Au Asiatic rope. A few days before Pius IX. breathed his last the Tone of the MtiMulmans passed away," Abdul Ghafur the Ahkoond of Swat. Abdul Ghafur was born of shepherd parents in 1790, and till he was sixteen herded their cattle. Kunning away from home he sought out teachers first at Teshawur. then at Kliuttuk, Desirous of greater distinc tion than that offered by the ordinary career of a Mooliab, he vowed to become a Dervecsh and took possession of the bland of Bokka, a mere bank of mud formed at one great inundation of the Indus to disappear at another. Here for twelve years he lived a hermit life, in a wretched hut, exposed to the cold blasts that only High Asia knows and having for food only milk and the epds of a variety of grass. Literally for months he remained squatted on the ground facing towards the Holy City and howling the Creed and the ninety names of God, as the Kev. Mr. Hughes a missionary to l'esbawur, and Sir Harry Lumsdcn, a British oflk-ert certify. The latter had been specialli ordered to visit and report upon filr? lanatic, who had already become pow erful in the religious world. Indeed his fame had already come to the ears of the Sikhs, masters of the Peshawur Valley, who had vowed vengeance on their iornier Mahometan persecutors, and they attempted bis life, but he lied to the inouutaius. So fcreat. was now (1S35) his influence that Vost Moham med courted his assistance when he struck against the Sikhs, but Runjeet Singh was too strong for Ameer and Ahkoond, and the latter, after fighting gallantly in the Klivber Pass for the Afghans, tied to the Swat village of SyJoo. where he was declined to make another Mecca. The Swat valley, a valley some fifty or sixty miles long by three miles wide was broken up into three contesting tribeshlps, each claijaiug supremacy over the other for its doctor of the laws. By craft and simulated miracles Abdul Ghafur induced the clans to consolidate under a nominal king of his own choos ing, Syud Akbar. Then he removed his rival saints by having one assassin ated while at prayer and denouncing the other two to the British, who had conquered the Punjaub, as Wahabees. Dost Mohammed urged htm to preach holy war against the advancing infidel British but the Ahkoond, who saw that English sovereignty guaranteed peace and prosperity to the faithful, repelled bis overtures. Henceforward he con tinued to exercise his influence in favor of tbe British, or at least refrained from using it against them, save when, in 1863, he for a time checked Lord Elgin in the Umbeyla campaign by casting in bis lot with the Wahabees. This, how ever, was only temporary, for he preached ever afterwards that a djehad or crescentade, against the reformed of the Wahabee rite was even more meri torious than one against the infidel British. It was Wahabee assassins, by the way, who struck down the Viceroy, Lord Mayo, and Chief Justice Xorman, of Calcutta. The Alikoond's influence it would be almost impossible to overrate. For nearly half a century the Indian Gov ernment watched him as assiduously and anxiously as Europe watches Bis mark or used to watch Napoleon 111. In 1 Sip Tinrrir T.ntnEiUn mrmta "I tits saint has gained such an ascen- , .. , . , . . ! 1 In general that they believe he is sup plied by supernatural means with the necessaries of life. Every morning, as he rises from his prayers, lie is said to find mo:;ey suflicient for the day's ex penditures. He is consulted in all difficulties." "The Pope of Sydoo, say sM r. Hughes, the missionary already mentioned, "reigns supreme as the guide and director of the hearts of men all over High Asia." Three hundred pilgrims daily visited him, and none came empty handed, whether their home were Bengal, or Bokhara, or Constantinople, or Mecca itself (for even in the Holy City the Ahkoond was held in high repute), or Persia, or Tunis. These lie entertained fancy the host of 100,000 visitors every year blessed, prayed for and admired. his counsels and predictions were sought upon every imaginable subject. This man came to ask if he could law fully learn English, a language which the oracle denounced as "the seed ot in fidelity ;', this if his crippled son would be healed by a certain treatment; this how his lawsuit in the Anglo-Indian courts would turn out; this (a ruler) whether he should declare war upon a neighbor, or the Franks, or the Rus sians. Up to the very last he retained his vigor. Last summer Ameer Sher Ali, of Cabul, as his father, Dost Mohammed, had done before him, in vited the Alikoond's co-operation and blessing in the military movement then being prepared in Afghanistan to take advantage of the Russo-Turklsh war, however it should lesult. The Ameer had, indeed, previously testified to tiis veneration of the old satnt by ordering the compilation of a bulky volume celebrating his sanctity and hismiraeles. In May, Ib77, though then eighty Seven, blind and su leriug Iron) a chronic skin disease, induced by the austerities of bis early life, the Ahkoond, already the patriarch of a great family, married a girl of twenty. The Courage or the Fox. The ordinary idea of the fox is ths. of a flying, frightened creature tearing away for bare existence; be is really a bold and desperate animal. The keejicr will tell you that once when for some purpose lie was walking up a deep dry ditch his spaniel and retriever suddenly "chopped" a fox, and got him at bay in a corner, when he turned, and in an instant laid the spaniel helpless and dying and severely handled the re triever. Seeing his dogs so Injured and the fox as it were under his feet, the keeper imprudently attempted to seize him, but could not retain his hold, and got the sharp white teeth clean through his hand. Though but once actually bitten, he recollects being snapped at viciously by another fox, whom he fonnd in broad daylight asleep 'n the hollow of adonble mound with scarcely any shelter and wilhin sixty yards of a house. Reynard was curled up on the ivy which in the hedges trails along the ground. The keeper crawled up on the bank and stopped, admiring the symmetry of the creature, when, pur posely breaking a twig, the fox was up in a second and snarled and snapped at l.is face, then slipped into the ditch and away. The fox is, in fact, quite at re markable for boldness as for cunning. Last Summer we met a fine fox on the turnpike road and close to a tollgate, in the middle of the day. He came at full speed with a young rabbit in his jaws, evidently but just captured, and did not perceive that he was observed till within twenty yards, when, with a single bound he cleared the sward be side the road, alighting with a crash in the bushes, carrying his prey with him Hares will sometimes, in like manner, come as it were to meet people on coun try roads. Is it that the eyes being placed toward the side of the head, do not so readily catch sight of dangers in front as on the flanks, especially when the animal is absorbed in its purpose Hares are peculiarly fond of limping at dusk along lonely roads. Foxes when they roam from the wood into the meadow land, prefer to sUep during the day in those osier beds which are found in the narrow corners formed by the meanderings of the brooks. Between the wiilow wands there shoots op thick undergrowth of sedges, long coarse grass and reeds; and in these the fox makes his bed, turning round and round till he has smoothed a place and trampled down the grass; then reclin ing, well sheltered from the wind. dog will turn round and round in the same way before he lies down on the hearth' rug. These reeds sometimes grow to a great height, as much as ten or twelve feet. Along the Thames they are used, bound in bundles, to pitch the barges; when the hull Las been roughly coated with pitch, one end of the bundle of reeds (thickest end pre ferred), is set on fire and passed over it to make it melt and run into the chinks So, mayhap, the Saxon and Danish rover may have used them to pitch the bottoms of their ceols when worn from constantly grounding on the shallows and eyots. A boat Valentines. During the gioiious oays of the an cieut empire the feast of Lupercalia was celebrated a'. Rome with a license and energy that render the Carnival a small affair in comparison. Among other ceremonies the ymng people of both sexes would let Chance assign the matters that we now leave to Seutimen and other considerations, by mingling in an even and equal number youths' and maidens' name-; and as Fate detei- mined the succession of them, Corydon and Flu via were matched as lovers. From time to time the privileges apper taining to this festival caused such abuses as to shock even Roman morality. and among the uiodiiicatious enforced this game of lovers was abolished. As a matter or course, some less ohjec tionable custom was substituted; and through various phases it took the form of valentine gilts, where, ignoring the barbarism of choosing , by lot, a natural course for election was permitted, and the dynasty of Pan was overthrown. If this had been a legitimate indulgence. the Cyprian goddess would have been the patron saint; but aside from his re gard for shepherds and their flocks, and he protection of the game-laws, Pan had a reputation for depravity that should nave excluded liiiu from re- spec'able society ; and the fact that he was selected as patron of the Lupercal ia reconciles all well-disposed people to the abandonment of those rites. St. alentnie came on the scene during the third century, but be was kept pretty well occupied with his own affairs by reason of a continuous perse cution on account of the bold assertion of his religious tenets; and if he did anything worthy of the succeeding veneration exacted from sighing lovers. it must have been at an early period of hid Avl;:t. It la i. ! .. .Kn I. a . , , .. , ,. lacked either the time, inclination, or opportunity, to make any impression on the S"X, as he died a bachelor a victim to the harsh Claudius. As St' V alentine was conspicuous for the purity of his life, it is probable that in the reaction of popular feeling the rites substituted for the licentious orgies of the preceding age were named in his honor. The Indifference of late shown for the recognized prerogatives of St. Valen tine's day is a sad commentary on this age, when sentiment and the science of the beautiful are giving way to sordid interest and devotion to affairs practi cal. The shop-windows are no longer decorated with the gorgeously-illuminated missives of Love for which gages the youth of our country were wont to straiten their lollypop supply for a time in direct ratio with the ardor of their affections. There is a dearth of rosy cheeked cupids; and the conventional illustrations of lovers wending their way through cosy nooks, suriouided by a halo of atmospheric splendor, would now excite ridicule from our groundlings, if they were exposed. In fact in delicate sentiment, we are on the verge of another social revolu tion, and we may infer its character from the tendency of our people in the matter of their tastes for public amuse ments. With the teachings of Wood- hull and Andrews, the riotous jollity, of the Pandean votaries menace the inno cence that has hiilierto characterized the celebration of this love festival. I'he "Personal" columns of our public journals now carry the messages that ere lormeriy intrusted to scented paper and questionable orthography. The merits of St. Valentine will soon pass outol mind. An Upisode at the War of 181?. The English papers announce the death of an cflijer whose exploit in the Eastern ocean recalls a nearly forgotten occurrence of the war of 181?, and one not very creditable to the humanity of one of our naval commanders, and er- hsps not to the good judgment of Ins English adversary. On the 30:h ot June, 1S15, several months after peace had been declared, the United States corvette, Peacock, twenty-two guns, commanded by Captain Warrington. encountered the East India Company's brig, Nautilus, fourteen guns, com manded by Lieutenant Charles Boyce. As Lieutenant Boyce had received in telligence that peace had been declared, be did not attempt to shun his more powerful opponent, but sent a boat to inform Captain Warrington of the con clusion of peace. The only reply he got was an order to strike his flag. This he refused to do, thinking he would dis honor his country by compliance. Whereupon the Peacock fired a broad side, killing six men and wounding eight others. Lieutenant Boyce was struck by a grapeshot in his hip, and his right knee and thigh bone were shattered by a thirty-two pound shot His first lieutenant, Mr. Mayster, was mortally wounded. Having thus vindi cated the honor of his flag by losing fourteen out of his crew of forty men Lieutenant Boyce surrendered. Captain Warrington, however, released his prize next day, the fact, which he should have realized before uselessly spilling blood, having penetrated his skull that he had no right to hold it. bt ran lie to say. Lieutenant Borce re covered from his fearful injuries, and survived to the age of ninety-one vears, dying at St. Calais, Sarihe. In France, on the "th of January last. He enjoyed a liberal pension from the Indian ad ministration to the day of his death. AGRICULTURE. Watering Plants with Hot WartR. M. Willermux has pointed out the utility or watering certain plants with hot water when out of health. Such waterings render repotting in fresh earth needless, when the flagging of the plants 1 caused by acid substances, which, contained In the soil and ab sorbed by the roots, act on living vege tables like veritable poisons. The small roots are withered and cease their ac tion, consequently the upper and younger shoots of the plant turn yellow and tiie spots with which the leaves are covered indicate their morbid state.. In such cases the usual remedy is to trans plant the invalids into fresh soil, clean the pots carefully, secure good drain age, and so on, alien with the best re sults. But the experience of several years has proved the unfailing efficacy of the simpler treatment, which consists in watering abundantly with hot water at a temperature of about 145 degrees r abren heit, after stirring well the earth in which the plants are growing until the water runs well through the puts. At its first experimental application, the water came out clear; alterward it was sensibly tinged with brown, and gave an appreciable acid reaction. After this thorough washing, the pots were Kept warm close to a stove or a calorifere. Next day the leaves of twoFicw tlatlica so treated ceased to droop, and the spread of black spots on their 1 aves was arrested, and tbreedays afterward, instead of dying, the plants had re covered their normal look of health, Very soon they made new roots, imme diately followed by a vigorous growth In large towns especially this course of treatment is easier to carry out than a general repotting. Perhaps the extra warmth may be as tflicacious as the extra water. Bees ix Spkino. As soon as Spring opens, our bees should all be examined by lifting the frames of each hive, and if the stocks are weak, the bees are shut to one side of the hive oy means of a division board, so as to keep up the necessary heat for brood-rearing on as many combs as they can cover. As soon as the queen has filled these combs with eggs we spread them apart, in setting an empty comb between those occupied with brood, and In afew days' time the queen will fill this one also; and so we keep on until every available cell is occupied with brood. Thus it will be seen that instead of the queen laying her eggs on the outside of the cluster, she lays them in the centre of brood-nest where they should be. After the hive is full of brood and bees, it does not make so much difference, as the weather is warm and bees aie plenty, so that the queen can deposit her eggs anywhere in the hive. As soon as the strongest stocks are full, take a frame of brood just gnawing out, and place it in the weaker ones, giving the strong one an empty comb for the queen to till again, and so keep on until all are full. Animal manures differ In quality; cows, for instance, for the chemical constitution of their bodies, or for the formation or milk, more nitrogen and phosphate of lime tbau sheep; and again, the latter requi.e more sulphur and common salt, tor the formrtiou of their wocl. Hence the excrements of oxen cannot contain so much nitrogen as those of sheep, while they are more abuudant in salt and sulphur. Again, the value of the excrement depends partly upon the digestive organs of the ot the diflerent kiuds of animals, and their organs of mastication. Sheep, naving stronger digestive organs than cows, and also the ability to reduce their food to a finer state by chewing. are able to abstract more nutriment from a given quautity of food. With tood of the same kind sheep dung can not be of so much value as thrt of oxen, though owing to the former being more nneiy divided it decomposes sooner and acts more quickly than the latter, and experience teaches that sheep manure produces its eneet more speedily, but not to permanently, as the manure ol oxen. Tile Drains in neat meadows, where me peat is several feet below the tile, are of frequent occurrence. When properly laid there is little danger ol their tilling with the fine peat. Boards should be laid on the bottom of the ditch which has previous! v been made of a regular grade; then lay the tile upon tue ooards, covering the joints with a small bit of inverted sod or a narrow strip of tarred paper. A Tremendous Talker. Coleridge was prodigal in his words. which, in fact, he could with difficulty suppress; but he seldom talked of him self or his affairs. He was very specu lative, very theological, very metaphys ical, and not unfrequeiitly threw in some little pungent sentence character istic of the defects of some of his ac quaintances. In illustration of his un failing talk, a correspondent gives an account of one of his days when he was present: Coleridge bad come from High gate to London for the sole purpose ol consulting a I'rieud about his son Hart ley, (our dear Hartley,") toward whom he expressed aud I have no doubt felt much anxiety. He arrived about one or two o'clock, in the midst of a con versation which immediately began to merest him. He struck into the mid dle of the talk very soon, and held the ear of the house" until dinner made its appearance, about four o'clock. He then talked all through the dinner, all the afternoon, and all the evening. with scarcely a single interruption. He expatiated on this subject and on that; he drew fiuedistinctions; he made subtle criticisms. He descended to anecdotes historical, logical, rhetori cal ; he dealt with law, medicine, and ivinity, until at last, five minutes be fore eight o'clock, the servant came in and announced that the Highgate stage was at the corner of the street, and was waiting to convey Mr. Coleridge home. Coleridge immediately started up, obli vious of all time, and said, in a hurried voice : "My dear Z . I will come to you some other day, aud talk to you about our dear Hartley." He had quite forgotten his son, and everybody else, in the delight of having such an enrap tured audience. The Memory. Good forgetful ness is considered by the Scientific American scarcely less valuable than good memory. "Actors," it says, "who are obliged to study new parts frequently, and commit long speeches to memory in very short periods of time, apparently have the power of cleansing the memory and rendering it blank and receptive to new tasks. After taking part in a perform ance which has been repeated night after night for months, the reproduction of the same play, after the lapse of a year or so, finds them almost ignorant of the text, and necessitates complete restudy." Mr. Verdon.in a recent arti cle on "Mind " holds that the memory of every individual has ti e capacity of keeping in fresh recollection a certain number of things, and that these, on being displaced by others, grow dim or entirely fade away. He says that a person may expend all his energy of memory on a few things and become "absent-minded," or may make it cover a great number with less distinctness. SCIENTIFIC. Wood and Metal. Interesting expert menu were recently made at the Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College, with their mammoth testing machine lor thedetermining the strength of different kinds of metals, timber, etc The first tests were of tenacity. A quarter-inch annealed iron wire broke at 5.160 pounds: another piece of unannealed wire, of the same size, broke at 3,860 pounds; a piece of bar iron, half-inch square, broke with 13,660 pounds; a bar of Bessemer steel, scant half-inch square, only gave way under 30,320 pounds, the latter tests showing clearly the comparative strength of iron and Bessemer steel. A piece of hickory, one and a Lalf inch square, broke at 10,460 pounds, and a piece of black walnut, same size, at 3.270 pounds. The ar rangement of the machine for trans verse tests was Illustrated by breaking a bar of apple wood, one inch square and one foot long, supported at the ends and weight applied in the middle, with white Waverly sandstone was crushed at only 060 pounds. A two-inch cube of 12,500 pounds. Such cubes of wood stood a teat of 7.000 and 8,300 before being crushed. The last experiment was the breaking of a 15x16 inch iron screw bolt, which was accomplished by a pres sure of 25,850 pounds. All specimens of metal could be seen to stretch very materially before breaking, becoiningof less diameter near the place of rupture. It was interesting to notice the heat generated when this stretching took place, w hich is ascribed to molecular friction. The tests followed each other rapidly, and the gentlemen present, who included rolling mill operators, prac tical engineers and manufacturers interested in the experiments, were delighted at the prompt and accurate working of the machiue. Prof. Men denhall is desirous of making tests of the comparative strength ot the various materials used by manufacturers, builders and others, and will be very glad to receive any and all specimens which may be ottered. The results of those tests would seem to be of great value in aiany buildings and others, yet Professor Metideuhall states that he was actually obliged to buy specimens for the tests above described. Filtering the Air: At a recent meeting of the New York Academy of Useful Arts, attention was called to a biniple method of filtering the air of an apart ment. 1 he object is to Tree the air from dust, excessive dampness, and possibly from the genus of malaria. The con trivance consists essentially of a fibrous woven fabric, strengthened by brass wire. It is to be applied to windows and ventilators, and may be of service on railway cars to exclude dust. It has the merit of checking drafts, while ad mitting air. Its general use might tend to prevent the spread of malarial dis eases, and modify the dangers that dirty streets occasion to the health of city residents. M. Iterthelot has informed the Academy of Science, Paris, that in ex perimentiiig on etherification 16 years ago he put aside a number or mixtures to he ke't a considerable time, in order to ascertain the limits of the reactions produced at ordinary temperatures, 1 hese mixtures consisted ol acetic acid and alcohol, acetic acid aud glycerine, tartaric acid and alcohol, valeric acid and alcohol. Recently the mixtures were examined, and it was found that the results confirmed the truih of the general laws of etherification. II anting the Sea-Otter In Alaska. The sea-otter, which constitutes the sole means by which these, the only civilized people of our new Territory manage to clothe themselves rightly and maintain their Church, may be ap propriately mentioned in detail. It is an animal, when full grown, that will measure from three and a half to four feet at most from the tip of its short tail to its nose. The general contour of of the body is much like that of the beaver, with the skin lying in loose folds, so that, when taken hold of in lifilne the body out of the water, it draws up like the hide on the nape of a young puppy dog. The skin is covered with the richest of all fine deep fur, a jet black, with silver tipped hairs here and there scattered as is so well known to our ladies of fashion. The sea-otter mother sleeps in the water on her back, with her young one clasped between her tiny forepaws. Frequent attempts have been made to rear the young sea-otters, as they are often captured alive; but. like some other species of wild animals, they seem to be so deeply imbued with fear of man, that they invariably perish by self-imposed starvation. The Sannacit Islets and reefs consti- rute the great sea-otter ground of Alaska, and hither come native hunting parties from Oonalaska on the west. and Belcovski on the north, where they camp on the main island, and venture out in their bidarkies fifteen and twenty miles in every direction to sea. Fires are never built here unless the wind is from the south, and food refuse is never scattered on the beaches. Th3 suffer ings to which the native hunters sub ject themselves every winter on this island, going for many weeks without dres, even for cooking, with the ther mometer down to zero In a northerly gale of wind, are better imagined than described; while the various shrewd and skilful artifices by which they out wit the otter in capturing it, would make a lengthy chapter if fully enumer ated, for this animal, of all wild ani mals, seems to be possessed of the great est aversion to or dread of the presence or even the proximity of man. The natives, when they go from Oonalaska to Sannack on a hunting trip of this character, usually make up a party of from forty to fifty men. They travel ia light skin bidarkies, two men in each, and are gone usually three to four months at a time before returning to their families; they haul their kyacks out from the water every night as they bivoaac along the coast, and sleep in gxles of wind, which are always loaded with rain, sleet and fog, without the least covering, and aimost invariably without a fire. Ab ! rude indeed is the country of the Aleut, but he is as rugged, and the bleak, precipitous islands stamped with his name are all the world to him. He wants no other and he is happy where we would be supremely miserable. Cotton Oooda. The announcement by the President of the Liverpool Chamber of Commerce that the exports of cotton goods from America have increased from $75,000 in 1870 to 2,250,000 in 187G, is of deep im portance to our Eastern manufacturers. Should a general European war break out. an exchange says, It will be in the power of America to acquire almost im mediately a very large proportion of the trade in cotton fabrics both in Eng land and on the Continent. This rapid Increase which already, In times of peace, has averaged 600 per cent, per annum, would be vastly accelerated in case of war. A Bruors Hcadachb. and all the nncnmf rta. ble sym, lomai-compaiiyingalilsordereil Liver, may be speedily go Vn rkl of Ly the use of Dr. Jayne's banaUvs puis. . DOMESTIC. Th Laws of Halth. Clothing Is essential to protect the body from heat and cold. Different qualities are suited to diflerent seasons and climates, and are chiefly connected with the relations of fabrics to heat and moisture. In cold weather the object is to prevent the loss of beat from the body, by conduction and evaporation ; in warm weather the aim is to promote evaporation, iience we must wear non-conductors and slow absorbers in winter, and free conduc tors and ready absorbers in summer. The fabrics must be selected with this object in view. As far as consistent. clothing should be light, durable and readily cleansed. Linen fabric is a good conductor, and hence favors the escape of animal beat. It also absorbs moisture from the surface of the body rapidly, and gives it off again to the external air. by evaporation, luis process pro duces rapid cooling, even in hot weather. But linen should never be used next to the skin, under any cir cumstances, as it has no power to pre vent sudden chills. Cotton is a poorer conductor of heat than linen, and hence warmer. It does not so readily absorb moisture, and therefore is safer for under garments. Cotton ranks next to linen as a fabric for summer wear. It is a much better absorber of moisture and conductor of heat than either silk or wool. Woolen fabrics are coarse and porous, detaining within their meshes a large amount of air. Hence they are slow conductors of heat. Woolens also possess a great capacity for moisture, though they receive and discharge it very slowly. This is a valuable quality in articles of clothing. Woolen is much better protection against heat than either linen or cotton and much warmer when wet. Its great power to absorb moisture is a highly important property, as it regulates evaporation iroin the surface or the oouy, aud pre. vents too great loss of animal heat. As au equalizer of the temperature aud protector against sudden chins, woolen fabrics are suiterior to all others, aid should be constantly worn next the skin. The color of clothing is Important only in relation to solar heat. Black cloth absorbs the heat or the sun, and white cloth reflects it. But with the heat of the stove the color makes no difference. The absorbing powers of the garment to the sunlight decreases as the shade grows brighter, and in this order, black, blue, green, yellow, white The dark colored materials absorb more moisture than the light colored, and black absorbs nearly as much again. But alter all more depends upon the manner of dressing than the material used. The poorer materials, properly worn, are better thau the best liu properly put on. As 1 have said, cloth ing should be light. Weight does not imply warmth, and often it becomes a source ot great discomfort, Several layers of light, loose fitting garments are safer than a few layers of heavy clothing. The imprisoned air more than the material secures warmth and hence the number of layers more than the thickness of one layer. Again loose clothing is warmer than that which fits the body closely. Besides, the tight fitting obstructs the circulation, restricts tne natural motions and healthy action of the parts affected. To Ebo.mzc Wood. Mix up a strong staiu of copperas and extract or log wood, about equal parts; add powdered nut-gall, one-fourth part; stain wood with solution, dry, rub down well, oil; then use rrencli polish, made tolerably dark with indigo or liuely-powdered stone blue. Salvb for Chappkd Hands. Two parts fresh lard, one part white piue pitch, melted together; very beaiing. Striving to be an Aator During a theatrical trial in Philadel phia in 1S65, brought by an actor named Sherry, against the management of the Chestnut Street Theatre, many amusing incidents ocenrred. It was a hot day, and the court room was crowded by members of the dramatic profession. The counsel for the plaintiff was Mr. T. J. Worrell, formerly au actor, with a ponderous bass voice; the defence was represented by Mr. Lucas Hirst, an eccentric gentleman with a voice like that of Stuart Robson, very high and all squeak ; and the "I object" of one, and "We appeal" of the other, never failed to produce a most hearty laugh. In fact, the entire trial was more of a comedy than a reality. Among the many witnesses called to sustain the actor was Mr. Sam Hem pie- a popular low comedian. After taking the witness stand, the necessary oath, and answering to the questions. "Your name f " "Your profession t " Sam spoke out boldly, "An actor." In an instant, as if by magic, from among a knot of actors the words. "Perjury ! perjury !" was uttered with so much emphasis that order had to be called. This inci lent so disconcerted Hemple that it was with the greatest difficulty he gave the balance of his testimony. The next witness called was Mr. Ed- Tarr. Ed. walked up and kissed the book. "Your name?" "Your profes sion T" Tarr, not willing to be caught as Hemple had been, and giving a sly look at the party or actors spoke out : "Sir I am striving to be an actor." This was too much. There was a general roar, in which counsel, judge, ury, and all joined and it was several minutes before order was resumed. The sanctified soul enjoys Christ as a delicious feast; the carnal professor onlv desires to hide in Him from the wrath to come. The Crista. Tvliat think von would be the remit if the earfi ebonld stop pinning; around the sun f w tit too. ever near a larva and intricate ma culae when oue of ita wheel ircma clogged or broken near enough to bear Ibe grating, jsmng clash, the sudden, deafening crash ? AitruDmkn iMDre m that prtciseiv aimiiar effects. oulv on an inconceivable grander scale. would be pr duced if our earth oue of the wheea in the univeree-tuacuine should sud denly ceaao ita revolutions. In otiit r words, ther ' would te a gent ral clash aud crash of ate litem, plan. U aud systems. What wt t rat financial citses are due loimlir cuwa Due of ihe wbtels in the ti nance n.achiu tx conies clOKged, perhaps r Littered. The terrible Wall a.rfM-t crau which follows ia communicate J to every part of the fiuat-cial jnet-hanutm of the count i t. Bat analogies do Lot atop here. There ia that other mechanism, the most in tricate of ail sometimes called an organism because it generates ita own forces the hu man machiue. When one of its member fana to p.rform ita office, the whwle svaUm is thrown into dkoider. Memters be lore oon side red onsmailabie, break cewn uudex the utu.al.uial prcsauro. The shock cornea, and u ter prostration ia the r cu t. Reparation can omy be tff.cted br the restoration of the pa red par. aud the re-adiuauuent of it leveia, ihe physical forces. Tnere is oue part of the machine mora 1 able to dtsoider than any ether the liter the great balance-win el ol the machine. The hv. r beins the great der n at ns or blood-ckaneing f-rgan of the eys'em set it a work and the loud corruptions wh-ch geudir in the Hood, and rot out, as it were, the ma chinery of life, are gradually xiel.ed from the a tern, if or this purpose Dr. P.erce a tio ueu Medical D fCOTerr, used daily, and Ir. rwice I'.eai-arjt furgatire relle'a, taken in t rr small do. ars (.re-cminent j the art. cJte needed The; cure ever kind of humor from the worst scrofula to the couimcn pimple, blotch or eruption. Greai eating ulnars kin.Ur hi at nnder their mighty cnraUT indue nc. Virulent blood poisous that lurk in the system are by them robbed of their t. Tiers, aud by their perse enug and aomewha pro .act d Ore tlu moet tan ed miuw maj be com- pl tety reuvatal aud buut up anew. Euhurteil giauds, tun or aud awe.iiuga dwindle away and disappear unuef th liirina .ce of tu se Kraal rsBOiventa. HUMOROUS. Asx the Old Won. A gentleman traveling out west relates the following : Kidine horseback just at night through the woods In Signor county, Michigan, I came Into the clearing; in the middle cf which stood a log house with Its owner sitting in the door smoking his pipe. Stoppiug my horse before biro, the follow; ing conversation ensued : "Good evening, sir," said i. "Good eveninir." "Can I get a glass of milk to drink?" "Well. 1 don't know. Ask the old woman." By this time bis wife was standing by his side. "Oh, yes," said she, "of course you can." While drinkintr it I asked : "Do you thing we are going to have a storm r" "Well, I really don't know. Ask the old woman she can tell." "I guesa we shall get one right away," she said. Again 1 asked : "How much land have you got cleared here?" "Well, I really don't know. Ask the old woman she knows." "About eighteen acres," she replied. Just then a troop of children came running and shouting around tiie corner of the shanty. "All these your children?" said I. "Don't know. Ask the old woman- she knows." 1 did not wait to hear her re pi v. but drew up the reins and left immediately. A Setter. A raw boy coming into a priuling office to learn the business, the foreman asked the question : Have you ever set any t meaning type of course. "Set? reckon I kin; haven't I set all our old hens; and diJn't every one on 'em hatch out every egg put under 'em except old speckle, that went off and left her nest consarn her old plctur!" "You'll do," said the foreman. "I don't want you to set hens, but to set at that stand." "Waal that's quare; you want me to set at a stand, like them set of feiler pickin' up them little jiguinarecs, do you ! Waal, here goes." John went to work, and learnt his "letters" at the case, until he could cotu poe and punctuate correctly so that he is now a first-rate tetter aud pointer. "What's this bamp. Doctor?" in quired a chap who had dropped in at a country phrenologist s. What s this bump here on the riht side?" "This! ah." replied the 1'rofessor, a he discovered a iu.up atmut the size of a hen's egg over the right ear ; "this, I should say, indicated a fondness for the Iraiiscendeutal, a love for the Sublime, a regard for ' "Hold up, Doctor," said the visitor, hold up. Don't diagnostic tie any further. I raised that bump on your sidewalk not five minutes ago." A Little "Pop." "How nicely this corn pops," observed he, as they sat eating it together by the tire. i cs, replied she, holding down her head, "it's got over being green." or course he could n 't stand such an inference as that, and might soon have been seen "nopping" himself, aud watching the glad lig.it in her eyes as she blushingly said: "Go ask 'poppy " "How much for that piano?" asked a customer at an auction shop the other day. "t ifty dollars, twenty per cent, off. was the reply. l u take it then," said the other. counting out two twenty dollar bills, two twenties make forte.-' Tbc young lady who fincied cueum bers grew in slices, has recently been married to the young gentleman who sent over to ht. Petersburg a large cargo of soap-stones for cleaning the steppes of K jssia. 'Mr dear." said a husband In start ling tones, after awaking his wife in the night, "J have swallowed a dose of strychnine!" "Well, then, do for gootluess sake lie still, or it may come up. ' Thk Bologna sausage is said to be the most economical food procurable. A sausage can be eaten for supper, ad it will just be 'in to digest iu season to answer for breakfast. Tbk Paris beliesdress largely in wine color, so that the young men will be more certain to drink in their loveliness The man who promised to get his boys some new skates this winter, has siuce concluded to "let 'em slide." What is the difference between a hill and a pill ? One is hard to get up. and the other is hard to get down. Fiplanatlon ot a Mysterious Occurrence, An Englishman went into a church in Rome the other day, and as a service was going on he sat quietly down, plac ing his bat on the ground beside him. After waiting a little while, and as there seemed no immediate prospect of the ceremony coming to an end, he thonght he would go, and reached for his bat, but was stopped by an unseen arm which grasped him from behind. Think ing that probably some custodian of the church wished him to remain till the conclusion of the service he azaiu waited. Presently he again thought of going, again reached for his hat, and again the unseen arm firmly prevented him. Con vinced that the service was really some important one which his leaving would disturb, the Englishman again waited for about a quarter of an hour. At the explratiou of that time he determined to depart, in spite of etiquette. So he reached for his hat. Again the hand grasped him, but as he determinedly resisted bis detaining efforts a voice be hind him exclaimed in English: "I beg your pardon, but this is my hat you are taking." And this was fact. Our nero nau ueen detained all this time because each time he wished to go he had reached in mistake for the hut of another stranger, placed iu close prox imity to his own. ' About (xoveroor. There are but five Slates iu the Union where the Chief Magistrate is elected annually. They are as follows, with the amount of salary appended : Maine. salary $2,600; Ma-sachusetti, $3,000; Jlichtgan, $1,000; Xew Hamoshire. si.ovw; Khoue Island, $1,000. The fol lowing btates have terms of two years: Alabama, salary $3,000; Colorado, : Connecticut, $2 000; Iowa;$3,000; Kan sas, $3,000; Minnesota, $3,000; Xehras ka,$2,500; Nevada, $6,000; Xew York. $10,000; Ohio, $4 000; South Carolina, $3,5U0 ; Ten nessee, $4,010 ; Texas $,000 ; Vermont, $1,000; Wisconsin. $5,000. The following have terinsof three years : Xew Jersey, salary $,00; Pennsyl vania, $10,000. The following have four-year terms : Arkansas, salary $3,500 California, $6,000; Delaware, $2,f!00; Florida, $3,509; Georgia, $4 000; Illinois, $6,000; Indiana, $3,000; Loosi- ana, $S,C00; Kentucky, $5,000; Mary land, 4,500; Mississippi, Missouri, $5,000 North Carolina. $o,000; Oregon $! 600; Virginia, $5,000; West Virginia, 2,7'jO. etkera. Mothers. Hotbera. Don't fail to procure MBA W1NSLOW8 SOOTHING 8VBCP for all disease 0f teeth ing in children, it relieve tha child from pain, eorea wind coho. regulate the bowels, and by giving relief and health to the child, pves rest to th mother. That Terrible Seoartf Fever anl ague, and ita congener, bUionsre muent, beaiuew affect.ooa of the Btotnacd hrer an i bowels. pioduceJ by miaamatie air and water, are both eradicated an J pi evented by the une of Host, tier Stomach Utters, a purely vegetable iair, indorsed by physi cians, and more exteuaiely ned as a rem!? for ihe abov e.a of disorders, aa weil a tor manr others, than any medicine of the age. A laugui l circulation, a torpid stale of th. hver, a want vital at annua, are cood.tioue peculiarlv favorab.e to malarial disease They are, bowev.r. urely remejie-l by the great FrevenUve. which, by invigorating the aratam and endowing: it with regularity a well as vigor, provide it with a resin ant power which enables it to withstand dUotderr not only of a malarial type, bat a host of otfae s to which feeble and ill regulated eye tema are subject. The bitten are a aafe a well aa searching eradicant and have widely superseded that dangerous drag, quinine, which palhate bat doe not eradicate nialax-a Scheack'a Seaweed Tonic. This ncelJeal remtuy contains no injurious drug, a d dots tot cuwvroe with the moat delicate atomic u 1 to use in case of JJebd ty. Dyspepsia aud Indigestion will oe attended by the most btnelk-ial results. for a le by all Droggu-t. Beautiful Spring Hosiery. It ia really wonderful how cheap any one ran now purchase Uau.'ifnl aud good hosiery. Oue of the most reliable house who aed thir class of g ods is that of B. F. Itowee. No. 725 Chestnut street Pbihvielpb a. This ia the fir.t spring season they have sold hosiery, consequent y tha r stock contain ouly new tood. They have but one pnee. and any person einding money or orders o them car dep n I upou hai.n; ai good ho.ery for the l rice as can be bought in this country. Special bargains in laii a aud chJdrcna plain and fancy hose. Rheumatism osneklj Cored. "Dnranes Rheumatio Kerned." tha great Internal JaVdirine. will uos. lively cure any cie of rheumatism ou t te fa e of the earth. Price ill a bottle, s.x bottles i So.d by all Drug vitt. Send for riicular to Helpenatine fc Bcnt:ey, lmi-gi.ts, Washington, i. C Skin Diseases. All those troublesome scaly, itching pimply. blot.-hr. htiuud eruptions of the akin, d no.o iuated XWrVr. Eryxiprlas. Acme, etc, that are so aKaiglitly aud annoying, are quickly an 1 eiTectnaJly cured br the simple application of Uietk'ICi Tftter OinJinmt, a reru -Ur that has proved iisvlf to possena wooderful healing powers, curiug hnndr da of cases that ha 1 re swied all other treatment, even that of the oest professional talent of the coantry. It only uaeds a tr.al to prove iu virtues. Sold 51 euts per box ; sent by mail for 60 cu. Ji.h.hsto. lloixowiT A Co.. 602 Arch at.. Phila, dr. r. w. nraii i i:li:rt a rn tv W ail a. al LLS r r-ir-. .vfrlT to cur- sick liam:ft, -r.ua Hra.lai:h-, lyp-tic Hmulach-. Mearalais. Nerv'u4Br sod Sleepl'-aeaeea, ami will car any cm.. Pric- Me.. po.tac live. So;.l by al lruita. OKc , a. auw at halUMura ELV. 0. T. YYALavEK SITS: FmoTTDirsCK, R. L, It Transit Street. H. R. STSVK.KS. Esq, I teel bound to espre s with my signature the h'.,(b va.ue 1 pla e upua your Vn.aTt.Na My fain.lv have us-d t for the hist two ears. In nervous debility It Is Invaluable, anil I recnin mend it to all who may need an uvlorauci;. reaovatln. toa.c O. T. WALKER. Formerly Pastor of BowdJ a-square Church, b stoo. Vegetlne is Sold by all Druggists. IIium aaisweruag ast Advertisement will confer a favor upon the Advertiser and the Publ iaher by stating that they saw the adver tisement In this toamal (namlnr the paper MATTHEWS' GARDEN SEED DRILL. Th;a drill ia very e mplct ia .11 its air&aj.vincnta u-d is tit Only Drill M in si Mctfor With Names of different seed thereof Price $12 00. LIDKRAL MCorXT TO TUE TRADE. DAVID LAXDKETH & SONS SOLE ACEST". 31 and 33 South Sixth St, Phi lad's. PAGENIS WANTED FOR THE ICTORIAL HISTORYoftdeWORLD ft tit:iTM C"? fin hifrfrM TiyiTtnri ftr! Is if.i..al'ic-lniin jr, and i I mor eniit Hi--.. ry f ih W..rl 1 rrr t'.blHhl. It f M eht. S-nl f-T iif imfn pac n4 Ttr trni to Az uta. on-l - wbj it ! faster tUm -vd; trfher Ji 4.tuxaL PrvLTsntTfa Co., Phnsttf'tphift, lhu an!l tir llf TBtVri.Li:R. Tunnw Hll AnAnjAfV I In r-.ni.i .x? if wnm: ftrnlTS. If yu vin iu I; nappy -tet.4 u iai.iKI COtA) wmy, --rav.. now V.HE1 WUEKE TO GET A FARE SEND FOR OUR CATALO SUE. 1.II.WYMAN&CO. 20 (-- Seventh Htreet. PHILADELPHIA. Guld Mines and Lands Coal OOI.D MIXES AND LANDS COAL Slot KB S..1.H. OIL LKD COMPMteOKOANIZKD, 8TO.NE IKON MIMN.I AtiaNCl. COFPKU MtKBLB MS. MVesrU bt. ilMK coal PanuiLrma. MliA MAUL AU.WlMi.SiCa GTPaL'M PIANOS? It "tall lHr tfMH mlT ' ftrl ITM. VMltl . MU J . W MtunC 4 SOTIICK WITS KMH OX THCNTiiD. I V " lUb! mrt-r-i. atliA4lv tr.ttii ritfuu.atiiu fnr rr thr y-nr. ftndi"-T iv rHif frt.m nnyihinir. 1 oon .-tt!.i lift, ll KK ! t; y iv-FY S.IFT. by which I wm eniirl rtarrsj. .rl r-eoo.mtil it to nian, Trii' k I. Phla. Kir- ipartm-..!. All wti (rntl'T I nun that i. rrihit iIim-ium M Hart. I ciTtiiy tht ih- jta..v st -it-iii nt i nttrrly eor- isatiu me-. isirui. ultra rutice LMtrt. EGETAB LE E-81.00. u 20 PAPERS GARDE SEEDI 105. liL Oil IIU r. 32 - - OK - 5C. - QUALITY UNSURPASSED ! r YOl K MKKl HAN T DO Mi Nof KKtP Til EM WRITE FOR THEM ! Ytar OntVe tW .n sa-rtmtnt mt - Ik .-niK tsali. will b- nil!, rm P-a. B-ai asifl t'tm -srv'if-.. -sci I n tr paper MUM k vilt-ti fr ptMtax. WUiat ,(uU The i"ti-1 I ;i. uiiuii a an .Tti itruw- rj in Am nca. rillLADCLrHIA. Compare These witk Commissioned Seeds ! 10 l.iHy P rtn.iti f Art ) . Acnt's OUII1IB, IVe. ASH lO., Atrtt. I O-ettMUU, .1 F Collections FLOWER-SEEDS. a rto.j. c. Anwnt, Iree bloomers.. . 7 3 F v rnre JasjM.i i ( F ..ri.. i . ASOKTVfKTir AMrn 12 vsr . fUlW.. 1 2 r., aTiwfcai . mm DrvjM.aa.ji v nr. . -. w-aw a j riOISJlaM var ), e ... r sesarte. p-r a,rtmnt, R II at.t. VEGETABLE SEEDS ? 1 vreaai.v Vri-ii. o lli. lsMllns; aorta. H,M. CotlitMsoDS of tarc'T aoantiti t, , s u 'JI. Any of tb- above collection, tent PRKR bV nt.la.on rro-ipcnf pric-. C 4LI..D t Klor 1-71 v-v irtertrnctiiin. MniltU re, lltl t(V A. DRF.CR, SrWunanand JTluriat. Lnrk !.. m. vt,.i. tsTtpiUaa. Pa. yr aaaaal ratfatocw mt Teweiable snaal """ r:kianra.ii,.wi.lb m t Kkb. Iu all who aaolv. n.t. ..j . .B s4 t wrir for 11. I otT-r on of rh lars-at ro.ltl..u,,,f -x-al.lrMrH a.r a. nt on br any ad buss ia Aro-rK-a. a Uraa , rtm. ot Wb mm IP'lldUBIIIIMl r.r... J J . - rnlnralionDa:liaackaa.' AU mrrd wamn'iH ... I fcolh Mi ami trw to n.m ; sr far, lhal ikonltl it siToih-rwiii. I will r-fiil the fU-T aratia. Aw varetawleaasapimBtw- a. ik. ... ... i . XT? "i !". r.l vtu.h. Plimo t iil4a, Mar- Dlrrvl sbnacm. Mexican O-rn. 1 otl-r Miml new imi araaon, an.1 In Vila tha aatr.na..f all whuareaniiooatohai rh-ir SE-d directly trura In gruwer, fresh, Iraa, anil of tha Terr tar utraia. JAMES H.J.URCtioKY. aiarDienmul. M.tan. $10 i $1000 inveetea in Wail street Mocks, makes fortruea every month. Book aawi thing-. . Address B AXTKK acoIBaaixi NATURE kV.EDi:.V T"f OattT BiPBB rVmrtr. f R. R. R. DYSENTERY, CHOLERA MORBUS, FEVER AX DAGCK, CD AID AMD raMVIMlllt BY Railway's Read j ReiieC RHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA, DIFTHERIA, INFLUENZA, BORE THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATUUso, gXLXiviD ci a raw McrcTva bv Railway's Ready ReiieC BOWEL COHEIAIHTS. tVooaenen. riarrftoia. Obo era MorMr, or ri, fol Llsraark-e frum la- bow a ar- ai. ippru ia H.ie a or tw.aiy minutes br uulr c Ki,U.-, t:eal) He lrt. So lOnk-estlon or Inflanina on. re w aJta-ne o- laaaituZe, wlal fuUuw la u M Ui B. B. Belief: ACHES AND PAINS. far heart-ft, whether sick or --nim ; rh- a tpftiiam lumiao. I a! lis and w-an e- 1q ta back, aplh ur kidue)s; pains aruuod u iter ptrnrby. swel Intra of he join l a. pelD lath bowe a, he n burn and pains of ail kliijj. Ka.V w y a Kealy relief will air n mmeti..te eaua, and It continue use for a few da aflou a permanent cure. Price 3 ceiita. Dr. Mufi Esinlafcir PiEs, perfect It tantelena, eletrantly eoated, for the ;ure of al diaurdfr of the stomach, liver, bnw. It, kidneys, bladder, nervous dl-ea'. hrv vhe. conslipaU' n, tnd'.t-stion, dyxrx-twla. nil. tousmas. bll ous fever, lOOamnia'lon of thettow. Is, p lea, and all deran ementa of the In'ernal n-.t-n. nunted to enact a positive cor, mci s cents per box. DR. RADWAY'S Sarsaparillian Resolvent The Great Blood Purifier, FOB TEX CCBX OP CHEOJUC DIMASB. SCROFULA OR SYPHILITIC, HEB. EDITARY or CONTAGIOUS, BB IT BXATZD DC TUB A-Ieala or Serve. CORRUPTING THE SOLIDS AND VITIATING THE FLUIDS. Ch ontc Rneomatlsm. "crofnt. GTan4tit (weillng-. Hacking Ury couch. Carx-eroua Ailee. (ions, hyphilitlc Cnmplaijia. Bleeiiinir ot lbs Lui.rra, Pyspepita. Wairr Brash. Tic LMor-ux, White Swelling. Tumor , Vlcers. ma a id U.a Daraaes. Mercurial lueaA Female Coujpialnia, Bout. Dropsy, Bait Kheuia. BronchiUa, cot itmpUoa. Liver Ccaplaiut, tic. - " Hot owry am the i'r!painian Resolvent e ml all remedial srnia In the cure uf t aroaw, rtifuloua Constitutional, and Sals pueaaa. but It la U only positive cure (or Kidney and' Gladder Complaints, Prtnary "nd Womb Disease Gravel. Diabetes. Drop y. Pic-ppeve of Water. Inoonllneuce of L'rli e. HrVli 1 Disease. Al umlnarla and In all rases where tbe-e are brick-dust dm-osns. or lb eater la tnlCK, cloudy, mixed wlin substances like the white or an e?y. or threads like wn.ie silk, or there to a morWi. dark, b li- us . ppeir Mice and whir bone-dust denosll. and wnea there la ptlcainir, burning sensation w .t-s psNSlnK water, and pain In the srnal- of the iia.'k and rine the Iota, boad by druggists, l a.i s 0KB DoLULB. Of Ten Year' Growth DR.RiDWAt'S RhUD: HAVE HAD AS OVARIAN TU MOR IX THE OVARIES AXD BOW ELS FOR TEX YEA US. An Assoa. Dec IT, lira Da. Radwav: That others may be benelltrd I make this statement: 1 hav had at O.ar an Tumor tn the ovsii and bowels tor ten years, 1 trvd tne be t pny llt lans of this place and others w thout any benent. It was rowing at such rapidity that I sould not have lived mu h lonirer. A mend of Bine Induced me to try Had way 'a R medics. 1 sad not much faith In them, but finally, arter ouch deliberau n. I tried them. 1 feel neifeclly well, and my heart Is full rrattiudetoGodfoTth.sbelpla my deep amo tion. To you, sir, and your wonderful medicine, I feel deeply Indented, and my prayer Is that It may be as much ol a blessing to others as it na been to me. (feigned) Mas. B C. Bisbiks. Mrs. Blbblns,wbo makes the above cor Incite, to th'- person for whom 1 requested you to -etl u edlrfne In June 1S. The medicines abo stated ere bought of me. with the exception of what was sent to her by you 1 my sav tha her stalament Is correct without a quail ncaUoa. (signed) 1 s. Laacs. Dmfrelst snd Chemft, Ann Arbor. Mich. This may certify tha, Mrs. Bibblna. who make the above certificate. Is and has been for niany years well known to s, and the fact there a stated are undoubtedly aiid undeniably correct. Any one who knows Mrs. Biobina will beus. aer atatament. (signed) BiHJ. D. Cuctbm. Mav . ror, Mast cociia, K B. t to. OL BAU?AI & CO 32 fiTrci St, w.T. I GflfflnonDa Oxygea Tr eatmest riR the rvnr. or all uronic pisi line. Il-.n si. b. Kellr. M. C. aa.1 sui olln-r. -f i.nr rn iihi.1 ami neat Cltixetta. etHl t"r .ar Brochiirr. 1 pp. auultfil rrea. TaaBv A Para. lll:Uirnl t., Phila Pa 0. .rkn.A.M.M M. li. K. fa.V.. .. it U 44 BAROMETERS, Opera G'aaaea. Telaaensea. sy Otaaae. Trmosr. Mara, 3SXIS. I-', Ktet;laa-.4. A I bafcAILl KkDiCklr run I?. 1C. t J. uioii:. Manufncrnrlnir Opticians. Kl CIlkSTNL r T PUILA. fllnatraterl sric ratal. n of Hal aura aiailad IS sav adiiraaa OS recaipl uf lUra atsmpa. ESTABLISHED 1849. S. M. PETTENGILL & CP , ADVERTISING AGENTS, 37 Par Row, New York. 701 Ctiastnat Strtwt, PluiMphia, rd 10 Stat Strtwt. Bosto. Eeceite Advertisementa for Mlrttv 1st all th 11mppn miMt rHoJlr, "F pn m ( i- . 4m u rcBtumi, tut IT aATKA. ADVICE rJS, medium), : br bt mnn-r a to tk rmc jwltetua !vr l-r tMTi fllsW etoanaT It. mf.i a I wniUBc ttkM will promof ib mcc of U tivrrtir. tavnBt im -wuf ifiEaU f wpn torwtuw r tbtvn iN 5-w-fM.pasr krri,4iU:Al, wili Iw f f wftnlva f charir all w.r eaiHivr PivJi- OUR 1 ! dou ia - ..(- af air 1 bB on-ifrt r f e'inirv,rowii min tha bhI fur- fchlB WlM.Blfk WUh tkwl BBC BCs.MtWl ABsNsair- tmm. TPrrn is mictttvi OVAHIfllt TUMOR ail street, aew Tor.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers