a jfirtsih gtabing. now to kanage When yon want to manage men, do as bee.keepers do when they want to manage bees. Here are twb men that have bees in a hive. One says, "I own these bees, and 1 am , going to divide them, and move them." He prepares a 'place for them, and then goes to the hive, thrusts his hand rudely into the midst of them, and very soon he has his bees all over him, and he moves himself very rapidly! That is just as I have seen men attempt to manage men. Another man gets a bowl of sugar and water, and washewhie -hands over, and goes with the utmost quietness and seren ity, and- opens this hive,'and puts his hand in gently, and the bees find everything sweet,' and he:eau sooop - them up as though they were so much LEW, and put them in BS many hives as he pleases. (if he only takes tare to put a qneert-bee in eaoh,) and they will not or: fly away. And people - say, " Wonderful 1 that man has a real magnetic , power with, bees." So he .has, when he has sugar-Amid water on his hands. Now when .you =want *to manage men, wash your - hands with sugar and water! It is right for na to maintain a thousand courtesies that tend' to-give pleasure, and to avoid:manyiuderiessetrthat tend to give pain. Choose things' tliat will please men. Nat-galls are not the only things in the world. There are roses and boneysnokles. `Wisps are not the only.things in the world. There is honey as welt— H. Ff Beecher: Route After Children have Grown Up. 'Nothing on earth grows as fast as chil dren. It wis-ruerdayiand that lad was playingWitli tops, a'"buoyint boy. He is a man, and gone now ! His foot is in the field, his hind is npon the sword. - There is no more childhood for him or for us. Life has claimed him. When 'a'beginning is made it is like, a raveling ,stocking; way-'till all are gone. The house has not a obild in it. There is n 9 more noise in_the hall—boys rushing in Pell mell—it is Tiny orderly now. There 'are no morelkates or - sleds, bats, balls, or strings left- scattered about. Things are neat enough now. , There is no delay of breakfast for sleepy folks; there' II tio longer any task before you lie down of looking after anybody, and tucking up the bed-clothes. There are no disputes to settle, nobody to get off to school, no complaints, no importunities for impossible things, no rips to• mend, no fin gers to tie up, no faces to be wished, or collars to he -arranged ! There was never such peace in the house! It would sound like music to have Some feet 'clatter down the front stairs r l 0 for some children's noise .What used to ail us that we were hush ing their loud. laugh; checking their noisy frolics, and reproving their slamming and banging the doors ? We wish our neigh bors would - only lend us an urchin or two to make a little noise an these premises. A- house -without childreni it is like a lantern and'no candle; a garden and no flowers; a vine and no grapes; a brook with DO water gurgling and rushing in its channel. We• Want to' be tired, to be vexed; to be run over, to hear child-life at work with all its varieties: Daring the secular days this is enough marked. Bat it is Stinday that puts an American home to proof. That is the Christian family day. The intervals of public worship are long spaces of peace. The family seems made up on that day The children are at home. You can lay your hand'on their heads. They seem to recognize the greater and the leas love—to God and to friends . The house is peace ful, but not still. There is a loar and mel. odious trill of children in it. Bat Sunday oomes too still now. There is silence that aches in the ear. There is too much room at the jable, too much atthe hearth. - The bialroonis are a world too orderly. There is too much leisure and too little care. Alas! what •mean these things? 18 somebody, grosiing old ? Are these signs sod tokens ? Is life waning? Praise Year' Wife. Praise your wife, man; for pity's take give her a little encouragement; it won't hurt her. She - has made your- home com fortablej your hearth bright and shining, your food.agreeitile —for .pity's sake tell her you thank her, if-nothing more She do n't expect it; it will make her eyes open wider than they lame these ten years, but it *ill "do her soiid - for all Viiit--=-you too. There are many , women to-day thirsting for the `words of the language °fen eonragement. Through Summer's heat, through Winter's.• toll,: have they drudged uncomplainingly, and so Anoustomed have their fathers,- brothers and husbands be come to their monotonous labors that they look for and upon them as they do the daily ' rising of the sun and its daily gang down. Home every day may be made beautiful by an' appreciation of its very holiness. Yon. know that; if the floor is clean, manual la bor luta been performed to niake it -so. You know, if you -can take from your drawer a cleat shirt• whenever you want it, that somebody's fingers have ached in the toil of making it so fresh and agreeable, so smooth and lustrous. , Everything that pleases the eye and the sense, has been prb duced by constant work, much thought, great care, and untiring efforts, bodily and I mental. It is not that many men do not appro. elate these things, and feel a glow of grat itude for the numberless attentions be= stowed upon them in sickness and in health; but they don't come out with a hearty—i "Why, how pleasant you make'things Took, wife 1"-or, "I am obliged •to you-for taking go' much pains 1" They thank the tailor for giving them " fits ;" they thank the man in a, full omnibus who gives them a seat; they thank the young • lady wlto - moves along in the concert room=:--1n short; they thank everything out of doors, because it le the (meteor and come home, tip their chairs back and their heels up, pull but the newspaper, grumble if wife asks them to take the baby e acold if the fire• is gone down, or, if everything is just, right, shut their mouths with a smack of satisfaction, but never say, " I thank you." I tell you what, men, young' and old, if you did but show an - ordinary civility to ward your wives in the common matters of housekeeping, if you give them the hundred and sixteenth part of the compliments you almost choked them with before you were married, fewpr women would seeklor.other sources of affection. Praise your wife; then, for all th 6 good qualities she has, and you may rest assured that her deficiencies are fully counterbalanced by your own. The Children of the Bible Unless you would read the Bible through, you would not believe how much of it is for children. It is not a book of sermons, as so many of you think, hut a book ofstories; Christ wants ohildren to read the Bible, ao he made it such a book as he knew chil dren would love to read; mostly histories and stories, and a great many of them about children." It tells of the two first children that ever were-in the world; how the one quarrelled with his brother and killed him, and beoitucii lonply, cursed vagabond. Then ynu read oitiummi.who ,was diereepootfol ibil ,of little Ishmael, who, when his mother got lost in the desert, and laid him down under a bush to die, cried to God, and God showed her a spring of water that saved their lives; of Jt.seph, whose brothers hated him and sold him for a slave, but who afterwards became a great prince; of little Moses, whom his mother had to put in a little ship made of bulrushes, and sent it :floating away on the river—who was found by the king's daughter, but when he grew up would rather serve God than be a king; of little Samuel, whom his mother lent unto the Lord as long as he lived, and whom God made a prophet and a judge. • You wou'd find in the Bible the history of young David, who was feeding his lather . 's 11. ee'p when God sent to annoint him king over Israel, helped him to kill the giant Goliath with a - eling and a stone, and taught him to write- your own• beautiful cradle hymn, "The Lord's my Shepherd; I'll not want;" and of his son ,Solomon, whom. Christ loved when he was little; and told his father to call him Jedediah, namely, Beloved of the Lord; the same who became the - wisest man on earth, who wrote the Beek of Pro verbs, and when he was a very old man preached that sermon to children, " Re member now thy Creator in the days of thy youth." You would read, too, of pious little 'Oba diah, who feared the Lord in his_youth, who hid two synods of God's ministers in two caves when Jezebel wanted to kill them, and gave them bread when it was worth more than gold, and water, when the king and himself hadqo Search all over the country to find a little; and of little Timo thy, who knew the Scriptures from a ohild, and became wise unto salvation, and whom Christ sent to be a missionary and to save many souls. - Then you have, the history of the boy king, Josiah, who had the crown put on his head, and the Bible put into his band, when he was only seven years old ; and of the young prophet Daniel, who : was wiser than all,the wise men of Babylon ; and of the three children who chose to be thrown into the fiery furnace rather Jinn worship the golden 'linage, and how Christ came down and walked with them up and came through it, and Would not suffer the fire to burn them. - But I cannot even name all the children of the Bible. The child Jesus himself is one of the most beautiful pictures in it. You set him a baby lying in a manger, a little boy going up to chnrch-with his par ents, and so fond of instruction that he did not miss his mother for three days after she' was gone, while he .was hearing the ministers in the temple - and asking them questions. isteltautotts, An Egyptian Railroad. A railroad from Cairo to Saes takes you in six koursuear to the place at which the best authorities have concluded that the children of Israel crossed over. So I have been there and,esme back in one day; and My stay in tle desert was quite long enough. lig niter desolateness stands be fore mesas an indelible picture.. There is no possibility of forgetting • it. Ninety miles' ride out of sight of any green thing or any object, of beauty is an experience that need not be repeated; yet it' for the same miles must ba traveled in ooiniag back. Through this desert a railroad runs to connect with the steamships on the Red The desert is=: as level as a Western prairie; but what a'aontrast in every other respeot There a rich-Soil is watered by timely rains; here no rain, and no soil to be watered. And yet if this same surface wire-traniferred to...At:aeries by he :lotion of frost;antLyzins it, would_ eovered with greenness in a. single year, and with a soil in a single generation that would repay cultivation. Little do we appreciate the rich blessing ,which 'our Winter frosts bring to us in aiding the work of profitable and prolific culture No rains, no, fros no overflowing of . the. Nile, and hen there is nothing but pulverized mineral substance in all this wide waste. • Thnileaert is largely covered with frag-. ments of flint—come angular, some round ed,some sharp—from the weight of half an"ounce to that of half a pound. This must have made the journeying of . the children of Israel—barefooted as they were - - --not - a little uncomfortable:; and some where in Deuteronomy the. Divine good nem in preierving them is referred to as an s . occasion of gratitude: g! neither; did thy footiwell.theee forty.yeara. ll The forty years_ were spent between the Red-Sea and the. Jordan; but the surface there is : aim- Hai to this; and as the - stopping of the train at, different, points gave mean,oppor tunity to gather a handful Oi two "of flints as a memento of the desert, I could easily realize 'how great a ,mercy.' it was that Moses recalled to their memory in these , Words. There area few mud villages alopg this route peopled principally by thoie who are employed in keeping Alia track clear of sand, and doing other, sorts of work on the' road. A railroad, even through - the des ert, carries with it ,population, :134, shall I tell yea' how 'tiles° rude people live? That would be quite impossible. I. may, perhaps, approximate to it. Their huts are about ten or twelve feet square—l give the average sise=seven • feet high, flat roof, or nt roof atall. Some straw on the ground constitutes the bed. .4.nd in a country where fleas abound, and wheie the common peo - plO snot never to have reeov.:' ered from the plague 'spoken of in Eva viii : 17, where water is so scarce, that it seems never to be used upon either the per son or the clothing ; and where the sun and the sand and lack of washing give half the men, women, ,and children blind eyes or sore ones ;':you can fill 'out the picture with out further aid, as well as if I painted it for you. • But what better can be expeoted Allen I tell you that a dollar kweekin,all that the railroad pays to common laborers, and that provisions are almost as - deerfts with us? FortunatelY; little fneFor cldtbing is, need ed, and . human beings can:exist on very little and very plain food. Of course, as nothing caiLgrow on the desert, :these peo ple are shut out from the luxury of_ a gar den, and Inuit get whatever they eat by railroad from Cairo.---Fred. Zeittirs. The Palm Tree of Scripture. The palm tree is remarkable for lofti: 1108 S, straightness and produotiveness, and hence is made an emblem In Scripture of uprightnesk fruitfulness and-victory. Its fruit is the . date, very sweet and nourish ing, and a large portion 'of the inhabitants of. Egypt, Arabia and Persia subsist almost entirely upon it. Camels are fond of the Stone. This fruit is of the sip of an olive.' 'Palm branehes were signals of joy and triumph. The leaVes are six or eight feet long and proportionahly broad when spread oat, and are' used to over houses, arid make cot:Mhos, baskets, bdis; redoes, hats, ate.' From the fibers of the branohes ire made 'thread, ropes . ,- rigging, r etc. - Indeed - _ - ,the natives (says Gibson)- celebrate, either in prose. or verse, three hundred and sixty uses to which 4he , trunk, -branehes,leaves, and fit4artkApplied„.....The .pahrt..tree.ist tainslnitlif* fn thirst iiiars ing , thi seed, and continues fit full strength for seventy -or eighty years, bearing an-' and some of them !Mail lie .three, PRESBYTERIAN BANNER.--WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, !P,"4, or four hundred :. , ears old. From its sap, palm wine is male, called by the natives araky. .It is a beverage which easily in toxicates, and is thought by Bishop Lowell to be the "strong drink" mentioned by Isaiah. There is no fruit that can be eaten so constantly, or with so much impunity, as the date. It is like bread, and is bread to whole nations of Orientals. And what a delicious bread, baked by the sun, and showered in profusion, to be gathered and laid up for the future, either dry in huge oorbels, or pressed into a conserve, whit-h, when cut into slices, lOoks and eats likt• plum-pludding. We have often been present when this dainty was in prepara tion ; first with a little brush made, of fine palm-leaves, the particles of sand are whisked away from.the fruit, which having then been laid open with a sharp, flint, the stone is taken out, and if large and fine, hid aside for planting; next, the dates are thrown in - to clean, strong, square vessel like a tab,; and , having ,been pressed by heavy weights made to fit, the process is oompleted. Immense, quantities of this conserve are exported' from Egypt and Arabia _into all *he neigthoring countries, where ii.is'much prized; especially in the harems, where the women and children may be said' to eat it - almost incessantly. The Valley of Sehoshaphat. _ The..efforts, the Jews have made and the sufferlogs r losses t , -aod - humiliations they huie - borne.7for the purpose of obtaining sefoUltdre the Valley ,'of Jelioshaphat, .form a singular feattre . ib 'hymen history. No other nation has ever ihns straggled, not to live in their own 4nna s but - to, be suffered to lay their dust therein. Many descriptioni have been grave - of this mar- Venous Wee; 'but Confeiffnone of them. ever_ afforded; me a notion" ,of its. actual ap pearanee. Wandering alone past the foun tain of Siloam and by-the arid bed of Ke dron, it suddenly opened on me a perfect mountain of graves--a hillside paved with sepulchral slabs. ~Each stone is small—so small as to_lead to ,the conclusion that the bodies must be buried perpendicularly. At all events, if the multitudes there were simultaneonsly to arise, they would form a crowd as deosa g and . 00Mpaet as it would be enormous. ,§lioyt,- Hebrew in scriptions (some evidptly- of great age) are on all the stones; and these are laid together with interysle, only of a few inches, as in our oldes,Koity churchyards. The slabs are almost CO - the level of the ground, and of equal,height, so that it is literally one large pavement of death—an appalling, almost an oieiWheltoing Praser's Magazine: Roman Lawyers and their . Fees: At first the Roman pleaders received no remuneration beyond the services which every client owed to his patron. Subse quently, when law had become a difficult science, it became the practice for clients to reward their. .adrocates by making them presents, which (to evade the Cinenan law passed, to prevent this) were often disguised as secret loans. Before the fall of the re public, these fees equaled in magnitude the largest fees known in modern times. Even Cicero, who was regarded as a model of dis interestedness, is said to have received from Publiva Sylla about $40,000 as a fee for his forensic serviees. In modern times many large fortuties have been, made at the bar, but we imagine none to be compared with that of K. Licinius Grasso& whose fortune is said to' have exceeded fifteen million dollars.Ona mode of rewarding advocates, by legacies left to them by their, - Clients, appears to have been a source of considerable profit, and was esteemed high ly honorable to the legatee. Cicero boast ed that in this _way he had received twenty millions, of sesterces, more than $BOO,OOO. We fear that clients in our days are not so liberal in their last wills and testament& In fact, during the best days of Rome, suceess at the bar was the surest introduc .tion to popularity, distinction, and politi sal power. ND Wonder, then, that the art of forensic speaking was greatly cultivated, and with-so much suceess. Probably .no age his produced a band of more eloquent men than Cicero and his ootemporaries of the Roman bar. Nor were the barristers of Rome dlitinguished only. for oratory. Many of them were men of enlarged erudition, of literary taste, and of varied acquire matte. Varro, " the most learned of. the Romans," Quintilian, Sdetonitts, Pliny, and Tateitas were all advocates; and the, vol umes of Cicero still bear testimony "to hi& versatility and power in almoet _every de ,partment of literature: . tinder the -emperors the eloquence of the Roman' bar greatly declined, as all that is manly and great must decline and wittier with the loss . of freedom. Moreover, the treatment : of the bar. was not always such as tei'encourage much mental vigor. - Lord MaCkenzie relates that one day Gallicus . , :was pleading before the Emperor. Claudius near the banks of the Tiber, when-the ad Volute . , having irritated the emperor,. was by his orders, thrown into the river. Some .days after a Client of Gallious brought his 'ease to Afar, the'xiost celebrated advocate of the age, and requested him to plead it before the emperor. " Who told you;" said Afer, "that I was a better swimmer than Gallicus ?"—British, Qacolerly. Vim, arVent " - Training the ToAtato. Site girdeners think Wei the best way is to let_ them_ alone allowing them to spread--over the - ground. They maintain . , that the heat of the soil hastens the matu rity of the fruit. Infield culture this must be done, but where there are but few plants it is well to train them on small twigs or pieces of brush: stuck in the ground around each plant: This exposes the foliage and fruit ti3thei light and air better;:than 'when sprawling in a dense mass on " , the „ground. And the fruit is: kept Olean. Some make cheap frame, say two feet high, 'about each plant or extending along on two sides of a row of plants, over which the branches_ may be trained as they . grow. Driie in oratched stakes two feet, high andabout six,feet-apyt,.on each side of the raw, and then= Tay poles (old bean poles will answer,) from crotch to crotch. While the plants are small, prop them up with email tivige,,andleken they reach the poles, draw the Vines. over them. This plan exposes the vines to the sun and makes convenient picking and keeps the fruit elein. - Persons :wfio hicie - time and pa tience, may - make frames like ordinary grape trellises,- and tie their vines to the bars. This makes a handsome show from August MlOotober. -'The plant, if pinched . in when young and made to grow oompaot,. will be more self-sustaining, and fruit earli er and better than if allowed to grow at will in this usualcway.—Americast Agricut twist. Sweet Potatoes id the' North. The aucoess whiete has attended oar own experi , znente as those of friends and oorreepondeots, - . -will- warrant thole who .hive net made trial_ or, sweet ,potatoes,to ; 11 9. 8 P-74'4ka , fair :Proa,Pe_ct of, a reuninara five orop. -Some who failed in their flret experiment have den ounced . their culture as imprautiCubic, but 4here, is - no doubt; that wit:emcee . -largely outnumber the fau. tree. .. - Aethis late - daz the Panto Inust_be i;:olimTatA - TIOM who -otafted.- them. Any good, warm and ratter r light soil will answer. The ground must be highly manured and ridged; this is done by marking out rows running north and south, at distances of three feet. Spread barn-yard manure or rick compost along the marks, and then form ridges by throw ing two fariows together. The ridges may be finished with hoe and rake, and should be about 10 inches high, a foot wide at bot tom and 3or 4 inches wide on top. Plant as soon as cool nights arc over—from 10th to 25th of Juno. Mark off the top of tho rows in Epa ce3 16 inches apart, and set the plants in up to the first leaf, and press the Moil well around them. In dry weather, water the, holes before setting the plants. Where theie - are many plants to put out, one person may make the holes, a boy,drop the plants at them, and one or two others follow to set them. It is best to plant on a cloudy day. The ridges should be kept clean of weeds, and the- vines occasionally moved to prevent thein from rooting at the joints.-16iVt: A Crop of Roots. At no distani day a crop of roots upon every - farm where live stock are wintered, will be deemed indispensable. Every:year increaseii,theuumber of, those Who oulti.• rate roots- extensively, and: find it profits.- bk. There are two convincing reasons why reels should become a staple production : First, animals thrive better in Winter upon a mixed diet; second, more food per acre, 'can be cihtained with them, than with any other erhp. 'The natural food of cattle is succulent: They can live and thrive on dry hay and grain, but they will turn gree dily- from these to an occasional feed of beets, carrots, , or - turnips,:and the natural taste of animals is the best guide in ,the se leetion of their food. It is true that fifty bushels of corn raised' on an acre-of - ground will give more flesh than, four times the same weight' of roots; but, with , fair cul ture twelve hundred bushela ,of -mangel wurzels can be taken from an acre, or the. nutrient equivalent of this mount in oth, ay. roots, as, sugar beets, carrots, or Swed ish turnips. There are other minor advantages in root culttire, whiejr should - be taken into Re count whWnstimating its -profits. They draw hilt lightly upon the soil, and thus, fill an excellent place in it course of mild vation - on /ands which have been teo se— verely taxed. ' They also leave the ground Clean and, in the best condition for any fol- , crop;lowing and besides they, give profit able errificiyment at a :.season of the year when thereollfeed not - be a great press of other labor. Amor* root crops most valuable for stock, we place carrots and parsnips; sugar beets stand next, mangel-wurzels and futa-baga or Swedish turnips follow,close, and when the season has advanced too far for these, English turnips will supply the place. These, particularly quick growing, white turnips, are better left, until July. Whinhezer sort is taken, the soil should -be made.ileeP and mellow. - An excellent practice is to plow down to the depth of the soil, (say 5 to, 7 inchesi) then follow with the subioller. A dressing of bone dust or superphosphate of lime harrowed in, will pay well ; or well rotted yard ma nure lightly covered will not mule amiss Plowing at this season will destroy the early crop or:weeds, which Will add their substance to,isnrieh the soil. About four pounds' of carrot or six of beet seed per acre will be needed. Sow in drills thirty inches apart for mangels, sugar beets, or ruts bagas, and two feet for carrots. , The work will be greatly facilitated by the usf. of a good iMPleinent for the purpose. floe as early 'as the rows can be plainly seen. There are seed sowers in the market which will ;make this much easier than when done in the 'old-fashioned way. At the first hoe ing, thin carrots or white turnips to six inches, at beets, etc., to one . feet apart in the rows. After the first hoeing and thin ning, the further culture of weeding and keeping the ground loose, can be almost wholly done by horse power implements.— . Dry Fodder. Too many farmers are in the habit of looking upon hay as the Only dry fodder; for my own part I - set a very great if not equal value upon corn fader, well- cured. I -out at the roots as soon as the kernel glazes, bind in small bundles, and when it is „dry, house it, if possible. Corn sowed for fodder, eitherbroadoasi or in drills, I out when fairly out in blossom. At this time the stalks are not so sweet, but they tireless woody than subsequently. If pos sible, we arrsnge to have our corn fodder sowed in a long strip, say two rods wide _near a fence, so that when it is out, it can be set up arinst -the fence to dry. We have tried sugar cane (sorghum) in the same way, and like it much, but can - ex press no decided-preference. Some years ego I obtained some seed of what was called " Egyptian millet," and though this is no name at all, for so many thing's- bear it, yet it is they one I could ever learn. The plant grew six to eight feet high in good soil, sendingup a multitude of suck ers. The spikes of , flowers appeared very late in the season, and I was never able to ripen- seed,- These spikes were like the heads of The oat-tail-flag, but: pointed and longer, the seeds being enoltised in a mass of short bristly hairs. It was very leafy, and the sialks not tough and woody like the sorghum. This was-the most valuable fodder crop I ever planted, but since the war I have been unable to get seed, as it came from the Smith. The crop was treat ed- in- all reskeots like - corn or sorghum sowed in drills: . - - Some of my neighbors sow', peas for - dry fodder, threihing them indeed sometimes, but often feeding the dried haulm, peas and all. The mildew which often covers the pea vines does - no injury to the hay, but the mould which forms if the straw heats in Curing, or gets wet after drying, renders it unfit for horses, - for which, otherwise, it is excellent fodder_ In this respect, how ever, pea straw dins not essentially differ from- any other _dry, fodder. Any of the kinds of fodder I hare mentioned, may be sowed thi; first week in June. Peas how ever, oughtredly to be put -somewhat earlier into the ground, but sowed thick and deep they will do well. Millet I. think:May be sowed later than any other thing for a dry fodder crop. In ordinary seasons a - fair crop of hay may be obtained, sowed as late as the 25th of July. It may . thilitg used as a second crop .toad vantage, following early potatoes, peas, or grain. The tax upon the soil or the, ma nure in It, is not great, for when sowed ao late, it'is cut soon after it blossoins, hekoTe the seed.: forms much. Of late years I 'have not used millet largely, but when. my hay.crop was likelyto be-short, I tried :Hungarian grass,•treating it in the same .way at - Mould millet (of which it is a variety), - ant-have been well satisfied with reaults.—lbid; Illinois Corn.—ln,lBBo Illinois raised one hundred and fi an nullons hushels of corn. If thie - were _placed in ears, three hundred bushels-in i.ear, it would—make a train of two thotisand three hundred and ninety-five Millis 16110 andatioWingtwen q-ilve fain' Inoomotife,4Wrould take lourteen.thousand.tbree ,hundred :and Bev entylooomotivee to draw-it. frotlieble 0 - Oil--4..,TAlthen L e l46 0 0 ., F*, + sends thlhe.. Anzarioan:Agriouliurist the following amount of three sows; forthe year 18681 690 lbs.? butter Sold at 20 ate. EMIENIIME!! per /b., and two splendid calves worth $1 each, making a total of $156, or 4.25 fur each cow. They wern led with guars each of wheat bran mixed with cut coin fodder in January, February, March, April, and December, and turned out to pasture the rest of the year. T 'OLOGICAL AND ' RELIGIOUS BOOKS ! -.. • All persons visiting Philevielphin, especially Mitt:atom ill attendance on the al4y 3leetizir„ - e. are invited to call and ex amine the large end varied stock of RELIGIOUS BOORS for sale by us. embracing Many • OLD AND RARE WORKS not to be round in any other bookstore. We also keep con stantlpon 'bend a large assortment of books for tlabbath Schmil Libraries, School Meeks * Miscellaneous - Books, Let ter cad Note Paper, Oc, &0., all for sale at tlos /omit • SMITH, ENGLISH & CO., Booksellirs and Publisher:,, . eZnith Sixth Street, toPP;4 • . • ,Piillaaolpant.. 1111ITTSB4JRG.H. •- - ' • . r FEMALE COLLECE. • ItEV. L C. PSItSitING,' fl 0., Pastime - v. - 'Seat Sustained College in the State.. Twenty Teactiers. Superb buildings, to which Improve - manta live Just been• made at a east of 520,000. Unsur• passed facilities in the Ornamental brunches. Thorough and } extensive course of study. $45.00 par term (14 weeks . ) paye all . expenses in the boarding department, - except mashing and fuel. Neat term . will commence December fith.- Send to President Pershing .for a Catalogue. lit. ,SIMPSON, Pres't Trustees. RAdRANT"...., SOZODONT.. , . , Only True Dentrifine mown. The public have lone been , in want of some convenient, sate and beneficial Dedtrtfice, which could be relied on es haying a healthy and preserving effect on the - teeth and gums. • Hundreds,of worthless preparations have already been offered sal such, in the foam of powders, pastes and liquids, when a trial bas only proved them Injurious to the enamel of the teeth, or eise too, inconvenient and unpleasmit for daily' use, so indispensable to tho•prtservatiob. of the teeth. The dozodont is offered With all - confidence at a Beautify:el' and Preserver of the Teeth, n, scientific combination, every ingredient'Of which is known tb have a beneficial influence on the teeth and gums, imparting a delightful and refresh tag taste and feeling to the month, correcting all disagreea ble odors arising :from decayed teeth. With of- tobacco, .he- Its fragrance and conventoticemoke it a pleasure to use it: it is perfectly free from all acids or other ingredients having.. the least tendency to inhireiheenamoL . This popular Rentritice is mow used,and recommended by many of the fleet - Dentists-in the country, as well as by many 'of the most eminent Divines, Physionanta,Chemistaandacien tifio Contlemen of the day. • The following eminent :clergymen and their Waffles, Of New-York City, together :with hundreds' ' of others having used the SOZODONT, are convinced of its excellent and it, valuable qualities, and give it their most cordial aommenda tion. - . , • CLERGYMEN OF °NEW-YORK JI,BV. JAMBS W. ALEXABDER, D.D. • *" E. 31. ADAMS " SAMDEL COK, D.D. " B. E. GRATIN. D.D. • "- TROXAS DEWITT, D.D. WILLIAM P. SIOMME . , D.D. ....',rramAN BANGS. ". J. B."WAKELEY. " - S. MICKEL& . " J. P. NEWMAN'. " - SAMUEL O'COOD, " D. S. PARMIsLES. 6130. POTTs. D.D. " B. E. RANKIN. - ." PETER STRYKER. '''=A'. VERRIM D.D. T. E. VERMILYE, D.D. Said by Druggists army - tiara, at 75 Cents per lion's. HALL & At. CKEL, , . ap2T. ' TROPRIVTORS, NEW-YORK. JOHN JAMB DITORD IftlEr OVIEDO 3631rAilk gee V.lnt.os ALANUFACTURBES AND DEALERS iliT Hats, Cape, and Straw Good% WEIOLEaILE 'AND.-SETAIL . 131 Wood. Street,. Pitts.burgh Itive now on hand for Spring sales, aelarge and complete at aortment of Goode ea can be found in any of the Easter , ' o consisting of - Fur, - Silk, and Wool Hats, o' every style and'quality,; CAPS of every quality and lates aahlona; Palm LeaL Straw; Leghorn, and Panama RATS, Straw, and BONN ETg, etc., etc. Persona wishing tf. purchase either by Wholesale or Retail will find It to they E W TRIMMING . AND FURNISH.- ING ROUSE. Oar stock will he found the most complete. in the olty embracing all the newest'stylea of TRIMMINGS in.. • Chenille, Silk, Gimps ; • Bead and Bugle Tiimminge;s4 Bead and Rosette Buttons; Hosiery, Glove.; Pine _Embroideries; White Goode; Bonnet gild Trimming Fibbon”. Scotch Plaid Velvet.aud Ribbons;, Hoop Skirts,- • Balmoral iikirts • lilorocco Belts • silk and Sooteit Plaid Rat Lace Handkevehieth; • • Ribbons: • Point Lace Collars; Valencia Collars: Maltese Collars and Curs t. Lees Sleeves; .Ladies! and Gents' Furnishing Goods. • - MOORHEAD, DENNISON & CO., ap6-3 . 81 MARES= STREET, PTTTSBURGH, NEW AND_ VALUABLE BOOKS FOR &ALB AT THE PRESBYTERIAN BOOK ROOMS, IN RENSHAW'S NEW BUILDINGS, NO. 67 HAND STREET, PITTSBCRCkI PA.. " The Board of Oolportage respectfully invite thef' friends $' call at their Rooms, and examine their large 'assortment of religious books, among which are . the tollowing new The headship of Christ la.SO Five Years' Prayers and Answel s. By Prime 125 Patience to Work and Patience t 0..... 1.3.) Rand Book of the New Testament " 1.00 ,The Ways of Pleasantness for thr .. ....... 1.00 The Recreations of a Country Parson. 2 roll, - 5.20 Graver Thoughts' of a Country Parson 1.60 The Sympathy of Christ. By Winslow 1.25 - Andy Rail, the Mission Scholar in the Army...... —. 90 Stepping Stones for Children's Feet... SO The Drunkard's Daughter 'tb I.ittle Lily's Travels • 65 The Bible Against Slavery • • 25 All the issues of the Board of Publication and a large sup. ply. of. Sabbath School books, always on.hand.. _ i4bla-p JOHN CULBERTSON Librarian. F IRST NATIONAL BANK - • ALLEGITENY, PA.. DESIGNATED DEPaSITOR ANn FINANCIAL AGENT T_TWITED STATES.. ®:.rte too - • This Bank has been authorized and is Doi , prepared to re ceive Subscriptions to the .: NEW GOVERNMENT LOAN, This Tenn, issued under authority of - an Sot of Congress approved Merck:loBB4, provides for thoiSeUff of Two Bun dredMilliOns of .Dollars (f 400,600,000) United . Btatei Bonds, redemiibble after tan years, and payabWfOrty trom date, TM COIN. dated Marchl, 1864, bearing interest at the rate of 5 PER CENT: per 'Annum 'TN COIN, - payable semiannually on all Bonds over 8100, and on Bonds of *MOO and less, annually. Subscribers will receive either Registered or Coupon Bonds, as they may prefer. Registered Bonds will be issued of the - denominations of fifty dolters,Jsso,l 'one hundr, d dollara, ($100,) five hun. died dollars;" one thousand dollars,' ($1,000,), five thousand dollars, (0,800) and ten thousand dollars, (610,106.); and 'Coupon Bonds of the denomination of fifty doThats, - (1 , 50,) one hundred dollar-a; ($100.) five hundred dol . lan, (s6ou,) end one thousand dollars, (VIM%) . T. H. NEVIN Pssulawr• J. P. KRAMER, Cashier; = a? M. 11'14USTEE ...... ..... ..... JOSEPR Mb 0 0, -+Ol MaVASTER 8/4 ..6AZZAIII, • er 02, -Js• x, A Tri. • os Gratt Street, Pittsburgh. --- Boldiora - Claims for Penatorati"BEarati - iFtaf 'tack' Pay TILE . ThiarIaw"MONTIILY IdAGAßlNß.ispnblishidby DAVID • `McKINNEY, D.D., and 1.-N. hIcEIVEV, in Pm:Emmen, rd. It ill Ern octavo of 04 pages, dongle - oolnearts, on `good papei, with strong paper °avers, and wall execitted: It ern: , , braces Christian Doctrine , Brienca, Philoaophy, and Iditicel lansocts Literature—truly Evangelical and with special adaptations to the young. TERMS, to advance, 'per year, one COMP', UM; three n - copies , 85.00; five copies. $8.00; ta copiea, $A5.00. Each ad. - dittonal oopy at the price of the club in whioh it it sent. 'One copy without charge to each pastor whose congttspii• Lion takeis tan nopiee or more.; - A specimen is sent to shy parson -who !imposts it with view of getting up a litit'of 'subrorttiens. Subscriptions talreii at .PtVshyterian Book Boothe, aro s ot the stores of J. IX Williams, and Davis, Clarks ft g o. °prior., 114 Smlinnasn gsnarr. • • Address D. & I. It. MaiIIENBY, app - • ' Dittahorah. - Pa. . . . _ SAFEST AND CHEAPEST SYSTEM. OF INSIIPAIs:CH. Bortp D#Hdapd for 2861 . - 60 per cent. Eirip Biliderid,for • 60 Tor cent. Scrip Dividend for 1883 - • 60'per mut. STATBMBNT OP, THB Washington Insurance Compaxty 07NEw.roitir. G.O. siTTEHLsg, Preet. I.H. 'WESTON, / I II" * S. S. BRYAN, Pittsburgh Agent, 59 Fourth Street (Burke's Building.), DABE CAPITAL $4OOlOOO - ASSETS. FilittninT 1, 1864.. • U. S. Bonds (rtaarli,t 5253,590.00 -Bonds and Mortgages ' ' 132,445.50 Demand Loans leajdo.oo Cadt on - hand' and initte bade of Agate 14,022.55 ratlite ' . .... 85,048.45 Aliaostlaropos:4 - .. 45,269.96 'nettled . . . . `2,31.6.00 barna and Somlne 4. .... AI Diirldiad or a per cent. diclarNt roh. fat, Mi. Attoari 'lntfirest Dtitdeldl of - 6 per:eint. on 'ontatadana, - Borip. Alcoa Scrip . Divickral of 60 par 'Cant. on the earned preinlik,_ - etrof Policies entitled to partleipateitabaprollte for. the yeti ending :estuary 81at,1564 nutritAr LYON'S ICAMMON. Katheiron is from the Greek word Sathro," or “Fiathairo," singnifying to cleanse, rejuvenate and restore. This' article is whet its name signifies. 'For prouerving, re storing and beautifying the human hair it is the must ry tuarkiefile preparation in tan world." I t is again owned and put up by the original proprietor, and is now made with the name care, skill and attention which gave it a aisle et over one million bottles per annem. ' It N a most delightful Bair Dressing. It medicates scurf - And andruff. It-keepsthe head cool and Clean. It mat es the Emir rich; soft and glossy. It.Prevelita the half iYotu isaling_off and turning gray. It means hair * upon bald beads. • Any lady or, gentleman .Who 'Tallies a beantiltd head of hair should use Lyon's Hatbairop.- 'lt is knOwn and, used throughout the civilised „world:- geld by all respectable dealers. 4 . DEMAS S. BARNES & CO., New-York. PAGAN'S MAGNOLIA BALK This le the most delightful and extraordioarratilcle ever discovered. It Changes the sunburnt face and bands to a pearly satin texture of ravishing beauty, impartirg the marble purity of youth; and the dislingue appearance so Inviting in the city belld of fashion. It removes tan, freckles, pimples and roughness from the skin, leaving the 'complexion fresh transparent-and sinenth. It contains no materiallittnrions to the skin, - .Patntinined. by Actreasm and Opera Singers.- It is What every lady should have , Sold Prepared by W. E. HAGAN', Troy, N.Y. Address all orders to ~.; pgriAs CO., New York. HZIMSTEEEPS• INIMITABLE .;i.A.II,I,.RESTORATIV,,, Not Dye, Hitt redone gray bait to iti:original color, by supplying the capillary tubes with natural sustenance, Impaired by age or disease. All iiistantatteous dyes are composed of lunar caustic, destroying the vitality and beauty of th.e.hair, and afford of themselves no dressing. ' Ifelmstreet's ILimitable Ooloring not only restores hair to its natural color by an easy process, but gives the hair a . ' Luxuriant Beauty, promotes its growth,- preventa its falling oft; eradicates dan druff, Wad imparts health and plettaantnews to the head. -It has stood the teat of, titns being the original flair Coloring end It eonetaetly increasing in favor. Med by both gentle menandladies. It to sold by all vas — *table dealera, or can be procured by them. of the commercial agents. D. 13. BARNS& & CO., 2112 Braadwah . New-Yprk. Two etzes, GO aeata and PIC . 'D. S. BARNES, - MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT. The, parties in St. Louis and Cincinnati, who have been Counterfeiting the, Mustang Liniment under. pretenee of proprietorship; here been thoroughly estopect bythe Coen& To guard against further impoation. 1 bare procured tion , the U. S. Treasury, a private steel plate revenue stamp which Is placed over the top of such bottle. Each smelt beers the ten simile ormy *taunter* and, without which the article is a COokterfeit, dangerous and 'worthless imita tion: Examine are bottle. This Limb:tent has beanie UK. and growing to favor Inv many yeara. There birdly axis* a hamlet on the trer,ltao te Globe that doelt not *retain evi dence of its wonaenn I affects. It is the hest emollent in the world. With its. present Improved ingredients, its effect* upon man and beast are perfectly remarkable. Sores are heeled, pains relieved, lives saved, valdrible animals made useful, and untold ills intemaged. For cuts bruises, spredna. rheumatism, swellings, bites, cuts, caked breasts, sprained horses, dm., it is a Sovereign Remedy that should near be dispensed with. should be in every Smelly.- Sold by all Bz S. BARNES, Newqork. We have learned not to be:astonished at anything. Tears of experience and a eorreenondence entending throughout all nationalities of the habitable globe hare inrned theorise Into fame and established a- basin front which we need not err. We are not surprised at each feats as the Wowing-- -altiongh the persons who write them are. We know the persons and circumstances, hence feel at liberty to indorse their statements: "Nzw-BEDsoaD, Raley Nov. 44,1863. "Dien Sri have been affLicted many years with steam prostrating cramps in my Raabe,' cold feet and hands, and a general diaordered system. Physician and medicines failed to relieve ma. While visiting some friends in New• York who were using Plantation-Bitters, they prevailed upon me to try them. I oommenced with a email wino-glassful after I:limier. Feeling- better - by' - degrees; In • few days I was astonished to find thecoldneas and cramps had entirely left me, and I could sleep the night through, which I have not done for yeet4.. I feel like Another being: lily appetite and strength have also greatly improved by the use of the'Plart tation Bitters. Respecttlilly, Jrfervi " Rim'sßra; Vla., Sept. 16,1863 " • • • I buTo boon In the army hospital for fourteen months—speechless! mud . nturly dead. At Alton, Zit., they me me a bdttl•'of Platitatlon Bitten. • • • Three but tlas rostored my speech and nand m•. • * • • The following is from the Maneger of the Union Nome School forehe Children ofVolunteers : “I.lAinemayss Dia'max. 67TH BT,I Nutr,Yoaa, Atigtpit 3,1883. j "Ds. Daiss wunderfal , Plantatiol Bitters have been given to some of oar Little children suffering from. weakness - and weak lunge with most happy effect. . One lit. tle girl in particular, with pains in her head, loss of appa ! Cite, and daily wasting . .ca stimption, on whom , al] medical skill had been 'exhausted, has been entirely restored. We cominenced with but a' teaspoonful of Bitters a day. Her appetite and rapidly increased, and she isixow well. "Respectfully, - • Mu. 0. M. Davoa.”, " * * • I owe amok to you; foi believe the nolantalloullitterakavesaved - aiy life. - • "Bay, Walisossit t Madrid, N. Tr , • • * Thoti wilt mend • roe two hordes more of tliy Plantation Bitters. My - vrile has beeh greatly benefited by their use..* -Thy friend, '• AIWOUPADt s Pbiladelrat, Po." " * *_„ * Ihave'been great - sufferer from Dyvepsta, and'had to absuiten,preaching. * * The Plantation Bit tars have canal ma. "Rev. J. 8. CULTRORN, Rochester, N. T." * * * X tine _given the_Blantation Bitters to hnn deeds of our diaahled,soldiers with the most astonishing elfeetl;. - Cf. W.. D. iistinaws, Superintendent Soldiers' Rome, Cincinnati, 0." * * The plautation Bitten ham* oared me of Liver OamplaMt.; id . ..kat - ch.', was -laid up prostaate x and had to abandon, my btudnema gl ,T;f 7 &: ~ineasrizs lend;Ohio? " • * • The Plantation Bittern have mired too of ada rarigament ot,tho Ki 4 neyAgpd Urinary Organs ttiattroadia creased ma car ye/am acts like +kat/aim.. !'cx 0: m0010;110 Broad y;' ax,, - &4:4- • The Plantation llltters-ntelee the weak strong, the languid Juilliankand are eialjianeteWtottnre'e pat% treivoyer. They wai rc runpostul of the colehrated.CalL'utya park, W.lutergreen, :stiVAN , s; :Turn, Her* 41 41 Prpsex.Y4 to P*f_nptir inn - e at Cry Raw. . „ S. T.-MOO-X.,. Parma" of eer4entary hatete,- tmtdded:with weal*, lassitude, Palpitation. of the heat, tacit Of trpetite, distress after eating, torptdliver, constipation, Ace., deserve to suffer if they will net try them. They, era reoommenderkhy the highest ,reeedcaa &Whorl- Mee, ited are warranted to pfedtrce cu iflotediefe'benottetal effeot.. They are exceedingly itirrtieihte, perfectly pare and harmless. . . . , 11ot1e0.—Att7 person protoodlog to sell Plantation tont in , bulk or b' tloqiilicoaVa AviOdlerauchropostor. It piA . up .ottlytt - ,:Ouplosi.ostfixtoottto: , Beware of,bottles rofaletL with itaittilon:deleted r ia stuff, fOr which iwcirara/ See'tkoit oven , bottle boa our Vatted f!ititil itamp over, twi cork anniahlate4 and our ilvature - - - . . sir Said by resperteble dealer*, thratiglior4 tike habitable a*. • - - P. 11. DARK & CO" Broadtvay, New-York. imar2-D • rut HERON:. WORKS, e 40 .41 arid 41 tena.Stret,t, PITTSBURGH, PA. - , . ‘--FOSTER AND'COMPANY + mACHINISTS.st_EAm,:iNcoit EttALD .ERS AND: !RPM: F.OqpiDEAS;, Aroireiutreti to mean ctarr, to order on short natio. and an rabto tonne, - A 2 KTrds of Sham Engias; And baying 42l*clini 70IINDRY'lli prOotiOs of building ni willdun* THE Andy to MI orders 6r , CASTING); of any isizerer pottara. ' - >f,1741 WA.LL PAPIs. - =EI I now offei for the ipurl.ni,saa,,,lue!f ,1 :7 6 , 5 Le t PARICR, HALL, DINING OONT, VESTIBULE, At;' CEILING Manti EArti, Alth so, IowWIEDOW ARRS FIRE 13064 at e est rket rat,m, PRZYtt, si r At NO. 107 51AREET STREET, nnr marl B-0 JOS. 142__141.1clitE, USEFUL AND VALIJ, BLB DIECOVEi , ri : 4 Groat D4:Fropery fi.pplikaable to the; °sofa Arts. 6 new thing Its Combinistlou. Boot and Shoe ManutAaturers, It is a 1:111Vd. ME Reamber. NABEIS PIANOS ARE NOW CON.. m-m- • eidered the beed Piattoe In the world, and ere fully warranted for eight seam. As to the relative merits Gilts linabe.Plartos, we would refer to tbe certificates ot earrii, a in our poseession from Melberg, Gottschalk, Stuttered, if, Satter, and EL Vieuptemps. A cell ht respectfully solftleff: before purchasing elaewbere. Persons at a distant,. tu please rend for a circular. For We at factory prices, BAINES BEMS. PIANOS are the ben. Planet in theca:T.. cry at the price. GROTESTEEN & CO:8 PIANOS. tall 7 .7otave rosewood, folly warranted, for WM. JIASFSALL MAVEN'S Parlor Grin PIANOS for 1225, PRINCEi ILELODSONS. the beet made. Pricey from $55 t. v - 26-.t HOMESTEAD. GAS LIGHT. TSB GRIFFIN BOMRSTEAD GAB APPARATUS SIAN. ACTUBING COMPANY, located in the cry of 21. a, ourith, is prepared o meld:, Mee4ines for peblie seri pri. v are butininge in, the court. ies of Bradford. fic Lycomiog, turd aU tire other counties in .Pennsyieuem 4 1 p west of the Susquehanna and fo th e conet...l of Gallic, Bohm, Athens, Morgan. Bohner., Wayne, J 1: intetnit, Porter, 0 canna, Like, Washim.t.a. Meta*, Guerneey, Noble, Belmont, Tnscarawas, Tlarthon, Jeffnut. 3taree Carol, Columbiana, Motioning, Trumbeti, acu Ashtabula, in the Butte of Ohio; and the $.lO of West . nllO4lll. Scud tor a Circular to FOSTER & CO, - . .. 3fACEtINISTB AND EKG= Bc - rOrks, Oor. Of Pam and etanwii SU), Pitt.turgh, Pa, fobi7-A LIBRARIES . , OP The American Sunday School UllllO FOR DISTRIBUTION. The_ Sunday Suhool Libraries tor (Inanimation et par Cawley fa Will of the Late CHARLES BREWER ; will De ready ter delivery on end alter July 10th, 1860. The Sunday Bawls; entitled to them Liam - lei are :how -etablished in Allegheny Oontity, Pa., enoe March 31e4 tam. Applicants will be required to subscribe to statement el. ing PAD* location, and date of organization of the Sobooll aame 'and Post Omoe address of Smperindendera; avenge number of teachers and scholars in errendanm., and ameerl then contributed for support of School. Reasonable evidence, by amount of contributions need, erwise, of the permanents of the School will be required. Apply to F. R. RATON, or 3.vrorr, Mecarld d Po, No. 17 pm St., Plitelruglt JOHN A. RENSHAW, Jain- a Corner of liberty and Hand Strode, Pittsburgh, Pa.., Would lwribe the attention of the publio to iie triteDEnt and varied assortment of -CHOICE FAMV..,Y GROCERIES, TEAS. Ilingar-Onrud Hams. Dried 13set, Fish, Chew, F0r412 and Domestic Fruits, Pickles and Eances, HAMS ctgart. Fresh Fruits and Vegetables, kc., besides a lsrge tot of HOUSEKEEPING UTENSILS, Snell as Wood and Willow Ware s Japanned I% WEIS Housekeeping Hardware, as, Jar floods carfenlly packed and defiT6red !Ye:: cf :tarp for cartage at any of the Railroad Depots or tirerah:ti Landings. Catalogues containing an extended Iter of gooLs, lent by mail if desired, and all orders from a dleuxnee Wit receive ora'prompt and careful attention, JOHN A. RENSBAN: . apT-A WHEELER, & WILSON'S Z 5 (i 9 42' Z 2 A' SEWING MACHINES; Save won the • Highest Premiums At all the important STATB AND MECHANICAL Las where exhibited. The CHEAPEST, SIMPLEST ANT) BEST. Every Nadine Warranted Far Three TM's , Air PRIOE3 non $5O UPWARD. - SS Bend for lliescriptive Circular. WM. SUMNER dc CO., WESTERN AGENTS. PlTTEtuutall cfmcz, NO. 27 FIFTH STn three doom below Bank Block. mar 9 0. A.lketine, SILVER PEARL SOAP. RUMP ON & CO., ,367 Liberty Street, Pittsburgh, Bole Proprietors and' fazrafaoturers for WESTERN PErt:' A 11roy M.antakotareni -01 a ittporio Bride of PAZNItt - GAltitiar, • 01,172 4 and Bosilt 50414. Of our SILVER PEARL SOAP; which wo cor3der- 11, better or general use than any otikr bsturs the Pa.b l * - should -be borne in wind, hos iscdher SccoW Lime or /Omits, or any ostler substance in its cia.,rw• turn which' can ehrink, or inittre thr flown fabnc. k Ixunsls and Wool :ma can be washed with the r&piiity o . Cott not CiOthee. washed with' the ELVER PEA 111. 3 0 .0 do dot requira bopireg or ha£ the rutibizg, wilt:a of couz-A , saves the weer And tear. . . P.71,114{t iglefAß 11mitoyearGrows% Dirt, Tobacco Stains, Primers' Ink, Smolt attrithe worat Bilge Water Stains instautiy, by rpplYin' with Mast arms" thtus protecting 'windows, collie , at furniture from suds and slops. It impata a bnil:sa Plate, Jo:malty, Olsesivarci Briamited Mutative and Seer- Leathsr ~..inn2eajaMY' and tor cleaning Nimble and Figs " Tiles " 38 .330 .olitual t ~ /Or the Mob. and particuluiy I ' 4 alnumnroodrig, the SILVER Pit crt i L , O.IP Is a pavers IvA ttry. In a word, all-who hare triad, its superior oat:mei soknowiedge E. cutest diswrery of C:1141 ape, This Compeuy respect idly ask a trial from irho interested in using Soap. arid in ovary case gilt ret- , ud , Drioe of the seine de'seld tail sccomkliski wiiat tei-d• for tt if need accoiding - to our Adrectiuus. ~Bold at 8 Vents fpr, Pound, in '25 and MI perar.i `o;-` 1 ' s : Deliiured to the osrs,-hottiP, ie .filieg,heny,Birmin,ciian. city. residence:, tree of charge. Directions for cse • • LIBERAL 'DISCOUNT TO TOM TRA , B. 'Merchants from abroad will do well to give CR OMPTOIf. 00,, a call, 967 lonearr dram; opposite Pena.. Railroa d Passenger Ilepot. ant- DEWAR g OP ALL INITT4TIVR. Na 3. F" ai t nni*traripg onr trade math—Ea PER PEA It Z. SEEL es stewed by the inventor by National CAvlrlo - IDE, OIL AND LEATHER STOE H .-D. KIRKRATRiCK 41 SONS, •Ito. tit. Muth Third airai, avurcra,7 l4/9: • •HaVe for. Sala SPANISH AND /HUM, EmArtegm, 3 - 1628., 02.. Lee #l4 Sfi .rits-D'PiiiiorVP.r O PRICES AIJD upriar-: • MEW BEST =Rms. A AI3 k3nde of tiistfiecitCaiib iong e b. wanted'' I'l'l6 thO higtiest markiat:Pdai lilt be kintk In cosh, or t^ oken t., il .ozehge for.i.m. Loa th er stored Sae clotile , ar'd 5 " . on Gomm/Won. • ' • • ' Weill' ONO mimeo vi -Leather vonsw ed liatz*.o INSOLUBLE CEMENT Le ! of more general pramical ut)Ste y inventor) now before the petsi,. has been thoroughly Mittel tittritl t h, lrst two pqr s by practical mer,, : , l pp ; affianced by all to be Superior tO Adhesive Preparation ktvw, lIILTON'S INSOLUBLE CriEN T E .. new thing, and the resat of years cf study; its combination is beMV7IIIO PffiNffipLEs. And under no circumstance s oz sta agt . , temperature, will it ~ierie cortris imit any offensive IA:1W 1, igogar, iiPatap Nannfacturen, tieing Mactiec., , r 4.11 g td It Om beet Article known foreez emi4 the Chntrnelsi. ma it worka'MlDl dtt tu ar LE not affecte4 by any cherigq of tempi:iv,be. TF,WELERS Wilhind it Eafticiently edheiir.. tar Vift I.IZP, 88 haft been proved. .7e9e* era. It Is Especially Adapted to Leslie' And we claim as so especial merit, that it Iticks Patches and Linings to Bova sad IShoes arzfdolentky estma g tho ! tea, n . hag. Families. IT is TIE °NIT LIQUID CEMENT Extant ; that te a rare thine laf meadm,s 17711.1VITITRE, CROOKBRP TOPA BOAS: 6. _ OR F, ardclei of Konsehold. REMEMBER, Hilton's Insoluble Cement Ie in a liquild foim and an malty cko!i&E, an pate. Hilton's Insoluble Ceniefit Ie Ineoytble in water or oft. Hilton's Insoluble Cement Adheres oily antritattees. Fluppiled in Family or MaraDlettings' rackages from 2 minces to WON. BLLTON BROS. & CO., PROPMMOM, YROVITOINCE, B. E. Agents in Pbiladeipbta : LIVING & MAGINICIS. Timis. I onfl-L MUMS BUM, 43 Fifth St., Pittsburgh, Sole Avant Env. ehnv. Trptrn,. WHOLESALE aarArz. SYLVANIa OHIO. INitIANA, LUZ _ 401 S, and MISSOURI, And cartons _Toilet. and Fancy. Soaps.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers