From the German by Geihall THB STILL WATER ROSE. BT CALDWFJX. The quiet water lily Floats on the lakelet blue ; Ita soft leaves glow and glisten, lta cap of snowy hue. The fair moon amileUi on ber Through all the aommer night. And on her fragrant boaom roars all ber golden light. Over the rippling water Glideth a snow-white swan ; He aingeth sweet and softly, The lily gazing on. He siuoth sweet and softly . Thus will his death song flow ; U Sower, snow-white flower, lKat thou iU meaning .ko ' Wiuter-kfrit apples, wasoued wine a clouded meerhaum, a vase around which the wfnt of the rose etil hangf:, all these have a rare, ripe, en ranescent flavor tbat suggests, but can not express, the charm of widowhood A youujr widow is, perhaps the most interesting object in nature or in art. She rt-presents experience without its wrinkles or its gray hair. She haa matron! v beauty and maidenly freedom combined. She is grief with laughing sorrow in a house of festival a silver moon in a sable cloud. She is too sweet for anything! Like all good things, she can only be created at a great sacri fice. Mrs Browning says that you must spoil a man, and lie must be pretty tho roughly spoiled before he can leave a widow. This black swan this mourn ful riiwnix rises only out of the fun eral urn that holds the ashes ot a hus band's heart ! Let us wipe away the briny tears and proceed. Poets, states men, heroes, and philosophers have all felt the indefinite influence of widow hood. Its mialitv is not strained. It falls alike upon the just and the unjust. None can escape it. Edward Plantage- net wedded the widow, Elizabeth Grey, though he knew she brought civil war for dowrr. Ned Waller, Joe Addison, Sam Johns-oii, George Washington, Xa- Kleon Bonaparte, John Wesley, Tony Wellcr, Ben Disraeli, and all the boys, married widows. Henry VII. was so fond of them that he married two: and King David was so pleased with Abigail the widow ofXabal, whom he took to wife, that he turned Bathsheba into a widow on purpose to marry her. When Judith coa.es her cogitations over the virtues of the late lamented Manasses, of Bo'thusia, put off her mourning and adorns herself in the brave attire to set out tor the camp of Holofernes, we feel instinctivelv that she will come back with his heart, his crown, or his head. whichever she goes for. When the old widow Xaomi counsels the young wid ow Ruth how to lay her snares in the harvest Ik-Ms of her kinsman, and spring her net on the threshing floor, we know at once that the wealthy bach elor Bo:iz might as well order the wed ding garments. Allen Ramsey wrote a song telling how to woo a widow. He might as well have left directions how to get struck by lightning. Kvil- of Wonslp . 1 have known a country society which has withered awav all to nothing under the root of dry gossip. Friendship once as firm as granite dissolved to jelly, and then ran away to water, only beeause of this: love, that promised a future as enduring as heaven, and as 6table as Truth, evaporated into a morning mist that turned into a day's long tears, only because of this; a father and son were set foot to foot with the fiery breath of an anger that would never get cool aain tietween them; and a husband and his young wife, each staining at the heated leash which In the begin ning had been the golden bandage ol a God-blessed love, sat mournfully by the grave where all their love and all their joy lay buried, and all because of this. I have seen faith give place to mean doubt, joy give place to grim despair, and charity give lpace to the features of black malevo lence, all because of the small woids of scandal, and the magic mutterings ol gossip. Great crimes work great wrongs, and deeper tragedies of human life spring from the larger passions; but woeful and most mournful are the uncatalopued tragedies that issue from gossip and detraction; most mournful is the shipwreck often made of noble natures and lovely lives often made by the bitter winds and dead salt waters of slander. So easy to say yet so hard to misprove throwing on the innocent all the burden and all the strain of de monstrating their innocence, and pun ishing them as guilty if unable to pluck out the stings they cannot see, and to silence words they caunot hear gossip and slander are the crudest and deadli est weapons man haa ever forged for his brother's heart. r.Krptlaa Chariots. Three kinds of chariots were em ployed by the ancients. The war chariots were two-wheeled vehicles often made entirely of brass, and were driven by two or three horses yoked abreast. There was no seat in them, and the riders, of whom there were usually two, one to drive, and one 10 carry me vteaiivii, moim uprigiik, t-Ide by side. The floor of these chart ots sloped backward, ami the wheels being Email, the riders could easi'y step in or out. These chariots often had long scythe blades thrust out on each side. The Gaulish chariot was also a two wheeled vehicle, made very light and employed in races. The "family chariot" was in shape .somewhat like the others but the floor much longer and the sides much higher. The women and children sat on the floor, 011 mats made for the purpose. The horses driven before these char iots were yoked abreast, sometimes as many as four, and even moro, were employed. Mnmtterlnr, Plaats. It is well known that plants sleep at night; but their hours of sleeping are a matter of babir, and may be disturbed ' artificially, just as a cock may be waked up to crow at untimely hours by the light of a lantern. A French chemist subjected a sensitive plant to an ex ceedingly trying course of discipline by completely changing its bourn expo sing it to a bright light at night, so as to prevent sleep, and patting it in a dark room during the day. The plant appeared to be much pnr.zled and dis turbed at first, it opened and closed ita leaves irregularly, sometimes nod ding, in spite of the artificial son that shed its beams at midnight, and some times waking up, from the force of habit, to find the chamber dark in spite of the time of day. Such are the tram mels of use and wont- But, after an obvious struggle, the plant submitted to the change, and turned day into night, without any apparent ill effects. Bottom Iranscript. AGBICTLTTaUL. Cake of PocXTaT. The care that poultry U enti'Jed to, to make it profit able, U not near so much as one would think. It is just like any other busi ness it needs daily attention, not one day in a month, but each and every day. If you expect a cow to be profit able yon must attend to feeding her regularly, give her good, comfortable quarters to protect her from cold, storms, etc Now the poultry should nave equally as favorable treatment as any other stock. Construct houses, not too large, as you will permit too many to crowd together. They should be about eight feet wide, sixteen feet long to accommodate each a flock of fifty fowls, fronting to the south with large windows so placed that the fowls may enjoy as much sunlight as possible. liave It perfectly tight and dry, except ing means for ample ventilation, with out a possibility of a direct draft reach ing the fowls at night after going to roost. A fowl will take cold while asleep, as easily as a person. Keep the roosting apartment clean; sprinkle a little air slaked lime and dry ashes under the perch ; have the house thor oughly whitewashed inside three or four times a year. See that they have free access to plenty of pure, fresh water at all times; don't force them to drink the drainage from the barnyard ; many cases of cholera have been caused by this. A few drops of sulphate ol iron put in their drinking vessels oc casionallr will be a benefit. Sprinkle the perches with coal oil and scatter sulphur in their nests and dusting boxes. Jlanv fowls die from severe colds re ceived by roosting in exposed places. Of course, every fowl that dies, it is said, had the cholera, when prooaoiy half of them were affected in this way. A Pkofitabl Hog. The following description of a profitable hog was re ported bv the committee at the swine breeders'' convention at IndianaKlis, Indiana: He must have a small, short neck ; ears f mall, thin, and tolerably erect, not objectionable IT they droop slightly forward ; must be straight from the neck back to flank : must be let well down to the knees in brisket; of good length from head to tail; broad on tne back; ribbed rather barrel-shaped; must be slightly curved or arched in the back from shoulder to the setting on the tail ; tail small ; long in the ham from hock to letting off of the loins; shoulder not too large to give eyrame try to the animal; ham broad and full : hair smooth and evenly set on; skiu soft and elastic to the touch ; legs short- small, and well set under; broad be tween the legs; good depth between bottom and top of the hog; with pleas ant, quiet disposition; should not weigh more than three or four hundred pounds gross, at twelve to eighteen months old. according to keep; c"or may be black, or white, or a mixture of the two. The above described hog will measure as many feet from the top of the head to setting on of tail as he does around the body, and will meas ure as many inches around the leg be low the knee as he does ieet in lengm around the body; depth of body will he four-hfths ot his height. Turning iv clover. l once had a very poor, exhausted lot come into my possession : the field was naturally good but run down. It was under the plough the year before. I sowed it to oats and stocked thoroughly with the large kind of clover with the oats. The oats grew only about six inches high, but there was an excellent catch aiid growth of clover. The next season the clover stood thick and high. I sent the har row ahead of the plough, exactly as I wanted to plough and not much faster. When the harrow came round, 1 took my bag of 'ova Scotia plaster, and sowed one cast at the rate of three bushels to the acre, then followed with the plough, about seven inches deep, until the field was finished. The clover was in blossom. In August I harrowed it thoroughly and sowed to rye. I had an excellent crop of rye, and have never failed to get a good crop on the field since, except in a small corner, which was too stony to turn the clover under at the time. All the crops since have showed the effect of that clover and plaster. The stones on the whole field have since been removed, and, with others, form a handsome fence on the four sides of the field, and I can now hoe, mow, or pasture at pleasure. Cor. Country Gentleman. The Feeding Valuts of Roots. A bushel of carrots to feed to a horse is worth from half to two-thirds as much as a bushel of oats; and when we con sider tbat a thousand bushels of car rots can in some cases be grown on an acre of land, and five hundred bushels ordinarily, tanners should always grow a few hundred bushels for their horses and cows, being the best root that can be given to them. Sugar beets come next in value, and they are worth to feed to cows about one-sixth their weight in corn meal. Turnips are worth about one-eighth their weight of corn meal, and all help to winter stock cheaply, and in good condition. The tarmer who enters upon winter feed ing with no roots has made a serious mistake in bis judgment. It is rather troublesome in some cases to weed out root crops ; but when the land has been manured heavily the previous year, Mid cultivated in some hoed crops, with view of growing roots on it the fol lowing season, keeping the weeds thor oughly subdued, there Is no trouble in growing a good crop without much labor in weeding. Hf.eli.nq dc Tree. The term "heel-ing-in" means the dieting of a trench large enough to hold the roots of what ever is to be heeled-in, so that when covered they will be fully protected. Then take your tress, or shrubs, and pack them in the trench at a slight angle, as close as you can; and when the work is done the tops of the trees, &c, will be upon the ground, and may as before stated, be covered slightly with hay or straw, if the rays of the sun are quite powerful. All kinds of trees and shrubs may be kept beeled-ln from October to April or May, and not be injured in the least; but the trench must be kept deep enough to allow all the roots to go down below the surface of the soil ; and they should be covered about a foot deep over all, and the earth well packed among them, l think it is the best way to manage trees, &c, to heel tbem in veil in October or Novem ber, according to the climate, and set them in the Spring, as they are often injured by the frosts of winter, before the roots have obtained a firm hold on the soil. How Often to Feed Cokx. Corn should be led only in cold weather and then but once a day, and that for the last meal. As a rule hens will eat nothing else when they get corn. The result is an increase of fat on their bodies and a decrease of vitality and productiveness. Too much corn inter feres with a laying hen ; it contains a surplus amount of fattening material and not enough albuminous for the production of eggs. Ctr away the old raspberry caneg tbat have been fruited, and burn. Tie up the new growth to stakes or other support, allowing only four or five canes to each plant ; shorten these to about four feet, and the laterals at eighteen inches. It is well to give the rows a dressing of manure, leaving It on all winter. Gather the fruit from dwarf trees as fast as it r atr res. Do not allow pears to mellow on the trees, but when the stem parts readily f roin the tree pick and lay away on shelves in a cool fruit room to color and ripen. Agriculturist. Arrxr manure to the surface to ferti lize and mulch currants and goose ber ries, if no manure Is used, put on a mulch of litter. SCIENTIFIC. AUous of Aluminum. It has been found by Sartorius of Gottingen that allnmioiim alloyed with four percent, of silver is admirably adapted for mak ing me oeara 01 analytical umu. nan fur whirh ita lightness and un- cbangeableiiess render it peculiarly valuable as compared with other mate rials. Fvnnrimenta nlwi allow that an allOV of one hundred parts aluminnm and five part silver can be woiKea use pure aluminum, but is harder aud takes a tine polish. An alloy of five parte aluminum and one hundred parte silver is almost as hard as coin silver, and has the advantage of con taining no metal that is poisonous, or that alters the color of the silver. Such an alloy baa been sometimes recom mended tor coinage. An alloy- of ninety-nine parts by weight ot gold and oue part of alumi num is very bard, but still ductile, and its color resembles that of green gold; ninety parte of gold and ten parts of silver make a white and bnttle alloy. The best alloy of aluminnm and tin contains seven per cent, of the litter ; it works easily and polishes nicely, but, on attempting to cast it, a portion of the tin separates from the aluminum. An alloy of three percent.Eiucis foaud to be harder than pure aluminum, but, very ductile and brilliant. A thou sandth part of bismuth makes alumi num as brittle as glass. According to M. Tessicr, aluminum will unite with mercury ouly when moistened with caustic alkali. The amalgam is very brittle, the aluminum in il oxidizing easily in the air, decom posing in water, and in general acliug like the metals of the alkaliue earths. With iron, aluminnm produces an extraordinary hard alloy. A compound of 24.5 parts aluminum with 7-5 5 parte iron is silver white, and docs not rust in the air; on treating this with dilute sulphuric acid, the iron dissolves and leaves the aluminum behind ; a blight addition of eight parts to oue thousand parts of steel, imparts r.o it all the pro perties of the best India wootz. The Chinese Management of Hoses. It has been stated that the Chinese me thod of layering roM'8 is sometimes more successful than ours. Late in the summer they select a vigorous shoot of the same year's growth and tongue it in the usual way: then pnt in a small pebble to keep the slit open, and biud a handful of fresh moss around the tongue, keeping it con stantly dampened. In aboutsix weeks it will have struck roots, and can be nlanted without disturbing the mossy covering. Many of the garden roses can be increased by suckers from the roots, which can be severed ith a sharp spade in the autumn and new bushes loruied of them. Budding roses is a simple process, by which amateur cul tivators often increase their stock. A sharp penknife can do duty for a bud ding knife, aud tbe handle of a tooth brush, if ground dowu smoothly, will answer for a spud to aid n lifting the bark. From the last of June to the last ot August is the best time for this pro cess, as the bark can lm more easily raised from the wood. Take a smooth stalk and make a horizontal cut across the bark, thronsh to the wood, but not into it. From the center of this cross cut make auother cut straight down the stem, an inch or more in length. These two cuts should resemble a T. Slice oft' the bnd you desire to propa gate with one cut of the peuknife, cut ting it close to the main sialk. Now, with the edge of the spiul tuin back thn hark nn r-arli side of the Straight cut and insert the bud on the wood of the branch to be budded, fitting it tightly to the crossed cut. With a bit of soft yarn bind down the bai k, leav ing the point of the bud exposed. A handful of dampened moss must then be bound rouud the stem, taking care to leave the tiuy point of the bnd ex posed to the air. In six weeks the wrappings can be removed, but all other shoots must be kept from grow ing on the budded branch. By this means a rosebush ran be made to bear half a dozen dill'cieut colored roses. Carbon Bisulphide at an Antiseptic. Herr P. Zoeller publishes the statement that, in an atmosphere containing a small quantity of the vapor of bisul phide, animal and vegetable matters are effectually preserved against de composition or putrefaction. The author a'lirms that a few drops of this substance is sufficient for the purpose ; and since it volatilizes at or dinary temperatures, the employment of heat is reudered uuneccessaiy. In this manner, he adds, bread, vegeta bles, fruit of every kind (and fruit juices), and meat may be preserved for a couMderable time in closed vessels. Upon opening the vessels the unpleas ant odor of the bi-ulbhide is very ap parent ; but upon airing the snbstauces treated for a tew minutes, it disappears entirely by volatilization, lu the case of meats, the flesh, after having been submitted to the alove treatment for several weeks, is iu no wise unpleas antly affected. Dcu tsc lie Industrie Xeit ng. American Xietel Mines. The nickel deposit neartheGap, L iucastercounty, 1'a., is considered the largest yet un covered in the world, aud the only de nosit of the ore wolked in America. The mine is on the high dividing line between Chester and Pequea alleys Besides nickel. Conner, irou. and lime stone are louud iu the same locality. Nickel was discovered here about the year 156, though copper, which w ta ken from the same mine, was known iu the same locality seventy years ago. The ore has a gray color, is very heavy, and so hard that it is mined entirely by blasting. After the ore has been broken into small fragments, it is put into kilns holding eighty or niuety tons each, and subjected to heat pro duced at first by the burning of a small quantity of wood, and continued by the conversion of the expelled gas. It is then put into a smelting f in mace, and undergoes a treatment similar to that of iron ore. Liquid for high Temperatures. It is ofteu necessary to surrouud the pipes of beating or evaporating apparatus, and hot air apparatus, ovens, stoves, etc, with a boiling liquid at a tempe rature altove 212 deg. Fab.; it is also necessary to make use of water baths producing high temjieratures. The li quid employed for this purpose is simply water in which sea salt has been dissolved. Oil baths, etc.. are also used. Messrs. Grimm and Corvin pro pose, instead of these various agents, to make a solution of chloride of lime in glycerin, a solution which does not boil below 572 or 20 deg. Fah., and has the further advantages of never at tacking metals nor congealing. Manufacture of Clouds. The stage of Wagner's theater, at Bayreuth. re quired 3 247 gas jets. The rising mists and gatheiing clouds needed for sce nic effects were produced by two large engines placed at a short distance from the theater, whose steam was carried by pipes to reservoirs, from which it could be distributed by a netwoik of tubes over the whole 6tage. In the corner towers of the theater are two cisterns, each holding about 1,200 gal lons, from which watercan be obtained at a very high pressure iu case of need. The gas and water works of the thea ter have cost frM.OfK). a vorl describing the present con dition of the domestic industries of Russia, M. tVesclmiakoff states that not less than thirty millions of wooden spoons are annually made in that country, the industry having ita great renter in the district of Semeuow. Poplar, aspen, maple, and box are the woods used for this purpose, and the cort of the spoons varies from about -3 to $2(1 per thousand. Glycerin is one of the constituents of the fixed oils and solid fate; and although discovered by Scbeele nearly a century ago (1779). it is but a few years since it has become familiar to the unscientific public. 1 be principle reason for this was tbat the processts of manufacture, in use until quite re cently, rendered it too expensive. i omrane. Advice About Pickulwq. Do not keep pickles in common earthen-ware, as the glazing contains lead and com bines with the vinegar. Vinegar for pickling should be sharp, though not the sharpest kind, as it injures the pickles. If you use copper, bell-metal, or brass vessels for pickling, never allow the vinegar to cool in them, as it is then poisonous. Adda teaspoontul of alum and a teacup of salt to each three gallons of vinegar, and tie up a bag with pep per, ginger root and spices of all the various sorts In it, and you have vinegar prepare for any kind of pickling. Keep pickles only in wood or stone ware. Anything that has held grease will spoil pickles. Stir pickles occasionally and if there are soft ones take out and scald the vinegar and pour it hot over them. Keep enough vinegar to cover them well. If it is weak take fresh vinegar and pour on hot. Do not boll vinegar or spice above five minutes. Apple Tore Pie. Core, peel, and quarter some fine juicy baking-apples. Make a nice paste with fresh butter and sifted flour, and line with It the bottom and sides of a deep dish. Put in the apples, and stew among them sufficient brown sugar, to make them very sweet. If you can obtain a fresh lemon; pare off very thin the yellow rind, and squeeze the juice to flavor the apples. Prepare some fresh pork steaks, cut thin, and divested of all the fat except a little at the edge; removing the bone. Cover the apples with a layer of meat, and pour in a tea-cup of sweet-cider. The contents of the pie should be heaped up In the centre. Have ready a nice lid of paste, and cover the pie with it, closing aud crimping the edge. In the center of the lid cut a cross-slit. Put it into a hot oven and bake well. This is a farm-house dish, and very good ; try it. A Good Cleanser. To cleanse wood work, save the tea leaves for a few days, then steep them In a tin pail or pan for half an hour, strain through a sieve, and use the tea to wash all var nished paint. It requires very little "elbow polish," as the tea acts as a strong detergent cleansing the paint from all impurities and making the varnish equal to new. It cleans win dow sashes and oil cloths; indeed, any varnished surface is Improved by its application. It washes panes and mirrors much better than water, aud is excellent for cleaning black walnut pic ture and looking glass frames. It will not do to wash unvirnished paint with it. Whiting is unequaled tor cleaning white paint. Take a small quantity on a damp flannel, rub lightly over the surface, aud you will lie surprised at its effects. Ffver and Agce Ccre. The com munists of the Wallingford, Conn, com munity have discovered a very simple remedy for fever and ague. For some years past this disease has bceu so pre valent in the region that, two years ago the communists seriously tnought of abandoning their property and flourish ing business in that place. But the idea was suggested of trying a heated stove in a small room, including a pro fuse perspiration, followed by a sham pooing and thorough cleansing of the body, with both warm and raid water; and these simple means were found to be a thorough effective remedy. Not only the communists themselves, but the people of the entire region round about have resorted to the remedy, and have !een thoroughly cured. Pkesekvep Orange Peel. First wash the poel in warm water, then cover it with cold water and place it on the fire till it boils, then pour off the boiling water and cover again with cold; con tinue this process until all the bitter ness is removed, then make a syrup of a pound of sugar to a pound of peel; boil it gently until the peel looks clear, then with a fork remove the pieces, place them on platters, dust them with pulverized white sugar and dry in the shade. To Cleax Glass Globes. If the globes are much stained on the outside by smoke, soak them in tolerably hot water with a little washing soda dis solved in it, then put a teaspoon ful of powdered ammonia into a pan of luke warm water aud with a tolerably hard brush, wash the globes till the smoke stain disappears; rinse iu clean cold water, and let them drain till dry. They will be quite as white and clear a new globes. Facial Xevralgia. Procure a half- ounce of the oil of peppermint, and. witn a camel s-hair brush, paint the parts of the face wheie the paiu is felt. We have found it an excellent applica tion in ail iorms of pain lu the face. A drop applied to the cavity of an aching tooth, and confined there with a pellet oi cotton, win arrest the pain. Molasses Gingerbread. One coffee cup of molasses, one tablespoonful of nutter, melted; one teaspoonrul of soda, dissolved in a teacup of boiling water cool before adding; three heaping tea cups of flour, quarter teaspoon ful of salt, if ginger Is liked, a halt-teaspoon ful of salt. If ginger is liked, a half- teaspoouful can be added. Hair Tonic The DrwjyisWs Adver tiser gives the following as a recipe for making a hair preparation which will be stimulating to the scalp, and oily in proportion : Oil almonds, sweet, two ounces; oil bay, one dram; oil nutmeg, oue dram; oil sassafras, one dram; tincL can thar ides, one ounce; alcohol to fill eight ounces. To Kf.cp Colors. A tablespoonful of black pepper put in the first water in which gray aud buff linens are washed will keep the colors of black or colored cambrics or muslins from run ning, and does not harden the water. A little gum arable imparts a gloss to ordinary starch. English Muffins. Make a sponge over night as for bread, using nothing but yeast, flour, a little salt, and tepid water. In the morning beat it up well and pour into muffin rings upon the griddle. The baiter should be just stiff enough to drop (not run) from a spoon. To restore the color of a marble mantle piece which has become stained, mix up a quantity of the strongest soap lye with quick-lime to the consistency of milk, and lay it on the stone for twenty-four hours. Clean afterward with soap and water. A srRE cure for pain in a hollow tooth is said to be a mixture of powdered alum and common salt, applied with a lock of cotton wool. A sensation of coldness follows the application, after which the pain gradually subsides. Xew Englasd Corx Cake. One quart of sour milk, three eggs, one tea spoonful of soda, one teacup of flour, yellow corn meal enough to make a baUer as thick as pancakes. Bake quickly in pans well buttered. The London Milk Journal says that a pint of milk heated a little, but not boiled, taken every four hours, will check the most violent diarrhoea, stomach-ache, incipient cholera and dysentery. Rovax PVxch. Two quarts of cold water, and of Madeira wine, half a pint of brandy, the juice of six lemons, and two quarts of sugar. This is very hard to freeze. In winter use snow instead of ice. Breakfast Puffs. One-half pint of milk, one pint flour, two eggs, a table spoonful of butter, or two of cream, and a te.ispoonful of salt. Bake In the hot roll pans. A good cheap paint for rough wood is made of melted pitch 6 lbs., linseed oil 1 pint, brick dust 1 lb. HTaOROCS. Sharp Studint. -The Kev. Dr. Ritchie, 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 mathe matics?" "Yes." 'How many sides has a circle?" "Two," said the student. "What are they V What a laugh In the class the student's answer produced when he said, "An Inside and an outside!" But thii was nothing compared with what followed. The doctor having said to this student, -'And you attended the moral philosophy class also?" "Yes " "Well, you would hear lectures on various subjects. Did you ever hear one on cause and effect?" "Yes." "Does an effect ever go before a cause?" "Yes." "Give me an instance." "A man wheeling a barrow." The doctor then sat down, and pro posed no more questions. Joax Jarvis was a native of Dublin, where he practised the art of painting on glass for some time, and then re moved to London, where he soon gained for himself a high reputation. When the bacchanalian propensities of Jirvis had rendered him rather an unequal, if not an unsafe, artist, he was employed by a gentleman to palut his wife's por trait a miracle of plainness under the stipulation that a pint of wine at a single sitting must be the extent of his potations. Jarvis assented, and in a short time produced a perfect fac simile of the lady. On exhibiting it to the husband "he seemed disappointed. "Couldn't you have done It," said he to the painter, "a little less that is, couldn't you give it a little more" "If you expect me," responded Jarvis, seeing the husband's drift at once, "to make a handsome portrait of your wife I must have more than a pint of wine at a sitting. 1 couldn't get up imagina tion enough to make her good-looking under a quart at the very least." A writer tells an anecdote of two well known American clergymen, one of whom undertook to rebuke the other lor using the "weed." "Brother G," he exclaimed, with out stopping to ask any other question, 'is it possible you smoke?" "I must coiiless 1 do," the other quietly replied. "Then 1 should quit it, sir!" the gentleman energetically continued. "It is a very under ical practice, ami 1 must say a very uncleanly one. Why, sir, even a hog would not smoke !" "Brother C ," responded his amused listener, "do you smoke?" "1? Xo, sir?" he answered gruffly, with much indignation. "Then, pray, which is more like the hog; you or 1?" At a most exclusive ball at the sea side, a young druggist's clerk ap proaches one of the f iirest and most aristocratic of ladies, and humbly solicits the favor of a quadrille. The lady In spects him critically from his tie to his boots, and taking her can I, says: "1 never, monsieur, dance with peo ple whose names are not preceded by a U. What name shall I inscribe? Mon sieur ?" "M. Peroxide de Manganese, mademoiselle." She, a sentimental widow, ob-erving some seagulls flying about the vessels, remarks: "What a charming subject for a poem a swallow lot at sea!" He just recovering from a severe attack of sea-sickness, replies, looking at the sub ject from his oiut of view. "Yes, tnadi-m; but there are so many swal lows lost at sea !" She chose a more sympathetic listener during the remain der of the trip. Thet were sitting together, he and she, and he was arduously thinking what to say. Finally, bursting out will "In this land of noble achievements and undying glory, why is it that women do not climb ttie ladder ol fame?" "I suppose," said she, putting her finger iu her mouth, "it is all on account of their pull backs." And then she sighed and he sighed, side by side! A Xorwich van calls himself on his card a "temperance boot maker." The need of temierance boots is apparent, for thought they're not generally drunk, it's a notorious fact that they're often very tight. A woman is imbued with a feeling of joy and kindness second ouly to that of the angels, but she ctn never wah a pair of men's cassimere pants and have them set as tLey did before. Seasonable Receipt. "Tlie proper dose is oue of paregoric to every green apple. A hot smoothing iron should also be placed on the top pantaloon button, or thereabouts." A good disposition will carry a man through a private party, make him hold a plate of refreshments on his knees full of stuff be does not want to eat, and yet say he is happy. Tillers. "In Spain," says a lady correspondent, "women are frequently seen tilling the fields " Ah, indeed, we thought they were more partial to man-tillers. A Chicago grocer stuck out a sign, "Call and see my figs." A joker changed the intitial letter of the last word to "p," and the sign was promptly taken in. Uncle Solomon says he has noticed, all through his life, how ready people are, wheu thy have made a mistake, to correct it by abusing somebody else for it. "A scrsert must be a great place for dancing." "Why so?" "Because it is." "I don't sec how." "Ain't a nursery a regular bawl-room?" A recent marriage notice ends with the singular expression, probably added by a waggish friend : "May all their future troubles be little ones." A yoc.no ladt, on being asked whnt business her lover was in, aud nut liking to say the bottled soda, answered : "He's a practicing fizziciau." Meanin' goes but a little way i' most things, for you may mean to stick things together and your glue may be bad, aud then where are you ? Goethe tenderly remarks that Un limited activity of whatever kind must at last end in bankruptcy." Let the festive mosquito think of that. Ax editor's excuse for discontinuing the publication of his paper was that everybody else stopped the paper and he thought he would. Whex a half-a-dozen people are to dineujion a quarter ot lamb, what's the proper time tor dinner? Why,aquarter before six, of course. The nation that produces the most marriages is fascination. And perhaps the nation that produces the most di vorces is alienation. ' ' W it T la tliA In rorwtc rif frii4 rtrln. cipally used for ?" asked a teacher of a pupil. "For purposes of exploration," was tne repiy. Said a justice to an obstreperous prisoner on trial: "We want nothing but silence here, sir, and but little of that." Whex a young ithow goes out between the acts at the theatre now, they say he has gone to see his aunts. Stimul-ants. TOrTH-S C0IXM5. As one tchom UU Mother Gmforlelh. A little boy came to hi mother one day, and wi h qni vering lips and tear ful eves, said. 'Mamma, need I go to schoo'l this afternoon ! I don t want to go. I can't go !' . , Why! what lias happened! asked the mother, 'i hope you have not been a naughty boy.' . o. III a HI IU 1 "---; - - just turned around in my seat little minute, and the teacher came nr and struck me with her rule, and I don t want to go to school ever again. -" is a horrid teacher.' and that little breast heaved with mingled wrath and indignation. , , liis mother knew that although the blow might have caused him pain, it had fallen heaviest on the little sensi tive heart : so she drew him into her lap aud laid his head opon her bosom, where he sobbed out bis grief. Then. u.ir Uj li.lr from hia heated KUkllUg . . ' - " row. and kissing him, she spoke words ot tender anecuon. it-i v,.. nrtiativ in her Arms, she if lieu wj 4w; - said, 'Little boys do have trials, and sometimes tney are aunom " iuuvii u l;t.i l,...rij -Mn W..II .-nil tire but. m n u 1111 10 i r Allie, everybody has trials, and some times, tney give up to mem u -. ought not. Now,' she continued. 1 want my boys to be good men by and bv. If you stop going to school, you would stop learning, aud that would not do. for you must learn a great deal in order to be a good, strong. Christian man.' . , , But it is hard sometimes isn t it mamma f be asked, finding comfort in her sympathy. Indeed it is.' was the reply. He patted her on the cheek, smiled, ami said. Yon are a good mother.' Now,' said she, 'go bathe your face, and we will go to dinner.' When the hour tor school came, he threw his aims around bis mother's neck for a moment and whispered, as though desiring assurance of her sym pathy, 'It is hard, isn't it f She assured him that it was but that he was her hr hnv. and must not permit tiials to discourage him. With a light heart ne went wnisinng on his way to school, comforted in the thought that his mother knew and ap preciated the difficulty. Til Tale the Shortest. I'apa. One day a gentleman entered a store, ac companied by his two little daughteis. "Bny us each a lead pencil, papa, said Adda. "Yes. do, papa," said May, entreat ingly. , , . , He studied a moment and then said, "I'll get vou one and livide it between you." Which be did. but contrary to "his intentions one piece was longer than the other. Laving the two pieces together, he said, "Oue piece is smaller than the oilier, daughters. What shall I dof 1 expected to see the pink lips pont, but iustead the clear voice of little May, the yonnger of the two, rang cheerily, Til take the shortest, paxi." The tears glistened in more thao one eye for a moment, and many times since have her unselfish words echoed in mv ears. Afterwards a lady came with a little daughter. "Buy me something, mam ma.'' said the little girl. The frugal mother bought two figs. "One is for you," she said, "aud the other is for Mary." I knew that poor Mary's lot in life was a sad oue. All winter she had been helpless with inflammatory rheuma tism, and when spring time we feared quirk consumption was on her track. The little girl eyed the tigs, and as she went out tilled her month with one fnller than it ought to have been. "Why Lave you taken the biggest," said the mother. "There is hardly a bite in the other," "But Mary is sick," and the mother. Yet the selfish little girl was not sorry at all. Mv thoughts went back to little May : "I'll take the shortest, papa." Uiblo Xaries.lu the old times peo ple called a pearl a "margaref" In an old bible I once read about the pearl of great price, but it was called a "precious nargarer." 1 read this to a little girl named Margaret, and she was very happy to find ber name in the bible. All i he Mai ys and Marthas ami Ruths and Abigails and Graces and Chaiitys can find their names in the bible, you know. There wts once a dear girl named Griselda, who hail many things to do for her mother. People called her "patient Griselda," and she was pleased to find a story with that very name in an old book. My name is not in the bible. I wish it were. The names of my three little girls are tlieie ; but there is a better place than the Bi ble in which to have your name writ ten. It is the I limb's Book of Life. You may read about it iu the Revela tion. "Jit," inquired a boy of tender years, who was slowly ridiug home on a street-car the other noon, "don't the Bible say that the Creator made all creeping things?" "Yes my son," re plied the mother, with due solemnity. The boy rode thoughtfully on a few rods, aud then suddenly exclaimed, in earnest tones : "Say, ma, did he make street cars " A lady, in describing to an irreverent boy an occurrence in whicu his father figured, closed by remarking, "I am sorry to say that the thing ended by your father Ioiug his temper." "Did father lose bis temper V exclaimed the young scapegrace; "then 1 hope he'll never find it again, for it was the worst temper I ever beard of. A teacher asked oueof bis pupils who sat at the extreme end of the bench, where the sun struck with full force all the afternoon, what business he'd like to follow when he grew up robe a man. "Well." said the lad, "pop wants me to lie a lawyer, but 1 guess if I've got to sit in the sun ail my life, I'd rather drive an ice cart." A little boy having broken his rocking-horse the day it was bought, his mother rebuked him. He replied to her by iuqniring, "What's the good of a hoise till its broke f At last ac counts the mother was .looking lor an old slipper. " What is the chief use of bread I" asked an examiner at a recent school exhibition. "The chief nse of bread," answered the urchin, apparently aston ished at the simplicity of the inq'iiry, 'is to spread butter aud jam on it." The Advantages f Betas; I sly. It may be egotistical tosav so, doubt less it is, says an English writer, but 1 have ever loved, and ever shall love, ugly people. Apart from the charms ol their conversation, which has noth ing of the frivolity that so often dis graces the talk of the beautiiut, I find a strange delight in perusing the features of the ugly. There is intolerable mo notony iu a finely chiseled face. lis regularity is irksome to behold. The ugly, and they alone, are picturesque. Irregularity is to their lineaments what undulation is to landscape, the key to that variety of outline which is all es sential to artistic eflect, A fellow on whom nature has graciously bestowed a turned-up nose bears about him the physical emblem of disdain, and always seems to be treating the world with tiie scorn and contempt of which the world is richly deserving. Beetle eyebrows call to mind a glossy, amiable insect; big cheek bones have a bold, majestic, cliff-like look; a low forehead bespeaks the gentle virtue of humility; and a mouth that is like unto an oven resem bles a good thing. And then for eyes why should ejes be fellows? Surely it is much more useful as well as orna mental that one eye should look to the west, the other to the east. I love a man with a squint: If ancient pnrtu Anras pnz-. W bo bowtrd of a hundred, eyca. San. greater prabi .f aim ki dne Who ua a honored v -jb with two. A Pompton (Xew Jersey) man of ninety-two was born, always lived and has just died in the same house. The salaries of tne different monarchs of Europe are given as follows by a German statistician: Alexander II., 9 132.(100. or $23,000 a day; Abdul Aziz, $9,000 000. or 20 000 a day ; Fi an cis Joseph, $1,000,000. wr $rt).050 a day ; Frederick William II.. $3.000 000 or $8 200 a dav; Victor Emmanuel. a.4"0. 000, or $6 840 a day; Victoria, 000. or $ 270 a day; Leopold, $000,000 or $1,643 a day. In addition to this salary, each of these individuals is fur nished with a dozen or more first-class houses to live iu without any charge for rent. t'aaaanaptlaa eaa fce Cared t Schencx's Ptlmonic Strcp, Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic, Schence's Mandraee Pills, Are the only medicines that will cure Pulmonary Consumption. Frequently medicines that will stop a couh will occasion the death of the patient; they lock up the liver, stop the circulation of the blood, hemorr hage follows, and in fact, they clog the action of the very organs that caused the cough. Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia are the causes of two-thirds of the cases of Consumption. Many persons complain of a dull pain in the side, contiaiioii, coated tongue, pain in the shoulder blade, feelings of drowsiness and rest lessness, the food lying heavily on the stomach, accompanied with acidity aud belching up of wind, t' t tit svnioto'n usually originate from a disordered condition of the sto mach or a torpid liver. Persons so-affected, If they take one or two heavy cold, and if the cough in these cases be suddenly checked, will find the stomach and liver clogyd, re maining torpid and inactive, and almost before they are aware the lungs are a muss of sores, and ulcerated, the result of which is death. Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup is an ex pectorant which does not contain opium or anything calculated to check a cough suddenly. Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic dissolves the food, mixes with the gastric juices of the stomach, aids digestion, and cre ates a ravenous appetite. When the bowels are costive, skin sallow, or the svmpioras otherwise of a bilious tendency, Schenck's Mandrake Pills are required. These medicines are prepared only by J. II. Schence & Son, X- E- eor. Sixth and Arch Sts.. Phila. And are for sale by all druggists and dealers. E. F. Koakela Cltler Wine t Iroa. E. F. Kunkel's celebrated Bitter Wine of Iron will effectually cure liver com plaint, jumdice, dyspepsia, chronic or nervous debility, chronic diarrhoea, di sease of the kidneys, and all diseases arising from a disordered liver, stomach or intestines, such as constipation, fla tulence, inward piles, fullness of blood to the head, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust for food, fullness of weight in the stomach, sour eructations, sinking or fluttering at the pit of the stomach, sw imming of the head, hnrrled or difficult breathing, fluttering at the heart, choking or suffo cating sensations when in a lying pos ture, dimness of vision, dots or webs before the sight, dull pain in the he id, deficiency of perspiration, yellowness of the skin and eyes, pain in the side, back, head, chest", limbs, etc., sudden flushes of heat, burning in the flesh, constant imaginings of evil and great depression of spirits. Price $1.00 per bottle. Beware of counterfeits. IK not let your druggist palm off soma other preparation of" iron, he may say is as good, but ask for Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron. Take no other. Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron is not sold in bulk only in $1 botrles. E. F. Kunkel, Proprietor, Xo. 233 Xortu Xinth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Sold by all druggists and dealers everywhere. Tape Worm Removed Alive. Head and all complete in two hours. Xo lee till head passes. Seat, pin and Stomach Worms removed by Dr. KrN kkl, 239 North Xinth St.. Philadelphia, Pa. Send for circular. For removing Seat, Pin or Stomach Worms, rail ou your druggist, and ask for a bottle of Kunkel's Worm Syrup, price $1. It never fails. Common sense teaches if Tpe Worm be removed, all other worms can be readily destroyed. Read tae following; Letter. From a highly respectable gentleman in Limestone, Montour Co., Pa.: "This is to certify that I was pro nounced by several physicians as con sumptive, and had all the symptoms of he disease in its worst form such as coughing, severe pi'ns in the breast, shortness of breath, night sweats, and extreme weakness and lassitude of mv whole system. My family nearly all having died of the disease, I had given up all hope of recovery, as nothing gave me relief; but through the per suasion of a friend I was induced to try Wistar's Balsam op Wild Cuerrt. The first bottle relieved me considera bly, aud the third bottle cured me en tirely. I now feel as well as I ever did in my life, and am able to follow my occupation of farmer as fully as any one. I also had a sister in a more ad vanced state of the disease, having been confined to her bed for over a year, and pron unced beyond hope by our best physicians. She also was entirely cur ed by the Wild Cherry, but it required six or eight bottles, and she stili takes it occasionally as a preventative, being naturally weak chested. I would sin cerely urge all who are similarly af fected to try Dr. Wistar's Balsam op Wild CiiERKY.as I am satisfied that but for your own valuable remedy my sister and myself would not now be living. I would cheerfully a.iswer any one who may address me on the subject and state our eas-.-s more fully." Jacob Miller. Xone genuine unless signed " I. Butts " on the wraper. 30 cents and 1 a bottle. TreiKired bv Seth W. Ko'vle & Sons. S Harrison Avenue, Boston, and sold by dealers generally. nnnc somktiiivi entirklv mkwi OHftUa, I Iq.e.-Eleaaat Artistic. ninnC 4.-.i-Crua n.wlo.C..KUb WHtt J 0..m-.-ir- Snl3c.l.miikra. pit. ALEUT PR!.Ttfc (O., Wwt sturkbnle. Mm. 312 a day at hon. aotiw wwted. Onrfft an Mm trae. TBXS a CO, Aorfiuta, Miua a-t-w AGENTS. Pnnr tltM Chrommi free. J. M. Mcxtos Co.. PhUxlelphit. Pa. 10-7 If Stock Speculation! ADVICE AND INTOIUIATIOX FURNISHED AS TO THE BEST MODE OF OPERATING IS WALL STREET. "STRADDLES" OCR SPECIALTY. KealUlng Prod's In every case. Senl for our new Pampblet entitled Straddles." Sent free on application. W. F. HUBBELL & CO., Stock Broken, 46 Broad St X. T. M3Sm QSOT"? ' to Amenta. Samples frm. rOOQt t r. O.VKKtKY, Augusta,! aloe a-w-iy JOB PRIMTiriC JHtATLT KZXCCTKD AT THIS OFFICS The People's Remedy. Tha Universal Pain Zsira-a Note: Ask for POND'S ETnUtT, Take no other. Hear, lor 1 willmak ! exceTiCS OMO'S HTSABT-TheKrtTeaef,M,r,i lrereyrr. 11m been in tt. en thir year, and f'ir clefml.neen nd pmcaot arZ t TeYtrtue cannot beexcellfd. CHllDREH.- ftmily ejn ..rd tn V wits. I mihwm, . praiaa, am p-Im? almot instantly by ei:.-rn : ;r.!'r- Prwmptly relieve pxinsne Hm, -rlj? Kxeariariaaa. baBasa, Old sT Hail. I'eloB. arms etc. Arrii amlion, rednees pweilinr. Mnp b -.tivZ" remnr- di-olortionniiil lie!arTy,ii, ;EMAltWUIIESSES.-It alv, n-u.,'M1 in i no bat auu iuius,f n Jn ud pr,-,-Irz lnehed. Mnsea, vertiijn. 3 I IE0C0RRHCA ith.tnnoe.ii:iL An kMflV, reraliwaa to which die- are Hubert 4T promrl!y cure!. Fuller detaUa in bouktcroo. panrinesen hHTle. PILES -aliad or Mredia meet p-orrpt and rendT core. Kocmee, however curio ,jc nhr:naie. cin Ion? reiit iu renihrir, VARICOSE WS.-lti trwooirro-ecne ft, int uir-e!u and dwgeroaaeoo'rTKin KIDHET DISEASES. It luunoeqaal forp. rntit carr. BliEOINB frv eaw. FortiN f cine It his wti lio,KliTdsof liYrmnm',, otbrrremeJie failed in ajTr-t blm'inv: iirta nt, tarh. Inns. &ixi el wViT RHEUMATISM. NE.URAISIA, TmnkwHi. 4 karmrke re nil aju: revered, and Oitrc per. tnanenf'T cured. PHYSICIANS ot nlmcbooto who are ,M!0. wua t'uad'a Extract mt W itrb Hazel ommenditin tiieir practice. VVchsvel-te-iGf ccmmendarMD from bandredsof 1'br.trivM, sua ol whom ordr It tor n-e in t;inr oir practice. In addition to the l.jr-'oir, they order its n-e- (or hwellinw ot ill 15V (im;,Sr Throat, laHaaied TaauU, simple and chronic liarrfceea, 4'atarra. tor whb it lea specific.) (bilblaibH I ea Feet, istiac af I niirrt. .Uoeqmaea, clc. ( happed Ilaada, r are, uu indeed all manner of akin dim-area. TOILET USE. Remove renews Reshiv , aud Kmartlagl beab (his rmtiaM, and PiaaaleM. It rrt- tr7vj -.-. r Jmkrt, while wonderfuilj niirvv Cawinlevlaa. TS FARHURS.-Ia"r'a Extract. Jfu Srnrk Bieeder.LO LlvervMancanAttordroliewiThoat It. It is niwd by ill the Leading Livere.siah!. Street Railroads and a -at H ioemeiiiii New York City. It ha- no equal l.w f praia. liar, aeaa or Saddle bagaa-, etiUnca, pwratcliea, Mwellina-a.1 , Laceraliaa. Bleeding, Paeaaiama. lalic, Oiarrbe-a. t'hilln, 1 old, etc lta raneeorarrkm i -:de, and tne relief it afford i prompt tbit n invalnMe in every Farm-rard eweli -o everv firm -honae. Let It be tried once. ,r.J von will never be with, tit ft. ' CAUTION. Paad'a Extract cue been im'rr.ni 'lucirt-nnine article hae the words PeaU. K tract Mown in earn hottle. It a p-epar-d by the aaly peraaaa llvlaa whoever knew bo toprereir it p-operlv. Keuea otb.rpr--pnttlon of Witrb Hn L Thi ! the .ui article naed hy Phyi. Uns. and in the h-p-t.n!of tha wnt-ririi Fnmpe HISTORY AN9 OSES OF PORD'l EXTRACT, nptmr''-t fopii, .' frw tin AipTUi-i'torj : "3N-t FXTRACjT COMPANY, M.aVa loop frjenz READ & LIVE! OXE person tn every four by ruptured, and two-thtrrls thus ar il cted desire to d'e, tit they an ffer from Oy py..Blaal IMa eitJMP. Parale a I a. Mealal Oeraaca an . leealllly. X"E0 'ATS SPRING PAD BELT TRl'SS"X For the treatment and cure of Riip'areanrl ner nla, patented K5. Is tne only sotenunc Truss invented. Every physician endorses 11 at once, and patients huv It ai sK-tiU Raplaresl Haflerec from old-faMHonecl mttaiiii' and Dard-ruboer sprlnK And cwaatrt. nd $3 1 for sample Truss, clrcnlara. and en dorsements of tn-'UHHiid1 who have been cured, and of tne valln phyaictans In the Cnlt-ed 8' atea. tnoiudinir the irreat doctor aisi soro-on. Gregory, principal of thext Loni aerih-al rnl lre. All ijr II to the Beat Traaa kmi. It baa cured a 5-year rupture Id dveweeka send 10 cent, for ou' weekly Trass paper, etc Rev. Howe, the pa'entee). la ruptured on both wdea badly, and baa been for year, and he Invented hia 'Srwat Traaa lor hluuelt only We maa them for Men Women and Children t wnodxliy bit- Mr. H. for bis inveutw.n TIIE HOWE l'EHALE il'PPOtTEl IS the beta known for abdominal artectiuti. If you have a friend nipt a red. do him a favor by aending a his name at onca- a, Addresa w X HOWE TRr CO., A Bo 11T. looncll Bluffs. Iowa. lav-SOO Traveitna; Agents wanid. Mates, Counties aud Towbshlps lor sale. S-fl-am 2o X Extra Mi.xeii cams. 1 vsn. iit-a. with n.ime. 1"C DO'-l 'alii. .liih ' tt.T ' . r. s-W 11TT Tin"ANAKESIS. nr. ft. Silabe-e-a tXTEESAL PILE RESECT 41m leaftraf rei ef, and 8 an infallible rm rit. To prove it we send sum. oles 'r to all applli'&nu P. NKI'T.:lT-:K a .. S-Ie .Manulaciureraof "AN AKEI!." Box 3M. wwlorii. Hrr f i mMf-,u t In etiylnir the -Aai-ts" from lrusnflsts. b careful to iret the irnu tne article, noserve thai the siirimture of -a. SlLSBfcJi, M D." la on aacA end of the box. a-ia-ly , all " sail i - i.-iww'l .11 ,f t-. -ICWitl. J r.,.. v J"-ij-iUa STYLISH TISIT.SU CARDS! aw tr it it sr yif vn rvti id - .. mJ ur aVO fcr 2f t-t., pf-f-tii. 5ml wLuup tr Nim Sami'l-, Brpr it oh to AarnM, A- ISo ftnuttrnir couevrn. r RK.ARl) 4 CO, Buthlukm. Pv 9-4-m Corrpiotnc irtTitt Old naufc f Ul kinds rfvturtJ- rvprurr.1; tvie ruuw Utti bjr contract, ixmt Jur sfim.ir. ROOFS. Wh mi malv itntr Jtft la m hfHm an 4 m tbe eipt-tift? ot a mw rof ev-rr 1 or 15 ywra. M enn V ,- if a tut. !Uir Plaint, it will tvt only rnit tbv etfoctn of wat-r aiv! wiirU. Imt hie4 jm frvm Yin. OLI BOOI'M. Protect mar Bnillintr by wine 9far Pmint, whirh nHtbr mirk m winter tvr runs in wmnirf. ot i obibatk1 n.H)Cn nn be pftinlrd Umking mmrh lattr, mt kuttma hmT Oi m ah neii with ml tit paint, fur wHrfA lb cot ef rv-tthiutflintC- On fUcuytt thttuf Vj it DiU nt th b"l ami porta, man a nrr U- M-mtioi roof, that laxta ft-r year. CurUd nr vtry I ohirMrl it brin" to thir plaraa and ksrp fVat V". Tht paint i"rniri a hwting. m Mpfid with a bru.-h and ttt ernanimtal. It in ehoit olr. wbra !irt applied bat olvrnc- to a uniform UU cvlor, and r to all iniots and pipnM atate. OJI TIH OWL IKO!f ROOF the rW y4r in th Vat paint tn tha wtrtd fir dnr.t:V ttT. It haa a Mtt body, fa madly apple)!, expand t-v neat. cwHitiarta ly c, lri- km and never erar" Bur m One coat M)rtaU 4 of any oiUr. flRE.PKOOr SEW BOOM. Mill. Cartr-TV 1rtrr and dMlitnr a wprialff MatertwJaMtptV r a new trepor lUt Koufof Utr Kaivlinc nm bat aboat half thm pneo ul re--hitutlink:. Pr private hi, burn and baddinc of all tircri trttna it k ar miperiur t way eiber mftnfe in the world rr convenience ii laying, and miubinea the or mmmntoi appearance. tittratxJitw. and 4r-prr inIr Hn, mi mmurxiUttToU. m Tmr or wirel ImL "How to ere rw-ehinctinr, 4tnp le1t effet-tnally and rheanry in roof, ot all klnda, a ltrO naga bo-k f rea. Wm. tawlay. M-n'toa ttii. pac. Xew York Male Katlat la.. Hoofing Coutractoia. 47 S. front St, Pbila. -15-tt BROOMS! BROOMS! joss j. sum h co., S53 Waaalartoa Btraet, Haw Tark. Principal Depot ib Hew Tork aw tne beat Broom Man hctnrai In tha tailed states. Brooms from $2.00 per dozen ud npwiri The lowest prtoja and areata! variety to ba tHia anywkara. Alao an entire new stock of WOOD aad wiuai WAKB, men as Paila, Tuba, Baakata, Mats, I ". Oanlatc Wicka. Ac, together wits a lad noeot A(-vi, Briar ox and Clay rises, raary Soasa, Yaoket .v tkiaa. Cutlery, Ac- Began from 115 to (Sti par XilL A fall has of the bast quality crfTINWARK. P. t. Weaell oar roods st prices that do not rc-fdre any dramming- oa tha road. Orders by mad will re ceive nmmpt attention. aSfMiahad lsdo. t-ly r. AGENTS WANTED FOB HISTORY lENTENI EXHIBITION It seila kutev than any other bock. One am J 3 copiea is two day. 8eou f r oar ettra lernw IS Agents. It atiosal' FuvusHHra Co Ftulaielliia. ft T-f a- f A O The cboiceat tn tha d la I KL A4, O porters' price. Large la America al.. arude pleases every bodyTtaiJa oustitasally Increaamc Areola wasted everywhere best inducements don't aaete time send mr circalar to Kossax Wslis. U Vavey at, N. T. P. a l- 85 to 820 sTTtoii
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers