VOL. XX. SEVENTH ANNUAL EXHIBITION SOCIETY. OPEN from SEPTEMBER 6 to OCTOBER 13, 1883. Artists, Invcnloi s, Mcclianlr* au<l Manufacturer! of America are Cordially Invited to participate In tills Popular and Successful Exhibition —OF— .A-IR/r -A. IST ID lItTIDTTSTIR/X". ADMISSION, 25 CENTS. SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS -AT— | GREATLY REDUCED RATES —WILL BE ISSUED By All Railroads Centering in Pittsburg & Allegheny. For Prospectus and Entry Blanks, 'Address, E. P. YOUNG, Gen'l Manager. J. C. PATTERSON, Sec'y. HENRY BIEHL f CO, AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. Remington Clipper Plow. IMPBOYED KELLER QBAIN, SEED AND FER TILIZING DRILL, TOLEDO I. X. L WOOD PUMPS The Celebrated American Fruit Dryer, or PNEUMATIC EVAPORATOR, It is portable, durable, absolutely fire-proof, economical and will cure frnit and vegetables in less time aud witli lees fuel (ban any Dryer in the market. It will pay for itself in less than tbirtj days if jrcprily attended. Its products are unsurpassed as to quality and color, and are in great demand at high i rices. Full instructions how to dry, bleach, pack and market the pro ducts, accompany each machine. WILL EVAPORATE 8 BUSHELS OF ANY FRUIT PER DAY. DEALERS IN | a»D HOUSE FIBV SPOUTING ISIIING HARD DONE TO ORDER WARE. Butler, Peim'a. STORE. NEW STOCK A XEW AND COMPLETE STOCK OP " iimim in routs JilsT rhihibJ" OAK AND HEMLOCK SOLE, FRENCH AND DOMESTIC KIPAND CALF, COLLAK, WELT, SKIRTING UPPER, BELTING, HARNESS AND LACE LEATHER A IST ID ZPXINIK: LININGS, ETC. ALSO MiIXI'PACTI'RKR OF ALL KI3DI OF Carriage, Buggy and Wagon Harness, Collars, Etc., Etc. And carry a fall stock of Whips, Robes, Blankets, Brushes, and all other Ooods belonging to the Business, All Kinds of Repairing will Receive Prompt Attention. CafPlease call and examine our Goods and get Prices before you purchase elsewhere. Plastering Hair Always on Hand. PAID FOR HIDES AND FELTS. C. ROESSING, Reiber's Block Jefferson Street, opposite Lowry House, Butler, Pa D. A. HK( K, CARPETS, CLOTHING AND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS. JUSTICE TO AIA, ONE PRICE ONLY. TERMS CASH. DUFFY'S BLOCK. MAIN ST., BDTLER, PA. GERhiANREMEDY FOR PAIN. CURES Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, Sore Throat, Mwellinga, Mpralni, Bruises, Barn*. Sralds, Frost Bites, AND ALL OTHER HOIiILY Pi IX9 A Nil ACHES. Bold fcj Druggists aud Dealer* everjwhere. Fifty Cent* a bcttlt Directions in 11 Laogu&fes. THE CHARLES A. VOGFLER CO. (SMMor* to A. VOQKiXR * CO.) Baltlaor*. 14., U. 8. A, Cholera! : I ! CHOLERA MORBUS CHOLERA INFANTUM ABIATIO CHOLERA ALL CHOLERA DIBEABEB I YIELD TO THE INFLUENCE OF FerryDavis'sFalnOer The GREAT REMEDY for every kind J of BOWEL DISORDER. Captain Ira B. Foss, of Goldsborough, Maine, says : " One of my sailors was attack ed severely with cholera morbus. We ad ministered Pain Killer, and saved him." J. W.Simonds, Brattleboro, Vt.,*ays : "In I cases of cholera morbus and sudden attacks of summer complaints, I have never found it to fail." ALL THE DRUGGISTS SELL IT.' 1 1 TUTT'S PILLS A DISORDERED LIVER IS THE BANE of the present generation. It ia for the Cure of this disease and its attendants, SICK-HEADACHE, BILIOPSNESB, DYS PEPSIA, CONSTIPATION. PILES, etc., that TUTT'S PILLB have gained a world-wide reputation. No Remedy has ever been discovered that acts so gently on the digestive organs, giving them vigor to «m --.imjiate food. As a natural result. the Nervous System is Braced, the Muscles are Developed, and the Body Robust. Cliills aad rovor. B. RIVAL, a Planter at Bayou Sara. La., says: My plantation Is In a malarial district. ror several years I could not make half a crop on Account of bilious diseases and chills. I was nearly discouraged when I began the use of TUTT'S PILLS. The result was marvelous? my laborers soon became hearty and robust, tun/% I have had no further trouble. They relieve the engorged Liver, cleans* the mood from polsonom humors, aad cause the bowels to act naturally, with, out which no one can/eel well. Try this remedy fhirly, and yoa will rata m healthy Digestion, Vl*orou» Body, Para TUH'S HAIR DYE. GRAY HAIR or WHISKERS changed to a GLOSSY BLACK by a single application or this D\ l. It Imparts a natural color, and acts Instantaneously. Sold by Druggists, or sent by express on receipt of One Dollar. „ OfTiee, SB Murray Street, New York. (Sr. Tl'TVa Jf4.Vf.tt of Fslusble\ Information anit fee/Ml Receipts I •rill be tnalitid FREE on application. / FAILSj^^ Spermator the, or Seminal Weakness, aad fifty other complaints?" We claim it a specific, sim ply, because the virus of all diseases arises from flie blood. Its Nervine, Resolvsnt, Alterative and Laxative properties meet all the condi tiona herein referred to. It's known world wide as OSSDO Ch|elbl»|e^c|o|hHlu|elb|o|b3 It quiets and compose* the patient—not fcy the 1 introduction of opiates arid drastic cathartics, but by the restoration of activity to the stomach and nervous system, whereby the brain is relieved of morbid fancies, which are created by the causes above referred to. To Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary men. Mer chants, Bankers, Ladies and all those whose sed entary employment causes nervous prostration, irregularities of the blood, stomach, bowels or kidneys orwhorequire a nerve tonic, appetizeror etimnlant, SAMARITAN NERVINE is invaluable. Thousands proclaim it the most wonderful invig orant that ever sustained the sinking Bygteui. 81.50. Sold by all Druggists. The DR. S. A. RICH MOND MED. CO., Proprietors. St. Joseph. Mo. Mm. ». Crlttaaton, Agtat. Hev York City. (4) PERMANENT STAMPING FOB KENSINGTON, ARRASENE AND OUTLINE WORK DONE, lessons in glyen by ANNIE M. LQWMAN, North ttieet, Butler, Pa. jiieSO-Iy Witt. KELIiEN, Washington, Pa., presents to the public a CE MENT ! More durable thau IRON for stoves, ranges, fire places and steam mills. Also, set grates in workman-like manner. This Cement takes the place of stove backs. All work guar anteed. july2s-12t. BUTLER, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15. 1883. INVENTORSAND INVENTIONS I Some of the Queer Happanings in the world of Discovery. The number of successful inventors is always largp, but the number of un successful ones is very much larger. Only the other day 17 000 models of rejected inventions were eold for old junk. There is always somebody work ing at the unsalable problem of per petual motion or making a flying ma chine. It not infrequently happens that alter a pateut has been refused to an inveutor, a subsequent application is granted by a different examiner. It sometimes happens that a patent is granted to one man after somebody else has failed to receive a patent for the same invention. This is a fruitful source of litigation. Indeed, litigatiou about patent rights is so common that in the introduction of any valuable patent the legal expenses of defending it are a large part of the capital re quired. Immense sums were spent in defending Morse's patents for telegraph ing, and the various patents for sew ing machines, India rubber manufac ture, and of the inventions that have ;evolutionized industrial processes. But when rights are once established by law, the profits are enormous. It was shown in a recent case before the United States Court that for royalties alone on the manufacture of barbed fence wire more than $1,009,000 a year were paid. Inventors are now chiefly busy with electricity, and the Patent Office is de luged with devices for making new uses of the modern marvel, or for using it with new appliances. Many of these inventions run in the direction of mo tors. The opinion has gained some ground lately that storage batteries of electricity are not as successful as was at first expected. It is asserted by some that no storage battery ever gives ont as much electricity as it receives, and that every moment decreases the amount yielded. Edison says the best storage battery is a ton of coal, which can be us d at any time to drive a dynamo machine. Others, however, still think that the storage battery will produce wonderful results. Inventors have always sought to utilize the forces of nature for the con servation of power. A good deal of time and money has been spent on efforts to utilize the force of the rise and fall of the tide. According to some plans the water is to be stored in a reseryo'r at high tide, and used to turn a water wheel wben the tide falls. Another plan is to get the power from the rise and fall of a float. There used to be a tidal mill at Astoria and an other at Charleston, S. C. The large amount of land required to get the requisite area of water surface is con sidered an insuperable objection to tidal mills. A good deal of money has been ex pended un solar engines, in hope of getting power out of the sun's rays. John Ericson, the inventor of the Monitor and a thousand other things, has made some beautiful solar engines, and not long ago an inventor had a model of a solar engine on the top of the Cooper Union building, and man aged to get up steam in a boiler. The trouble is, however, that the sun does not always shine, and the solar en gine, to be of any practical use, must be accompanied with a storing reser voir of power that can be kept for a rainy day. After all coal is nothing but the heat of the sun stored in the past ages for present use. There is no telling of what great val ue the discovery of the simplest fact may be. When bromine was discov ered by Ballard in 1824, nothing of im portance was expected from it. Now it is a valuable factor in photography, and a useful remedy for nervous affec tions. Capital ia never wanted to try eyen the most inventions. Not long ago in ventor had an idea that he could, by the use of a naked wire, produce a re turn current and avoid electrical dis turbances in cables. He could have got the capital to lay a long cable un der ground to try his experiment. He was with difficulty dissuaded from do ing this by a practical man, who sav ed him lots of money by wrapping sev eral miles of cable about a barrel and arranging the naked wire as proposed by the inventor. The result was a complete failure, but the cost of the ex periment was comparatively trifling.— This is an illustration of the large amount of money that can be wasted through ignorance. Men will work away at an idea with no knowledge of what has been done or what can be done, only to discover at the end what they should have known at the begin ning. A good deal of money has been spent in the effort to introduce ice machines. There is, however, a strong competi tion to he encountered, since ice may always be had for the gathering, and transportation is cheap. Fire escapes are numbered by the thousand. Hardly a day pass that the Fire Commissioners are not compelled to test some new plan. A good deal of room is taken np in the Patent Office with the models of these contrivances. A very good example of eager ness with which capital can be secured to promote the most chimerical ideas may be seen in the story of the Keely motor. The stockholders have been pretty thoroughly bled still more in the hope of saving what they have already expended. The varying fate of capital invested is seen in the contrasting re sults of the two steam heating compa nies in New Y'ork pity, one of which has proved a most lamentable failure, while the other has had a measure of success. It is not so certain that mon ey invested underground will always return a fair interest. It may be no ceeeary to incur great expense when an underground cable gives out, as tfie whole route may have to be dug up to find the break. Accidental discoveries have supplied some of the most valuable processes of the industrial arts. It is said that the rolling of cold iron was first suggested by the fact that a workman who was placing a piece of hot iron in the rolls carelessly permitted his tongs to be drawn in. Ho noticed that they were rolled, and not broken. He called the attention of the Superintendent to the , occurrence, and this led to investiga tion and experiment and the discovery that cold rolled iron is equal to steel for shafting purposes. The process of rolling iron cold was not long after ward patented, and millions of dollars have been made out of the patent. There are many similar instances where observing workmen have called attention to valuable processes. A sig nal one was in the early period of the cotton manufacture, when a good deal of trouble was caused by the cotton sticking to the bobbens. All the work men in the mill were delayed by the necessity of stoping work to clean the bobbins. At last one workman found a way to obviate the trouble. He, and he alone in all the mill, had clean bob bins. For a long time he kept his se cret to himself. He finally revealed it on the promise of a pint of beer a day for life. His secret was to "chalk the bobbins." That little scraping of salt on the bobbins saved millions of dollars a year, and the obserying workman got not only his beer, but a competence. Each extension of modern enterprise and skill brings with it a train of in ventions. The railway, the telegraph, the steamboat, the development of iron, electricity, and petroleum, have each produced a long line of inventors more or less successful, so that each of these industries might have a creditable ex hibition by itself. Natural Gas Fuels. Years ago, in their eagerness to tap from the earth its hidden treasures of oil, drillers generally expressed disgust when nothing but gas rewarded thei* efforts. Later, some enterprising men began to turn their attention to this great sou.ee of ca'oric, and, one by one, a number of iron and glass manufactor ies in Pennsylvania carried the gas into their mills. The Engineering and Mining Journal says they have not made much bluster over what they were doing, and have quickly pocketed the increased profits which their saving of fuel, due to the use of gas, has given them. Of late, however, the subject is attracting considerable attention in a quiet way, and recent developments in dicate that the territory which may pos sibly be able to draw upon the new source of fuel supply is much greater than is generally believed. Gas wells have been opened and are utilized as far west as Detroit, and as far south as West Virginia, and Pittsburgh is now getting excited over the extension of the business of the Murraysville well in Westmoreland County. Pipes have been laid down to a number of glass and iron works in the eastern part of the great Smoky City, and a rapid ex tension of the field of the gaseous fuel is looked farward to. The belief is ex pressed by men whose opinion is wor thy of much consideration, that the number of localities capable of being supplied with gaseous fuel in the States of New Y'ork, Pennsylvania, West Vir ginia, and Michigan is much larger than the majority have any conception of, and the permanency of the flow of some of the older wells gives rise to the hope that it is a reliable fuel sup ply. Its cheapness and cleanliness are, of course, matters which are beyond all doubt. There are indications that dur ing the present year a considerable number of companies will form to sink wells, and a "boom" is looked toward to that may bring forth the unusal crop of unsound enterprises. Alive With a Broken Neck. An operation was performed yester day afternoon by the physicians on Mr. Edward Swartz, of Dover town ship, who on Monday last had his neck dislocated by the limb of a tree falling upon him during the storm of that evening. The operation was a critical one. The man might die in the operation, and Drß. West, of York, and Gross, of Dover, informed the un fortunate man of his condition, and he was willing to have the operation per formed. Mr. Swartz calmly had his family called to bid him good-bye, expecting that the result of the operation might be a fatal one. Dr. Hay took hold of the patients head, and Drs. Weist and Long at the neck and shoulders, and the reduction of the fracture was successfully per formed. The patient immediately said he lelt relieved, that he bad more feeling in bis body, which had been paralyzed, and felt less pain. It is yet impossible to tell the result of the operation. If the spinal cord was not injured the patient may recover. The case attracts much attention among the medical fraternity, and considera ble interest among the people general ly, owing to the singular and critical nature of the injuries.— York, Pa., Dispatch. —Large tracts of land between Vic toria and Indianola, have had a hedge of McCartney's roses planted around them, and, though exposed to all kinds of stock, it is growing finely, and in a few years will be a fence which no kind of stock will attempt to pass. This fence is everlasting, and much cheaper then rails, wire or lum ber. —"lt mijst have been slippery weather when the prodigal son return ed." The old gentleman asked: Why, in your opinion, was it slippery?" "Because," returned the small boy, "the old man fell on his neck." DELEVAN, WIS., Sept. 24, 1878. GENTS —I have taken not quite one bottle of the Hop Bitters. I was a feeble old man of 73 when I got it To-day I am as aetiye and feel as well as I did at 30. I see a great many that need such a medicine. D. BOYCE. Road Dust Defended. MERCER Twr., Aug. 5, 1883. EDS. CITIZEN: —Ia my last I stated "dry earth is the best disinfectant in the world." Your Bruin correspond ent inquires, "what disinfectant prop erties does road dust contain," Road uust is dry earth. "Earth to earth and dust to dust." The living of to-morrow are built up from the de caying of to-day. The earth is the proper absolvent of all she produces. "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth, etc." Nothing has been created since and nothing has been lost. Earth is nature's greatest disinfectant. All decaying matter, either animal or vegetable, must re iurn home to "mother earth" and she receives it and appropriates. Decaying matter, marl, phosphates, Ac., which are used as fertilizers for our wheat fields, form part of the wheat we eat, supporting our bodies, which in turn must return to earth. Nature has not only made provisions for life, but for health, that life might be pre served. For instance, the atmosphere is the most agreeable respirant, and the best calculated to support animal life of any combination of gasses, that can possibly be made. But in passing through our lungs by breathing, it be comes carbonic acid gas, a deadly poi son. But behold God's hand in that tree by our dwelling; its leaves set to work at once, absorbing the poison from it, setting the oxygen free, and it is again ready for respiration. Now, Mr. Editor, I will answer your corres pondent's question. But first let me ask. what is it in that tree that decom poses the air that I have rendered pois onous by breathing, and restores it to a healthy atmosphere. I answer the hand of God—Nature, if you please to call it so. Dry earth is itself a disin fectant, naturally God has made it so. Your correspondent might as well ask, what disinfecting properties chlor ine contains. It is a disinfectant itself, God has given it certain properties which are governed by certain laws, which laws are consistent. The laws of nature are laws of health, the viola tion of which is followed by a penalty. As I am speaking of chlorine, allow me to use it to illustrate some of these laws. I have already said it is a dis infectant; It is also in its pure state an exceedingly suffocating gas. It unites with hydrogene readily in the light but not in the dark. Suppose we shut the blinds of our bedroom, shutting out the sunlight, the air becomes damp, or loaded with moisture—hydrogene; the chlorine gas that is present, ready to disinfect the room, cannot unite with the hydrogene because of the darkness. There is a law in nature that gasses uniformally mix irrespective of their gravity. But in the case above we lose the benefit of the disinfectant un der this law, because we shut the light out of our room, again, one proportion of Chlorine and one of mercury makes Calomel, a medicine, while two propor tions of Chlorine and one of mercury make corrosive subliment, a deadly poison. I might cite too many such laws, some of which seem to be special laws; I cannot speak of them here, I may at some future time, but for the present must return to the subject of dry earth as a disinfectant and deodor izer. Yes, it is a deodorizer, a power ful one. lio decaying matter can con tinue to emit disagreeable odors when completely covered with perfectly dry earth and kept covered to the depth of but a few inches. In your issue, some weeks ago, you recommended salt and lime as a cheap disinfectant. Salt is a chloride of sod ium, uniting with lime forms a chloride of lime, a good disinfectant. If your correspondent would ask me what dis infecting properties salt contained, I would answer chlorine, and when he asks, "what disinfecting properties road dust contains," I answer dry earth, and it acts as an absolvent. The alpha and omega under divine law. Who has not heard of the Dry Earth Patent Closet ? We do not see animal and vegetable matter undergo decomposition and emit disagreeable odors, while in a per fectly dry state. As moisture is neces sary to all life, so is moisture necessary to decay, because as already stated, the living is built up from the decaying and moisture is the medium for trans mission, that is, the properties are car ried in a fluid state by an inate princi pal or law of nature, that is to say the hand of God. While dry earth may not be used in sufficient quantities as to prevent decomposition entirely it does arrest it by absorbing a part of the moisture and acts as a deodorizer by absorbing the escaping gasses. Road dust is the cheapest form in which it can be obtained as it is al ready pulverized. Again I would urge all who prize good health, with yards and outhouses, free from all disagree able odors, to use it freely especially from now till autumn frost, as it is generally most sickly season. Use it in ditches and drains of the yard and about the door and board walks. MILO. Whenever oil of turpentine, ben zole or either is used to remove grease spots on cloth, the application should be made on the reverse side of the cloth by moisten ing it with the solvent in a circle sur rounding the spot, so as to approach it gradually, having blotting paper in contact with the spot of grease to ab sorb tho fat immediately; otherwise the solvent will have the effect of spreading the grease over a larger portion instead of driving it out of the cloth. In the application of a hot iron to one side and blotting paper to the other, the heat will drive the grease out of the cloth into the paper, because fat has a tendency to move from the hotter parts towards the cooler At Council Bluffs the trains of the Chicago & North-Western and the U. P. R'ys depart from, arrive at and use the same joint Union Depot. The Arbitration Fxperiment. For many years the organized work men of the State have been urging ar bitration as a means of avoiding ruin ' ous contests between the employers and employed. The difficulty in their way, as they claim, was to get a hear ing from those who choose to speak for those who only could have a com mon interest with them in the ques tion, viz: their employers, and a long time was spent in ruinous contests without satisfactory, or indeed any re sults. Senator Wallace, who in the time spoken of was the most uncom promising persecutor of those who urged the equality of workmen in their dealings with their employers, at the adoption of the principle of arbitration, blossomed out as the advocate of that principle at the late meeting of the Legislature, and presented a bill pro viding for a voluntary tribunal for such arbitrations. The reason for this sud den conversion are not avowed, and Mr. Wallace has not given the work men many reasons for feeling confi dence in him as a friend, but just the reverse; so that when his bill was pre sented, it was looked upon with a great deal of suspicion. The bill pass through all its stages, however, and became a law. The first attempt at an application of provisions of the bill has just been made, and brought to a conclusion in the Pittsburgh coal region. The employers demanded a reduction of the price of mining from three and a half to three cents per bushel, which the workmen rejected, and stoppage of work was about to take place. It was proposed that ar bitration under the new law should be resorted to, and the parties agreed. The tribunal was organized about a month ago, and the subject gone into, and it was found that the ultimate ar bitrator—an umpire, must be resorted to. Hon. John R. McCune was agreed upon as an umpire, and after performing his duty in examining all the facts presented, he has submitted his decision in a letter giving his rea sons for his conclusion, and decrees that the price from the 21st of May to the Ist of Cctober shall be three and a quarter cents per bushel. He reports that be finds the trade somewhat de pressed, and the prices at which coal can be sold readily will not warrant the payment of three and a half cents, but three and a quarter cents would be a fair price. It is stated that the work men are satisfied with the reasons for his decision, and are willing to abide by it. The operators up to the time of this writing have not expieased their views on the point, but it is believed they will likewise acquiesce, and thus a strike that would have been damag ing to all involved be avoided. What ever may have been the motives lead ing to the introduction of the bill, should it prove to be effective in pro moting harmony, it will be hailed as a long step forward in the line of be neficent \yrogresi.-Armstrong Republi can. It Was Very Effective. The King of Dahomy received an in voice of Krupp cannon not long ago and conceived the idea of having them mounted on elephants' backs for use in the field. With much difficulty this project was carried out, and at the next military review, the King ordered that one of the guns be fired immediately in front of the royal position, first taking the precaution to place a couple of thousand of prisoners about where it was calculated the ball would strike, so as to judge of the effectiveness of the shot. When all was ready, one of the big gest elephants was backed around and sighted. Just as the lanyard was jerk ed, however, the animal turned half round to reach for a peanut or some thing, and the shell took oil' the Prime Minister's head and knocked a hole as big as a sewer through the palace. His Majesty wouldn't have cared so much if the matter had ended there—as the Minister wasn't very prime and the palace needed ventilation—but it didn't. On the contrary, the elephant which bad been stood on his head by the recoil, picked itself up in a fury and started in on the down grade ahead of its ticket. It upset the grand stand the first rush, slung the grand chamber lain and past grand carver of mission aries into the next street. It then jumped into the brass band with all four feet, and if it hadn't got the big drum over its head so that it couldn't see, would probably have cleaued out the entire congregation. The King was not found until the next morning, and then, as he slid down out of a ba nana tree, he was understood to re mark that there was one thing needed to render his new artillery system an entire success—that was to get the enemy to adopt it. Murder Will Out. A man named George West, of Washington county, 0., after a silence of seventeen years, has just confessed on his dying bed to having assisted in the murder of an oil speculator. His story was that he and Ward, with a man named Kirkbride, who now runs a butcher shop in Matamoras, were the murders—Ward and he holding the victim while Kirkbride cut his throat. The body was then thrown into a well the location of which the dying man disclosed. He spoke of a ring upon his victim's finger, which had not been removed. Kirkbride is missing. The well has been searched and a human skull found. Further search is in pro gress. Kirkbride's whereabouts are unknown, he not having been in bis shop for two or three weeks. He will probably be arrested as soon as found. —An enthusiastic country exchange remarks: "The hills and valleys are carpeted with the verdant growing crops." A neat idea. The carpet, strictly speaking, is of the ingrain va riety. -~-The year keeps up it 9 reputation fo* disasters. Old Manuscript Ink. While examining a large number of manuscripts of an old scribe some 20 years ago, I was struck with the legi bility of the writing, owing in a great measure to the permanent quality of the ink, which had not faded in tho least, although many of the manu scripts were at least 200 years old. It was remarkable, too, that the writer must have been celebrated in his day for the excellence of his caluraphy, for I met with a letter or two from his correspondents in which there was a request for the receipt of tho ink he used. I found his receipts, which I copied, and from one of them, dated in 1824, I have during the last 15 years made all the ink I have used. The receipt is as follows: llain water, 1 gallon; galls, bruised, 1 pouud; green copperas, pouud; gum arabic, 10 ounces, 5 drams, 1 scruple Not re quiring so large a quantity at a time, I reduced the proportions by one-eight, aud the receipt stands thus; Rain water, 1 pint; galls, bruised, li ounces; green copperas, 6 drams; gum arabic, 10 drams. The galls must be coarsly powdered and put into a bottle, and the other ingredients added. The bot tle, securely stopped, is placed in the light (sun if possible) and its contents stirred occasionally until the gum and copperas are dissolved, after which it is enough to shake the bottle daily, and in the course of a month or six weeks the ink will be fit for use. I have ventured to add 10 drops of car bolic acid to the contents of the bottle, as it effectually prevents the formation and growth of mold without any de triment to the quality of the ink, so far as I know. —ln these days of temperance agi tation, and among the multifarious de vices to bring about a temperance re formation, it would be a refreshing change to see the reformers make some movement agairsi the drinker AS well aa the seller of liquo?. The drink busi ness is regulated by the law of demand and supply, and so long as men call for rum it will be forthcoming, law or no law. The seller is an accessory, but the drinker is the principal. The drink er plans to get drunk, knowing just what the result will be. The modern style of reform iB, to give the seller Hail Columbia, and the drinker hoteof fee and sandwhiches and, metaphori cally, to wipe away his maudlin tears with the assurance that he is a noble hearted fellow with a appetite. This is not even-handed justice. Whatever criminality attaches to the seller at taches to the buyer and consumer. Seller and drinker are practically in the same boat—they are there because they choose to be. The law now iu force in Maine recognizes the fact. Tho man who gets drunk, either on or off his own premises, is fined and im prisoned equally with the one who sells the liquor. The law which would reform the one must also deal ivitb the other. How a Woman's Life was Saved. After she had tested the skill of all best doctors in Western Pennsylvania, and New York, and had paid over SI,OOO without receiving any perma nent good, the limbs became with even tenfold greater virulence, not only eating away the flesh, but at tacking the bones beneath. It also affected her head and face, making her almost blind and deaf, reduced to a mere skeleton, weighing but 80 pounds, the doctors pronounced her at death's door. Per una was then given her, as stated, and with the result given on "Ills of life." She took no other med icine and is perfectly well. —Several of our exchanges have had a squib lately about the merchants of Oil City being taken in by an advertis ing fraud following or preceding, Sells Bros' circus, all ended by saying "here after those merchants will advertise in newspapers." Hereafter, those mer chants will do no such thing. They will just in the sweet bye and bye until some other advertising fraud with some other scheme comes around and then they will all contribute again, under the mistaken notion that they are ad vertising their business. I Know Whereof I Speak. For I have used it extensively. I re gard Parker's Ginger Tonic a most ex cellent for kidney, lung and stomach disorders. It invigorates without in toxiacting J. Francir, Religo Philoa Journal, Chicago. A rare case is that of Andrew Carnegie, of Pittsburgh, head of the largest iron manufacturing concern in this country. After accumulating » great fortune, he has returned to hit native Scotland, and it is said will seek for election to parliament. Four packages of Dr. Hertson's Skin, Cure entirely cured me," —F. P. La velle, Merced, Cal. sl. at druggists. —Watermelons, mostly from Geor gia never were mose plentiful at this season of the year. The freight from there here is from S9O to SIOO per car, and in some instances consignees re fused to take them knowiug that they could not realize enough to pay the freight. Diamond Dyes for family use have no equals. All popular color« easily dyed, fast and beautiful. 10 cents a package. An Illinois woman ha« done no work since her recent conversion, and her husband has sued the revivalist who was instrumental in destroying her household usefulness. Mr. Will T. Montelius, Mt. Car mel, Pa., says: "I wa3 entirely cured of dyspepsia, general debility and loa® of appetite by using Brown's Iron Bitters. NO. 3S
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers