fini, b “Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 16, 1891. Colored Fires. i it may be taken for granted that many readers will be interested to learn how the colored fires, with which the “birthday of our country” is popularly celebrated are prepared. The process of combining the materials is simple. Striking differences in color produced by slight changes in composition. The “Western Druggist’’ gives some form- ulae which clear up the mystery of these strange effects. For the production of red, green, yel- low and blue fires, one-fifth part of the composition is shellac. As thisis a con- stant quantity it is apparent at once that the shellac has nothing to do with deter- mining the color. It serves the purpose that charcoal does in the manufacture of gunpowder. It holds the other ele- mers in desired form, and regulates the rate of combustion. Another fifth part of these several compound: is the chlorate of potassium. This is used for the detonating effect ; to startie the beholder with the crack- ling sound, and with the scattering of the fire. Of itself it would give a white light, and would burn with intense en- ergy. Itimparts “go’’ to the rocket. The remaining three-fifths are what give color to the flame. They differ, of course, in the four compounds. For producing red fire nitrate of strontium is used ; for green, nitrate of barium ; for yellow, nitrate of sodium, and for blue, ammonia sulphate of copper. As we find nitrates used for the first three colors named, it is plain that the effect is determined wholly by the use respee- tively of strontium, barium and sodium. It is equally true that blue is the result of the burning copper. Violet and purple dames are com- posite. To produce the violet, lime and copper and sulphur are burned together. For purple, strontium and calomel are burned with just a little copper. The fumes of calomel are particularly harm- ful, and all these substances yield gases that ought not to be freely breathed. Very striking effects could be obtained by using nickel, arsenic and other simi- lar elements, but their use would be dan- gerous to health. A Stormy Winter Coming. Weather Prophet Foster Predicts Cold and Severe Weather. ‘Weather Prophet Foster makes the following predictions : A remarkable period of great storms will occur during the first half of Octo- ber that will be surpassed only by those that will occur in March, 1892. There will be three storm waves during this period, which will cross the continent from west to east along the usual storm centre. The first of these storm waves will be most severe in the Mississippi Valley, and the last on the Atlantic coast, The first will be due to leave the Pa- cific coast about Sept. 3, cross the Al- legheny valley from Oct. 1 to 3, and reach the Atlantic coast about the 4th. On the 2nd the storm wave will be crossing the Mississippi river not far from St. Louis, and will then be of very considerable force in Illinois and Mis- souri. Accompanying this storm wave may be expected tornadwes, cloud bursts, hail and severe gales, and with- in one or two days following it killing frosts will visit most localities with lati- tude 86, with a strong probability of frosts much further south. Hurricanes will develope great force on the North Atlantic at this time, but I cannot give their exact location, but they will prob- ably be not far east of the West Indies. These hurricanes will become very fierce along the Atlantic coast from October 1 to 18. These October storms will indicate what the coming winter will be. I ex- pect great storms from the 1st of Octo- ber to the last of march, ana if "this period of storms covering the first half of October proves to be of more than usual force, it will indicate that I have not miscalculated the weather, and we may then confidently expect a very cold, severe, and stormy winter setting in quite early. Saturn will pass its equi- nox the last of October, and to that in- fluence I attribute the great increase of storms since the middle of last May. Mr. Green Understood It. Some good stories are told of Thomas Reynolds, who began his duties as an associate justice of the supreme court of this state early in September, 1822. Not all of them are true, and the one that follows has been denied. but it may be worth repeating nevertheless. Gov- ernor Ford is authority for it : Judge Reynolds presided at a court in which a man named Green had been convicted of wueder, and it became his unpleasant duty to proneunce sentence of death upon the culprit. He called the prisoner before him and said to him: “Mr. Green, the jury in its ver- dict says you are guilty of murder, and the law says you are to be hanged. Now I want you and all your friends down on who condemns you, but itis the jury and the law. Mr. Green, the law al- lows you time for preparation, and so the court wants to know what time you would like to be hanged.” The prisoner replied that he was ready 10 die at any time the court might ap- point. The judge tuen said : “Mr. “Green, you must know that itis a very serions thing to be hanged ; it can’t hap- pen tc & man mare than ance in his lite, and you bad better take all the time you can get. The court will give you until this day four weeks. Mr. Clerk, you look at the almanac and see if this day four weeks comes on Sunday.” The clerk looked and found that it came on a Thursday, and the court in- formed Mr. Green that he would be hanged on that day. The attorney general of the state, James Turney, wanted a more formal and impressive sentence passed, but the court replied: “Oh, Mr. Turney, Mr. Green under- stands the whole matter as well as if 1 had preached to him for a month, He knows he has got to be hanged this day four weeks, . You understand it in that way, Mr. Green, don’t you ?” Mr. Green said “Yes,” and the court djourned.— Chicago News. Interesting Odds and Ends. Scraps Picked Up Here and There Which Contain Worlds of Infor- mation for all. London has 4,700,0)0 people. Daniel Frohman was an errand boy. Thomas Edison bezan as a telegraph operator. . Never be ashamed to ask what you do not know. Henry E. Abbey began as a cornet player at Akron, Ohio. Senator Matthew Stanley Quay earned his first money sawing wood. Great art is nothing more than the type of a strong and noble life. Senator Proctor’s first step into official life was as a village selectman. Senator Arthur P. Gorman was once a page in the United States Senate. Meb of science say that the chemist will dominate coming inventions. Michelson has calculated the velocity of light to be 186,360 miles per second. The Jeanette drifted through the Arctic ocean at the rate of two miles a day. San Francisco’s cable system is great- er by fifty miles than that of any other city. - Even a genius needs common sense at times in order not to be mistaken: for a fool . The actual length of the new St. Clair tunnel is 5,026 feet. It cost $1,460,- 000. A swarm of flies cannot travel at any greater pace than eleven miles an hour. : Jay Gould was a surveyor and school teacher and once peddled mouse traps. A syndicate has offered to buy the Washington monument for a shot tower. The first thing entered at the colored fair at Moberly, Mo., ‘was a water- melon. There are over 1,100,000 railroad cars and 33,000 locomotives in the United States. A man never wants anything so bad as when he is told he will have to fight for it. London enjoyed eleven hours of sun- shine on a recent Sunday—-a most rare record. In the year 1635 a tulip bulb was sold in Holland for $2,200 ; it weighed but 200 grains, The California raisin crop in this year estimated at 1,800 car loads, 350 more than last year. The best acquaintance a man has is the stranger who knows neither good nor bad of him. It may interest some people to learn that blondes get seasick more easily than brunettes. Nearly twenty thousand pounds of bread are daily eaten in the sultan of Turkey's household. Fashionable men in Paris ard Lon- don are now using electricity asa cure for excessive tippling. The claque has been discarded at the Ambign, the first theater in Paris to break into the tradition. Superstition has decided that London’s new Cecil hotel shall have twelve in- stead of thirteen stories. Yucca blossoms 8% feet long, from base to tip,are said to be abundant in the San Gabriel canyon. The earliest coin for American use was made about 1513, and bore as a design the picture of a hog. Of the 50,000 deaths occurring annu- ally in London 21,000 are of children under the age of ten years. “Life,” say the Arabs, “is of two parts ; that which is past—a dream ; that which is to come—a wish.” A cubic foot of newly fallen snow weighs 5} pounds and has 12 times the bulk of an equal weight of water. Indians who live along the Paciffe railroad in Western Canada make a liv- ing by selling polished buffalo horns. An American contractor is to build a railroad from tne Amazon to the Mad- eira, connecting Brazil with Bolivia, A temperature of 220 degrees below zero has been produced ty a bath of carbon bisulphide and liquid nitrous acid. Russia’s oldest inhabitant is one hun- dred and twenty-four. His name is Nitchinorenko, and he lives at Belgo- rod. Mexico has a rock that serves as a weather prophet by changing color with every approaching change in the weather. The largest steer in Illinois, and prob- ably in the world, weighs 4,500 pounds and belongs to a Macoupin county farmer. There are in Old Orchard, Me., three apple trees which bear e ch year loads of apples shaped almost exactly like pears. In a certain portion of the Ural dis- trict camels are the only working cattle ¢ 3d used, some large farms possessing 100 IRAIAR TPR JR ERIE ARR IE 5 Bah Leder ion re meiiv swans vise 2 > ) ts mst mn The average wealth of every family of ive in Massachusetts is four thou- sund eight hundred and ten dollars, but itis by no means distributed in that way. Out of fifty-eight leading cities in the United States only three have a larger death rate than New York, they being Charleston, Hoboken and New Or- leans. ! Lemans were aged by the Romans {to keep moths from their garments, and in the time of Pliny they were considered an excellent poison. They are natives of Asia. California is offering a five-dollar bounty on coyote scalps, and the thrifty people of the neighboring territories, where coyotes are more plentiful and money scarcer, are hastening to catch the tide at the flood and a brisk trade in exporting coyote scalps is growing up. Adams, who founded the Adams Ex- press Company, was a stable helper and bartender in Boston. An old lady took pity or the boy and got him a place in a grocery. The daughter of that old la- dy now owes many of the comforts of her life to Waldo Adams, the son of that once friezdless boy. Jutely dread her. An Ancient “Sell.” The Huge Joke Played Upon a Quarry- man of Carrara. Not many travelers visit Carrara, where the finest of marble is constantly being quarried, as it has been for so many centuries, but, once there, much may be found in the way of legend and scenery to occupy the curious mind. Innumerable stories float about the place, says a writer in Cornhill, concern- ing the existence of hidden treasures. Gold has often been found in the neighborhood of the town, and not very long ago a crock of gold coins was un- earthed beneath one of the streets. A most curious experience, however, was that of a quarryman who, in one of his rambles, sturabled upon an old deserted quarry, within which, half-bur- ied in grass and brambles, lay an enor- mous block of heavy marble. On ex- umining it, he found a number of letters rudely cut, and half hidden under a crust of dirt. With some difficulty he managed to spell out the words: ““Bless- ed is he that shall turn me over.” The man at once jumped at the con- clusion that he had stumbled upon hid- den treasure, and that his fortune was made. Ile rushed home and collected some of his friends to aid him in the re- covery of the ‘concealed gold. After some very hard labor they succeeded in turned the hoary giant over. Another rude inscription met their eager eyes: “Thanks, my friends, I was weary of reposing so long in one position !”’ mm ——— A Convenient Ring. The following incident happened at Oroville, Cal. : It was a handsome soli- taire, and she evidently desired that the jeweler to know that it was her engage- ment ring. “I would like to have this ring cut down to suit my finger,’ said the hand- some heart smasher as she flourished the pllion ring before the eyes of the jew- eler. The jeweler took the ring and smiled —he had seen it before. “I can fix that in a minute,” replied he. Screwing a magnifying glass in his eye, and taking a small sharp pointed instrament in his hand, he touched a minute button on the inside of the ring and made it the exact size, saying, as he placed it on her finger. “You see these rings are made in this manner for the reason that they are worn by so many different people ; it is a greatcon- venience.” The young lady sailed out of the store burning with indignation, and the reason she did not fly was because she didn’t have wings. What did she think ? You know, and it is only necessary to state that she did not wear the ring. Another girl wears it now but this time the jeweler was not per- mitted to touch the button—the young man did it himself. ‘Who Haunts You ? Now think a minute. Is there not some unknown person whom you are always meeting in this great city with- out any reason for it? I have asked a great many people, and find that near- ly every body is haunted by some stranger. Just at present I am haunted by a red-headed girl, who has freckles and a turn-up nose and wears a light gray dress. She turns up at all sorts of unexpected places. No matter where I go to lunch, that red-headed girl is sure to pass me on the way. Every day I meet her on the “L’’ car. I change the line, but sure as fate there she is If I go out between the acts at the theatre that red-headed girl walks by. And so it goes, until now I have come to abso- The worst of it is that she is a nice looking girl and nev- er seems to see me Amount of Sleep Required. Sleep is the principal agent inbody’s recuperation. The amount needed is different for different persons. For the ordinary worker from six to eight hours is necessary; yet how often, in the battle for existence,is the desire for sleep forcibly suppressed and the night's rest foolishly shortened. Soon- er or later insomnia wrecks its ven- geance on the physiological sinner. Many a person who once robbed him- self of the necessary amount of sleep would now gladly sleep, but cannot. Many nerve troubles first develop in- to disease when joined with sleepless- ness, It appears as a symptom of a long standing nervous disturbance, but to many 1t appears as the first signs of disorders, when it is only a result of causes in operation long before.—Her- ald of Health. Old Honesty Tobacco. Tyr CHEWERS OF + + OLD BONIATLY Br AN Tne 8 see PE 8 4A NR 0 AR A A RR G0 | —TOBACCO — { | | ! WILL SOON FIND THAT IT LASTS LONGER, TASTES SWEETER THAN OTHER TOB\CCOS, AND WILL ! PLEASE YOU. ASK YOUR DEAL£R FOR IT AND 1N- SIST ON GETTING IT. Every plug stamped “Finzer’s Old Honesty. JNO. 36 40 1t FINZER & BROS, Louisville, Ky. ) Saddlery. SS OROFIEL IY NEW HARNESS HOUSE. We extend a most cordial invitation tc our patrons and the public, in general, to witness one of the - GRANDEST DISPLAYS OF Light and Heavy Harness ever put on the Bellefonte market, which will be made in the large room, formerly occupied by Harper Bros., on Spring street. It has been added to my factory and will be used exclu- gively for the sale of harness, being the first exclusive salesroom ever used in this town, as heretofore the custom has been to sell goods in the room in which they were made. This elegant room has been refitted and furnished with glass cases in which the harness can be nicely displayed and still kept away from heat and dust, the enemies of long wear in leather. Our factory now occupies a room 16x74 feet and the store 20x60 added makes it the largest establishment of its kind outside of Philadelphia and Pittsburg. : : Weare prepared to offer better bargains in the future than we have done in the past and we want everyone to see our goods and get’ prices for when you do this, out of self defense Jo will buy. Our profits are not large, but y selling lots of goods we can afford to live in Bellefonte. We are not indulging in idle philanthropy. It is purely business. We are not making much, but trade is growing and that is what we are interested in now. Profits will take care of themseives. When other houses discharged their work-, men during the winter they were all put to work in my factory, nevertheless the big (?) houses of this city and county would smile if we compared ourselves to them, but we do not: mean to be so odious, except to venture the as- section that none of them can say, as we can say “NO ONE OWES US A CENT THAT WE CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story. The following are kept constantly on hand. 50 SETS OF LIGHT HARNESS, prices from $8.00 to $15.00 and upwards, LARGE STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS id set$25.00 and upwards, 500 HORS COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,00 each, over $100.00 worth of HARNESS OILS and AXLE GREASE, $400 worth of Fly Nets sold cheap $150 worth of whips from 15¢ to $3.00 each, Horse Brushes,Cury Combs Sponges, Chamois, RIDING SADDLES, LADY SIDESADDLES Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25c per pound. We keep everything to be found in a FIRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang- ing, over 20 years in the same room. No two shops in the same town to catch trade—NO SELLING OUT for the want of trade or prices. Four harness-makers at steady work this win- ter, This is our idea of protection to labor, when other houses discharged their hands, they soon found work with us. JAS. SCHOFIELD, 33 37 Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa. Farmer’s Supplies. ey SUPPLIES AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES. SOUTH « % CHILLED BEND

ey Lane halle aon 8, a Pp m., arrive at Lewis- urg, 4.45, at Harrisburg, 9.45 p. m. - delphia at 4.25 a. m. Bi, Phila o—ALL KINDS OF GRAIN.—o A@~The highest market price paid for reesvenss WHEAT cori sii RYE. iri FOORN isivern BOL rrr AND end OAT Sours ibiis Music Boxes. I Jur GAUTCHI & SONS, 0—MANUFACTURERS & IMPORTERS—o OF : SUPERIOR QUALITY. o—M USIC BOXES—o ST. CROIX, SWITZERLAND. Sale rooms and Headquarters for the Uni- | ted States at 1030 CHESTNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA No Music Boxes without Gauntehi’s Patent Safety tune change can be guaranteed. * Old and damaged Music boxes carefully re- paired. Send 5 cent stamp for catalogue and circular., HEADQARTERS IN AMERICA FOR MU- SIC BOXES. Music box owners please send or call for Patent Improvement Circular. 3349 1y IMuminating Oil. (RowN ACME. THE BEST BURNING OIL THAT CAN BE MADE FROM PETROLEUM. It gives a Brilliant Light. 1 will not Smoke the Chimney. It will Not Char the Wick. It has a High Fire Test. It does Not Explode. It is without an equal AS A SAFETY FAMILY OIL. We stake our reputation as refiners that IT IS THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD. Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by ACME OIL CO. 34 85 1y Williamsport, Pa. For sale a retail by W. T. TWITMIRE 36 14 % ms BALD EAGLE VALLEY. WESTWARD. EASTWARD. PEEzreBEee (fiE 5 : Po V Plxel ® Dec. 14, > lmgl ® TERR Fi EX] EB 1890. F |BE| BE [PPOINTERS. "|e [8 : i ~ | MONTANA, Washington, Oregon | P-M.| A.M. | A. M. A. M. P.M | PM Ba aud California reached quickly | 6 40| 11 55| 6 10 8103 10| 715 and cheaply via Great Northern [6 33| 11 48/ 6 08. 81713 17) 722 Railway Line. 6 29| 11 43| 5 59 82013 20 7 28 Ask your local ticket agent for | 6 25 11 38] 5 55 8 25/3 24| 7 33 round trip tickets to any point in | 6 19/ 11 32] 5 49 83013 30{ 7 39 the West or Pacific Coast via the | 6 15] 11 29| 5 47|... -| 8321333 742 Great Northern, 6 13| 11 26 5 45/.. .| 836/337 746 ) 6 06| 11 17| 5 38/Pt. Matilda.| 8 43(3 44] 7 55 A= THE leading pleasure, fishing and | 5 59| 11 09] 5 31|..Martha....| 8 51/3 52| 8 05 hunting resorts of the Park Re- | 5 50| 10 59| 5 23|....Julian...... 8 59/4 01| 8 15 gion of Minnesota, of Lake Superior | 5 41| 10 48] 5 15/.Unionville.| 9 10/4 10| 8 25 and the Rocky Mountains reached | 5 33| 10 33) 5 08/..8.8. Int...| 9 18/4 18] 8 35 easiest on the various lines of the | & 80 10 35] 5 05 Milesburg | 9 22/4 20| 8 39 Great Northern from St. Paul. 5 20| 10 25, 4 55 .Bellefonte.| 9 32/4 30| 8 49 510, 10 12| 4 45.Milesburg.| 9 47/4 40| 9 01 k%~| FARMERS, stock raisers and busi- | 5 02 10 01/ 4 38/...Curtin....[ 10 01/4 47) 9 11 | ness men will find choice loca- | 4 55 9 56] 4 ¢5.Mt. Eagle..| 10 06/4 55| 9 17 | tionsin the Red River, Milk River | 4 49| 9 48 4 30 -.Howard...| 10 16/5 02| 9 27 and Sun River valleys, at Great |4 40 9 37| 4 22|.Eagleville.| 10 30/5 10| 9 40 Falls, snd in Belt mining towns, the | 4 38] 9 34] 4 19/Bch. Creek.| 10 35/5 13| 9 45 Sweet Grass Hills, and along the 42 9922 4 111..Mill Hall... 10 50,5 24| 10 01 Pacific extension of the Great |4 23] 9 19, 4 09 Flemin’ton. 10 54/5 27| 10 05 Northern in the Flathead and other | 4 20] 915 4 05 Lek. Haven 11 005 30| 10 1¢C valleys of Montana. P.M. A. M. [A M. | A.M. [A.M.| P. M1. 5% THE Great Northern reaches more TYRONE & CLEARFIELD. points in Minnesota and North i Dakota than any other railway. It | NORTHWARD. SOUTHWARD, is the main route to Lake Minne- | ® | ¥ 2 Doc. 14 5 E tonka and Hotel Lafayette. 888 2 a gs | H B| Be EF 1890. g | : £3~| MAPS and other publications sent | # | # i ’ Treen 20d Jesters of Inquiry an- a HE Av Pais An Ip. 3 swered, by F. I. , iD, Ohl mrt aiogl: Ti Er TAG. N, Ry. 56 Pant Sis, © % | 725] 315 8 20|.. Tyrone... “6 50] 11'%5(6 17 3632 tf ? 732 322 827.E. Tyrone.| 6 43| 11 38/6 10 738 8 27) 83... Vail... 6 37| 11 34/6 04 748) 3 % 3 3 Ne, 6 27| 11 25/5 55 755 34 5l.Gardners...| 6 25| 11 21/5 52 Flour, Feed, &c. 802 350] 855|Mt.Pleasantt| 616 11 12|3 4 ih, Ee 8 10, 3 58 9 05/..Summit...| 6 09] 17 05/5 40 814) 403 2 y Sand Bilge 6 05 11 00/56 34 5 8 16, 4 05 ... Retort..... 6 03] 10 55/5 31 ERBERICH, HALE & CO., 819 4 06 9 15\..Powelton..| 6 01] 10 52/5 30 8 25] 4 14] 9 24|...0sceola 5 52| 10 45/6 20 ie iz Soa Bom 5 46 10 39/5 14 — BELLEFON: — 8 2 ..Steiners...| 5 43| 10 35/5 09 ELLEFONTE, PA. 8 42| 4 30| 9 40/Phili shu’g| 5 41| 10 32/5 07 8 46| 4 34| 9 44/..Graham...| 5 37] 10 26/4 59 8 52! 4 40 9 52/.Blue Ball..| 5 33| 10 22/4 55 8 58 4 49| 9 59 Wallaceton.| 5 28] 10 15/4 49 :- Manufacturers of -:- 9 05 4 57) 10 07|....Bigler.....| 5 22/10 07/4 41 9 12 5 02 10 14|.Woodland..| 5 17] 10 00/4 36 F-L-0-U-R 9 19! 5 08] 10 22|...Barrett....| 5 12| 9 52i4 30 and 9 23| 5 12] 10 27|..Leonard...! 5 09] 9 48/4 25 id F—B-E_0,... 9 30| 5 18 10 34|.Clearfield..| 5 04] 9 40/4 17 9 38] 5 20| 10 44|.Riverview.| 4 58) 9 31/4 10 9 42| 5 26| 10 49/Sus. Bridge| 4 54] 9 26/4 00 9 50| 5 35] 10 55/Curwensv’e| 4 50| 9 20/4 08 And Dealers in P.M.| P. M. | A. M. A. M. | A. M. [P.M BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after Dec. 14, 1890. Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday......6 45 a. m: faery . m. Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday....10 30 on m. weves? 5 25 p.m. BELLEFONTE, NITTANY & LEMONT R.R To take effect July 19,1891. WESTWARD. EASTWARD. 111 | 103 114 | 112 SraTIONS. bint Montandon........ ering Lewisburg........ SHEE pt 2 Trains No. 111 and 103 connect at Montandon with Erie Mail West; 112 and 114 with Sea Shore Express East. LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAIROAD. WESTWARD. Upper End. EASTWARD g| a | 8 A.M. | P.M. A uiry 9 51] 5 (bl... 8cotia.....| 9 21| 4 47 10 21| 5 25|..Fairbrook.| 9 09 4 27 10 28| 5 37/Pa.Furnace| 8 56| 4 15 10 34| 5 44|...Hostler...]| 8 50, 4 08 10 46] 5 50!...Marengo..| 8 43 4 (1 10 52{ 5 57(.Loveville.., 8 37] 3 55 10 58] 6 064! FurnaceRd| 8 31 3 49 1102 827] 346 Janae (Rae! 8 ae! SER § AOE 0 A ey | 758) 318) wan! 1 40! 6 '50{..Tyrone....! 7 50! 3 10] DR BUFFALO RUN AND BALD EAGLE RAILROAD. To take effect May 12, 1890, EASTWARD. WESTWARD, geil 49 | 1 5 | SrATIONS. ZK. P. M. | A. M. A N| PM 620 9 To Ar ...Bellefonte....Liv| 6 04; 3 00 6 13) 903(........8eales,, j 607309 6 08 8 59! ..cm Morris. | 61) 313 6 03/ 8 54/.........Whitmer.. | 616) 319 559 851) i | 619) 328 6 57 8 48] 622 826 b Ha) 8 44 6 26) 3 30 547 8 40 | 632] 33886 5 43] ‘8 ¢ | 638 343 5 39( 8 33{ [646 348 | &f | |:.8 58 8 3 59 8 4 09 524) 7 700 459 520 7 g 704] 504 ThOo8. A. SHOEMAKER, §uvt. Philadelphia Card. WITH WOOD, BROWN & CO., Dealers in HOSIERY, NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS &OC. 429 Market Street: “HILADELPHIA, PA. JL OW4RD W. MILLER, 151