AGRICULTURE. Shelter With Eveborkens. Heltc w screens to protect from the sweep of winter wind? ma? be formed in several different wars. The simplest of course i the single'llne of trees, for which the Norway spruce is the best. The distance n j rt m-ill virv with the intended object. II it is desired to iorm a screen mwu miwLriu hpicrht. the trees are to at be ct nnur tnimthpr. nr Wlthill tWO Or th re feet. If two and a half feet high when au etui tiiA Kiirk i well done, and the line of trees is kept well cultivated, they will form a goon tow screen Three or four years, and in six years w'll lui In dira At tiflMtl IWt lllfrl. ai 1U it , am) . . '. . .I! with almost wiprTvious loiiaur as m-.i as six or eight feet. By cutting back yearly (not i-hearing) it is easily kept within these dimensions. Large seroens for sheltering orchards and farm fields may be in the form of belts three or lour rods wiile, and they will possess the ad ditional advantage of ultimately yield ing valuable timber. The Norway sprune may occupy the first row, Aus trian pine the second, then arbor vita? aiid Scotch pine, with one or two rows of chestnut, oak or black walnut. The evergreens may be set ten or fifteen feet apart; the deciduous tree nearly the same, but the distance should vary with the intended purpose. If for or namental etiect give plenty of space, so that the trees may branch out freely, and present round, rich, full heads; II lor shelter and timber more ef peciaily, plant nearer, that the trees may run up straight, and furnish clear, even, up right stems. Cokn Meal and Wheat Brax. if a ton of corn meal is worth f 20 for feed ing dairy cows or fattening stock, what is the value of a ton of wheat bran for the same pnrose? The answer to this Question deix-nds verv much upon the manner of using the two articles. If they are to be fed separately, the oran is not worth much, if any more, than the rn meal. But if they are to be mixed togell.er and fed to milch cows, the bran is worth the most ty ao nit titty per cent, of the excess in the bulk of the tirn. and bran beiug more than twice as bulky as the meal, the differ ence in favor of the bran will be iu the neighborhood of to or t6 per ton. 1 mean by this that two quarts of corn meal and three quarts of bran, given at one feed, will produce quite as good re cti U as four quarts of clear corn meal ; and. as the three quarts of bran will weigh about two-th'rds as much as the two quarts of meal, the difference in favor of the bran is fully $5 per ton. I make this difference when fed to milch cows, out if fed to steers for beef 1 con siiler the proportions should be differ ent, lhat is, three quarts or meal sholud be mixed with two quart of bran to produce the best results. But one of the most valuable uses to which coarse w heat bran can be put, is to feed it to laying In ns about once a day, changing it on alternate days from the morning to the noon or evening feed, by mixing it with warm water or with milk. It has been found that hens fed about once a day on w et bran, and once a day on corn or oats, will lay many more eggs in a given time than if fed entirely on one kind of feed; therefore, bran for that kind ot stock is worth fully 2i per cent, more than corn or cornmeal. But if the bran is to be the only feed, then the corn meal would be the more valu able. Thisti.es require radical treatment to remove them, and so do Boils and Pim ples. Ir. Bull s Blood Mixture is radical blood searcher, curing all skin eruptions. Makeetino Vegetables. In market- ii g vegetables remember that much de iends upon the attractiveness of their appearance. IHn t heap them in aeon' fused mass, but arrange garden stuff so that its good quality shall be apparent. Oftentimes the best selections carried to market ty themselves w ill bring more than the whole crop, goo-I, baj and in' different, indiscriminately thrown to gether. A box of berries, each berry of nearly uniform size and appearance, will sell more readily and lor a better price, than the box which gives a con fused look to the berries. The good marketer studies how to please his cn tomers, and doesn't grudge a little care in sorting or wa-liing, in order that his w ares shall show the best they are capa ble of. Many farmers seem to think there is MHi eihiug gained by getting trusted lor whatever they have to buy. .Many farmers, laboring under this delusion, allow their grocery bills to run unset tied for years, also their blacksmith's bills, and always owe for their agricul tural machinery and tools. Never did men make greater mistakes. There is probably no one thing that operates so ti uch to keep farmers behindhand and lu straitened circumstances as the habit of gett'ng trusted for what they buy. It is a good rule to pay when you buy, and if you cannot do so then, go with out until you can pay. This makes the independent farmer, while the habit of getting trusted makes the farmer the most dependent man in the community a slave, In fact, to all other classes. Winter Flowers in France. The business of raising roses in win ter is carried on sometimes by selling them in pots and sometimes as cut flow ers. In the former case the potted plants are kept in beds in the garden, and then at the right time they are placed in hot-bed frames. When the buds begin to open the boxes are sur rounded with fermenting compost, that s stirred up oncea fortnight. Precise ly forty days are necessary beforC the buds become sufficiently full for mark et. The trees v lik h furnish the roses to be cut are planted in rich earth and in green-houses. They are kept close to the glass and heated with hot water. Light and ventilation are no less indis ensable than heat for both the perfec tion of their forms and the brilliancy of their colors. These roses are chosen from the most varied kinds. They are the :! I I!ii, with flowers of a bright red ; the Queen of the Isles, of a carna tion color; Jules Margotin, f a bright cherry color; Madam Boll, a brilliant pink, and a certain number of tea roses. They flourish throughout the entire winter, and the flowers are cut almost daily. The lily of the valley in full flower is a German importation, which for the last ten years has been acclimated at Paris. There is no more graceful orna ment for a parlor than this cluster ot suit in-like leaves, from which emerge hundreds of little rose-colored stalks, with their bunches of little bells of so pure a white and so beautiful a perfume. The principal place for the production of these lilies is near Beaumont-sur-Oise in the greenhouses of Pcrsau, an estab lishment recently founded, but which ca-j compare with the great nursuries for the cultivation of ornamental shrubs and flowers, of which Holland had a specialty up to the present. The for cing of lilies of the valley Is carried on there upon a vast scale. Strange to say Nice the garden of flowers, monopolizes almost as many lilies of the valley as Paris. It is true that they come from the South in pots, but they return there again, after a long voyage, in the form of bouquets encased iu violets. Kkkf it rw ma nocsE that It may te promptly aliuiuisiepti La ail ouddeu attacks or c holera Morbus, t ramps, D.aribiKa, colic or any slml Jar affe Hon for wlilcli lr. JayaeS carminative , Balsam la aa effectual remedy. At tnls season or tne year, every lamlly will Had It a useful aad ueueeaary curative. SCIENTIFIC. Friction of Steam Engines. The dlffi culties which lie in the way of ascer taining, by actual experiment, what the fractional resistance of an engine is, are very great, and to this cause, says the London Engineer, is to be attributed the greater portion of the existing ignora nee of the subject. The obstacles in the way, as cited by this journal, are of two kinds it being in the first place, very difficult to put a dynamometer or brake on large engines whereby to ascertain their duty ; and, in the second place, the amount of friction varies not only in different engines, but in the same engines, in a very extraordinary way, As regards the first named, it is practicable in the case of pumping engines t ascertain precisely how many foot pounds cf work an engine actually gives out in the sh ipe of useful effect, while the indicator shows the work done in the piston ; but from thee data engine friction cannot be calculated exactly, as such calculations are com plicated by the greater or less efficiency of the pumps. It is possible that nothing can be more deceptive than the results obtained from pumping engines, and they are therefore rejected by engineers in deciding questions of engine friction. Practically, therefore, the test most generally available is the indicator, used when the engine is light and when it is loaded ; but diagrams taken thus do not account for the extra f riction due to the performance of work, no invest! gation of the qualities of an engine being complete unless the dynamometer as well as the Indicator Is used, Eftct of Suit on MttaU.'Th forging and tempering of iron or steel is found to be rendered much more effective, ac cording to recent experiments in Prussia, by dipping the metal in fused salt the process being also well adapted for annealing steel, without the oxida tion of the surface, if the metal be rusted, it is to remain some time in the bath, and borax can with good effect be mixed with the salt. It is found that metal subjected to such an immersion is peculiarly susceptible to galvanic de positions, so as to be easily coated witn Conner, zinc, tin, nickel, silver, etc.: for iron in the spongy or powdered state, too, as obtained from the reduc tion of the ores, such a suit bam is specially adapted, as it augments the combination of the particles, oy render ing their surfaces free from impurities. To prepare the bath for an applcation like the above, the salt is fused in a pudding furnace, and the Iron sponge, with the addition of a flux, added in small quantities so as not to vitrify the salt; the iron is left in the furnace till the flux has combined with ail the im purities and formed a slag, whereupon the metal is taken out and forged to gether. While in the furnace, the iron is to be constantly covered with salt, so as to prevent oxidation. For the hardening of iron the salt is fused and the object immersed, a small quantity of ferrocyanide of potasa being added from time to time say one or two pounds per one hundred pounds of the iron. In thn latter, the articles thus treated are, according to their different degrees of thickness, permitted to remain from five to thirty minutes, and are then plunged in water containing to one bundled parts, one part ot bvdrocmoric acid, five of wine vinegar and one of salt. Photographing .Sound. Professor Vo- gel, Id a letter to the Pnntograpner, Philadelphia, Pa., says that Konig, at Paris has constructed an apparatus, consisting of a little drum, over which is stretched a very ela-tic skin. A stream of gas let through this drum will burn as usual ; but as soon as a tune (by singing) strikes the skin stretched over the drum, the gas light commences to shake in a wonderful manner; and if we look at it in a rotating mirror, we observe peculiar figures, which change according to the different notes; and by using a burning gas producing light of great chemical effect, we can photo graph these peculiar figures. hat kind of gas w ill answer for this purpose is still an undecided question, but this much is certain, there are in this re spect great problems yet to be solved ; we may succeed, iicrhaps, in photo graphing speeches instead of steno graphing them as usual. It it claimed that the steam hammer lately erected at Woolwich, England, is the largest piece of mechanism of its kind iu all Europe. The weight of the falling portion is nearly forty tons, and its force of Impact is greatly augmented by the use ot steam to drive it down from the top, the augmentation being estimated to equal the lorce represented by allewing the hammer to fall, of its own weight, from a height of eighty feet. It has been allowed a striking fall of fifteen feet three inches. The hammer is 45 feet high, and covers. with its supports, a base of about 120 square feet. Its weight Is about oi)0 tons above the ground, and the iron used iu the foundation below weighs 005 tons. A Peruvian chemist. Dr. A rose in ft no. exhibits an invention at the Paris Ex position which may become a very im portant one for commerce. He bad suc ceeded iu obtaining a magnificent dye for the violet or maro.in ttel.-hcorn of Peru, ami ibis dye is said to impart the color, odor and taste of claret to all light while wines to such a degree that It is imiHtssible to distinguish the colored wine from real claret without being in the least injurious to the health of the consumer. Besides this a number of other uses are mentioned to which this Welslicorn dye can be put. Caoutchouc hardened with umgnela is a new article of industry, and is called oy si. lurpin, its inventor, vegetable ivory. Gambling Extraordinary. A little game has been played in Los Angeles of late which is an immense ad vance upon the primitive card tactics depicted by Bret Uarte, iu his short card Celestial sharper. For something over a month past a heavy poker game has been going on in the card-room at tached to one of our popular saloons. An unprecedented run of luck settled upon the banners of the experts, who were running the game in the interest of the saloon management, or, at least, In the interest of those controlled the card room of the saloon. A number of the most experienced card sharps in Los Angeles settled themselves to un raveling the mystery and to turning the tide of fickle fortune the other way. Still the luck staid with the house, and the confraternity were" worsted to the tune of about $1,500. Now a pro fessional gambler is prepared to en counter a pretty severe run of bad luck, but here was something that put the sagacity of the oldest of them at odds. "Twas ftrange, 'twas passing strange," that no outsider could win a game iu that room, try they ever so bard, but so it was. At last two proficients took possession of the apartment, ostensibly for play, and locked the doors. They at once began a diligent search of the premises and unearthed a regular system of wire telegraphy, by the aid of which a staol pigeon, who saw the cards of the outsiders, telegraphed their hands to the manipulators of the skin game, A flood of light was poured in upon the mysterious run of tack, and curses, both loud and deep, filled the modest apartment. DOMESTIC. Tax iso Cold. ITow shall a person who is sensitive to cold, who take cold whenever a door is opened or a window raised how shall such person acquire that hardihood which enables him to endure exposure and avoid taking cold? In the first place, he should spend a considerable portion of each day out ol doors. He should do this at all seasons of the year and in all kinds of weather Secondly, he should watch with the greatest care the temperature ot the room in which he spend the remainder of his time both the living room and the dormitory. Thirdly, be should each day bathe his chest and neck, and, if he can bear it, his whole body in cold water, and follow this with a vigorous rubbing with a coarse towel. What is called the splash bath is perhaps better than any other for this purpose. It consists simply in dashing water against the body with the hand. This causes a slight shock to the skin, which brings the blood to the surface, wnue it causer an involuntary deep inspiration of air, which expands the lungs and increases the fores of the circulation. This all can be accomplished in a few minutes. and should be followed Immediately by a little brisk exercise In a cold room or in the open air. Of course a person un accustomed to this should not commence in cold weather, but, beginning lu the summer, he will find, as the winter ap proaches, that his ability to endure the bath will increase with the falling ot the thermometer, and that his suscepti bility to the changes or temperature will be greatly diminished. Blaeberrt Win. Here are two re cipes for making blackberry wine, the season for which is now so rapidly ap proaching. Measure your berries and bruise them; to every gallon adding one quart boiling water. Let the mix ture stand twenty-four hours, stirring occasionally ; thee strain off the liquor into a cask, to every gallon adding two pounds of sugar; cork tight and let It stand to the following October, and you will have wine ready for use, without further straining or boiling. Ir. Henkle's way: Take 100 quarts of blackberries, crush them and press out the juice. Then dissolve 110 pounds white sugar in au gallons cold water. Measure the syrup; add the juice, and as much more water as will be required to make iD gallons iu all. If you want to make, a smaller quantity, preserve the above proportions. After putting it iu the cask (one that has recently had whiskey in is preferred), set in the cellar or other cool place with the bung open to the air until Christmas, lhcn stop tightly or bottle it. Polish for Flooks. One pound of beeiwax, one quart of lieuzine the beeswax melted soft, to which add the benzine; put them over a range or stove, the fire closely covered as benzine is highly iuflamin ible; stir together till well mixed. These are the proportions, the quantity must depend upon the space to be covered. Apply to tne noor, first making it clean, and rub in thoroughly. It shows the grain ot the wood, and makes a permanent polish, growing better by use and rubbing in. It is free of dust, and clean, and is not laborious to take care of, twice a year rubbing, and sweeping, so to say, with a broom in a flannel cover. The floor of the Lovre has on it this preparation, and all who have seen it will recall Its smooth anil clean appearance. Water Pkook Blacking. The fol lowing recipe for making a water-proof blacking comes to us highly recom mended : Dissolve one ounce of borax in water, and in this dissolve gum shel'.ac. until it is the consistency of thin paste; add lampblack to color. This makes a cheap and excellent black ing for boots, giving them the polish of new leather. The shellac makes tne boots or shoes almost entirely water proof. Camphor dissolved in alcohol, added to the blacking, makes the leather more pliable and keeps it from crack ing. This is sold at fifty cents tor a small bottle. By making it yourself one dollar will buy materials for a gallon. Tde Pictorial liLvruuv or the Would. puLlwbed by ihe Nat oral i'utiUxUiug Co.. of rimaduiubia. hi. Lous. Cluratto and L tuu. embraces full and authentic accounts of every nation of ancient and modern times, inrlud ini; a complete History of the late War between ltunsia and Turkey, and is compact, easy of reference, and strictly accurate. It contains 12110 large, double-column paes, closely printed, and is embellished witii over f JO fine engravings of historical scenes, pon raits and views of the principal cities of the world, and which are neimiue works of art. There is not a dry page in the book, but it is is faAcii.ating as a romance, and we heartily recommend it to our readers. Raspberry Vinegar The following makes a delicioussummcrdrink by stir ring two or three tablespoonfuls of it Into a tumbler of iced water, r ill a stone jar with ripe berries and cover with pure, strong cider vinegar; let stand five days and then strain through a sieve, pressing outall the juice. Allow one and a half pounds of white sugar o each pint of this juice and boil until the sugar is dissolved, removing any scum which may arise. Take from the fire, bottle and seal. Ripe Tomato Preserves. Seven pounds sound yellow tomatoes and six pounds of sugar, the juice of three large lemons. Peel the tomatoes and let all stand together over night; drain off the syrun and boil it, skimming well ; then put in the tomatoes and boil gently lor twenty minutes; take out the tomatoes with a skimmer and spread on dishes to cool. Boil down the syrup until it thickens; put the preserves in jars and nit up with hot syrup. Raspberry Shri-b. Place red ran- berries in an earthen dish; cover with good cider vinegar not too strong and let it stand twelve hours; strain, and to each pint of juice add one pound of sugar; boil ten minutes, and bottle not. Sikferino will exhibit its presence by the cries of the baby, and should be removed by the prompt use of that highly recommended remedy, Dr. Bull's Baby Syrup. It is free from Opium. Price 25 cts, A bard cement is formed of Iron borings and salt water and a small quantity of sal ammoniac with fresh water. Lemon Tea. Add a few slices of lemon and a little of the juice to tea. Foolish Fellows. The ways of the buffalo as described by travelers in the far west are as st range as those of the Heathen Chinee, if a herd of these animals gets on the north side of a track, it will stand stupidly gazing, though the locomotive passes within a hundred yards of it. But if two miles from the track on the south side, the whole herd is thrown into the wildest commotion. Regard less of consequences, it w ill make for the track, and if the train is in its way, each individual buffalo will go at it with the desperation of despair, plung ing against or between the locomotive and the car. There was notable in stance of this in the winter of 1871-72, when the ponds and small rivers were frozen solid, and the buffalo was forced to the larger rivers for water. The conductors of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad, after having trains ditched twice in a week, learned to have a very decided respect for the idiosyn crasies of the buffalo, and when there was a possibility of striking a herd on the rampage for the north side of the track, stopped the train until it had passed. ? HUMOROUS. She Knew Her Btmrsncss. When Collins went home to dinner Monday, he found the bouse tenantless, the cook- stove cold, and there was lonesome look about that part of the Monday washing still left In the summer Kltcnen. Hurrying through to the back yard he saw his wife braced against the fence, holding to the end of a broken clothes line to keep the newly-washed garments from the ground. "You've got here at last, have you?" exclaimed his wife as she caught sight of him. "Yes, I'm here what's the matter?" he repeated. "Here I've been holding this broken line for over an hour over a full hour, sir!" she snapped. "I was determined to die right here before I'd let these clothes down l ' "But why didn't you call some one?" he inuocently Inquired. "There's that new family next door the woman would have come over In one minute." "Woman next door, you big idiot, you ! Hasn't she been peeking around and peeking around for two weeks to see my wash, and d ye think I d give her a chance to come over here and see for herself whether the sleeves of my nightgown are pieced down with un bleached cotton ? You don't know any thing, sir, and you make tracks tor a piece of rope, sir : "Well, 1 swan," growled Collins, as he "tracked." iMrocciiious mail, addressing a com munistic meeting: "As 1 have said before, gentlemen, I am with you, heart and soul. The pioperiy oi tne country should be equall divided. The rich must be compelled to share their hoarded wealth with those whom a somewhat careless and inattentive Providence has blessed with nothing. Why should one be penniless while atiother has his thousands? Why" At this point a telegraph-messenger boy pushes his way through the crowd and nanus tne speaker a dispatch, which reads as lollows: Colonel Whackup : Dear Sir : Tour aunt in fenn Van has just died, leaving you a legacy of twelve thousand dollars. attohx et. The speaker devours the glad tidings silently, and then says, Hum ha es well gentlemen, I shall be com pelled to conclude my speech at some future day, as 1 have been summoned awav on important business;" and Colonel Whackup isu't witlis them so much as he was. 'Hia banner led the spears no more Among the lulls of Hpaiu." "Sound," said the schoolmaster, "is what vou hear. For instance, you can not feel a sound." "Oh, yes you can," said a smart boy. "John Wilson," re torted the pedagogue, "how do you make that out? What sound can you leel?" "A sound thrashing," quickly replied the smart boy. "Correct," said the schoolmaster. "Come up," the smart boy felt and smarted. He bad brought her the very things she wanted from the supper table to her sale retreat on the "tairs, and she was moved to say, half laughingly, "You are a man after my own heart. Mr. B ." "Just what I am after," he answered, quick as a fl-ish, covering her wuh confusion. "What is the best nietho I of feeding cattle in winkr?" We don t know. One man might prefer to take the ox in his lap and leed hi in with a spoon Others would bring him Into the dining room and let him sit at the table with the old f)lks. Tast;s differ I u matters of this kind. A Toc.no Man in Cincinnati lost his bride the other day. She smelt whiskey in his breath and left him at the altar, A fellow who U too stingy to buy a box of cachous or an ounce of c&rdamon seeds doesn't deserve a wife anyway. "Exkkcise your patience for awhik and you will get practice," said the old physician to the young doctor who re cently put out his shingle. "Yes, but I don t have any patients to exercise," was the reply. It is a trrrilile give away when a temperance lecturer, pausing in his speech to take a drink of water, sets the glass down and lazily reaches out toward the end for a couple of coffee grains. Ir top wish to preserve continual harmony In your family the great secret lies in being sometimes blind to things yon do not cire to see and deaf t things you do not care to hear. It is true that, unravelling the cord of man's existence, you will generally find that the entanglement begins in the twentieth year part and that it turns out to be a truelove-knot. If von are bent on getting into a quarrel you will not have to search long lor an opportunity. There is a proverb that runs, "who wants to beat a dog soon finds a stick." There are eighteen grain elevators in Chicago with an aggregate capacity ol over 15,000,000 bushels, and of 2-"o sc.iles in use in these elevators over 240 are Fairbanks'. After all, agriculture is the surest road to wealth. An Illinois farmer plowed up an iron pot containing ten thousand dollars in gold. Plow deep. Medical examination. What is there besides ether and chloroform to produce unconsciousness r V Isitmg boy : A club. Spiders ouzht to be pood correspon dents ; they certainly drop a line by every pst. Best Expressed on Tombstones Grave sentiments. The tied of life the married ones. A Voice ot Long Ago. "Just give me a chance to pour my voice into that machine, will you?" said a red-nosed man, stepping to the front at a phonograph matinee, the other day. "Certainly," said Mr.Gilllland. "Put your mouth down close, without press ing, speak distinctly, and the instru ment will repeat every word exactly as you say iu" "Ain't you joking now? Will it really say the same thing I say, without auy mixing up and changing around. to turn the joke?" "You will get back your own words, nothing more nor less," said the pnv prietor. "Hold my hat, then, and pull open all the valves," said the man, as he nervously brought his mouth to the proper position. "Steady now, I'm about to warble." "Come up boys every body and drink with the landlord I" was what the man said, with an emphasis on every word, and the same was what the marvelous little wonder shrieked back. "That's the sweetest music I've heard for about ten years," said the man, with a moist palate and a glowing eye, "and I reckon it's about that leng since I've heard that good old tune ground out. 1 s'poge I'll never get another chance to hear it again, and, if it ain't too much trouble, please run her back and shoot it out once or twice more. My ! wh it a bead that man has! If he could only get up a jug now that could never be emptied I" and the man walked out with tad look and an unsteady step. TOUTH3 COLUMX. Who'd Hare Thought if.-Mollie Bentley, with a paper and pencil in her hand, and a disconsolate face, wan dered through the room asking mam ma. Laura and L ocle Dick, what she should write about for her essay. It haa sot to be ready to-morrow morning. " she said; "and I have writ ten about "spring" time ' TJowerB' and everything. I don't know what I shall do," "Poor child," said Laura, langhing. "You have used op all the subjects there are in the world, and all the ideas in your head, and here you are, only ten years old. What a pity. Mamma laughed too, ana Jioine thought they were not very helpf uL Uncle Dick looked up from his news paiier. "I'll tell yon what to do, Mollie, Go out on the side piazza and Bit for fif teen minutes and put down on your paper every single thing that you see or think about, and write an essay that shall be about them all." "Why, Uncle Dick," exclamed Mollie, with wide open eyes, " there isn't a single tiling to see on the side piazza. I've sat there for hours and hours and haven't seen a thing." "Never mind. I'll give yoa just fifteen minutes; at the eud of that time 111 call you. Be honest now, and see if you will have nothing written on yo'ur paper when you come in." So feeling half provoked and half amused Mollie took herself to the side piazza. "There's nothing here," she muttered; "nothing in the world, but the old gatepost that needs painting." Then she stopped and began to laugh a little. Now she would have to write about the gate-iost; she bad certain ly seen it and thought about it; so she fiut it down on her piper. Then she (Hiked about her. "What a beautiful bird," she exclaimed; "red breast and yellow wings, and a brown rulHe around his throat. Then she laughed again and wrote down, "A red-breast-yellow-winged bird, trimmed with brown, smelling of the flowers." "What a mass of flowers, vines and mosses that arbor was. to lie sure. Oue, two, three, five kind of dowers," she said in dismay. "I can never write about them all. she exclaimed; but she wrote their names. "Oh, there's a butterfly a queer one; his wings are made of three different colors." Down went his name, "How funny to think that he was once a horrid cater pillar,'' she said; and then "there, now I re got to write about caterpillars. That's a pretty bit of lichen on that tree, gray and green and yellowish. Oh, dear me; my essay will be about everything. 1 must stop seeing, What queer things eyea are, to see so mauy things all at once, .owi shall have to write about eyes; I'll look right straight up in the air ao I can t see anything. hy, what a funny cloud; 1 never saw such a queer shaped one. it is black aud gold colors, and all fiiuged around the edges with red, J ust then she stoniied. and with a sober face wrote 'clouds' on her paper. "1 can't look anywhere without seeing thiugs," she said, gravely. "I suppose it wouldn't be right ti shut my eyes; 1 wonder if it isn't almost fifteen min. utesT Why there's a drop of rain on my nose; 1 thouirht that queer cloud hail rain in it. lliere now, I must put 'rain' down. I am glad it can't snow. Oh, dear me, now 1 shall have to put that down. I never saw such queer things as thoughts. Silence for a minute, aud then not knowing wheth er to laugh or cry, slie put down 'thoughts' on her paper. "Time's up," called L'ncle Dick. "I'm glad of it," she said hurrying in. "Uncle Dick, I've seen and thought about everything in the world most. I can never write about them all in one essay." "Vou will have to," said Uncle" Dick; ''and make good sense of it too. That was part of the bargain. Now set to work and see what you will make of it." "What shall I call itT" she asked. "Conglomerata.' said I'ucle Dick with a sober face, and a twinkle in his eyes. Putyin Uistory. It was daring the stoimy times iu England when the wars of York and Lancaster were raging that Sir Thomas Wyatt a tierce Lancasterian, was confined in one of the dismal duugeous f the Tower of London. Sir Thomas was not very comfortable, as you may suppose. He was cold and hungry.. One day, as he sat there in bis loneliness aud and misery, a rat made its appearance in his cell. He took the animal, warmed his numb lingers in her soft fur, and laid her in his breast where she cuddled, quite delighted with this kind treatment. Next day pussy came againe. and, won derful to tell, carried in her mouth a pivreon, which she laid at the prison er's feet. The next time the jailer came to visit liim.Sir Thomas coin plained of his hard fare and begged for some meat. His request was grull'ly refused. "If I provide the game will yon dress it for met" inquired the old kuight. " That I will." said the old Jailer, thinking himself quite safe in mak ing the promise. W hat was his surprise when the pigeon was product, lttit he kept his word, however, and brought it to Sir Thomas again nicely cooked. The cat continued to furnish him from time to time with these rare hi Is. It is needless to say that she stood high in the affections ot the prisoner. After some years Sir Thomas was released' He ever afterward included all cats in his love and esteem in mem ory of his benefactress. A portrait ot the old knight is still to be seen in South Kensington gallery with his faithful cat beside him, anil the pigeon in a pan. A Boston lady sent her little boy to a drug store the other day to get a porous blaster, and charired him to be careful not to forget what he was going atter. lie went out. repeating the words to himself.and in a few minutes came back saying: "Here, mamma; this is the poorest one 1 tood diU ' A Ciood Kecoiitiurudation. "Sir," said a lad, coining down to one of the wharves in Boston, and ad dressing a well-know n merchant, "Sir, have you any berth for me on vonr ship I want to earn something." "What can you do'' a-ked the gen tleman. "1 can try ny best to do whatever I am put to," answered the boy. . hat have you done?" "I have sawed and split all of moth er's wood for nigh two years." " hat have you not done?" asked the gentleman, which was a queer sort of a question. "Well, sir," answered the boy, after a moment's pause, "I have not w his pered in school for a whole year." Yfhat's enough," said the gentle man, "you may ship aboard this vessel and I hote to see you master of her some day. A boy who ran master a woodpile and bridle his tongue must be made of good stuff " Coffee in Ceylon. There are at the present moment in Ceylon, 257,000 acres of cultivated cof fee, divided into slightly more than 1,200 estates, and giving employment to 1,050 managers and superintendents, nearly all of whom are Europeans. About 50,000 acres of these estates are uot in proper bearing through being either too young or too old, and there fore 210,000 acres may be taken as the extent of the plantations of the island, which are accountable for the present year' scrop ending in September esti mated at 630,000 cwt. Last year the yield, with 8.000 acres less in cultiva tion, was 873,000 cwt. The value of the w hole plantation interest is roughly es timated at '9,000,000 sterling of Eng lish money. , Kastor Games In Germany, Easter Monday is looked upon" as a grand holiday hy the peasantry in many parts of Germany. Weddings are often deferred to this day, and many tillage games are reserved for this season. The lads and lassies' all appear in their gala costumes; the girls with short, dark skirts, braided with gold or silver, snowy aprons and full white) sleeves. bright colored bodices and oJd little caps; the boya with knee-breeches, white stockings, low shoes, and scarlet or yellow vests, the solid gold or silver buttouaon which are often their wnole inheritance. But when they are dauc iug gayly together on the green, they look a good deal happier than if they were little kings aLd queens. Games vary in different villages throughout the country, but one exam ple will give some idea of what they are like. Two of the leading young men of the place take entire charge of the day's amusements, selecting for the purpose as the scene of festivities some inn or Wirthscbaft, to which is attached a large garden or meadow. For several preceding evenings, when work is over, they go about fr jui bouse to house, dressed in their best, and carrying large baskets on their arms. Everywhere they are kindly received, and bread with w ine or cider is placed before them. While they eat and drink, the baskets are quietly slipped away by some member ol the family, a generous donation of eggs is placed within them, aud they are secretly returned to their places. The eggs are not asked fori ueiiher are they alluded to In any way; but the object of the visit is well under stood and prepared for long beforehand. When Monday morning dawns, the inn is found to have been gayly decor ated with garland of green aud flowers, and fluttering ribbons of many colors. The tree nearest the house ir ornamented in like oiviuer, and on it the prize to be contended fur, conspicu ously hangs. On smooth grass hard by. a strip, a few feet wide aud perhaps a hundred long, has been roped in, and at either eud of this narrow plot a large, shallow, round-bottomed basket, called a IKunne, is placed, oue filled with chaff and the Other w ith eggs, dozens upon doeus, cooked and raw, white and colored. The plau of the peculiar game which follows is that one player is pKted to run a given distance, while another safely throws the egS from one basket to the other, he who first completes his task being, of course the winner. Ac cordingly, when the young men and maidens have arrived, two leaders tfraw lots to determine who shall ruu am who shall throw. That decided, the contestants are gayly decked with rib bons, a baud strikes up a lively air, a capering clown clears the way, and the game begins. He who throws takes the eggs, aud one after another swiftly whirls them the length of the course, and into the chaff filled basket, which Is held in the hands of an assistant. Occasionally he makes a diversion by pitching a hard one to be scrambled for by the crowds of children who have assembled to see the sport. Meanwhile (while wagers are laid as to who will likely win) the other contestant speeds the distance of a mile or two to an ap pointed goal, marks it as proof of his having touched it, and if he succeeds in returning before all the eggs are thrown, the victory and the prize are his, otherwise they belong to his oppo nent. The game finished, the prize is presented to the victor with due cere mony and amid the cheersof the crowd; the hard eggs are distributed among the company, and the raw ones carried uproariously into the neighboring inn, there to be cooked in various ways and eaten. The remainder of the day is spent in dancing and merry-making, and if a wedding can possibly be arranged to take place on that afternoon the fun is wilder than ever. Milestone on the Konit to Health. The recovery ot digestion and the resump tion of activitv by the liver, bowels aud kid ners, are milestones hich mark our progress on' the road to health. They speedily become perceptible when Hosteller's SUmacb Bitters is used bv the invalid, rtothing so surely and expeditiously consumes the distance to the de sired goal. As no bodily runcuou can suner interruption without iiunainus the genera health of the system, so the system can never acquire perfect vu;or, health's synonym, until that f uuctiou tie actively resumed. Take, for instance, digestion, a suspension of which is invariably rw-tirted by the hitters. If the or gans upon which it devolves grow weak, bil iousness, coustipattou, headache, poverty of the blood, and a hundred other symptoms su pervene, which indicate unmistakably the banefid general indneiics of dyspepsia. The disappearance of all these symptoms through the use of the Kitten shows with what thor oughness it removes their cause. HooOand's German Bitten. During the warm season the nerves become ufeebled and the whole system debilitated. The stomach loses its power of digestion, the hver becomes congested and sluggish, causing constipation or diarrhea, dysentery and chol era morbus ; and the prevalence of more or less malaria at this season engenders ague, billons or typhoid fevers, often of serious im port. To avoid these consequences, take, night and morning, a tablespoon fol of Hoof laud's tierman Bitters ; it w a splendid tonic and alterative, that will restore the appetite and digestion, tone the nerves, ngulats the liver aud strengthen and build up the whole system to withstand the summer heat and all its baueful influences. Tire Csa or Mfrcckt is often attended with disastrous results. Why use it theu, when iu SiheDck a Mandrake Fills we have a remedy equal in effect and rfectlv harmless i These Fills act directly on the aver, and are a sure cure in all disorders arising from a de rangement of that important organ. Sick-headache, sour stomach, nausea, and all other bilious disorders will freely succumb to a few doses of Scheock's Maudrake 1'uls. For sale by all DrnjrgisU. Rtcto! (Va) Vimictob Omix Pr. C. Y. lieusou : We lose no opportunity to re commend your Celery aud Chamomile P lis to our friends for Neuralgia and &rk aud Nerv ous lieaU sciic Ihev t like a charm with us. TINSLiY t MOKfoS. Liver la King. The Liver is the imperial organ of the whole human system, as it controls the life, health and happiness of man. W ben it is disturbed in its proper action, all kinds of ailments are the natural result, The digestion of food, the movements of the heart and blood, the action of the brain and nervous system, are all im mediately connected with the workings of the Liver. It has been successfully proved that (ireen's August Flower is unequalled In curing all persona afflicted with Dyspepsia or Liver Complaint, and all the numerous symptoms that' result from an unhealthy condition of the Liver and Htomach. Ham pie bottles to try, 10 cents. Positively sold in all towns on the Western Continent. Three doses will prove that it is Just what you want Hon. A. B. Stevens, The great statesman of the 8onth. says: "I used Dnrang'a Bbeumatic Remedy for rheu matism with great benefit.'' It never fails to cure the worst case. Send for circular to Belphenstine A Bentley. Druggists, Washing on, D. C bold by all druggists. .Reliable Dry Goods Hoojw. If you wish to buy Dry Goods of anv kind m0!1 ? 725 Chestnut -btreet I'luladelphis, for samples. Thev keen a larei of Suks. Dress tloods. Shawls. LinenV rnuts. Black Goods or every description. hJ y7 "txU- and Cndeiwea?. lbeyU all Good, for cash. Only onVpeV to ail. Lowes prices known in the t. a Thousands an oraerin; goods from wnolea VEGETIfJE. Is Recommended by all Physicians. Ma. H. B. fwwi . T a small C rtillactecoucerulug VegeUne prepared by you. I have neen a buhc-. K V ..7- pepsta lor over forty years. '' ,1 fhronlc Darrtia tor over six months sad have tried nvot every mlng-. was given up to die. and al UKHeip. io live from day to day. and i o phyScui T amid toorb. my case. I mw your Vegeune recommended to cure Dyspepsia. I commenced using u. and I continued dolnir so, , VUH womn and nMtfnttHl LO Del "i-heal": All who are afflicted wl. n this ter rible disease, I would kindly r coinmeud to try It for the benefit ot their health, and It Is ex cellent as a blood purifier. . d u. . . if n fnr Sk: . H. FORBES. Wta.a that KlsW.lt hMnS UfttlPSS and HtAiiTUUit, eiiiier Irom cbm?e ol weat her or fpun any other cau., the valine will reoew the blood, carry off the putrid humors, cu-aa.- . i .... a a iuwula a nil ImnArt . tne stomacn. rvKumn- tun " r - to ue ot vigor to the whole body. VEGETIfJE For CAKCEKS and CiNOEBOUS HTJMOBS. The Doctor's Cwtincnte Kend it. Ashlit, Washington CO, UL. Jan. 14, 1ST& B. K. htbvbns : Dear Mr Tbls Is to certify that I had been suffering from a Rose Cancer on my right nr. ast which grew very rapidly, and all my menus unci given ul F " . yi,ur medicine. Vegeune, recommended for Cancer ana cancerous numors. i Hmimcutcu to take it, ana soon lounu mjiseu uuihiuk w leel betteii my health and spirits both fell the benign Influence which it exerted, and In a tew months from the time I commenced ihe use of the Vegeune, tho Cancer caine out almost buddy. - C'AKRIK DsFOKREsT. I certify that I am personalty acquainted with Mrs. lie Forrest, aiid consider her oue of our very best women. lr 8. H. Flowuoj. AU, DrasAMS or tub Blood. If Vecetlne will relieve pain, cleanse, purify, and cure sui-h dis eases, restoring me pai lent to perfect health alter u-vlng different physicians, many reme dies, suffertDg lor years. Is a not conclusive pro., II you are a sutlerer, you can be cured? why is thl- uieiilcine pertormlug such great cures r It works In the blood, iu the circuit ing fluid. It can truly be called the Great Blood Purifier. The great source of disease originates In the blood: aud no medicine that does not act directly upon It, to purify. nd reno vate, has any Just clulu upon p bUc aiienUuu. VEGETIIIE I regard it as a Valuable FAMILY MEDICIWE. JlXl'lKT 1, loti Ma. H. R. Stvvins : . .k . , Uesr Mr. I take pleasure In saying that I have used the Yegetlue In m fjouilv lth gtwd reaulu, and I hate known of several eases ol remarkable cure effected bj It. 1 legard It aa a Valuable laiuily m-diclne. Tru.y yours. Kev. WM. McDONALD. The Rev. William McDonald Is we.l known through the United Mates as a minister In the M. E. Church. THOCfUirne !itB. Vegetlne ts acknowledged aud reouuiuieodrd by physicians aud apothe caries to be the best purlner and cleanser of the blissl yet discovered, and tuou'iand opeak lu Us praise who have been restored to health. VEGETIIIE. The M. D's Have It. Mb. H. R. &TBTINS: Dear sir. I have sold Yegetlne for a long time, and Hud it gives most exeelleut satisfac tion, a. B. I)K FKlEsT, M. 1 . Uru'gll, Balk-tun, lud. ' Prepared by H. K. ST E VEX, Boston, Haas. Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. 1 taoM um if aa Ivor. . I will confer m favor nyon the Ad vortJser a Pnblianer by statins; that thev saw tne I soment In this toornaJ inaminc tho J. C. FRESE & CO.'S HAMBRO'TEA. Th:BCfIbrmtMi Ten hnbtlii11 CnnI rpnln ftcconnt nf it rxtrswnlitiry bntitf in t hi cm. W low mentioned. It n-ny bo riven to little cniltlrtii wit boat beiac h artful to tbm. It paritirt .be biN j. an.I mar tbTffT well b rcininieni'l to per-tv-ia nrTfnuc from t-rupi to in tht nkin, AtxJ tfimtlar eomplaii ta rim nit fr.ui -htrir-Brfia f tlKM, ; ), to prrmm let int uai-r pl-t h- ric habit f tMiiy.a it arvvrtita cohkh-b f tha blousJ in Ihe hf-a and apoplectic tiu; ami even lu th aulj-ct to Ujicb'iHlriaciam, r in attack of the lrp-y. It re-Horn the appetite; It aita ditreation. nl clean tho bingo-. It reliev.-a the t.th ami hexd rhe ariainc truin tha aiaiacb rac--M. It 1in-th the able? in contTh, aa in cnipaintM .f the rh"t. and soq aciliiatea the breathihtc f iheinrahil; it ia, tnrwttlaa, a never-rKilinir remedy in Hemorrhoiiltt. In complaint of the liver, jttwel, jaundice and ac cumulation of bile it Kaa never failed in ita eflW-ri. It may Im eontVhmtiy be reoiinmeuded la th. who are inotliied to d ropey and h p-H-h-tirdria. A vr-pr effr-cile rniedy it baa pr aKainnt gravel in the lladler, aa it aoiuma th aatne, if n( yet fnn-d mt' to hard a atihttauce, aiel cmiri- it (T alnc wib the nmte: it al-o relieve tha difficulty and pain turne praota feel in makinc water. Lastly it will aerva aa a prrvative acaint alt miitaiti.na iMrteanea, aa it aitrtn-a the body and n-u-tralia a the Btras inbIat.n. It ia a are pie fleivativ likewise axiat araatWk'-er. preveora -rnrvy and reauovea flap. Ia irrecaNrit of the bowel it provea a Try mild and ai the -me time eTectnal pnrvntlvp; therefore every family fhoiild h provided with thia Tea. as by it .irtv ly nee mauy ill iteaaee ntay be prevented, and Pbyiciana in aiany cae diftpenaed with. The nae of thia tea fa aa follows: TaHe a tahle pon full of the Tea. put two or tUreerupa of boiling water upon it, let it draw in a teapot or any w u-r vev4l covered up for nte hour. p-ur it thronifh a ieve and drink a teacup fall of it ta i ha mrnitiat and in theevcnin: ff r children aae proporttoiiallt l-aa. Should thia quantity not be anfficient to me the invalid two or litre motiona a day, the named I nan t it y may be tncrvatd. accord in to nn-nm-tinre or even doub l. and aiay be repeated every twu hoars, till it baa had th-- deairvU t-rfc-ct. CATTIOX A ft ha often been tried to Imitate thiM Tea and to pan off awn ipuroa article a- th ffennine llambro' Tea, which baa alway proved niMt efficacious in all the above mentioned com plaint, and a th wll deaei ved reputation of thi excellent Mtnlicin BHKht eailv b t-tidaiigvrt-d by tich ctointrfeif . we hnve rnhv the lirwtion for the of our medicine to be printed on pink colored ptper, atamped, and every parr-l -a'ed with the aanteef our anu. J. FRKvK O.. Uopffn-. k, H.mt-urh. Arc.lSTrS BART II. I4 B..wrr, NVw York. Principal Agent. Sold by all IroiKift. irrMTQ uiMTrn -n.p" "?r- r J Va.IV fair WW will M U e KeV, V. J. 11 Holt ID jell Abi, liiieraetina; and Popular Work, an I it leu atlB 1 rlhOl.OICAL lIl-IIVMs, 0poBft' tn JOC tnnaof Kndleaa Mieery oa tu one and and I'niver aai Salvation on th other, and atamiiiir Uoadl tional Immortality. Pinrle tVpie aenl poet paid fo AlJJD. Ititraordiaarily favor iie trma to afvuta hrnd f"r Aet ata t ircalarand Pric Lrat BttkEWOUl A Cl., Kaat Niuia SI..N. T. City PETTEN SILL'S Newspaper Directory AND ADTERTISEE3 EABD-BCOK. For 2H7H. th nsool rsnaa, novaaBr Miwwri t alii ara. aansiiynsaT tno wmmtm mt raMlahera aatsl Advertiser alias. It corals. aa, with information eraeara tn Mis diVoreut sspsrs la the Uaitaa States sni BrtUab asiariea, sad ecmipralMaaivs liatsof pro ml sent Fsroseae sad Attatralasiaaartala. Tkis Pian-rosT will b aaat, aoataca pale, -aa uldraaa, fur tba rsrv low arm it Dollar. S. M. PETTENGILL & CO., 37 Park Row, Sew York. TH" Tba ch-lraat la tBa world Impurttri Pneaa- Larsrat Osupan? ia Astarica-atapla rticla atraara erbo' irad- cos'iauallv is-rr--aiiir At-nfa waartd av.rtvhr bai indac both d'iB't w.t. Iibiu ai'nd fur circolar V villu,lllsSI.,JI. I. r. O. Boa is?. IT COSTS NOTHING! Ta trv aw irmna aa w .1 mm m ... . J I, i an tea dara' trial, sad r-fand fr-if ht If not Bu cbaaaa. cum waiast citaes, 12 a ops, 2 a.r or rtmia. UU II ' 13 i7l ri.a Toara' warns?. J. I VlV Vj M 1 Dlract Iruaa tha factor. Alleger, Bowlby & Co.. CauriaaaVTfra. wasHiatiTua. Maw J-nav. t HopfenMck 6, I Representative Business Houses OF PHILADELPHIA. Music Teaclifirs, Qoristers, Diuaiilst!, Anal aU tra ftraalamal Waairlaaa.' Ara lavitrd to improva a prtj.,B f tv-lr a Varalhna ia asasjininc tht mrsa BomW ftflmBI'T Music Bouka. prrpaml lj ulitrr lm; V."" ptxlall for tbrir ua. EasBatM I - Ksmwi'i n-w'-OSWtun , t;j r-r ...-. hi. !. k.k f. s,lwi Alao. hia a-w -'hwrrk OWrla,. VT 1 duK-al.aapkrudid Antb-m Book. aUo hi"JJLl!r crow ,mrta,- 42J. "Tb, Enwhittaf narmm. r HaMara. c. is PaBiphl r .nn . ,jt ajcoT varv roi-l, BMd by tb.ir. s-i-n alosora furnuh-d. " l- r-aaaalair Joaia ! Jakaam'i rar ak Maaa. u ;D b, .""7 Ttaar Book for Irarning t, ti.Uy I'biTslJJin,., ? Tbbfs, lles. c. Alao hia I'fcarwa thai atnartlaa Bosk t I li-r d. ni, a , plala manual and r.m book. Worth cartu V" Thaabovaand s mnlliln,artrArv . an.l awful b-ks, n.ay I-. n-B at th- ,.J-T V""11 l-hilaik-lphia: l.troB HraW. t'hlras;.. V.H'i4 I incinnati: Sh-rnian, Hi. a t o , -an'r.. scd with all proBiiB,-nt Oralm thnoh..ut ta7a OLIVER DITSO At f 0M Boston. J. r- P1TM Y r..9 Ch-tnnt St., PhiUj v ICE CREA JILFK E LZERsT BT Til ISE ,p BlatcMefs EorizoiM Fra, Sto4narta of tba Im ,ualir of fc,crwni p Costaid. Krnit Icra. -xc, rtc. ran W r let z K S U a KI'tMU ready for imamliatr 11. in ! , ataa' tuna, and at a taXal raat "f 6U.ac.ula J said aalt at I'hiladHpui retail prica. Sanm. S, , (. S, K, a, 3U, )nartr Sold hol-aalB aod rrtail by th aiai.afactar-r CniS. . B LATCH LET, lark at at Philad-Ih, Sand addrsas for prica Itat and diroBnta. ITila a morrfa n Emdotment-T . aTBWAJT "TV VS. VABCB-S 0 I 1 U MfWBOOK, M UAXXVTT la this saw valarna tha PSpalar Author or Xisar n. tm rsa Biaia ponrara .W ti 4 and Ihnli.nTn- akqaaaaa (baavaataoi Sacra. TraU. and f! la taaaaaaty. pathoaaad aaUiatiy J ih. Sfanj.f o. a ma w.U,.d thai ,Bmk -,U U, pk,.., ia, atyla. baaurul i.araiaaa. and r-n ka.l tr. at tha maxa.1. Tfmm l.ihrrml. ';.- . J-.C,jr-.6CRJv, CO, IhilpLTX Y AGENTS WANTED FOR THE PICTORIAL 1 HISTORYoftueWORLD Embracing toll and authentic acruont rvf eterv n at lott of ancient and nn-iTu tim. an. . nrlu'litiat hirtory of the riae and tall ot the ipr- Ami K.na Knipirea.the trrtwt h of n uti-n--.f nn-l.Tti Kur, the middle age, the crutulf. tbe t-u :l -ttu. tt) reformation, the di-cwt-r and -ttl-u.et4t a tiv World. etc., etc. It contain 672 lln hintriral -tirrTinr and ta tarredou-de col unm pag. and it tht tu. f-fiifpi-t. Hi-lory of the World vt-r puMi-h-d. it t -dlftlt. lVnd tor apfCltliea ptif--) id -v.tr t-rDtt.. Atft-uta. and -ee hy it -IU t-T--r rhin m x:t book. Adutvns, national i'i iu.i-min , Phi..vM.i.i, w ell sri rEi fob pi blh' exhibition Hear edition oi Catalogue i w retviy, u.u grtrU" Heduced J rice. M.44M SEW AD TIPKvVI D H'fU p'tiK PAKLoR uKifAN-aVnt hv ti.il f. r Ja baa the moet thorotwrh nv-tcni f m-trut-n.-a Q,t ma eleeunt m Hection of vca' Hiiii .ii-nrniii-iitl iti-iw.lira LE HtLKIK. II 13 i bentiiui M.. fill lad a. Central Fire Br-ech Loinsr ;nn- :ns-'--r!vrrW fnm f iA np trouble lUrr-l. fr ..': tp i;nr a Rtrte ami PifOoU "f ni--t appr..t il American m-ike. Prer an l IJr-i SU -, ttai. Cap, etc. Prica on application. Liht-rsU Oi-coauta to dealer. JOS. C. GEUBB & CO, 712 MAEZET ST., PIIILADELPHU. pniiBnitun r vvrrn tti. d. rir? uwmruuriai uai uli ms, ctUaxera, Brittle ah m. ai.i.iif, iyT47i 1'hrotilC iwrafJC, by a rm niiri', pr-xraa. REMARKABLE CURES .i:," C'taiaxerA, iiruki-Aifu, iiisi.i. het 'yptTvhi, h 1'hrotilC iwrafJC. by a rm niiri', pr-xraa. ianrifa tnti (Af ir 1.11 tutmii STRONGLY ENDORSED! let, r. S. Aatrura. 11. -il SUshmil by tha Hon. J FDlrt Ktb- I KBf n si aaJ oth-m who have nne-1 thia TreatRi-nt. SENT FREE! Fm. h'ire f 3 po t wttn many tet:ruonii to Trnxarkah 2aJb.xt 4 Pi,k. 11 Li (iirard Plu-a IDI rCENTENMAL T.ROI MIS.) 0PEX FOR THE SEASON OF IMS. Sl'PKKb PISPr. AT or I XlttHlTH. W ITH Mi (HINKRV IN MnriiiN: Mr. Wnlt AM NuKTHi OTT. th-iii!mitar.!Vr-art PIavr..n.l Pirf'TinitiK"". 'n th- i.r.iM K.- valt t'nean. by Mr. TilLil ('. KX VIIK. -tar) iU IC.V TSi I CXWCKHT OnTwavafay. Tkaralay anl aialarrfay tf Sowii. by ilMairr ! BjthltUi.n tl.iMl. Tha F.rtn Carl.a. PV-'pV. t:r-r". .n-l It-M'a Tal'liaaiaa. Al-. HI-K'.MSS tawaula Haadrr; ". l.fian' lrai.i -i 'I liiuram. "t Vt IIIN.TO. at OKK TUN . sc., Ac, Frrr to V imivra. ADMISSION xi Craia. THlLIiREN DI'iM. LAHDBETHS' .SEEDS ARF THF KKHT. I. LIMIKIIH at at at llHaala kl VIH Ht pkilaallhla. IIUEY C: CIIKIST, Sliavlttl H. THIRD UTRI ET. Pl4lJMlrl---l- Bailey a P-ire Rre. fnmt . ' 3 . 4 oppr pi-till-i. fr-ni 5..-..0 ial-.aa U iue, i -JT. tfead for full priVf li-t. HI i:i wk HRIVT. toiLpnv , JiAVIC laA MI.Ki M.I L J. MiRCT. ua Ew.tB" Bi . m ' a k rr imiihiii aaa aiciraev tor 7-" for pt DSEIYALLED t aWaaw I tm ta n--. 'lrviarafV 1 rm Mftaua . ttl td Ttlli v ata 8siaba. Just Published. TUB THrOL04.iriL TRM iT, th threa-iold uueaiittu ot kvLa.4 M -., t SaLVATIO-J or t'O VDITIO-JAL h vimT tTt r -n-14 red iu th tight of h ra.ca . Aa.r and 'tf '" by Kv. J . H. P-ttinfcT-ll. M. A. A vr iatfu and p- nnlar work : rmtf. WHAT 14 fAII Of IT. "Th-cl-ire-ftvat Mbtwl tha iWctriue of Cotniitional Imin-.rt ' th Survival f th Kit teat, w h -n. -wf .' Kept tram Tbe l- il i.,tiil intertatluK- St. Louts Prtsbyteriam. "The artrumetii -tr- ft.'f preated.',:6aay Art. "Tlie le-.k w with candor and ahility. and pr--!t-nt the npturv apHaaajraa and arKunf-nta in fa.or d it pHtti" ' tr-ng and thinking mann-r. " r ia. Lth '-i . -The Author 9 aptrit ia admtrat'ic. CVuna Latoa " It i ihetn--at imp ri tnt M " the timea, written with mn.uUr wt.iln neatly 4 hrifttiaa ia ita pirn. A S ." tJf t rvvt, . i. . ia ao mirnita4 an 1 fr-a- laar and full, and withal to candid aui .1W avake it hy far th aideet anl h th.t h J? parwd.' Aav Km4imd Loniwiw tr Mt fftM-taM fir 05S E DOLLtB A4.t:..T W.4.T:U in every p.irt -t th-e" try, to nm l.o.-rai Urn..- wm h- ni ! Agent pr lea hat. H.RH(WM.v 4 W-5.inthst., w l-rt'iir PIANOS Another battt on hKh pr-c-a p&Q l V ar oa tha pxinopoli-dt r -r.ra-d -.wavw iV.vr Beatt y a ltet New-iJaperfUilrpiv' ... "" tWorahuyipc PlANaor ukUAN rew.!u.. It l.r; lwei-t prk-ea ever attven; moat aucc-f'r "a in America; commeaced a few yrarv ai: lf,,f W13 wdlar; ftalea n w nearly $-M '" PRnb annual y. l. F. bVatty. Wa-h n.N J-lv' rorervc H-vVVI-h a "v aw III BUMF?! LANDRETHS' CELEBRATED TURNIP SEEDS, In Original Sealed Packages. EVERY CRAIN OUR OWN GROWTH. W ALL TARIETI2S IT LOWEST PRICES. JtJ It voir Berchant dors not kef o thrm. we will nPP'' yoa by nail, fWUge paid. Write fur Ptice aod crlptWo LUt. DAVID LANDRETH & SONS, SI and as Soath SIXTH StrMt, FHILA UKLFHI. The avast extensive Seed craw era In Anierk
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