SOSG. To dream, and then to sleep Until the morn return j An hour of watch to keep, A little lamp to burn. To weave but make no end, To sing and lose the song. Where busy footstep wend Among the world' gar throng. To know that day is here. To see that spring has gone. And summer's death is near And still the hours roll on. We fail, we fade, we die. Yet onoe 'twixt death and birth To know Love's kiss, Love's sigh, Is light of heaven on earth. Mv God ! thy arm is sweet. If, ere the twilight come. Love walk with sacred feet Across oar naked room. Awerdeteeef BMk-Haktaa-. A curious list of translators' mistakes or mistakes made in translation, might be made oat. Thus the Abbe Viel, writing of Canterbury, and misled by the word "canon," stated the cathedral was surrounded by artillery- The primate of all England was ap parently in his eyes a military ecclesi astic, like the ancient Yladika of Mon tenegro. Guizot. in bis "Life and Times of Shakespeare' has, writing in English, expressed a hope that Shakes peare might be more and more "tra duced" for the benefit of the French. Authors' mistakes, however, belong only indirectly to the subject of book making; nor is it always wise to point them out. Indeed as a famous "prin ter's reader" once remarked in a poeni on the subject of his own occupation, ailed "Corrector Typographicus" to the man who corrects the errors of auother (and who ever thinks of cor recting his own f ) "i'lui aati. Hindu? gloria nulla ma lift." Erroneous opinions cannot always be described as mistakes; though that young man may fairly to be said to Lave committed a blunder who, having stated before a board of examiners that Charlemagne lived M years lefore Christ, and being asked whether he did not mean "after Christ," persisted in bis ongi nal statement, add in g : "1 am sorry to disagree with you, but that is my opinion." Many authors cause a cer tain amount of confusion to their ad mirers by chaugiug their opinions theiropiuions properly so-called. Num bers of writers have begun as Revolu tionists to end asConservatives. Victor Hugo, however, who lor the last twenty-eight years has been an ardent Republican, gained bis first reputation as a Legitimist. Apart from errors made by themselves, a good many au thors have been the cause of errors, sometimes very droll ones, made by others. Guariuo's "I'astor Eido'' has been iucluded in a cataU gue of religi ous Ixwiks; we have the authority of Mr. Hill Kurton fur stating that Mr. Kuskin's "Notes on the Construction of Mieepfoids" was much asked for among iuuiiland farmers, and that ; great disappointment was caused by their discovery of the real nature of the work; Miss Edgeworth has herself told how her "Essay on Irish 15ulls" was ordered by an agricultural association; Mr. Swinburne's "Under the Micro scope" was classed by German pub lishers as a scientific woik, and Henri Murger's ".Scenes de la Vie de Boheme" is reported to have had a corner given to it bv Herr von Sybel in his "Ilistor ische MonateschrifU" Probably index makers have shown themselves quite as ingenious in misapprehending their authors'intentions as catalogue-makers themselves. The compiler of some "Annual Record" is said to have been much annoyed at finding that in his in dex, which he had intrusted to other hands, no reference was made to Par liamentary proceedings. So at least it it seemed until at last under the head of "Public Meetings," he discovered "Meeting of Parliament." A very in dustrious index-maker, who letnotuing escape him except now and then the main subject of the sentence he was dealing with, made in his index the following entry : "Greatness of Mind, instance of." This corresponded with a passage in the body of the work which related how a certain Judge had de clared that he had "a great mind to send the accused to prison without the oution of a fine." Errors arrising from hasty and inconsiderate cutting down are to be met with, not in books (for an author always cuts himself down with remarkable tenderness,) but iu care lessly edited newspapers. A barrister of my acquaintance was much irritated at seeing it stated one morning in a London journal that he had defended a certain person, "who was accordingly convicted." The chief causes of the man's conviction, apart from the man ner in which his counsel had defended him, were not given. In connection with eccentric journalism a story is told of a reporter, in the days when descrip tive reporting had not been inveuted, who, being instructed to report an eclipse of the sun, and finding that no sjeeche8 were delivered on the occa sion, wrote, in stereotyped phrase, that "the proceedings were eutirely without public interest." A certajn admiration must be felt for that iuexperiencetl re porter who, being 6ent to the Divorce Court, caused much dissatisfaction in the oftice by merely writing the plain truth that "the evidence was unfit for publication." Macmillan's Magazine. The PrrinlBDi Prednrtlte Caltare. The foreign feather, added last win ter to Mr. Emerson's already bending plume, was one which, judgiug by that gentleman s published letter, he re garded as quite the most brilliant that the plume had ever received indeed. its crowning glory. e recall one, how ever, that must have comforted his heart a great deal more than this tribute to his intellect. It was the as sembling of his neighbors, on his re turn from his Jatest foreign tour, to welcome him. It was not a new thing under the sun, but it was a new thing in America. On the Continent of Eu rope, the honors paid to genius and culture by friends and neighbors have formed some of the most touching and lieautiful incidents in history. We read of artists returning to their coun try homes, after their metropolitan triumphs, and finding the streets lead ing to their birthplaces thronged with shouting friends, adorned with floral arches, and strewn with roses. A hun dred little cities and villages cherish with the teuderest pride the fact that they have sent out men who have moved the world with speech and song, with picture and sculpture. America has seen, and been capable of, very lit tle of this; and it really marks an era in our national life when supreme cul ture is so fully apprehended that it be comes the object of supreme honor. How many years ago was it that X. P. Willis chronicled the fact that a young man had passed through New York on his way to Europe, for a for eign tour on loot t This young man's name was then James bayard Taylor. The name has been spoken so many times since that early date that the "James" has been woru away, and has disappeared altogether. Since then, the young man has "ransacked the ages, spoiled the climes," and done hard work enough for ten men. As lecturer, newspaper correspondent, novelist, writer of travels, poet, trans lator of Goethe, he has poured his lit erary life out upon the world in a con tinuous stream that has grown deeper and broader with the advancing years. America has hardly produced a more prolific life than this, or one more ver satile in its productions and possibili ties. iet we fancy that its possessor fancied that he was not held at his true value iu a country devoted to money, and political ambition and social rivalry. How sweetly, then, must the recent ovation paid to him by his old neighbors and friends have come to turn ! e do not wonder that his mouth was sealed by the swelling of his -"j. k orttfr U-il that we are after. e learn to despise the ap plause of the multitudes. The difteV- i:u, oeiween ueing lionized and being loved and honored is wide. And to be loved and honored by one's early neigh bors and friends is the sweetest thing of all. It was worth all the cost of travel over Arabian sands and Siberian snows, and years of toil and straggle, to find one's self at the end among con gratulating friends, and proud and hearty fellow-villagers, with tears on one's face, and the great comfort of appreciative sympathy in one's heart Last winter an old man with the snows of eighty years upon bis head stood before the legislative bodies of the Empire State, and received their obeisance. For sixty years he had been writing for the American people. Their oldest poet, and, in many respects, their best, his productions had been familiar, not only in the household, butih the school, to all the generations that have risen since he began to write. With an unspotted personal record, with wis dom won in many schools, with the gathered veneration of half a century looking np to him, and the modesty of one to whom laurels are unwonted and the breath of praise almost a painful surprise, he stood before the people's representatives and received his crown. Did it come too late T No ; it never comes too late, if it comes in life. It would have touched him more, doubtless, at an earlier day, when in the thick of his struggle; but men worthy to be honored are not men who seek for honor 01 recognition. They are not men who must have recognition or die. Still, the strongest heart melts before personal reverence and personal a fleet ion; and the good white head and the good white soul must have had a foretaste of the thrill which will come with the upper verdict : "Well done, good and faithful servant !" Now, all these tributes paid by Mas sachusetts, Pennsylvania and New York, to men who have enriched the nation's literature, mean something. Thev mean that the time is come when that which is most solid in a nation's acquisitions is, in some degree appre ciated. Scrilmer. kmolleU axd his Mather. Tobias Smollet, the novelist, poet, genius, and traveller, best remembered, Derhans. bv the average English reader as the author of "Roderick Random," lost his father at an early age, and as his mother had been left poor, he was taken in charge, and educated by his grandfather. At the age of nineteen he had served a term of apprenticeship with a physician in Glasgow, when, his grandfather having died without mak ing further provision for him, he went to London, there to strike out for him self. He carried with him the manu script of a tragedy, called the "Regi cide," upon which he placed great reliance, but he found no manager willing even to read it; so he threw aside his pen in disgust, and obtained a position as surgeon s mate on board an eighty-gun ship, where he learned much of life. He was present at the ill-fated expedition against Carthagena, where he gained a rich experience which he subsequently incorporated into "Rod erick Random." When he again turned his efforts into the literary channel, he was better able to battle with opposi tion, and as he produced works of real merit lie became popular. Smollett had grown from youth to middle age when he concluded once more to visit his native land. His fame had gone before him, and his reception by the dignitaries of Scotland was cor dial and flattering. But he had prom ised himself the greatest pleasure in meeting with his mother whom he had not seen since his beard begin to grow. The battle of life, and the travel into foreign climes had left their scars and their tan, and it was thought that his mother would not know him. Mrs. Teller, his sister, introduced him as a gentleman from the West Indies, who had known Tobias when he was there, and the better to support bis assumed character, Smollet put on a serious look, amounting almost to a frown; butwhilehis mother'seyes were riveted on his face the old eyes with the kindly gaze that he remembered so well he could not refrain from smiling. In an instant she was upon his bosom, with her arms around his neck. "U, my son ! my son ! I have found yon at last ! Ah !" she added, as she held him oft, and gazed upon him, "had you kept the austere looks and the gloom upon your face, I might have missed you; but the old roguish smile it betrayed you at once '." S. J:'. Led 1er. Irish woke. The Irish peasantry have an inborn taste for funerals, and in the amount of honor done to the departed they lose sight of the actual loss they have suf fered. "Uch, shure, thin, it was a fine berry ing; there was a sight of people and a power of cars," is as great aeulogium as cau be accorded any man, and will quite console the survivors. And the reverse, 'Och, thin, he didn't leave enough as would berry him daceut;" in fact, they think far more of how they are to be buried than of keeping life itself. The poorest and most im provident lays by something for his or her own wake, and I have myself known cases of paupers in the hospital wards who were accumulating under their pillows a little store to save the disgrace of a parish colli n, that being the greatest and last misfortune that could befal them. Douglass Jerrold was much struck by this phase or the Irish character, and it is he, I think, who tells an affecting storv of a young girl whom he found in a cabin, busy at her needle. "1 see you take in plain sewing; this is some bridal grandeur," he said, taking up what looked like an elaborate niglit-dres. 'lis no wed' ding grandeur," replied the girl proudly "Shure 'tis my own shroud; let life bring what it may, plase God I'll have a daeent wake." In parts of the north of Ireland there was at one time, some forty or fifty years ago, a rather romantic custom, that when a young unmarried woman died, her coffin should be carried by young girls only to the graveyard. As this was situated perhaps fifteen or twenty miles from where she lived, it followed that the bearers should be changed every second mile, and -on these occasions there was generally an escort of running volunteers, who in this way often did their thirty miles in the day. This was called "shifting the coffin," and a good many marriages were the result of these excursions; but the Idea was, nevertheless, pretty and pastoral. Oublin Cniversits ilaijazine. alts. It is always better to pass a dozen in tended insults without recognition, than to take offense at a single unin tentional neglect or reflection. Misun derstandings are fruitful of more unkindly feelings in society than ever result from deliberate ill-nature. Hun dredsof friendships have been sundered by that egotistical sensitiveness which is ever looking for offense. We can all point to certain persons who are thus morbidly sensitive to a painful degree. They are disagreeablecompanions. We need not spend onr precious time in pointing to them, however. We have each something to guard in our own character. We are each inclined to take offense too easily. If we could remove this ever jealous watchfulness, society would gain a new charm, or rather it would be relieved of a very disagreeable feature. Pass neglect, then, and personal reflections, as grace fully as possibly, instead of taking the risk of being offended when no offense is intended. Miles. aasTerlwa. These things are often unknown t the world; for there is much pain that is quite noiseless, and vibrations that make human agonies are often mere whispers in the roar of hurrying exist ence. There are glances of hatred that stab and ra:se no cry of murder; rob beries that leave man and woman for ever beggared of peace and joy, yet Kept secret oy uie sunerer committed 10 no sound, except of low moans in the night seen in no writing except that made on the face by the alow monthsof suppressed anguish and early morning tears. Many an inherited sorrow that has marred a life has been breathed Into no human ear. AfcKICXLTt 11L. Hungarian Mnxrr. A great diver sity of opinion exists among practical farmers as to the value of the several annual grasses commonly known as millet. This may be accounted for in part by the character of the soil where grown. All the varieties of millet are peculiarly adapted to light, sandy, or sandy loam soils, such as will produce full crops of timothy and red-top only under the most favorable circumstances. Land that is excellent for grass is not the best for millet, and the best millet land is not natural grass land. Millet re sembles the corn plant in its adaptation to warm land and hot weather, and for this reason we should expect to find it a more popular crop on the dry, sandy land bordering our sea-coast than upon the moist, green hill-tops of Vermont, New Hampshire, and Western Massa chusetts. And this we find Is the case many farmers in the interior having scarcely ever seen a patch of millet growing. Profitable crops of millet! presuppose land easily plowed and capable of being smoothed off and laid down with little labor. A3 a feeding crop for milch cows, we hold it in higher estimation than when we commenced raising it, probably be cause it is now grown more thickly and cut earlier. Formerly it was thought that a peck of seed was enough for an acre. Then twelve quarts was recom mended, next a half-bushel, and so on till now we find the most successful growers using from three to four pecks of seed per acre. This gives a fine quality of hay, and if the land is made fertile, a heavy burden may be obtained. When first introduced into our neigh borhood, many years ago, millet . as recommended as specially valuable for horses, yielding both the hay and grain on the same plant, and it was tried for this purpose, but without giving satis faction. The straw was too hard and stiff, and the horses did not appear to relish it like good timothy and oats. Most farmers now cut it, or intend to, when it is in blossom, and when cut thus early they find that it is eaten readily by all kinds of slock. Many even contend that it is better than the best hay. We can not give it quite as high credit, but esteem it a very valua ble plant with which to supplement the grass crop in a dry season. From two to three tons per acre can be ob tained in from sixty to seventy days from sowing, and it may be grown after an early crop of hay has been re moved. Making an Orchard. Some eight years ago Mr. J. H. Bostou, of Bidde ford. Me., says the Farmer, commenced to clear a piece of laud consisting of twelve acres so rocky and broken that nothing would grow on it but bard-backs and junipers. After clear ing and burning off this unprofitable growth, he put it out to fruit trees, wherever he could find soil enough. Mr. Boston defies the State to show a better growth on trees of seven years old some of them measuring nine inches in diameter, and fruiting well this year. 31 r. Boston says he never lost a tree. He has some four hundred fruit trees, consisting of apples, pears, cherries and plums. Where he could not set a tree he has graje-vines In and around the rocks their beautiful foli age and fruit covering up the great rocks and unsightly objects. In the smooch, level patches of land he has strawberry beds, and where nothing else will grow he has .raspberries all of the improved varieties. At the foot of this romantic garden is a trout brook which Mr. Boston intends to dam and stock with specimens of the speckled fish, affording some of the sportsmen with hook and line an opportunity to enjoy the fun of hauling the little fel lows out. This stream and fish pond will make quite au addition to the looks of this romantic little place, be sides being a source of profit. Aboct Fowls. Always use china eggs for nest eggs, and never put eggs under a hen till she has set one night on a china egg and is found upon her nest the second night; then at evening put the eggs under her, eleven to a large hen and nine to a small one. Let the nest boxes ii of ample size, fifteen to eighteen inches square, and first put a layer of dry earth at the oottom, men make the nests of fine hay or straw, and sprinkle a little Hour of sulphur among it to drive away lice. Keep your henhouse well wnitewasneu, perches and all, and remove tne ma nure often. Put it into a barrel and when filled or partly filled take it into your garden and mix it with aDout four times its bulk of soil. Make a heap broad enough to contain the en tire droppings of the season, and here compost your manure from time to time, always leaving the top oi tne heap flat so as to retain rains, and cover with litter of any kind, so that none of the heap will be exposed to the rays of the sun. these comost heaps should be shoveled over two or three times during the season, to mix their con tents thoroughly; and the next season apply from a half pint to a pint of this mixture to hills of garden vegetables, or to field crops of corn, and you will find every pound of the coniost equal in value to a shovelful or Darnyard ma uure. Wixter Feeding. Corn is better adapted for fattening animals than for making them grow. To young animals even to pigs, it should be fed in moder ation. Fat is not what we want in a young animal, but bones and muscles instead, and these are best produced by grass roots and oats, it is often, how ever economy to feed a little corn meal with these. Professor Arnold has made some experiments in feeding corn com pared with hay, and he estimates the former at 1 per head equivalent to bay at $10 per ton. He woui I like to see our dairymen feeding more cornmeal and more oats In winter and less hay. Then cows would not come out in the spring as lean as Pharaoh's lean kine, and they would start oft for their snm mer duties with good heart and udder, and more than pay back the extra cost, if there is any, of the winter fodder. Sowing Salt on Wheat Land. The Toronto Globe recommends that the best time to sow salt on land for winter wheat is immediately before the seed is sown. Where land is plowed in the fall for spring crops then sow the salt late in the season on the plowed land. It is always sown broadcast when ap plied alone and it has been applied good effect at the rate of from three to twelve bushels per acre. But all trou ble and labor of that kind may be saved by scattering it on manure heads. Celery. The snapping cold nights, although not so hard upon celery as upon many vegetables, dues it no good. To preserve it indefinitely place moist earth in a box, set the roots of celery into it and put into a cool cellar, or bury so as not to confine too closely until excessive weather comes on. if put in a box in the cellar it Is well to have the box of such a depth that the leaves will not overreach the top, and cover it with a piece of woolen, which can be moistened occasionally. When husking corn from the shocks is the best time to secure seed for next year's planting. The ears set apart for seed should be taken where two have grown upon a stalk, they should be weii-niied out at both ends, should be stripped except the inner husks and these tied and hung np together in a rather warm but dry garret. Feeding Fowls. Fresh meat scraps. liver, etc., should be fed to fowls. It is much to the advantage of fowls to have iron in their drinking water. Clean gravel and broken oyster shells may be given them with advantage es pecially where their quarters are llm- 8CLK3 1 iFIC The Discovery of Fire. Fire, the com mon source of neat, of light, and of life, and the active principle of a mul titude of industries, and of metallurgi cal industry in particular, is unques tionably one of the greatest conquests achieved by man over Nature. The discovery of fire was more than a benefit ; it was, in fact, a giant stride on the road to civilization. With fire arose sociability, the family, the sacred joys of the domestic hearth, all indus tries, au arts, togetner wiui cue won ders they have produced, and still pro duce from day to day. Hence we can readily understand how it is that fire has ever been and still is. among many nations, the object of a special wor ship (priests of Baal, Gbebers, Hindoo Brahmans, Roman vestals, priestesses of the Sun in Pern, etc.) ; and that it has often figured in the religious or funeral rites of nations most remote from one another, both in time and space, as the Chaldees, Hebrews, Greeks, Romans, Peruvians, Mexicans, etc But how and when was this great discovery made, in the absence of which we can hardly conceive of the possibility of human arts or even of human existence I Did man, as we are told in the myths of India and Greece, steal fire from heaven ; or did he, as other legends atlirm, take advantage of spontaneous forest tires, arising from the violent rubbing together of dry branches under the action of the wind ; or, finally, was man so ingeni ous, even from the beginning, as to de vise one of those simple and practical contrivances by means of which cer tain savage and half-civilized tribes in cur own time obtain the tire they neod for their daily nsest Popular Science Monthly. A Aew Safety Explosive Composition. Messrs. L. de Soulages and K. Cahuc. of Toulouse, France, have patented through the Scientific American Patent Agency, September 19, . Ic7ti, a new blasting powder, which is claimed to produce a dynamical effect superior to the common mining powders and to dynamite, while it combines the ad vantagealof cheapness and non-explo-sibility in the opeu air, with a reduced production of smoke and injurious gases iu its explosion, leaving hardly any trace or residue of solid deposit of ashes in the bore hole. It consists of nitrate of potash or equivalent salts, sulphur, and soot or lampblack, com bined with tanners' bark, sawdust, or similar separating ingredients, ground aad mixed in suitable proportions. The compound is then miugled with a so lution of sulphate of iron, and boiled until the mass becomes entirely liquid, with the parts so combined as to form a uuiform black paste. This, when dried, produces a powder of a blackish color, and of a density of about O'tJ. It may be stored for a considerable length of time without undergoing the least alteration or deterioration. In the atmospheric air the powder takes tire and burns like any other in flammable body brought in contact with an ignited body or a dame of suf ficient intensity, producing no shock or explosion whatever. Neither atmos pheric electricity, nor shocks of any kind, have any action on the powder, which explodes only when firmly tam ped or compressed in the bore hole, and ignited, like the ordinary mining powder, by means of a mining fuse. Effects of Compressed Air on Animals. The mechanical effects of compressed air upon the animal economy, as ascer tained by Bert, are to cause a lower ing of the diaphragm and liver, and a consequent increased pulmonary vital capacity ; this effect, while gradual in its production, lasts long after the sub ject is withdrawn from the compressed air bath. Pravaz finds that the heart's action is at first increased, and then lessened, the pulse first becoming more rapid, and theu slower, but never fall ing below the rate at normal pressure. The respirations are diminished during immersion, but on removal of the in creased pressure they rise in frequency and in direct proportion to the degree of compression. There is an increase in the amount of urea excreted, but this increase diminishes the longer the sojourn in the compressed air. There is at the same time an increase iu the amount of carbonic acid expired. The temperature of the body rises above the normal at first, and then falls as the immersion is prolonged. These varying effects are due, Pravaz thinks, to the two influences of inward atmos pheric pressure and hyper-oxygena-twn, the former tending to diminish the circulation and the organic chan ges, and the other to increase them. Popular Science Monthly. Acid - Proof Faint. The following recipe taay be of value to some of our readers: The application of water glass or soluble silicate of soda to wood or metal utensils, to protect them from the action of corrosive bodies, is some times desirable," and this material, a correspondent in the Polytechnisches Journal tells us, may be used with lit tle difficulty if you go the proper way to work. The wood or metal mnst be perfectly dry to begin with, and free from rust or any kind of fatty matter. Any of the pure mineral colors may be used for mixing with the silicate. Pow dered lime, amounting to twenty or twenty-five per cent by volume, is mixed with the pigment, and double as much water glass is then added. The mixture is then applied in the same way as ordinary paint. A Xew Emerald Green. X new pig ment, which is said to approach the well-known Paris green in beauty, and to have the merit of being vastly less poisonous, is said to be a hydrated oxide of chromium, prepared in a pecu culiar manner, and known as Guignet's green. It is prepared by using togeth er on the hearth of a furnace, at a dark red heat, 3 parts boracic acid and 1 of bi-chromate of potassium. The result of this fusion is a double salt, a borate of potassium and chromium, which, by repeated washings in boiling water is decomposed ; the borate of potassi um is removed by solution, leaving a hydrated oxide of chromium behind. This product possesses a very tine shade of green, colors well; and resists the action of air and light quite effect ually. If hy a Distant Lamp Looks Blurred. Looking at a distant lamp with both eyes I see a radiant corona round the lamp. I find that this corona is com posed of two corona) superposed, one due to the right eye, the other to the left. Each corona has distinctive feat ures of its own, which are recognized in every observation and have re mained the same for years. The radiaut beams (which are the conspicuous feature) are not exactly radial, out are forked once or twice. The corona is bounded by a peripheral fringe of blue succeeding to red. The diameter of the corona varies with the diameter of the pupil. The distal portions of the radiaut beams are concealed or re vealed by the contraction or dilation of the pupil. An English inventor proposes to &ump exhaust steam back into tie oiler in place of condensing it, and experiments are now being conducted with an engine for testing the inven tion. The inventor contends that "the pressure exerted by the steam on one side of the piston represents, by its elastic power, the same expressions of power in pressure on the other side ; so that the elastic charge is always ready to give back the exact power ex pended for its expression." An invention which is expected to revolutionize the tinware trade of the country has been perfected, after some years of labor, by a young Bostonian. It consists of a serie of die by which boxes of all sizes, from the salve box to the preserved fruit and oil cans, are pressed from a single piece of tin, the corners being doubly folded, in the process, and no solder being required. though the cans are perfectly air tight. The Australian gum tree, eucaluvtus globulus, well known for its antiseptic qualities, has recently been found to yield a fragrant resinous oil, contain ing a substance homologous to camph or. , mitotic: Kitchen Economy. The most useful expenditure any man indulges in is that which gives him blood, bone and muscle and brain power; which keeps him in sound physical health, buoyant, active, vigilant and energetic; and, by a parity of reasoning, it follows that the poorest economy is that which begins in the kitchen. Yet, putting the two together, and acknowledging their truth, it by no means follows that an extravagant kitchen is conducive to health, or that a man's physical con dition is to be measured by the amount of money he spends on his table. There are other things that go toward the making of good blood besides thirteen courses, with soup atone end and pastry at the trier; and if the statistics were on hand, they would show a preponder ating weight in favor of the poor against the rich. The bad cooking in this coun try has been the theme of many a pen, but it requires no great skill to cook a joint and a potato, and we will put the man who has nothing more, against tne man who has the thirteeu courses, with a certainty of carrying off any sanitary prize that may be offered. Our dyspeptics are found among the rich, not the poor; among those who live freely, and work with brain more than with hands; who stay long at the table, and tempt pre carious appetites with choice viands and delicate tid-bits; who heat their stomachs with wine, and chill them suddenly with ices; and whose nervous energies are on the perpetual rack. Heating the Oven. If the oven Is too hot when ready to bake cake, lay a large wire grate on the oven bottom, or place some nailsrold pieces of iron on the bottom of the- oren. Put a piece of paper over the cake, take one or two covers half off, till the ven is cooled off; but never open the on door, that will make the cake fall, close the drafts, but they should be partially opened al ways while baking. When cake seems to be done try it with a clean straw or splint from a broom, or, better still, keep a long knit ting needle for the purpose. Then ore is sure It is always clean. If this comet out of the cake dry and clean, the cake is done; but If there Is any doubt about it leave it in a few minutes longer. Jamie's Potted Beep. Cut quite lean beef in pieces, as for a stew, and put in a close-covered pail. Put in one layer at a time, then a little salt and pepper and a little sprinkling of clow and cinnamon. Theu put in anot'.er layer, season as above, and so on till all the meat is in the pail. Pour over all a cupful of vinegar and water for about three pounds of meat. Cover the pail closely, and set Into another partly filled with boiling water, and let it simmer four hours. Eaten cold, or warmed up for a breakfast dish, this is very nice. Cloves gives it a dark color, but improve the flavor. When warmed up thicken the gravy a little, and place bits of toast around the dish. Paper Blankets. Paper has been recommended as a bed covering on ac count of its non-conducting propensi ties, but its density and consequent ob struction of ventilation has made it ob jectionable. To remedy this, an Eng lishman hag taken out a patent tor a perforated paper blanket. The perfora tions are about four inches apart, and the material a tough, light brown paper. They are recommended s clean, econo mical, and ready for use in any emer gency, in hospitals, schools and private families, where their cleauiiuess and comfort will bring them into service, and also in hot climates, where blankets are liable to be infested with insects. Stcfted Ego Plants. Cut two egg plants in two lengthwise; slash the inner surfaces with the point of a knife, making a shallow incision ; fry till they are soft, and drain on a cloth. Prepare in a saucepan two ounces of butter, two ounces of salt, fat pork chopped tine, and two or three chopped shalots; cook a lew minutes, and add a pint or musli rooms, a little parsley, and three an chovies, all chopped fine; mix the fleshy part of the egg plant with this, season to the taste and put the stuffing thus made back into ttie plants, with bread and cheese crumbs and little pieces of butter strewed on the top, and bake twenty minutes. Hioden Pickle. One peck of green tomatoes, chopped finely; add one cup or salt, drain three or four hours, then add two heads of white cabbage, four large onions, six green peppers, all chopped finely ; cover this with vinegar and let it boil five minutes; drain off the vinegar. Ihen take fresh vinegar enough to cover it, put it oil the lire and scald it with two ounces whole cassia buds, oue ounce whole cloves, one large teaspoonful ot mustard and one pint of molasses. Then pour over the whole, mix well and put away iu close stone jars, with the top sprinkled over with horse-radish root grated finely Pumpkin Pies. Scrape out the inside and remove the rinds. Then cut the hard portion into pieces about an inch or more square. Cover with cold water and boil quickly. When done tender turn into a colander and drain every particle of water off. Then mash through the colander. When this Is done sweeten well with white or light sugar; add also a generous lump of butter and the yolks of three eggs. Beat the whole well together. Next add a cup of sweet cream ; then the whites of the three eggs beaten light. Lastly, nour, with essence or lemon or nutmeg, French Rolls. Two quarts of sifted nour, a lump of lard about the size ot an egg one a little larger of butter; stir into the flour, the same as iu mak ing pastry. ben well stirred, add bloodwarm water, or preferably milk and water; add a little salt, half a tea cupful of home-made yeast, or three tablespoontuis or baker s yeast. Mix In the evening as for bread, and let rise ; ten or fifteen minutes will suffice to bake if the oven is sufficiently heated. Good bread is made in the same way with a proportionately small quantity of lard and butter. Stains from Linen. To restore linen that has long been stained, rub the s-ains on each side with wet brown soap. Mix some starch to a thick paste with cold water, and spread it over the soaped places ; then expose the linen to the sun and air, and if the stains have not disappeared In three or four days. rub off the mixture and repeat the pro cess with fresh soap and starch. After wards dry It; wet it with cold water, and put it into the wash. For cleaning jkwflry there is noth ing better than ammonia and water. If very dull or dirty, rub a little soap on a soft brush and brush them in this wash, rinse in cold water, dry first in an old silk handkerchief, and then rub with buck or chamois skin. Their freshness and brilliancy when thus cleaned can not be surpassed by any compound used by jewelers. Potato Yeast. Two good sized pota toes, grated raw ; pour ou one pint of boiling water, one half cup of white sugar, teaspoonful of salt; when cool, put in one-half cup of good yeast; let it rise; when light, put in a bottle and cork tight. Half a cup makes two loaves of bread; reserve one-half cup every time lor raising. Cocoanut Cake : One cup of butter, three of sugar, five eggs, the whites beaten to a stiff froth ; lour and a half cups of flour, one cocoanut grated, a piece reserved lor tne r resting ; one and half teaspoon fu la of yeast powder; flavor to suit the taste. Ccccmbkr Fritters. Peel and boll, pick out the large seeds, mash them and add pepper and salt, flour and beaten eggmlx well Id a tbiek batter, and fry XIOBOFS. A Scotch minuter, after a bard day's labor, and while at a dinner tea, as be called it, kept Incessantly praising the ham, and stating that Mrs. Dunlop at hame was fond o' ham as he was, when the mistress kindly offered to send her the present of a ham. Its unco kin' o ye, unco kin', but I'll no put ye to the trouble ; I'll just tak It hame on the horse afore me. When, on leaving, he mounted, and the bam was put np in a sack, some difficulty was experienced in getting it to lid properly. His Inventive genius soon cut the Gordian knot. I think, mistress, a cheese in the ither en' wad tnak' a gran' balance. The hint was immediately acted on, and, like another John Gilpin, he moved away with his balance true. A fashion writer thus deals with cardinal red: "A stylish priestess in the temple of fashion looks very much like a perambulating conflagration. Lurid ribbons leap about her shapely limbs, glowing tissues envelope her head and clasp her white throat in blood red coils ; startling flames of light dart in and out, up and down her dark garments, and even shine between the soft kid of her little boots." And no insurance, either. She stood in the door and watched the departing form of her own beloved spouse, and sighed at the thought that she wouldn't see him before dinner time, and then she went sadly into her boudoir and kissed the photograph of her first husband, whispering in soft accents, "Oh ! how changed is the world to me. He promised to give me a new silk, and he's ordered home only calico. Why did I marry again?" Private Theatricals. "You would make a most beautiful actress in the drama of life," whispered a poetical Chicago youth to his inamorata the other evening "indeed 'tis so you would be a star." "And you," mur mured the fair one, as she leaned her frizzes on his shoulder, "w-wouldn't you J-like to support me T" So he ar ranged it right there. How could he help It? Cards, of course. What a poetical way the ancient had of putting things. We read in their pages that "Lycurgus, king of the Edoiies in Thrace, refused to worship Bacchus, in consequence or whlcn the god visited him with madness." Now iu our day the affair would read : Ly curgus, king, etc., refused to drink any more whiskey, and in consequence had the delirium tremens." Burlinjtun llatckeiie. "How mcch will your new school books cost, Johnny! says rather. Johnny calculates to himself, sot to voce, "Lemmesee: 62 cents for the singing book, 7i cents for a new 'nthnietic. $1.25 for a new 'joggraphy,' 25 cents for a hookey, harf a dollar tor a new bat, and a quarter for candy." Ihen out loud says: "'Bout four dollars, pa!" "How, mt dear fellow, can I make a girl love me, who is constantly devoured by love of herself?" asked a young gentleman of his friend. "Oh," replied the latter, "that is the easiest thing in the world ; just minister to her self- love until it overflows, all that runs over will be yours." "Coachman," said an outside pas senger to oue who was driving at a luri ous rate over one of the most niountsi- ous roads in the north ot Scotlid, "have you no consideration for our lives and limbs?" "What are your lives and limbs to me r was the reply, "I'm behind time!" The sexton of a parish in county Armagh was about to lose his wife. She begged him to bury her in Tyrone, among her own kindred, 40 miles away. Indeed, Peggy," said he, "I'll thry ye here first, but if ye give ony trouble, I'll take ye up and bury ye In Tyrone." A Wag tried to annoy a popular preacher by asking him whether the fatted calf of the parable was male or female. "Female, to be sure," was the reply; "for I see the male," looking the questioner run in tne race, "yet alive iu the flesh before me." "Ark you there, my love?" he whis pered through a hole in the fence of his beloved's back yard. "Yes, darling," was the reply; "jump right over." He did so, and alighted in the presence of her mother, a broomstick and a police man. Commercial Advertiser. Augustus "Oh, Adele, Adele, why cast my love away for sordid wealth ? Why, he's in his second childhood." Adele "But, Augustus, childhood is so sweet, and think what experience in childhood he has already had." "Get out, you ornlthorhynchus!" ine man departed meekly. "Mhos that?" Inquired a friend of the speaker. "Anornithorhynchus." "How's that?" "Well, Webster defines him as a beast with a bill." The farmer who sent his son to New York to become a clerk now writes ask ing the merchant whether there is "auything in the boy." "Yes," replies the merchant, "just after he has been to a saloon." A touno gentleman meeting a band- some milkmaid in the country, said, "What will you take for yourself and your milk, my dear?" The girl in stantly replied, "Your hand and a gold ring, sir." A Yankee, describing an opponent whose person was extremely thin, says : "I will tell you what, sir that man don't amount to a sum in arithmetic; cast him up, and there's nothing to earry." "What is Ingrain Carpet?" asks an exchange. Mrs. Spilkins says that it's something that costs three dollars or so a yard, ana nas to be kept shut up in a dark parlor to keep the moths out of it. A correspondent writes: "Will al cohol clean silver?" Jt will. Taken regularly, fifteen or twenty times a day, it will soon clean all the silver out of your pocket. Since the cardinal red floats behind every other woman, th.ee raise-ups-and-sit-downs is the conventional for getting seated in church. "I don't think that you are smart," said a darling wife the other day. "No. indeed ; but everybody knows that I am awfully threw'd." What Is the difference between horse racing and going to church? One makes men bet, the other makes them better. What must always be calculated noon when we paint our houses? A brush with a painter. If you wish for money, send a postal card to the man who owes you, and the thing is dun. Wht is a compositor like a cripple? Because he can't get along without a stick. If a row of columns is a colonnade. Isn't a row of lemons lemonade? A Western settler The contents of a six-shooter. What class of people lie the most? Sluggards. To iekp warm Keep the furnace A vert narrow aperture The crack of a whip. Favorite jewelry of horse fanciers Stuthv A beneficial strike: striking -a job. A tender subject: railroad fuel. Tt tMrysfallst. In the year 1820, when James B. Rand, long station master at Green land, on the Eastern Railroad, was a boy of nine years, he was working in his father's garden one fine day, on the farm In Rye, New Hampshire, now owned by bis brother William, and took np a clod of earth to throw at his sister, who was joking with bim. The dirt crumbled In his hand, and to his great astonishment there came from it a bright gold ring, on the inside of which was the date "1747." It was plain, with an eagle engraved noon the outer surface. Who was the loser was never known. It became his wife's wedding ring. Since it was found as above stated it has twice been lost and found once on the road in Rye, where it laid through part of a winter, until the snow melted, when Mr. Rand him self found it. To have changed your longitude ex tensively, and placed yourself in a moral solitude in order to have small explosions, to find conversation diffi cult, and to band a glass of water with out looking, can hardly be regarded as satisfactory fulfilment, even to the toughest minds. &rij Eli4. E. F. RMkel'K Hitter M'lae ! Iresi. This truly valuable tonie has been so tho roughly tested by all classes of the commu nity that it is no deemed indispensable as a Tonie medicine. It eosls but little, puri ties the blood and gives tone to the btomnch renovates the system and prolongs life. Everybody should have it. For the cure of Weak Stomachs. General Debility, Indirection, Diseases or the Stom ach, and for all eases requiring a tonic. This wine includes the most agreeable and efficient Salt of Iron wt possess Citrate of Magnetic Oxide, combined with the most energetic of vegetable tonics Yellow Peru vian Bark. Do you want something to strengthen you? Do you want a good appetite ? Do yon want to get rid of nervousness ? Do yon want energy ? Do yon want to sleep well ? Do yon want to build up your constitu tion? Do yon want to feel well ? Do you want a brisk and igornu feeline? If you do, try KCNltEL'S BITTER WINE OF IRON. I only ask a trial of this valuable tonic. Beware of counterfeits, as Kunkel's Bit ter Wine of Iron is the only sure and effec tual remedy in the known world for the per manent cure of Dyspepsia and Debility, and as there are a number of imitations offered to the public, I would caution the commu nity to purchase none but the (-enuine arti cle, manufactured by E. F. Kunkel, and having his stamp on the cork of every bot tle. The very fact that others are attempt ing to imitate this valuable remedy, proves its worth, and speaks volumes in its luTor. Get the genuine. E. F. Kunkel's. 8old only in $1 bottles. Sold by Drug gists and- dealers everywhere. E. F. Kun kel, Proprietor, 209 North Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Tape Wraa EtesMVed Alive. nead and all complete in two hours. No fee till head passes. Seat, pin and Stomach Worms removed bv Or. Kun kel, 2.VJ North Ninth St.. Philadelphia. Pa. Send for circular, or ask your druggist for a bottle of Kunkel's Worm Syrup. It never fails. Price, $1.00. Schenck's Pulmonic Strup, for the Cure of Consumption, Coughs and Colds. The great virtue of this medicine is that It ripens the matter and throws it out of the system, purifies the blood, and thus effects a cure. Schenck's Ska Weed Tonic, for the Cure of Oyspepsia, Indigestion, tic. The Tonic produces a healthy action of the stomach, creating an appetite, forming chyle, and curing the most ob stinate cases of Indigestion. Schenck's Mandrake Pills, for the Cure of Liver Complaint tc. These Pills are alterative, and produce a healthy action of the liver, without the least danger, as they are free from calomel, and yet more eflicscious In re storing a healthy action of the liver. These remedies are a certain cure for Consumption, as the Pulmonic Syrup ripens the matter and purifies the blood. The Mandrake Pills act upon the liver, create a healthy bile, and remove all diseases of the liver, often a cause of Consumption. The Sea Weed Tonic gives tone and strength to the stomach, makes a good digestion, and enables the organs to form good blood; and thus creates a healthy circulation of healthy blood. The combined action of these medicines, as thus explained, will cure every case of Consumption, if taken in time, and the use of the medicines per severed In. Dr. Schenek b professionally at his principle office, corner Sixth and Arch Sts., Philadelphia, every Monday, where all letters for advice must be addressed. Crass. From Mr. James Grimes, of Mt. Pleas ant, Columbia County. Pa. " About three years ago our daugh ter, njw twelve years of age, was se verely afflicted with Croup. A general irritation of the lungs followed, pro ducing a hectic cough, which became almost constant; swelling of the tem ples, and other indications of Consump tion, were also appareut, and her life was desaired of by her physician. At this critical moment we were induced to give Dr. Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherrt a trial: and after she had taken one bottle we found her so much relieved that we discontinued iu use. Since that time we have used the Bal sam in our family in cases of Coughs and Colds, and believe it to be a supe rior remedy for all diseases of the lungs." :tl SO cents and 1 a bottle. Sold by all druggists. loop pf:en.T. READ & LIVE! ONE person In ery trtir fs rui'turvd. and two-thlnls thm nf ll'cteU desire to ti'. aa tiir snnr from Dy Mental ItViniiie- X"H0WES SPRING PAD BELT TRCS5"X For tbf trstment and cure of Rupfureand Ht-r-nla. DNtented ISIS. Is the only rt lrnttilc Truis luvented. Every physician endorses it at once. ana panenT oar h at siviu. Rlwrel HwOerera from old-fashioned metallic sad uard-rut0-r spring flbd esmfsrt Send la.ov lor sample Truss, circulars, and en dorseiuenui ol thousands wlio have been cured, and ot the leadlOK physicians In the rolled Stales. Including the Kreat dot c and sury.-on. Gregory, principal ot tst. lnls MII'-I Col lege. All say H la the Best Trwaa hsiWB. it has cured a 3-year rupture in nve week, woo IS cents tor our weekly Tnwi Dper. eir. Key. Howe, toe patentee, hi roptuml on both siu-" badly, and u. bees for years, and be Invented his reatTra for himself only. We make them for Hen, Women and Children! who duly 01?sh Mr. H. tor bis invention. THE HOWE FEMALE SI PFOETM Is the best known for abdominal atrectloua. If yon have a friend ruptured, do turn a taTor by sending us his name at once. XAUurem u llOWKTRrssfO, A Box UTS. Council Bluffs, Iowa. IT Soe TraTBtlnr Agents wanted. Males, Counties and Towkships lur sale. S-il -3m ftKIn 6flt Pr Ur at bona PampUa worth II I sH 10 free. 8rnsoabC,rurtlMd.MaiDa. . 1 ore You Going to Paint AND SAVE ONK-TUiatf 111K Cue! Vl PAlSTlNli, aad avt a paiat that w Ml'CU U A.NtnoMKK. aad wUI hat TH ICE AS U.U aa aav othrr Darar. I. srrpand rwadv Jur an la WHITE a tif COLOtt dearwi. Ia oa swaey tboeaead ef lee limit kaileiae. aa lb. euuntrv. man, of which have crra saintel ai vaars, aad sow look a. wall aa abn Brat puotrd. THIS CHKMICAL PAIST iW Ukae HaST PIUUIlV at twenty ot ia. ewe run ei tee v sloe aixrii uabus or LX1LOK3 saT I it as. Addrve, w ivn aa-X.EIAMEL CQ.,J03 Chaabaa Bl, U. I., sr KILIJ.il B&03. 109 Water 3e CUvaiaai, 0 The People's Remedy. Th9 Universal Fain Extractor. Note: Ask for HMD'S EXT1ACT Take no other. Hear, lr 1 will sf cllsisn thlss." raiO'S nTiACT-Tbe great Ttmfc.FsJ ieatra?rr. Has beta in aw vnt thirty years, and for cleanliness and prompt canv tire Tirtarf tannot be exeeued. EMU DOER N.faU can afford t be without V..J's Extract. AcvtdeBta, Brakm, lumlir-i fata. Bprai , srs reHersa almost instantly by external appHcarioo. Promptly relieres pains or Baraa, tjcalsa, Exrariatiaaa. ( kaSawa, OM Marts, Bails, r'elaaa, t'araa, etc. Arrests m lunation, reduces sweUincs, stops bleeding, rpmor df-M-olontkMisana beaJs rapidly. rUWUWUUIlSt.-It always relimpahi in the but jwdiouu,fii!baa aad PRsaiBc pain in the hH. nausea, vertigo. II lEOCBIIHlIA t hs no equal. An kinds of aU cermiioaa to which- ladies ars sahMKt are promptly cored. Fuller details in book sccota panvtag each bottle. PILES -klii or bleelaaaieat prompt nUaf and ready care. No case, however cbionlc or orinate. no long resist ha regular ase. MRICOSf mS.-It the only .are cure fee ihi, divn-wmg and danteroascondttloa KIDNEY IIStASES.-" kasnoeoaal tepersja-n-nt cure. tUEDIRQ (n any cause. For this Is a asw t-iue. It has saved hondreds of Htcs whea all other remedies failed to arret bleeding from hw, at eiaach, laaars. and elsewhere. WEUMATISM, lEUIALSIA, Takaefc aad Kararbe are ail aUu relieved, aad often per manently cared. PHYSICIANS of all schools who are acquainted with Pead'a Extract ef WUrh Haael reo ommend it in their practice. Webave leuersoc commendation from hundreds of Pfcysiciaaa, many of whom ordW It tor use in their own practice. In addition to the fca-voing. they order its nae for MtrelliaeTa st all Kinds, Qaiamy. !ere Threat, laSaaarsl Teaaala, simple and chronic IMarrbam, 4'atarra, nor which it i a specific.) C'bUMatas, i rewa rd Feet, Mines mt laaeets, Meaajaiteea etc.. Chapped Hands, Vacs, aad indeed all manner of skin diaeaaea. TOILET ISL KcmowHeaasKcw-hn.a, aii-i Kaaartiaaj beats t'ala, Erapll.es, and Pis. plea. It rmm, vun$arwHa?Dd rs fraka. while wonderfully imprvruig Umb t'emplexiea. TO rAI.-,-"ie Extract. No Stock Brcrtier.uo Livcrv Man can afiord to be without it. It u nwd by all the Leading Livery Stables, S(rect Railroad, and An Hurwmea la New York City. It ha. no eqaal for Aerates, Har sea or Maddl ihaaaea, WtlsTam, rvratchea, KweillBsTa,C'ata, Lar.ratl.aa, Hleedias!. Paonaaoala, lelie. Dial I be a. s biUe, t ela, etc Ita range of action is wide, and the relief it affords Is so prompt that it invalnahle in every Farm-Tard as well so ra every Farm -boase. Let it bs tried ace. aad von will never be without H. CAdTIOI. Pcwa-'s Extract besheea lmftsted. iue grnaine article bsstbe word. Peads Ex tract blown m each bottle. It m arenared bp the .sly peraeaisitwlwaj'wBo wrkaar bow le prepara it properly. Reftu. all ether prrpenUk-a. of Witch Haul. Thai is the ealy wtH'le awl by Pkyaidaaa, sad ia tb. bna.lula of this conn try and Btiropa. HLSTUKl Al iSlM VF PvXar9 EXTRACT, in iNunpliM ". wnf frwoe apvlwattue k POND'S EXTRACT tvEPA.lI, W Xaldea Laea, Sw lurk IS FREKH-Ol TFIT ktiDT-THS CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION itiumeri it. II l.lTlllTlfr. A graphic p-pirlare f it. btatary, rad bMikiiaca. wamderfsil eablbiia, rarlMllira, rl dajsv'tc Vrwlsiaely lllMotratra, r-tmt. ! very rtrap. Imaaeaaely . 5,W Abb T wwllleil. St' IW IU4l irin ui..r. Tim. will b- ttie rkaar. ItMft " u re I M mresiey favaa. tn in- eaily reliable hi.tr,. Uimuw. saue., p iu . 7 a -itii-.-B, .-rt. hll."lrl,. r. PaTTTTnV mmt deceived by pre 1AUllUil aaataire k, aawiiw i be -.-IB isl ' aMi i-Hiiii sk still luiipeaia A a we u.d Septeaabw-r. lu-U-iw $12 at day nX atom), A cents Wsnfd. Outfit nlu4 tamrtaw fret. TKUK k CO., Au&Mm, Mmim 3-w-if i tlilulUriu Fuot-, UhrrisamMw mud Kb-piJ ci-um my cilirti. Atlvic fr- IdcIuot -lamp. THOS. McMICHAEL, Att'y, 707 Samoni St, Phila Pa. jft nii Tbt csVuicMt ra tsM wurltl Itmv- Ca VaV P trtm' price L-brrrt Co-npasy Ati.cn. a Ubie article uU?ur embody Trailw cuntltiually iinrreinir Afcot wanted everywhere bt iuiurrme.ite tkm't wattle time eeod for cirrnhv to KuatEai WiXL, 43 Veeej St IS. P. O. BX 197. ) X Extra M1xh1 Cards. 15 varieties, w tth name. wtj luc., pUttl-pttlO. .axn Otrd Xtmu,M.T. n.t -Laii .p (-r jutit -flan. C.T vV,HtwAt-'e. Sta.N V Jie.l-.l-: LjJfT 4V17-1J THE BEST YET Th Sundisy Srhool T I meet, of which FT. Clay Tram hutl fti.d vrMtrifse A. llZz arv editor. ai4 John Waaav nuikfr is ptiMisbv-r. will, in W77. ntatu criUrml imA on th Iiitritutional .esMfui. bv iTuf. TayUf Lewi and A. I '. KfiMlrM-k : a popular ex pneliion of ihe h-asoti-i every wfk. br Um Kvv. Newman Hail, ot l.uitiion: ami ft pnntirul application of th l--, truths.hr H. i 'lay TruintMilL Tim plan Mnrw ft live a-itl rpt'tier lMs.a hWpn titan ran be otHainsd eiite n bere. The 1 im-. m .wnt to new mibrV-Tibe-rs, Uuva aionttM on trial. ftr'JSc-nti: xe venr. fl.li. Fr ven cvntA there wll be went a p.-rimen ropy the scholar' Quarterly, th bwl iuoalay sKawoi l-,eitn ht-lp for nrhotiajN puMixbed. spM-imen-. of the Wr-ekly L"r-,ifi F-enf gent free T'le ith complete leaf ol any ; aiUbOUgn it It auiti al low a ,.ru-. A -), J'JiiN lx WA TTI.FS. Rinine-M Sfanncer. IU0 'LirUiUt SUbM-i. Pail4ipbia. Stock Speculation. ADVK-EAXT INFORMATION FURNISHED AH TO THE BEST MODS OF OPERATING IN WALL STREET. " snn. ax3idXj:i2p.' OCR SPET1ALTY. Realizing Profits In every case. -nI (or our new Pamphlet entitled "Straddles." Sent free oa application. W. F. HUBBELL & CO.. Stork Brokers. 46 Broad St, X. T. TTLIH VlSITINe CAIOS t y TL 1 1 N r. W II1TF. OE M I J ED COLOR fcr rta . or & fcr cu . suet-paid. Brad staate kjr Nine Sunik-M. H K-T t tn to Ageata, Ac. No umImi euoevra. ril'KAKU a IX, arrauau. Pa. A 1" rWTC T""'r V0MD ChruBM. tr. i. M riUL.ll 1 J. Muatua A Cus ttriladtlpftia. Pa. lu-Mzw f AGENTS WANTED FOR HISTORY bENTENI EXHIBITION It wile kVts-r tna any other tao-tk. ia ageM MI4 73 topic in two day. cVn4 far oor extra ten&w u Agput-. at... sal FveOUMIM Col, Pliiukuelj.bka. fa mXjn ANA'KESIS." I B Dr. K. Hllahea fa EXTEBSAlPILIRKlEDT I I . I.. 1 fa taattat rtUtj. ami m I I I I I I I m infallible itm for v. I I I I I I I To prove it we send aam- " ' ' IheV nles frm to all aDolkrants f. N Kf M'.KDT KK CO- Sole Manulaclurers of VAN AKK-IS." Box 3M. New Yorfc. Hnmmtt Cmnirrfnttl In buying- the "ANAIS st8" from DruwrtHts. be careful to ifel the gruu lue artic le, observe tual tile signature of "a. rtlL-sBr.E, X D." Is on ok end of Ue box. s-xs-ir cancer; New Trvetejewt. Csive est aur- dinarv. bv be Kuss. fii An b Stnwt, PfaiUwh-lp ,av Pa. nota-d. Kuik,aa-tka. Leal uf blond er SKbewe. Call or aad as- particulars. Bawaia wf Vraoda. 1U4V " S5-77 mplesr vww O I P.O. VK.'aEH, Aua'Uala.Matlw s-xi-ur
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers