brushed with a solution . of 1 part, by weight, of bichromate of potash in a parts of boil ing water, and is then allowed to dry thoroughly, and is to be rubbed and polished as usual. Ked beech and elder, under this treatment, assume a most deceptive resemblance to American walnut, lhe color is nxed in the wood to a depth of one or two lines. Rice PcDDrso. Rice pudding is cer tainly very familiar, but this receipt is peculiar from the fact that it contains neither raisins, butter nor water. Take two quarts of new milk, five ounces of rice and five ounces of sugar, flavor ac cording to taste and add a little salt. 1 lace the mixture where it win heat slowly, and stir occasionally while the rice is swelling When the milk is boiling hot place the pudding In a modern oven and bake for one hour. Do not stir the pudding after placing it in the oven, but try to ascertain if the rice Is done before removing it. Serve cold. This is certainly a very simple pudding, Dut it is much preferable to the more elaborate receipts containing fifteen or twenty ingredients. To Broil Beefsteak Rare. When beef is desired very rare, have a good bed of live coals ready, lay the beef on the gridiron and put It on the coals. It should be ready to turn lu three min utes. When it is turned, take it up carefully with two forks; roll it so as to save the juice of the meat which has collected in cooking, do not squeeze the steak, but merely drain off the juice on tne uisn ; put it oacic as quickly as possible so that it may lose no heat in turning; add to the juice of the meat pepper, salt and considerable butter, and set the dish over a kettle of boiling water. In three minutes, if the fire is right, it will be done. XeW SOPS may he nuila nllnhlo tv boiling it in water for a couple of hours. lta la .. . . . . 1 1 I . - : . 1 1 1 . , . DMCUjhU IS iim UltUtUISIICU UUfe lis stiffness is gone. It must hang in a warm room until thoroughly dried, and must not be allowed to kink. Avoid wearing heavy overcoats or furs for hours lu succession; the ten dency is to weaken the powers of re sistance of the wearer, leaving him liable to inflammation of the throat and lungs. CfT FBT SiT-rif Talc) a tirora hnnoli of celery, cut it fine, and boil it until soft in a nint nf w.tjr thloL-on It with butter and flour, and season It with salt, pepper anu mace. To CLE AX a browned unreel In Vettl boil peeled potatoes in it. The porcelain wui ue rendered nearly as white as w uen new. Burns akd Cuts. Take inside bark of elder and fry in fresh butter or uiuuuu tauow anu a utile beeswax. To remove paint splashed upon window-panes, use hot solution of soda, and a soft flannel. . - v.l,u nrllntlv never learned Chinese, nor sought at the bottom of a page or the end of a chapter of a German tale for the wnrwori which gives a meaning w tr lMwail the dltn- culties of our vernacular. He says that . - J A laraiaa at k MtinB when he exciaunea, iwu8 - , m i ii what a flock Of verm Tcawjta, " . . , ships !" he was told that a flock of ships was called a fleet, and that a fleet of sheep was called a flock." And it was added, for PIS guiaanco m the intricacies of our language, that a "flock of girls or quails is called a bevy, ana a oevy oi wwra v ' C .kiwoa la allAl a a-anfi?. and a gang of angel is called a host, and a host of porpoises is called a shoal, and a shoal of buffalo is called a herd. and a herd or cnuaren is wuicu .i i . -r rtrirliM ia called a auu a v ... covey, and a covey of beauties is called a galaxy, ana a rumj - , V" V called a horde, ana a horde of rubbish is called a heap, and aheap of oxen Is i j j n .1 nf hlaCK- caiieu B muiwa - guards is called a mob, and a mob or wnaies is caiiea a kuuw, u - -v . 1. mIUI a MnarrpatlOll. and a congregation of engineers ia called a corps, and a corps of robbers Is called a band, and a band of locusts is called a a . - I -1 I lajl warm, ana swarm u pwijw v a crowd." Thi Valcx or Educatioi- Jake was 1 1 1 1 aaAauua Ka fttlliVI tA hift neighbor's son. a colored youth who goes to scnuoi at mid i "Look hyar, boy, you goes ter school, don't yer?" " X es, sir," repueu tne ooy. "Gittin eddykashun, ain't yer J" "Yes sir." wii. it'don't take two whole days ter make a hour, do It T" wy nor' exciaimea tne uuy. iivii a., s-winit ttr hrina dat hatch it back In an hour, warnt yer?" i es, sir. .( . , la.. Kt A m r-m iaum V,P Tlftr- AI1 110 UIU ,wv U.J. J - - rowed it. Now, what good's eddykashun .1 wn.. thl.lr-alrilllMl nlcTWr when yer go ter school a whole year and den can't tell how long It takes ter - i- , i u ... v. : ioteu uw a umajuiix The boy got mad and slung the through an ash-barrel. Atlanta Consti- tuuun. A NawYoREER. while journeying the other day, was recognized by another citizen doing business near the Bowery, he being also away from home on busi ness, and after a little preliminary con vents Lion the first remarked: "Well, I heard that you had to make an assign ment." "Yes, dat Is drew," replied the other. "And your brother, over on namaiu street he assigned too, didn't he?" "You zee it was lust like dis" said the Bowery man. "I was owing a good deal. I makes over my stock to Jacob and Jacob makes over bis stock to me, and I do bis peesness and he does my oeesness. and dem vellers vhat was after money doant get some!" Chicago Tribune. Two railway superintendents had engaged in a considerable discussion in relation to the rules and regulations mmrnln, tha fni,mmts OI trains. nntil late one Saturday evening. The next day one or tnem entered tne omce and found the other busily at wort. "Mr. Jnnea " Bald he. "what is the third commandment?" "Eastward bound trains have the right to the track twenty-flve minutes over westward hound trains," replied Mr. Jones. Ak Irishman was brought before a Justice of the Peace on a charge of vagrancy, and was thus questioned : "What trade are you?" "Shure, now, your Honor, an' I'm a sailor," "You a seafaring man I I question whether you have ever been to sea in your life." "Shure, now, an does your ITonor think 1 came over from Ireland in a wagon?" A TOtnro gentleman got neatly out of a fine scrape with his intended. She taxed him with having kissed two young ladies at some party at which she was not present, Ue owned up to it, but said that their united ages only made twenty-one. The simple-minded girl thought of ten and eleven, so laughed off her pout. Be did not ex plain that one was nineteen and the other two years of age. Wasn't it art- ful A Scotch ladt who put on a seal skin jacket for the first time at a coun try church was much surprised by hear ing the following remark made to her husband while passing through the grave-yard: "When did the mistress get her claes stolen ?" "Claes stolen ! What do you mean ?" "O. I jist thocht some tramp had walked off with her wardrobe and you had gi'en her an ould shootin' jacket to get to the kirk in." A fastidious English lady on her travels, stopping temporarily at the log cabin of a literary trapper in Oregon, and seeing the essays of Carlyle and nacauiay on tne table, asked tne iron- tiersman what he thought of those authors. "Oh !" said he, "them fellers Is some pumpkins. They ken sling Ink, they ken, now I tell you I" A ladt remarked to a popular divine that his sermons were a little too long. Don't you think so?" said she; "just a little?" "Ah I dear madam," replied the divine, "I am afraid you don't like 'the sincere milk of the Word.' " "Yes, I do," said she; "but you know the fashion, nowadays, la condensed milk." A darket who was stooping to wash his hands in a creek didn't notice the peculiar actions of a goat just behind him. So when be scrambled out of the water and was asked how It happened, he answered : "I dunno 'xactly. But 'peared as ef de shore kinder his ted and f rowed me." "What on earth am I to do with that incorrigible son of mine?" enquired an anxious father of a friend. "Dress him in a suit of shepherd's plaid," was the reply. "Why, what poessble benefit would that be?" "It would, at least, be a way of keeping him In check." A blind begoar in Paris was absent from his usual position in a doorway during the late cold weather. In his stead was a placard with the Inscrip tion: "In consequence of the severe cold I solicit alms at home," accom panied by his address. Whex is a lady's dress like an unfor tunate bull-fighter? When It Is gored. And when kit like a partisan ? When it is biased. And when is it like a toper? When it is full. And when is it like the sails of a ship? When it is trimmed. An undertaker, who was briskly furnishing up a coffin, being asked whom it was for, replied. "I can't tell which, but two women have started out on a talking match next rtnnr nl it'll be sure to end in the death of one of em i Some people will be over-polite. "Don't trouble yourself. I can find the way myself." "Oh I nonsense, my dear ; I'm very pleased, indeed, to show you ouU" "I don't think, husband, that you are smart." "No, indeed, wife; but everybody knows that I am awfully shrewd.' Froos were the original greenbacks, and since they first drew breath they have been inflationists. A HINT to thna arhn Aan't .vnroi. their Ideas Just send them by mail. r si . . i . j. . com. U2c. ' The This that crossed the ocean loiumDUs. ' , tn h hMt of taking W Oman ia uw . . . . , " th"advlce so freely offered to her in a kindly spirit by man. She listens ap rentiy to all he says as to the incon- . ' i ,....r,m of her dres venience anu - ,nd of its prejudicial efTect n her tiMiin Dill soe iy - wS, and Cutely follows the path of her own Inclinations, even rr i to ,n ti, workhouse or grave, with that firmness which is one or ner most cmruiiug . .L wUKB hAWnvoP At this season oi mo jwi tbeo, owing to the treacherous nature of our climate and greasy condition of . A.. (. wr .r,nIM 19 OI- our paveuicuuj, o"' . V , , ten as dangerous as it is beneficial, wo man can hardly fail to see the absurdi ty of her high-heeled boots. It Is quite J ... a It. wtrk a W impossible lor ner w ease, comfort, or safety to herself in these instruments of torture, which by throwing her out oi tne perpeuu,uu i i .k. .mnm tt the leaning give nci fc .pjrv-i tower of Pisa, and produce an impres sion on spectators tuai uu "j moment topple over. Iler boots, also, are far too thin for walking purpose, nt ft- wr at a An i- lat wek that an in quest was held on the body of a young . . . . ... .. ; 1 ; ...... i i. .r thtt lady wno, owing to a ui tv.v...6 sole or her boot, received sucn an inju ry to the foot that she died of lockjaw. Woman, moreover, now tnat sue so active a part in the business of life . .1 : . .imA., Kifiiiiruia rminires to be strongly if not ponderously shod, so that, when necessity arises, she may hold ner own wiin man, nauruiug " i-iv fth that fajti-inatiner but foo lish creature. A few word from the pulpit would perhaps induce ner to taae . i. . ,.f iwwit rcfurtn Into her e l UCQUVII V, " ..." rloua consideration. Pall Mall Gazette. Ida lamalMaya. In Europe, as in America, the peo ple's idea of a holiday ot any sort al ..a tbiui th fiirm of something extra to eat and drink. A true Parisian will keep his great-grand-motner s hundredth birthday on a small plate of soup, an entrecote Bordelaise, a franc's worth of fine champagne or absinthe, and cigarettes. The sturdy Briton wants something solid, satisfying "a mn.1 Wint " aa he Call It. with UlentV of malt and other liquor to wash it down. Ai l careful house-owners are inter ested in Paint; one that is ready for use costs lest than any other, look better and lasts longer than white lead (as proved by 20 years practical experience) is worthy the investigation of nil. Beau tiful sample cards free, also lOO page Book. Call or write for them at once. X. Y. Slate Roofing Co., Limited, 40 S. Front St., Phihu, and 8 Cedar St., N . Y Dr. Puercx's Pleasant Purgative Pel lets are so compounded from concentra ted principles, extracted from roots and herbs, as to combine in each small gran ule, scarcely laryer than a mustard seed, as much cathartic power as is contained in any larger pills for sale In drug stores'. They are not only pleasant to take, but their operation is easy unat tended with any griping pain. They operate without producing any constitu tional disturbance. Unlike other ca thartics, they do not render the bowels costive after operation, but. on the con trary, they establish a permanently healthy acttlon. Being entirely t&jttahlc. no particular care is required while Using them. fooO Heaard if offered by the Proprie tor to any one who will detect in these Pellets any calomel or other form of mercury, mineral poUou, or Injurious drug. 'l'uey are sold by Druggists. U Br. Bekejka Staadard Keaaedlea. The standard remedies for all diseases of the lungs are Schexck's Pulmonic SYRUP, SCHKNCK S hEA EF.D IONIC, and Schenck's Mandrake Pills, and, if taken before the lungs are destroyed, a speedy cure is effected. To these three medicines Dr. J. 11. Schenck, of Philadelphia, owes his un rivalled success in the treatment or pul monary diseases. The Pulmonic Syrup ripens the mor bid matter in the lungs; nature throws it off by an easy expectoration, for w hen the phlegm or matter is ripe a slight cough will throw it oft, the patient has rest and the luugs begin to heal.- Jo enable the Pulmonic Syrup to do this, Schenck's Mandrake Pills and Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic must be freely used to cleanse the stomach and liver. Schenck's Mandrake Pills act on the liver, removing all obstructions, re lax the gall bladder, the bile starts freely, and the liver is soon relieved. Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic is a gentle stimulant and alterative; the alkali of which it is composed, mixes with the food and prevents souring. It assists the digestiou by toning up the stomach to a healthy condition, so that the food and the Pulmonic Syrup will make good blood ; then the lung heal, and the pa tient will surely get well if care is taken vo prevent fresh cold. All who wish to consult Dr. Schenck, either personally or by letter, can do so at his principal onice, corner or Mxth and Arch Struts, Philadelphia, every Monday. Schenck's medicines are sold by all druggists throughout the country. 812 a day at bom. Agrata antL OatAt " lr m. IKl'K CO, AuguM. Main 3--lt 25 REPP or DAMASK CARPS, with nam. 20 en. Addraa, t. B. UtalEU, NaMaa, Reaa, Co., N. T. S-JS-ll conBueinii ibon burdisbs. KOOF9. Wronsht Iroa Rrldaro Vmi4ted inn Bhr-t, Shatters. Doors, Ac. s Bey St.. Mew Tor. Send tor Circular. 1-T-Jra SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! an atrka. MTrar Vmmtod and Wainm, m n ncoDd-hiad- BatmralT icKd for blpuln. OUUNTaMUi, BAH, 1 1. RE&. c Hotnm and orricR ruunrrTTRE an ktnd Tha wt and ba linim Bloc, m aod LEWIS BRO, S-M) 1 an. less. if ia Riau vx rvu. C ennpter atkooM. Tra rraa. Addraa, POf0VU. (ZD. f - - a-TwtAewt..a.ai'Af"iwr-y rT "Xm" nay xr ese; nmeneau Are-proof ; chtrp nd dnrable. it'e. cat wan ten ra rrer. i Ddaoemena orTered. -How to ra reshinflisg leak enVrtoally nd cheaply ia moot Paga Book rVs to any one tmtimg when they ssw than Writ f-"-' Protect yowr Boilclinn by asinr. eiine Slat Roof inir Paint, which neither crofcj in winter nor mi in urareer. Old iMnrl mofs can be painted locking sr better, and loartaa laaaer than an himtle with oat th paint, for ae frmrtk th coat of rehinclimc. Oa deoae i0rlt (II np the hole and pore, snd fire new tubttnutiaX ronf that last for years. Cared nr sarrned thingie it bring to their place eas! faxxv tkrm tVr. Thi. lat paint requires no bearinc or thinnng. h applied with brasn. nd -ery ornamental. Oa coat a nearly sanal to a aee, btrer of .hmsW Beaareyon obtaia ear article whirh ia caecaoft-color whea ,f rat applied, changes to a uniform alate color, nd a to U intents sad narpraea slat.. Oa TIN OB IBON HOOFS re color a often preferred, and kt acknowledrrd tn rf paint in the anrkat for dnrabitttT, en metal arfsces. It baa a heavy body, bnt m easily applied; expand by best, contracts by cold, a slow drier, sad mmr erar nor amies. On coat to eqnal to 4 of any otherpaint. Baildinneorered with tar-tell can be mail wasaxigni at ssli expense, and nreaer-ed foe year. . T. SLATE KOOF1XU CO Limited, i Chu St., 5. T. I j The People's Remedy. The universal Paia Ext Non: Ask for TuXD tStl Take no other. " Hear, lr 1 w--. alVx,, NIB'S nTlACT-Th"re,Ti, IMatrayrr. Has beta im a, ZT; . i i . law tin Ytrtut ranoot heexnlvd. BHIL98 lB.-N-.ft.li- rn tf PaatPa Extract. Amani JV ('atnalaaa. Cat, ttaraaaa, tr!? aimoM hwtanU- by ih.ttw tnT Prompt!- reliewa pain or br?a3? Kxrariatlaaa, t'haaaga. oj Hail-, tclomm, araa, etc. a.tZT l.UDtmn. reduca -Ilii,?a. tcn.fci rmrr- d4cl'n, Nona not! hur-t.pH KMALE WEAMESSM.-I; ! .i In fh h-H.T:rrw,Tm.-o. ' n tw.o-UHff k n as cerml.aaa to wlK-h ImIic are aiae' promplljronrfl. Fuller dcta-b ia boiL? Urol? ear h"tle. " PI1J$-I' or klrralaa meet pram aud read-enra. No -, howern-tJj n"ilit. em Ion J rvamt ltrnbri f ARtSSIE Plt-''!io,!, i .i ui-tr-in-' and d.n-errHi.wri.ii.i E!3t OISUSI.-" tnoirul lor"! Ti-'titcjre. lUi3lB Irora "y . cilir. It hl handmi1':;Te,tlTv otnTl-aiei; failed lu arre-t tXrenbw r-rtiaaATIC HCIiatiai T i .- ilivaniwin, "araej fcmrarae are all alike icLcTed, nd oCr-7! MYSiCfAlS of KlIKhooh irhotr -. wiui I'aaaV txlrart T nr H, . omiwnd it in tiir practice. Uetave commends Kin tnmi uortdred-toi Kt . a wianr of whom orr-r i! tor n- hi trj-. . practice. Ioaddtuoa l' me l.-v, v order it - for wrlli nf ,u ifainaj, Mar Tkramt, Inlaaira Ta. mnDie and chronic lliarrlimu I ar. pt whicb, it w a perhV.llalblia, i. Cat Feel, Mtiasnaf Inarrla, .WaaaMta. etc, Caaaa- llaada. Face, 1 TOILET I aud HI -KeumMmea. K I r.artlact heals ( at. I mMi frakm, while wonderful! im'orar a, 0apleTlaa. IB f AUrHEIS.-Paafa Errt. 5, V Beeilar.no LrrsTTMaacanillurdtnbt-'tai: tt. it I ned by U the Leading Lrvery uv fltraat Railroad and Srt Hr-emeata x aaa ria sat a. i ,.- ". nmra. m. - YorkCity. It hieiulffaraiNa. aea or HaaVll kattavs Mil, h-rratraea- ewerlla.t ata, Larnviaa, ' Bleedlaa, PsMK'BMaia, t alie. lMae, Chill, ia.oa.Mc. iianuhff-oismna. and the reurt a anom less pniir.ai lnvainthle la every Farm-yard ii e-err Y inn -rone. Lei n ne me aaa. Ton will never be with. t it. SiSTiei PaSKP Extrart has nws krtm i ur rfeuuiue arucie ha II word.- FaaJMi t-at M-v.r n e- rr-w. r' te tae saly farsas ll-lag who gJ buw to prepare It properly, arraa a, B reparation of Witch HaasL Tha a tat . rticU ad by Phyicim, and is a saxj ot mat coannr mm aaiupe. nSTOICI A0 tk VV FOLD'S IITl m :nrhkl ftvm, ent fre oa KDnUcauaa FOXD EXTRACT CvaPA-M, no Ma, Jl new lurfc A C fn AAA V .- at knew. nftn an OJ IU 6U 're. STI.l) A Co, PorUaaUL t77 j-eir. weak to Asent. lid ana loan. ml.in thatr Maliiy. Trn. aistut . KER. Addreal t. O. TICKUU Ca gusts, Min. , TRM .NEXT and arantaltla emnkiTBeat a ' arvnrai by one latly in everv lo-a is ts State. AtMreal J. UEMII LIBU.iur - ' Tuhsbiu BT , Buaru, Hut BROOMS! BROOMS JOES J. REQfES & CO, MS Waablaataa Street. Sew Tart Principal Depot I Hew Tork the b r k I th. I nitMl Male I Brooms from $2.00 per dozen aid The luwast prka ad grealat mnery m - Also an entire new stork of WOOD v WAKK. nch m Pail. Tab. Bk. a.J "1 v-raatre w ick. c,ittawoer wun k t. . . n m Tar., r nnw w ia. iay rip - t i lau, Callery, Ac Sgars trom tla k ) pa? l Anil Itnm nf tha ht .Tt.!itT f Tl I P . W.ellOTrAtpiwtl'l any draaiBun oe tbs read, or-leri by J f COT prompt attaauoa. aatabtea KIDCCED TO A C.HTAIJTT. CkBc t Wala Without riak. Send fur circular at OK time to lone. AT.I V - X CO., 79 V . Y'i j q I . ! gtilSS Clw5 I II ...a . .- r.B CCset-B - arnt on tir, P"er-piHt. ami "J" 7, Iw-WUi, UD TWWi-k tsa -, T-ltaC, it im mm ml fa. bat rmf1 AaweiUttwAUMItiSaeeSS--. to a ears tfemre to w "-"Zj arsa peema Rent fcajrwww. I . " 'Zl Is, lLiaUMJ,lalUBC 31,- xrw OAFS. 1 Mill, fr.on.trie. lactone. n.l dw. -IliM Msrermla aaaWet. vr m mm .teepor "fjr Rahhrr Koonne; co.t bnt N,nt jjv .hinetine .nr nfi rate boOM. bam MH, - I H description it ia far superior to , in ths world for eonienienr in 3. Tne wan. ami ppearanr " anslitie of t-a, at om-thtrd tkr oa. -a NO TAB OB G HAVEL W mail mrh fmplr direction W' wanmaianiaa. ' XnMer Sooanc bein -ery lttc. y mended by Architect.. Corpnr"-'"- lion. Bnildera. and leatlin ies 'lcrJi' hud Mr old idincle. felt. ptad1" e peairir auvttaetion: will not mT nLll. andlStnctly P"-"- ... easily mef y pr T. Wril- ( . T," a torB pa. .. s Correapondenc . a I 5S 3ft Oi & i R 2 0 S aS"4 k ?3 I at L? i !CH-!Bga-rU! 90 2- OjPT a. VK H - 5? 3 HI C c r TT II II I ij i I I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers