-a. :... .iwaV 7 - jsV -C - - 3. r I f THE lOCIKO BULB. Buperb and sol opon plumed spray That o'er the general leafage boldly grew, He summed Uia woods with song ; or tj-pie draw Tba swoop of hungry hawka, the lone dismay Of langnid doves when long their lovers atray, And all birds' peaaion-playa that sprinkle dew At morn in brake or boaky avenue. Whate'er birds did or dreamed, this bird coold say. Then down he shot, bounced airily along The award, twiuAed in a grasshopper, made aong Midnight, perched, primped, and to his sit again, Sweet Science, this large riddle read me plain How may the death of that dull insect be The life of yon trim Shakespeare on the tree Due (! alary. Libraries. I I lii nk it was Jean I'aul who said lie always looked on a library as a learned riiHrrrmitioM. But there are libraries ami libraries. II. L. told me he once found a foolish, ix-dantie old millionaire curled ui in a luxurious apartment, walled with rirhly bound books, not one of which he had ever read, hut all of which he pretended to have devoured. L. says that when he. entered this room, be- studded with glittering tomes, the pro prietor exclaimed, "And so vou have found me out at last, alone with my Imoks! Here's where I hide awav from the family, day after day, and voImhIij'i unite the visrr!'', IMerce Kgan has an anecdote of another "literarv character,' which I quote in this con uectioti without comment. " lady, resident in Ilevonstiire, go ing into one of her parlors, discovered a young ass, w ho had found his way into the room and carefully closed the door ujton himself. He had evidently not been long iu this situation before he had nibbled a part of Cicero's Orations and eaten uearlv all the index of a folio edition of Seneca in Latin, a largs iart of a volume of La IJruyere's 'Maxims' iu French, and several pages of 'Cecilia.' He had done n- other mischief w hat ever." The library of old Sir John I km vers, as described by Bernard, must have im-hii a curiosity. It a'MHindcd with the best works of the lest authors, but ihere was not one perfect volume in it. So eager had been Sir John in his pur suit of know ledge, says Bernard, that he had inspected every book iu his col lection : and wherever a passage pleased him, he tore nut the leaf and thrttut it into kilt jOef.' That w as a clever remark of an Kng lUh essayist who told us so many years ago that he had such a reverence for the wisdom folded up on his library shelves that he considered the very perusal of the backs of his books discipline of humanity." There are some household libraries which once visited can never be for gotten. It. Y. has one, "tilled to over tlowiug with delights." You cannot move alomt it anywhere and not be en chanted. There is sea rely an edition of any literary work worth owning that cannot lie discovered on his shelves, and if you have a year at your disposal it is none too long to sjiend in that "house of fame.' l.'s collection is a rare one, but he trill insist on telling you the cost of every set of liooks in his jMjssession, and thus exaserate you with financial values w hen you onlv wish for literarv estimates. What do I care how much lie paid "in gold" for the bindings of hi various Shakspeares? It is the "inspired leaves" we are after, and not the gilded glories on the outside! Arrian tells u the Greeks thought it a calamity to die without having seen the Olympian Zeus by Phidias, and I), has the same opinion oi those tinhapnv mortals who are translated liefore they have handled hi: sumptuous Horace in llayday's mag nificent morocco. The biographer of Iickens (John Forster) had assembled a library worthy of himself, which is not unmeaning eulogy. It was full of what Lamb calls "(Jrcat Nature's Stereotvpes ," the "eterne" copies that never can grow stale or unproductive, and to have spent a day iu it with the host for indicator, and IMckens for co-enthusiast, is a memory forever. Manuscripts of Gold smith, Swift, Johnson, Sterne, Addison Burke, Fielding, ami Smollett, together with the original draughts of "Iavid i opjierneiu," "t uner I wist, ami a dozen other looks from the same glow ing hand and brain, were not to lie handled w ithout a thrill ! I once had the privilege of walking about in Wordsworth's library, and be ing shown by the poet himself many of the jew els it contained. I recall w hat I saw and heard there with a kind of transport even now, although it is more than twenty-five years since I stood beside the venerable author of "The Kxeursk n" while he pointed out in the margins of his liooks what Coleridge, .smb and Southey had noted there. Lord Houghton's library, also, is one of the most attractive in England, esiecially in joetry and autographs. Alexander I yee, the editor of "Beau mont and Fletcher," had marvels to show me in his fine old book rooms in Gray's Inn, thirty years ago. But nr haps the most interesting to me of all the private libraries I have ever seen in Kngland was the small collection of Charles ami Mary Lamb, which Edward Moxon the publi.-her unlocked for me w heu I was first iu Englaud, before the books were disjicrsed. as they never ought to have been. Then and there I lovingly handled hi Kit Marlowe, hit I'mniinoiid of Hawthornden, hi Dray ton, hi Cow ley and hi Burton ! I rewenilier how Moxou's whole family stood around that "Life of the Iuke of Newcastle by his Inichess," and told stories of Lamb's enthusiasm over the look, a volume about which he has written, "No casket is rich enough, no casing sufficiently durable, to honor and keep safe such a jew el." Oneof the selectest household libraries in America has lately been left desolate. Our new minister to Spain leaves be hind him a family of "literary maguiti cos" at Elmwood not easily to lie sur passed anywhere; and although we are all proud of the call his country sends him to aid and honor her iu the land of Cervantes, we lament the necessary absence w hich now renders it impossi ble for our leioved professor to give as his wonted address, "Among my Books." Front " l'nderl.rh ," h9 J. T. Field. The Ribboa Fish. Frank Bucklaud, in a recent letter to Lend and Water, says : "I have received through the kindness of a correspond ent at Nice, a very interesting and re markable specimen of a ribbon fish. I make him out to be a regalicu. I have never before seen one of these most curious nsh iu the flesh. It measures five feet, Is about a quarter of an Inch thick, and Is of a silvery hue. not fun like the color of the i'silver-hair tail. Upon the top of the head there are fila ments, which, when stretched to their full, are about eight inches long. The head is vet y remarkable; altogether it is not unlike the shortened head of horse. The mouth is prehensible, and so peculiarly formed that it is quite worthy of a figure; the eyes are very large and circular; the iris of a lustrous silver color. Behind the head the body is two inches and a half deep, in the middle two inches, at the tail a quarter of an inch. When held up to the light it is almost transparent : the vertebra can w ith difficulty lie seen, but w ith the movement of the fingers each ver tebra; will give a slight crack at the junction with its neighbor. The verte bra' are longest and thickest toward the tail end. at which there are sharp spines, It is covered every w here w ith a fine silvery jMiwder, w hich readily comes ofl n he hand. It nas a crust of about an uc v. height, which runs down the w'nole of the back. The rays form ing the crest are united to double pil lars of very slender bone. In substance it is very delicate, and liegins to drv and harden almost immediately on ex posure to the air. I cannot find much aliout this fish in any of my liooks. This family of rihhou-shaiie form consists of seven genera and twenty-six sjiecies. Mr, Swainsou remarks of it as follows : It contains the most singular and extraordinary fishes iu creation. The form of the liody, when compared to lies liettiT known, is much like that of an eel, the length of the ImmIv lieing in the same proiortion to the breadth; but then it is generally so much com pressed that these creatures have ac quired the iopular name of riblton fish. lath, or deal fish. The Ixaly, indeed, is often not thicker, except in the middle, than is a sword, and lieing covered with the richest silver, and of great length, the undulating motions of these fi.shes in the sea must lie resplendent and beautiful lieyond measure. But the wonders of the mighty deep are almost hidden from the eve of man. These meteoric silver-coated fishes ap Iear to live in the greatest depths, and it is only at long intervals, and after a succession ot tciniiests, that a solitary individual is cast u)miii the shore with its delicate IkmIv torn and mutilated by the elements on the rocks, so that w ith few exceptions they are scarcely to lie regarded as edible ti-h. Vccording to this authority, the Mediterranean has hitherto produced he largest proMirtion of the family, but it is distributed from the arctic re gions to the sunny shores of India, so that probably a tithe have not yet lieen disci ivered." S, M. rettengill at Co.s Advertising Agency. This Agency has a world-wide fame. It has earued and enjoyed this honor for nearly the liie-time ol a generation. It has si-cured and long euioyed the confidence of the newspaper press of the land. Mr. . -M. 1'ettengiil, the head, has long been eminent lor tact. talent, urbanity, and high business honor. In advertising he has extended to the benefit of advertisers over twelve millions of dollars, and has largely as sisted in making the fortunes of a large number of his customers. He is Affent for more than 7,000 newspapers. let- ten gill's Agency, with branches in Bos ton and Philadelphia, is the largest Advertising Agency in the world, and the oldest in this country. It offers special inducements to business men who wish to advertise. Advertising has become a positive necessity to sue cess. A man out of business for three years, and w ho comes back, could no more do business in the old style than a last year's chicken could get back into its shell. Judicious advertisers make large fortunes, if they have a good article, and know how to trade. Men who build up a great business, must do it through the press. A business man can go into I'ettengtll's fine rooms, con sult with the influential press of the land, make satisfactory terms with prominent papers, decide the manner in which advertisements shall be print ed, close a contract with publishers in all the cities of the Union, from Bangor to San Francisco, from St. Paul to New Orleans, and do it actually cheaper, without leaving the office, than he could if he should visit each of the cities in person, Practical knowledge is needed to advertise successfully. This comes only from long and successful experi ence. The best and most appropriate mediums must be selected. The matter must be displayed properly. Men must know what amount of money to lay out in advertising, know when to lavish and when to contract. Just here, the valve of the Acency comes in. Men who ofler their services to conduct ad vertising for a house, to Us of any use, must possess talent, ability, and prob ity. Mr. Pettengill is a practical printer. He knows all about news papers. He has proved himself one ot the most successful advertisers of the age. Uy lair, honorable, and liberal dealings, he has won the confidence ol the press everywhere. He is prompt in his payments, perfectly responsible, makes large contracts, and can make better terms with the papers than an individual can do. Publishers know that his check is ready for any amount of space he contracts for. He can select lor advertisers the papers best suited to their trade, lie can guide in regard to the setting-up of the matter, and see that the advertisement has the best lo cation. All his great facilities are placed at the disposal of his customers without charge. Peltengilrs A gene v is centrally located, being opposite the new L. S. Post Ulllce. 3, 1'ark Kow. N. Y. ; 10 State Street. Boston; and 701 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. The business is done on a perfect system. On file are all the leading periodicals daily, weekly, monthly, both of the United Mates and the British provinces. ready for inspection. Advertisers can know at any time whether their con tracts are being carried out. luforma lion concerning advertising is cheer fully given. Contracts are made for advertisements in any and all papers in the land. Estimates and costs ol inser tions are given without charge. Con nected with the .New iork Agency Is a fine reading-room, free to all business men. Prudent men do their advertising as they do their other business. They do not deposit in slmky banks. They do not take policies iu a life insurance company that cannot pay expenses. Men want sound banks. They carry life policies in a company that has re pute and success. If they are In trou ble, they call in eminent counsel, who know what to do or how to do it. It is on these principles that PettengUPs Agency has attained its high repute. It has made the fortunes ot many of its customers, as well as its own. Its high mercantile honor is its capital. It keeps up with the times. It oners its unsur passed facilities for advertising to all business men who wish to make their trade known in all the land. BUm Watchman and EeJIectur, July 1st, JS75. Do all the good you can in the world and make just as little noise about it as possible. It is impossible to ascertain how far virtue will predominate until oppressed by temptation. People become ill by drinking healths. He who drinks the health of everybody drinks awav his own. AGaUCTLTTBlL. EOKSES AND VCXES EaTTXO Uikt. A correspondent of the New York Tribune asks why horses and mules eat dirt when turned out of close stables, to which Professor Law replies: "Most commonly the habit Is an indication of acidity In the stomach, and to oe cor rected . by Improving the digestive functions. Horses are at a special dis advantage in the matter of stomach complaints, inasmuch as they cannot rid themselves by vomiting, of anything that disagrees with luem, and are un able even to belch up accumulated gas. Then the stomach is much too small to allow of heavy feeding or the formation of much gas without injurious overdis tension, hence, of all domestic animals, the solipeds should be fed with the greatest care and judgment. Like hu man beings they have their periods of acidity or heartburn, and having no op portunity of taking soda or magnesia, they lick the lime from their walls, or the earth from their pathway. For temporary relief a piece of chalk may be kept in the manger, but we should seek to remove the radical evil by giving a better tone to the stomach Feed sound grain aud bay in moderate amount aud at regular intervals, and don't drive or work hard for an hour after each meal, lest digestion should be impaired. Give a few carrots, turnips, or other roots, if available ; water regu larly, and never just after a meal, aud put an ounce ol common salt in tne looa or water dally. Any existing weakness should be corrected by a course of tonics such as oxide of iron, two ounces ; cal cined magnesia, two ounces; powdered nux vomica, one and a nan araenms powdered fennel seed, two ounces; mix Divide into eight powders, and give one morning and night. The habit has been sometimes caused by a deficiency of mineral matters in the food grown on very poor soils, but this may be cor reeled bv a similar treatment. Soiling. The number of inquiries which we from time to time received relative to the benefits of soiling would seem to indicate that there is a glowing interest in this mode of feeding. Theo retically it is much better to keep the animals (especially cows) fenced up and bring the grass or other food to them a larger number may be fed from a given area, and the only question is whether this increase in number will pay the increased expense. If we are to take practice as an answer it is evi dent that a large majority of our dairy men think it will not pay for the extra labor, and hence still allow the stock to run in the pasture and select their own food. Many of our best dairymen have to a certain extent compromised the matter bv adding four or five cows to their usual stock, and plantingau acre or two of sown or thick! v drilled corn; as soon as this corn is large enough, and the fall pasture begins to fail, it is supple mented by the green corn fodder led out on the pasture. By sowing an acre or two ot rye for early spring cutting and an acre of oats for early summer feeding, the time between winter feed and after harvest pasture may be bridged over without any decrease in the flow of milk. If any of our readers have bad any practical experience in this line we should be glad to hear Irom them. Castor Beans. We hope our farmers will turn their attention more to the culture of castor beans. Grasshoppers will not eat them, but w ill keep the weeds and grass down, and give the beans a chance to grow. They are proof against 'hoppers, chinch bugs and dry seasons. Any land that is good for corn Is good for beans. It is not advis able to plant sooner titan the 20th of Mav. They are slow in coming up, One half bi'shel will plant ten acres. about four feet apart. Plant from two to three beans in a hill, and all the building that is wanted is a granary to hold the clean beans. Clean off a big yard by the side of your building; as they pop out clean them up aud put them in store and put more on the yard. lry beans next year. Uaki.ev. skillul management is re quired to succeed with this crop. Pe culiar soils are required to proouce a clear, thin-skinned, bright colored sam pie, such as brings the best price in the market. A Triable, clean, mellow, dry, limestone clay loam is perhaps the best soil, but some lighter soils, that are warm and rich, will produce good bar ley. The soil must be thoroughly worked, and free from weeds. Barley should always be drilled and the seed placed at an even depth below the stir- lace. mere is no better crop with which to sow to clover. Foor Rot ix Sheep. Of the one hun dred aud one remedies recommended for this evil, every one is claimed to be the best. Here is one: Take of turpentine, two ounces; sulphuric acid, two drachms; olive oil, one ounce; mix carefully, and, after removing the horn from the part having matter underneath apply freely to the diseased parts. It will greatly assist the curs if diseased heep are put in a shed with a clean door, on which some quicklime is spread every day. Ilunr the Miri.lltea ret their Wivr. u Marrying Wnliln the Tribe. Perhaps the most extraordinary cus tom of the Miridites, who are Roman Catholics, is that by means of which they get their wives. When a young man among them contemplates marriage he first goes to some Mohammedan lo cality and finds out where the maidens are wont to stay. Then he returns, or ganizes a party of frienls and relatives, and, swooping down on the habitation of the bride elect, carries her off to his mountain home and to a state of wed lock. But the most singular part of the whole affair is that, in spite of the appearance of violence, the matter is really devoid of any hostile feeling, and is, in fact, a perfectly amiable ar rangement; for the husband afterwards hands over to the bride's relatives the price that is considered a bride's equiva lent in that part of the world, and both sides remain contented and on intimate and agreeable terms with each other. The idea of giving this semblance of force to a courtship and literally taking to one's self a wife seems to be that it is more manly to seize upon the lady than to sue for her. V by Mohammedan women are always selected for capture by these fanatical Christians does not appear. But It Is probable that a desire to make proselytes is the chief motive which causes this action. The women taken are not Turkish, but members of Albanian tribes which have become Mohammedan, so it is probable that they, and consequently their children, are looked upon as stray sheep brought back to the fold. As for the Miridite women they must take their chances of getting husbands among the other Christian tribes of Northern Albania, or else remain virgins all their days, for on no account will the Miridite men marry within the tribe. Truths Qeerly Told. Science is a first-rate piece of furni ture for a man's upper chamber, if be has common sense on the ground floor. Advice is like a doctor's pills; how easily he gives them how reluctantly he takes them, when his turn comes. Some injudicious folks, instead of en couraging the highly-charged mind and heart, in blowing off verse and bombast, would sit on the safety-valve. Truth gets well if she is run over by a locomotive, while error dies of loek- jnw if she scratches her finger. 'Ditcueert of bjcyqe in te Sn by Pkoto oroi Av. Profefceor Henry Draper has announced the discovery of a series of bright lines or bands in the photograph of the solar spectrum, which correspond exactly with the principal bright lines or bands seen in photographs obtained by means of electric illumination in the spectrum of oxygen. He has, in the America Journal of Science and Art, published a paper and illustrated it with a photograph, in which he shows the perfect coincidence of certain bright lines. Ihe photo graph contains in its upper half the solar spectrum, and in its lower half the spectrum or air obtained by passing the spark of a Gramme induction machine (driven by iirayton's petroleum motor) from an iron to an aluminum point. 1 he coincidence of the luminous oxy gen and even of the nitrogen lines is really remarkable; aud as the photo graph is stated to be absolutely free from hand work or retouching, it places the subject In question beyond doubt. Thus the iron and aluminum'lines, pro duced by the effect of the powerful electric current upon the electrodes. show themselves, and the first may be traced in the solar spectrum at the corresponding places, as might be ex pected. We will only aJd that Professor Draper has made detailed comparison of these lines in the spectra of air, oxy gen, nitrogen, hydrogen, carbonic acid. carburetled hydrogen, and cyanogen. so as to be sure of the luminous lines belonging to oxygen, and he has also made experiments with these gases at various pressures, as in some of them the lines varv with the pressure. It may be remarked as an Important fact that the spectrum of oxygen is not sub ject to variation, but that its line are constant at all pressures. Science is already largely Indebted to Professor Draper for the originality of nis researches, and no doubt important results may be expected in the train of research he is now following. It is use less to speculate as yet on the nature of the sun, and It Is better left to later times, when our knowledge of this re markable body will be more complete; but one thing is certain, that the Idea of Iler-chel that the sun may be an in habited globe must be given up. It is undoubtedly that a body at a tempera ture so high that the substances present there are dissociated and cannot enter into chemical combinations. However, that we will find there all the elements present on our globe may be anticipated if we adopt the theory of Kant and Laplace of a common origin of our whole planetary system nut of one single nebula. Fish from an ArUtian II eft. At a recent meeting of the San francisco Academy of Sciences, specimens of fish. supposed to be trout, were presented, accompanied by a letter from Thomas Jt. lUrd, of llueneme, entura county. Cal. They were thrown up from an artesian well 141 feet deep near that place. The well, .which is nearly 300 feet deep from high water mark, was bored in 1871, and ever since has thrown out immense quantities of fresh ly spawned fish in April and May. The first fish this year were observed in March. The well is capped, having three two-inch apertures, from one of which people were in the habit of filling barrels of water for household uses. In that way the presence of fish was dis covered in 1872. The cap was removed and fish were ejected in incredible quantities, until the cap was replaced. The fish are said to be of various sizes, the largest about an inch in length. The nearest stream where fish are found is Santa Paula Creek, twenty-five miles from the well, but it empties into the Santa Clara river, at a point twenty miles distant. Fretzintt rvint of Ether. Our common ethylic ether, improperly called sul phuncether, because made by the action of sulphuric add upon alcohol, is known to be a substance which does not freeze very readily. Its freezing point has been variously stated by different investigators, but Franchiment thinks that pure ether cannot be Irozen. He has cooled It to SO drg. C. ( 112 deg. Fall.) aud it remained a thin liquid showing no signs of crystallization. In ether containing any water, white crys talline flakes form at a very low tem perature but the less water there is present the lower the temperature re quired will be, and the smaller the quantity of crystals. Franchlmoiit thinks that these flakes are no crystals of ether, but ice crystal. The question seems to be one not easily settled, lor few experimenters care to work at such extremely low temperatures, ob tainable only by the expenditure of so much time, labor, and expense. A HUtoiir lrae-on. Among the curiosities which are about to be added to the Museum of Cluny, are a number ot relics lately purchased in the Island of Rhodes. M. u Sommerard, the director of the Museum, and M. Schlumberger, of the Society of French Antiquarians, have negotiated the purchase of these monu ments, which are principally ornaments for the tombs of the Grand Masters of the Order of St. John. One of them is fragment of the sepulchre of the famous Deodat de Gozen, who was at the head of the Order from 1316 to 1353. He was a gentleman of Languedoc, and was celebrated throughout the whole of the Levant under his title of "Extinctor Draconls," or the dragon-slayer. He had acquired the name by an exploit worthy of Hercules or Theseus, the de scription of which, as embellished by the legends of the Middle Ages, is fit to be compared with the tales of Greek mythology relating to Lerna or Crete. According to the pious chroniclers at tached to the Order of St. John, the in habitants of the island were, in the earlier part of the fourteenth century, tormented by the presence of a ferocious monster, armed with enormous jaws and teeth, and a huge tail, and pro tected by scales, apparently invulnera ble to mortal arms. For years this beast was permitted to ravage their lands and scare the children out of their its, until at last subdued and slain by the redoubtable lance of Deodat de Gozen. This was the established history current among the puny Greeks of the Levant. But Paoli, the chief historian of the Order, casts some doubt upon the tale, and the inquiries made by the two French antiquarians reduce it, not in deed to the level of a complete myth, but to very modest proportions. It seems that the dragon was an alligator imported by some mounte bank from Africa, and that probably the young knight Deodat, as he then was, thought it a good joke to try the temper of his lance by riding at the poor beast and transfixing him. The Name Knilth. The Spaniard's version of Johu Smith is Juan Sniithus; the Dutchman adopts it as Hans Schmidt; the French softens it into Jean Snieets; the Russian roughen it into Jouloff Smittoweki. John Smith goes into the tea trade with China, and then he becomes Jahon Shimruit. Among the Icelanders he is Jahne Smithson. Among the Tusca rora'sheisTom Qu Smittla. In Poland, Ivan Schmittiaveiski; among the Welsh we are told they talk of Jibom Schmidd ; in Mexico he is written down as Joutli Smitrl ; among the classical ruins of Greece he becomes I on Sinihton ; in Turkey he Is almost lost sight of as-Yoe Seef. " . DOIESTIC. To retain or recover health, persons should be relieved from anxiety con cerning disease. The mind has power over the body for a person to think he has a disease will often produce that disease. This we see effected when the mind is Intensely concentrated upon the disease of another. We have seen a person seasick, in anticipation of a voyage, before reaching the vessel. We have known people to die of cancer in the stomach, when they bad no cancer in the stomach or any other mortal disease. A blindfolded man, slightly pierced in the arm, has fainted and died from believing he was bleeding to death. Therefore persons should have their minds diverted as much as possi ble from themselves. It is by their faith that men are saved, and it is by their faith that they die. As a man thinketh, so he is. If he wills not to die, he can often live in spite of disease; and, if he has little or no attachment to life, he will sup away as easily as a child will fall asleep. Men live by their minds as well as by their bodies. Their bodies have no life of themselves; they are only receptacles of life tenements for their minds, and the will has much to do in continuing the physical occu pancy or giving it up. Many of the colds which people are said to catch commence at the feet. To keep these extremities warm, therefore, is to effect an insurance against the al most interminable list of disorders which spring out of a "slight cold." First, never be tightly shod. Boots or shoes when they fit too closely press against the foot and prevent the free circulation of the blood. V hen, on the contrary, they fit with comparative looseness, the blood gets fair play, and the spaces left between the leather and the stockings are filled with a comforta ble supply of warm air. The second rule is, never sit in damp shoes. It is often imagined that unless they are positively wet it is not necessary to change them. This is a fallacy, for when the least dampness is absorbed into the sole it is attracted nearer the foot itself by the heat, and thus per spiration is dangerously checked. Any person may prove this by trying the experiment of neglecting this rule. 1 he leet will become cold and damp after a few moments, although on tak ing off the shoe and warming them they will appear quite dry. FaN'CY Work. The fancy for em broidery has become so great that bits of It are applied to various small arti cles, such as the tops of boxes, the backs of brushes, bags, baskets, and shawl covers. Round boxes of red leather for collars, and large square boxes of red leather for gentlemen's handkerchiefs, have the words ''Collars, and cuffs," or else "Handkerchiefs," wrought upon them : also the monogram of the owner. Clothes brushes, aud the fine soft brushes used for velvet, are ornamented on the back with bead em broidery. Baskets of the stylish rough Mackinaw straw are trimmed with worsted leaves, cherries, and other small fruits. lliirpe.r't lltuur. Confectioners' Taeky. To four pounds of sugar add a full pint of water; place it on the fire, stir till it is dissolved and boil it to the crack, at which point you add half pound of the best butter which you have cut up into small pieces; stir the butter into the sugar with a wooden spatula as quickly as possible and add a little essence of lemon or vanilla at the same time; now pour it immediately on the slab (which you have previously slightly oiled or rubbed with butter) and while it is yet warm cut it into tablets or diamonds whichever suits your fancy. Stov Blacking. We hope the fol lowing receipt lor imparling to stoves a tine black polish, w hich will neither burn off nor give out an offensive smell, will prove acceptable to some ol our readers: Lamp-black is mixed with water-glass (a solution of silicate of soda) to the consistency of syrup ami applied with a brush as a thin and even coating, then left twenty-four hours to dry. Afterwards graphite, or black lead mixed with gum water, is applied, and a polish obtained by rubbing in the usual manner. Ci'KE for Sprain. Take one table spoon ml of honey, and same ot salt, and the white of one egg; beat all well together for at least one hour or two would lie better. Let it stand an hour. Then anoint the sprained place freelv; keep well rolled up w ith a good band- 82". m The finest quality of indigo has the least specific gravity, and floats upon water. It may also be tested by its not readily leaving a mark on drawing it across a piece of paer, and also by the clear blue which it imparts to water when dissolved. Mm. fctuhh- the Sutler'. Wife. She was tall, she was gaunt as a giay wolf in Winter. She was strong of arm and stout of nerve, with a tilent for devising and a will for executing almost any work. She could serve a dinner to a tolerably straitened garrison that would tempt a king, or she could steady a rifle and drop a red skin, if need be, at 300 yards. There was even a rough kind of femininity about the woman, who was by no means disagree able to look at, with her bright black eyes and her brown cheeks showing a subdued flame. She had been known more than once to nurse a wounded man back to life when the surgeons had given him up, with just scolding enough, it must be owned, to spur him on to convalescence. Add to these the aggressive qualities of thrift and neat ness, and we shall have a perfect char acter, you will say. Oh no; do you fancy that all the natural graces and Christian virtues are to be found in one individual? She was envious. (But that is not so rare a fault that it need be dwelt upon.) She was crafiy and un scrupulous. But the first she concealed by the second; and the third, in tend ing upon the other two, kept in the background. And then she was comely to look at that is a better cloak than charity, even, with her sleek black hair aud the fresh color just deadened by the tan on her cheeks. Comely to look at, if one could forget the embers in her eyes, which a gust of passion might blow Into a blaze. After all, it was a kind of beauty which a man might like to look upon, but would hardly covet lor his own. As for her thrift and neatness, the sutler's quarters showed the effect of these good qualities, which were a kind of stockade aliout the real woman. Her home was tidy and inviting, or would have been, but that the tidiness became tyrannical at times, (iradually a kind of cabaret of a most respectable pattern was established here, where the officers dropped in of an evening to order a bit of supper, which the mistress of the house was not above cooking with her own hands. A well-thumbed pack of cards was brought into requisition while waiting for this to be served, and rumor did say that many a pile of gov ernment gold changed hands over the table here. But rumor is always ma licious, and this may not have been true. Drinking there certainly was, but no brawling over the cards or wine, or the friendly pipe with Stubbs him self, who was a quiet, shrewd man, an excellent listener at all times and what could be more desirable in a com panion ? He could even tell story of his own when Mrs. Stubbs was not by. Scribner'' Monthly. Pioneer Hotix-Faks. Henry Ward Beecher tells a funny anecdote of his early life In Ohio. The other day." through Loudonvllle, Ohio, and I was forcibly reminded of my stay there when on my nrst trip out weft. We stopped late at night, and spent Sunday there. There were two coacb-loads of us, and the little two-story brick tavern was nearly full when we arrived. The best they could do for my brother Charles and myself I... ..a - AA.inln nf 'u h L A floWnS WU IU )(la HBWUm v. in the dining-room. We slept late Sun day morning, but finally waking up commenced to talk. I said, 'Charles, I'll bet you I can tell what they had at this hotel for dinner yesterday.' What was it?' he asked. 'Roast beet,' I replied, basing my judgment on a stale sort of odor that pervaded the room. 'No, you're mistaken,' said he, shaking his head and sniffing at the covering of his bed; 'it was mutton.' We both stoutly maintained our respective pro positions, and railing to a vigorous smelling of our bed-clothes, found the landlord had given us a couple oi taDie- cloths for bed-spreads, and Charles had got the mutton-cloth and I the beef." Sue had lust returned from a visit to a married couple, and, as she threw ber hat on the sofa, she turned up her nose, Dut on a look of disgust and said : It there is anything on this earth that Is hateful it Is to see married people Kiss ing and hugging and gushing belore folks." Her little brother crawled out from under the table, where he had been hunting a stray marble, and ad dressing his sister, said: "lou and George is all the time kissing each other before me; but you isn't married yet, and then, 1 'spose I'm too small to be folks." That boy told another little boy next morning that it wasn't always a sign when your ear burned that some body was talking about you. Speaking about the war the other night he told his girl that the Russians had ben making Kischenefi their head quarters; "and" he added, "that re minds me that I am somewhat like the Russians, myself." "Why, how so?" "Well, ain't this my headquarters?" "Oh, Pasha! Charles." "OH, yum. yum." "There, there, Turk care!" "Can't Servia me that wav, Mollie." "Polish! Polish!" m' yum, there, you'll think this is Kisaye null before 1 leave." She was Gladova it all the while, too, and was ready tor a permanent engagement immediately after the skirmish that night. That'll be a Matchiu a short time see, if it won't. Lutrell Joumcl. Thet were sitting together and he w:is arduously thinking what to say, when finally he burst out in this man ner: "In this laud of noble achieve ment and undying glory, why is ic that women do not come more to the front aud climb the Udder of fame?" "1 suppose" said she, tying knots in her handkerchief, "It's on account of her pull-backs." When you see a young fellow who a year ago used to step up and order lager lor the crowd with the utmost ang frotd patientlv trundling a baby carriage along the street on Sunday afternoon. aud looking chapfallcn in his last sea son's hat, don't it speak volumes for the reforming influence of woman's society ? Puck. Teetotum tells us that a Miss Buch anan, once rallying a brave soldier on his courage, said "Now, Captain , do you really mean to tell me you can walk up to a cannon s mouth without fear?" "Yes," was the prompt reply. or a .Bui-Ada'in'j either." And he did it. Ex. Bi.ifki.n8 says: "I ain't much on problems in Euclid, and don't care about evolution, but when a man sits down on a bumble-bee at a picnic I can tell him how long it will take him to get up just as well as any professor at lale." The sights of Dublin. Irish car- driver: Mm re that's the custom-house, sor; but it's only the rare av it you'll be seeing this side, sor the front's be hind. Tapa, does Mrs. Smith play mar bles?" "Xo, ol course not." "Then why did you sav that she's just got 5,(KK) Irom Mr. Suiiib for alley-money ?' Ladies, the best way to beautify the hand is to put a quarter in it, and then shake hands with some suffering fellow creature. What is the difference between a christian and a cannibal t One enjoys himself, and the other enjoys other people. Tut experience ol many a life, "What a fool I've been !" The experience of many a wife, "What a fool I've got !" Seeing is not always believing. There are many men you can see and yet not believe. War is an infant like a diamond. Be cause it's a dear little thing. Advice to young men about to settle down Settle up. AX EXTRAORDINARY cat-o'-niue-tails. curiosity The A set up job a newspaper. Turkish Dainties. A t'ullectioii of nwert temptations much carrieil about in IVra is of the "stick-jaw description ; the Mack, brown, rel. white ami yellow sul-t.iri-ces are tlisjiosei"; on a flat metal dih, Ii viihti into coiiii:irtinei.tsrailiatin from the center, w here there is a revolvin; ' ... i i .t . . , , i Stick Which the appreciative twirl round, and the dealer. m ill, on :.,.., llll an iron ! skewer that serves for all. a.iMVi.u nut M-0.ll Ollt a halfpenny or farthing lick from the ! sweet, at which me snut may stop. But these dealers are generally Per sians; our Usiiianli is of a superior or der, and he gravely waits the approach of customers; they quickly gather round, among them two little Turkish girls under the charge of an old man in a COttOII dressing gOWIl and large white ..-, ,!... ., .. . turban. The little maidens are on their way to the day school of the quarter, for their gold-embroidered M-hool-bags are slung over their shoulders, but they stop soberly at sight of the "scheker" aiet em.-i ijf.Fii a riioij! naraui oil Ut j subject of candy, exacting with much show of experience, the largest lumps obtainable for ten paras; they are, how ever, slightly distracted during the ne gotiations by the rival charms of the "inoh.ilibe' w hich an Albanian is dis pensing at a neighlioring house door. "Mohalilie" is a sort of cold jelly com posed of ground rice and milk ; it is served in saucers, powdered with sugar and sprinkled with rose; water; in the proper season a lump of clotted cream, called caimak, is added. There is noth ing prettier and more tempting than the inohalibe trays, when the white jelly is covered with a clean wet cloth and surrounded with gaily colored and gilded saucers, while a richer display of ornamental porcelain rises in tiers at the hack. Then there are the slim metal arrow shaped rjiooiis, and the Oriental looking flask of rose water w ith its slender neck. The costume of the "mohalihedji" completes the pic ture; he wears the broad Albanian fez, with a ponderous dark blue tassel, and a large striped cloth is bound round him like an apron. Temple Bttr. The patch Pmloai for Warning. . i Kvenr Saturday morniug the Dutch women wash their houses on the out side, scrubbing them from pavement to chimnev. Any point that is ioo u,Su for broom or ladder they reach by a f..rein.r niiiiio. From nearly every i.. .!..- mr be seen a woman, stretch ing herself half-way out, perhaps, w ith a hnisli and cloth reaching after some fancied dirt stiot, or dashing a pail of water at it. It is understood at this time that the town is giveu up to cleaning, aud the passers by on the jiavenieiit below have no right to complain if they get a shower of water and suds over their heads. The spiders have been driven eutirely out of Holland, or left in dis gust; and I do not think I ever saw a fly anywhere iu the country. No swallows are allowed to dirty up their houses or stables, and, strange to say, one sees no birds about whatever, ex cept the omnipresent storks, which we allowed, by special favor, to build their nests in the chimney tops, ow ing to a particular veneration w hich the Dutch have for this bird, likely because it is a water-fowl, or rather a water or land fowl; or, like the Dutch themselves, an amphibious swamp animal. As you go through a jmtcn tow u me most common sight is the women wash ing in the canals. In both sides, Irom one end of the street to the other may be seen at all times of the day, w a-shin everything, from a baby's stinking up to t-.l.l.H-lotli. and when they have nothing else to wash, they wash out their brooms and brushes and tubs and themselves. Sometimes the w hole canal I.;. the aonearaiice of tlouinir with soap-suds. The Dutch have learned the art of uashiior and everything connected fs, - with it, so well that other countrie often send their linen there to be washed and bleached, esiccially the large manu factories. The meadows outside of Dutch town are fairly w hite ith washed article stretched over them. Lioliex' ; iuitorf. Tba Channel of Exit From tha human aystem bear the same rela tion to it as aewers do to a city. They carry off tha waste tha refuse which it is essential to remove in order to prevent disease. Use of the most salutary effects of ilosietter's Stom ach Bitters is to renew activity of the bowels when these organa are dereiict in their duty. The btliuue and dvsptptic symptoms whirb accompany comiupauon are also rented ed by this sterling siterauve. Its gendy cathart c action has the effect of removing ui,pnr tie which would otheiwiae poison the T tea. ud its toiue indueuce is eihituted in sn increase in vital power. It renews apietite. soothes and invigorate the nerve, prevents and rem- rdiee malarial fevr and ks a brat-rate remedv for desiondency. Soxos or Er.rLAH the new Suiidav-Sehool SineniR-book price 35 ets. ; S'iu per humlred. Lkk & VY.u.KER. 1113 Chestnut ML, 1'hnaU a. auttlana 4alcklv Cared. Dnrang's Rbeumatio Remedy, the great Internal Mtirine. will poeitiTnlv enre an; case of rheumatism on the face of the earth. Price ill bottle, six bottles. jl Sold bv all Drug- trist. bend for circular to Helphenstine 4 Bentley, Draggisto. vtsnhinston. 1. V. 31 elk era. Xatraera, -Hat fcerm. Dont fail to procure MRS. rTINSLOWS SOU I HI NO bYRl r for all diseases of teeth ing in children. It relieves the child from pain, core wind colic reeulates the bowels, and by siring relief and health to the child. sivea rest to the mother. S. I PETTENGILL & CO, Advertising Agents, IVo. 37 X'ar-lt Kow, NEW YORK, Desire to call the attention of Business Men. who wish to reach the reading public, to the toUowintc y -A. C T H 1. They have been in the Advertising tmsv aess (or nearly IhirrTar, and given It ouav atant attention aTusuTmurtng that time. a. They have had. and continue to bare, carnal tMiglpe- relations with all The bv t7aHiinu!tr?nMducSLS biau a itiid Caiiu . a- Their record with aTl these publications Ta one of fair treatment, TTSoraNe dealing, and prompt settlements. . Id eonsrauenci 4. In consequence of this, they can always have advertisements lnaeru 5Th!"7 are so acquainted with the entire Eress of the country that they can select the it wxfims.. for any given purpuse. ICTng done advertising for an kinds of bnslne. and noted the results to ihnir ciato mers, they can give valqahte inge'Hn aa to the fir. ttyU, avf-uf Kiam Vhiuluunethe mot eir-MiTe aurerusemcnt lor the object u be AiuUuttl. T. Having frxpi'Tit orders for a large Bom ber of par" rs, tuey tou, iu most cases, get the work dune fur Ur thin th s'lreni-r wuuld have tO pay tf heulomlerTIlfect- a. They examine all papers, note all orr le sions or Irregularities, ana secure the s n't fil- flliment of every stipulation of the ord" . They give the advertiser the fin henefftof their supervision wisms' easrsv, aU cuuiiaiona belni( paid by the publishers. Tuey submit e'imn'ea for any grva nst of papers, or for prueiy covering any given district. II. For a ayiteTiiaae working up of any large enterprise, tn -y asvt in the D reparation of cir culars, panXlcis7aud general reading matter. In addition lo new-paper adve tlsing. Tftey Inv'te a rail mm any parties who eon, tetuutaio autiuatng In any way or for any amount. aTL rETTEiieiEX at CO.. IT Park Bow, Hew Tort. Toi Chestnut St., Porta. is state lu, Boston. RUPTURE, o sje i aire who h t a m rri kc " eiatiw b.w ininiftnt he mr rxnaHW it. f-r everv man who a thl from it toee fljtttrl hnwelf that it vuNl a mi1m ailment, and ever nan who n"w ..in-r irera n am ine injury oi troea to h an extent that Itle ha bo entovae-nti once reganlM " ""nlir rol attention. It ia n-.t a n.l.nll afflirtioa. ll u -Mhlt .rvn.!,. .... .I,K -j-li", slvMim cuiuea upon him. Dr. Sherman, Bt hi" p!M-llnn. In hi method of rare, avoid the lujuri trii inriiot. and fsroe-a tbe part injured to natural -- asrl hralthlnituwa. Tie cur iarlti-.-tr.l by llr. Sherman 'a mrthod with ont an operation, ainiplv Ky external Um-1 appliva tiona. brth merhaiiM-al anl meiiH-inal. man ilaily by tlw patient, who can perform any kind of laboruurihjc the Ir-aim-m wilt, aaleiy fr-iu the dan.fr- of in- fl -avinf aa v-ll pit n r-wa atiaai aa iih.a,i . . t .1 KVferencegnentoenti-n-nin tn city hat neenrured. A larav numtr of rtmiu.l l-hot. xhibitincthecoiKlitio. nf patino before aitd altr iui-.rai newt ai ine omre. Term motlerale. t- auliatH'n frae. Th-aa from the country can recite n p-ipra tor nonje on the aame day. Book... with photographa of bad caa belore and after f ur, Kiai n tor HI crnta. DR.ftHFrt'lf w t.T BE rnXsrLTFP AT HIS ! iJa, aa ktS . 14. . 2 J""wt' ,kr. rd" ". with same . . FlLlowa a Co.. Sorth Chatham, N.Y. $10 1 $1000 thine. AddretK invested In Wall Mtreet Mocks, makes fortunes every month. Book mu fr exDlainlnir even. BAXTER CO, Bankers, 11 Wall Street. :,ew York. Tie Psun Mutual life Insurance Co. OF PHILADELPHIA. PURELY MUTUAL. IrMorporated to 1MT. u oan on " ra.,.a m stncuv mntnal Ir- --tr! an .uvrr Taimy. aodowawmt PoUcssa mnud at LIB) RsIml awM whhn, apply lo M. 8. STr.PIir.N3. Tic. PraaUmt VEQETINE. A Kxeellewl kleoielne. Thls ts to eerttry that 1 have tLvLi? manufactured by H. R. Stevens. BoKtotTw'' lor Rheumatism and beneral Prostration Nervous system, wttli g-ood successTl iL!? mend Vbubtihb as aa mifewl, nimn,. hi r ownplatttia. a Tours Terr truly, C. w. VANDEGttnu. Mr. Taodegrtrt. of the arm of V aoaemm. BulT man. la a weil-knowa business man J, ,h place, having one u Urn largest sUo-, u, sTL, ueld,0. "pins Oar Mlalster's Wire. Louuruxa, Kt, Feu. It, u Mb. H. R. Srrreo. Dm Wr, Three years apo I was mffrUur t. rlhiy with li.Haninutory Bheunuui-nt r? minister's wife advised me to take k.inC Alter taklngr one bottle. I was enur-iy reu-tM This jeas leeUi it a return of the db,,. , cr-.ln r.immeiMd Laiflnir It. Anil ti...' I ented gieal.y. ll also Krrally UnpruvL dlKs4.un. i.especnui J, Has. A. BALUrr lull West Jefferson Street. Sfe -a tar. Ma. H. K. STavisa. la lsTS your Viornioj was reconnu'-nuy,. h me; and. yielding to the per-iia-ioiaJ . blend. 1 consented lo try It. At lue now . MiuVring trooi gei.eml debniiv and umjt pripsiraiion. superludueeu by ovr.ir and J regTt'sr httilin. lu won'iertul strein(t -o'l aud curat tve properties beeiurd to nam m bllitated .ysiem nom the tin doe ; no Its perslsienl use 1 mp.dly retovrreo. glla more tuan usual healiu and o-d f -uu then I have n. heaitaird to give " t4.in.-oj mt unqualified indorsement as b-n.u sure, ana powerful atrenl In pnjnietiii hraita and rep tori r ivr the bi ed .-ysi em lo net, tj eneijry. VMis-nsa u the only merUcne f and as Ion as 1 Lve I never eipeet to aiui better. lours truly. W H. cLAkK 190 iluuierey street. AlieKhajij, rtaa. VEGETINE. The following; letter from Rev . w Beld, formerly pastor of tne HethodM p,k pal Church, iide Park, aud at pre nt sriu In Lowell, must conviuce every one wuo reals his lelier of the wonderful curative iua.itira j Vwiimss as a thorough cleanser aiai punocr ot the blood. Htm Pari. Mass., Feb. ll uci MB.H.R.&TTVCNS. imtr ."r. AiMrtit ten years atro my heaitk failed through the depleting effei ts of dv-. ia; nearly a year later I was attacked u. tvl pno.d-lever lu tut worl form. U set ilea In tV Back, and (oi k the form of a larire ueep.,, aoecess. which was hfteen mob' UMn gathtniK I had two surgical opera Ions by the be swij In the Mate, but received no permanent ctm. 1 sunered great pain at tunes, and wjg eng. S'antly weakened by a proline liK-hargt also lint small pieces ot bone at illdereui ums. Matters ran on thus anout seven year. u!1 May. Ki, when a mend reeomuienl-d me to m to your office, and talk alth you oi tne vino ( Vaurna. I did so, and by your klMQrw passed tbrounh your manufactory. n"tu. tlw Inirreilleuls, ac, by which your remedy i pn. duced. By what I saw and heard I gained some cot. Oileoce In Vki.mN. I commenced taking It soon after, tit rt't worse from Its effec s; still I Delivered il soon lelt It was benefltirir the lu other rerTUi Vet 1 did not se the results 1 delreo: uu 1 iij taken It fallhfu ly for a lit tie more than a m when the dllliculty In the back wits cured: tui tor nine months 1 have eujoyed tne beat ti health. 1 have In that time rained twenty-live pr-moa of deh. belnhf heavier than ever bet, re In il life, and I was never mure able to iertorm Lux than now. During the past few weeks I had a snTra''m swelling as lare as my flat gather uu anuUirr part, ol uiv bedv. i took ViomM faithfully, and It remover! a level with the surface In a month 1 tuink l should have been cured of my nialn tn.-j sooner U 1 had taien larger donea, alter hoiii become accu-louied to iiseiJecix Let your patrons troubled with scrofula cr kidney dl.-ea.-e understand that it ukr-s tim-1 cure chronic dlsea-es: and, it ihev wiu nU& . ly take Vu.vtun, It a til, lu my juJ-tunrt, cur them. With great obligations I am kuurs verv trn!v. O.'W. MANSFIELD. Pastor of the Methodist tpiwupai c hun-n. vegetim: Prepared by II. R. STEVENS, Boston, Masa Yeselioe is Sold bj All DrcgiK DIITTCD After fwlr triI -M ttH DU i i rr i tr.i-i ivr.te-MMi ivi'-m-m- rf J XJ XV ALL. Iff. Il h-w no iar r in-j. Hid l-asU-lIl.ie-aaawltef. Ji. 1 1 19 1 .j T l l . 19 t liatetJI-, aiMi m LUiKtil tn crm trtr ct.urunig jf t. It pr xjijcej a c..-r rnilnig June 4r- toiim 4vh. It 10 thoiily MrfKl tli At will c.'l.-r ttt 6'itt-r ml not th buri-roiilk. 6th. It trath-r tti tatt-r HivtTi 'i I. liK-rvm,, tb r iiht mr ttiau will pv !..r ttret n4t WMtl. It l tb trr knnD -1 .oor . Mr in ptwtai otT-t f'-r my rvipt booh. ?. it tlii how t Dikt Lutt-r, r.t k . in-wrm. "Jitrtaci ru- cmiiy. Mr.. B Smith, ii" Artu ai.. A. 0. ix riuiauieipitut, f. BUTTER k Iur3wate4n.e, MM MMO. H.2U.IXU. 0.7 At ttt.. 1-aiam.U.. ie. s:v Itfp and property. On!TThm rtlrv-otiy fnm lite Mnnui' t"ry SiiVt the UnfV AtHl xe.-rv.iv ppi-Vr h trv; d by traveim ;al-"i:u-ii. K'-puiniitf aUtiid.-a r. AUr MIDDLETOM & CO.. Mianufarturer-t of all kin.1 of Llirh-nln? R" Point; aim H eai ber aiies, EiuOlr-uiai ic Ccr. Rifiie ani Girari A?s!s Ptiiltfi IiTAt.unrn 1S27. Ital:hkd -J. :Din.:iT:-xr'23 PURE KYE WHISKEY. Thf..)lowinaT I- . Hit of thv)iffrnt mA of ffixlA, with ftrk-- iin--"i. which b-v l"" cou iiiativiir.at tli uiftrbet ft nunitT of year, ami tireir alT.naT ftDtl O'li-.tant fsnirtonifti- But. I. SflKKinc ahr l ynr l'r. with vUftrrtMc of Ukt la- n.xaiti in -.trv re-jvii. w r-rrin. i-turt truly. a . r. a tc niiii. Sole f rupriwivi-a. UU u a ai., i'uutuc.Iui, BAILEY'S PCBE RVK ? "A - i o X X . 2 ' XXX -i X.WX .... . EX.-ropptK I!STII.Ltt WHISKKY 1 t'FpfcK 1IT1I.LKI HIMvkY 1 i, 1 : ifiL. . tk v fcR tunic hkrb bitteks 2 j. If ji'U ilir .Ntmpltn (if ftiiv ot ih- tM.v, -ha'I tk BreeaMltVlJ tlMllU UfevBl. Ailg,KHjd In V'l P-V. DYKES BEARD ELIXIR h.. risi m r wj. :-i ,t r- a. v.-c A re 'naa P. hawnc iap! ffwt, I M I Pa. -." UiKl aoWI. Thnne anawrHnir an A l verti it t will -onfrr a fvor Umu the Alvertir and the PahUrahrr by Malinctht IhfTMw thea'lvrr Usenirut in tha lourtaal (utniiiix lh pMr i PENSION Late chad of In. iVtii J. 1. Pnvmi, W alnnf t . ri:. PENSIONS-?- No mttor bow Mt fatly &imt-ld. "T' raow Mid. A1tk and eirn- IftT lrr T. McMICHAEL, Att'v, 707 Snw St- Phil.Pf. iCocpMOiypitatni ThiB to no ytvai of mMtaC .tmn rnnflnM n tf crB to narrow limit. bHnir twairrwetls I tlv rrvaftl w n.1 earful fha.lirr t tin t.nni u t-i kown. Th-rfir it b .uiti cur a griM' varirrtr "i lit-, and ft Urtttr prH-ti'n tif ptini than ai.j orhr went. Eiat t yarn-' of lrn t?-.p n-iw e fuilv c.'nl'-t'te-ifrcMtion. Th Huticribrs unit tUr i-r --' mak know u, avfti M t thi k th- mmmtr A-l vlrtm r .h4 vMav-Mw Ox7Cm- Ih aal-M. iMirrfet aiul CU-apr.i rutriy tit iue "r'' Lt all conu:iiptiv-, 4vwyrfirfl, pa&ntivtic (iwnti. aal all, a!! Uioouragwl invasWU. ftfiid for oar tr cuirwt.f i . wtiic:i contain ri'any wr,.l, f'i! to Cnitatatii-niaaod b-rt .f url-rirnia;. M .:M?f O. K. r-.TA.wf. AM .M D., !T A KK K Y A PLW, U. E. Pal-.i. Pa B..M.D. UU tiinara Ptxu. Nf.'w'77 ft week to Awa. Jioomfl rCK KKY. AukrusiAaMlne mm 'AN AKESIS." Br. H. hll.be-. Mil 1 e X KXTKBSlI.riLIBia a . IIJjJjO qwt mavraf rhef, ana n infallible iw To prove it we sena tw pies fr to all appileuW P. JJElST.SDTKR fo.. Sole ManuiatturersJ' ANAKESI8," Box 3u New York. bmrf (rmmirrfrxu! In buytuir the -AM'-'' sis'' from DrULTrlsta. be careful to iret the -- Ine article, observe that the stifrature oi BILsBKK, M D."tsonMcendO' ilietxix. .viaix l-loiirjloiifi fo. Maize flour Toilet Soap!- Maize Flour Toilet fcoapi- A ra diaeavery t A aw wp enaar-! " .Mitna- suite:., ana whitana Ihe akia. aan 1 . hhnc ana anpanor wa.mn: pf"Pr' -,ilall 1I!J f .r lh" SalS. BOTaelT. aiirt """" 1-1M. It r dhirhtlolly prfnn.l. and I1 -" wlir. at a mo.tar.ta prira. Kestatatal w raw Vine. PCA. l lb. mnnfctnrara. Mcaao.Ni, VA.N U1AGS1ICO.. . faila. PENSIONS, X a 3jra Taneon Teat U tat lat. Pai sr r! ft pr-.rjm. Us Pcatt IsctuiI lad KUSTIUJoi. TSJBCi3 3 3i."i3-ps ma.-lt mm fer Subtn. 23 ax a rr. rey hUiartafaitt. raB tart eslan isd simlrva tt fill put I ailm, TJ iua.i Kit. Si-aiS w. ttaaU, S.L Oala ASanrf. fuiafa.S-- HEAVEN HKLrS THOSE WH belu tiieuuelvui. TbeP a.aalaa iwtu la la luMrV'J a WH trM SMalaaa, aaabwl) tt la a anall eamfM -MtkaBaaaitrMr Iwaajw.lalw la "'rri7roi WW ft f SSZl VST aTttwikki m tti " it i l U