HOUSEHOLD, Roast FowL A LA GYOT,~ One ten der, full-grown chicken; a sweetbread boiled, blanched and minced; a dozen mushrooms chopped; a tablespoonful of minced fat salt pork; pepper, salt and a pinch of mace; half a cupful of fine crumbs; slices of fat salt pork, Draw and truss the fowl as usual, and stuff with a forcemeat made of the minced sweetbread, mushrooms pork, bread crumbs and seasoning. Bind thin slices of pork over the breast, lay in a dripping pan, dash a cupful of boiling water over it and roast one hour, basting often. Ten minutes b:- fore taking it up remove the pork, baste abundantly and brown. In serv- ing lay the pork about the fowl. To make the gravy mince the boiled gib- jets and stir them into the gravy left in the pan, with a little boiling water and a tablespoonful of browned flour wet ap with cold water. Boil sharply and serve in a boat, QUEEN OF PUDDINGS.—One and a half cup of sugar, one quart of milk, two cups of very dry, fine crumbs, one tablespoonful of butter, one quart of red raspberries, Rub butter and one sup of sugar to a cream; beat in the yolks. The erumbs should All this time be soaking in thé milk. Beat them in- to eggs and buttered sugar, and when light pour the mixture into a buttered bake dish. Bake well set; draw to the oven door; cover with berries, strew sugar thickly among and over them, and spread deftly over all a meringue of the frothed whites of the eggs, stiffened with two tablespoon- fuls of powdered sugar. Shut the door and brown the meringue lightly, Set away where it will cool quickly, then leave on ice till wanted. Eat ream. This is not a new receipt, Among famed “Queen’’ I regard the above as the simplest and best, It is better made with strawberries than with any other fruit, but always delicious and popular. A—————— SriNaAcH is one of the most some vegetables, It has been a French physician ‘‘the broom of the stomach.” It may be simply boiled i salt and water, drained, finely chopped, and then returned to the saucepan the butter is melted, and then serve. Spinach a la creme is delicious, Boil and chop the spinach in the usual way. Set it on the fire in a saucepan, and stir until it is perfectly dry, add two ounces of butter and stir for five or six minutes, spinach add two tablespoonfuls of cream, and stir again for flve minutes and then take it from the fire. Slir in ne ounce of butter and serve hot, gar- nishing with hard-boiled eggs and croutons, The eggs should be cut in 1uarters or sixths, A PeEr¥ECT soup 1s one of the mir- acles, yet 13 extremely simple if persons would strictly abide by instructions, Clear soup must not be too strong of meat, and must be of a light brown, sherry or straw color; white or brown soup should be rather thin, with just sufficient consistency to adhere lightly to a spoon When hot—soup of fish, poul- try, or game especially. All purees, no matter whether of meat or vegetables, require to be somewhat thicker, which may be ascertained mn any case by its adhering more thickly to the spoon. Every Itahan soup must be very clear, f pale sherry. Ix the fields of fancy work there are new discoveries every day. One of the prettiest of recent date is the tinsel work. A very pretly and showy table scarf may be made of dark felt with a pretty pattern in tinsel for a border at very small expense. The felt must be stamped at each end with a neat bor- der, about six inches deep, Follow the outiine of the tinsel braid, fastening it on by passing the thread over the braid, but not through it. The edge may be turned under and cat-stitched down on the right side. The result of your Ia- bor is sure to be satisfactory. ONE of the most unique ornaments I have seen lately was a cat-tail easel. It was made wi h'common, well dried cat- tails, placed iu fhe form of an easel and fastened ge with a short pin, by bending the end around the stalk, The easel may be further ornamented by ty- ing small bows of narrow ribbon around the stalks where they are crossed. PINEAPPLE PYRAMID. Make some good calves-foot jelly, or get it from your grocer. Surround a pyramid- shaped mould with ice, keeping the pointed end upward: put in enough jelly to cover the bottom of the mould: when lirm, add a layer of diamond- shaped pieces of pineapple until the mould is full and all the fruit 1s used. Keep it as cold as possible until want- ed, then dip the mould quickly into hot water and turn out the form on an ‘ced-cold dish, parts of common salt and alu, as much cotton as will fill the tooth, dampen it put it in the mixture and place it in the tooth. This Is also a good mixture for cleansing the testh, PAINT SMELL. Water neutralizes the smell of paint, nated with a little sulphuric acid; chloride of lime with walter. To wash cashmere. take a pail of warm water and put In a tabl nful of boraxine,” Let the cashmere lie in it an hour and a half; rub out with the hands, rinse, shake, hang out to dry, aml press, and yon will find your cash- mere free from spots and like new, —— CoLp raln water and soap will often take out machine grease from fabrics when other means would not be advisa~ ble on account of colors running, ete. PAMPAS grass, its feathery plumes dyed in piok, is one of the prettiest novelties for decoration. The pompons of the milk weed are also tinted in BIE Way. FARM NOTES. How TO CLEAN A TARM HORSE,— One of the most important things to be observed in the management of farm horses is their cleaning, and yet it may be sarely stated that nothing is more neglected by the majority of farmers, The horse should never be cleaned or harnessed while it is eating breakfast, Let horses eat their food in peace, for many, from sanguine temperament or or greed, bolt their oats when handled during the time of feeding. Harness can be quickly enough put on after the feed is eaten, and time should then be ner time. they should at once be un. harnessed, ‘The feed is then to be given, and before the harness 18 again put on, the horse should be thoroughly rubbed down with a wisp of straw or hay. If the horses are very warm on com:ng in, they should be rubbed down immediately Sn the ramoval of the harness. ‘The cleaning or grooming, which should be done at night, consists first in enrrying the horse with the cur- rycorab to free him of the dirt adher- ing to the hair, and which, being now dry, is easily removed. A wisping of straw removes the roughest of the dirt loosened by the currycomb. The legs ought to be thoroughly wisped, not only moisture that may have been left in the and at this time the feet an iron mstrument made for tween the shoe and the foot, The | brush is then to be used to remove the | remalming and finer portions of dust | from the hair, which is cleared from | the brush by a few rasps along the cur- | rycomb. The wisping and brushing, if | done with some force and dexterity, with a combing of the tail and mane, should render the horse pretty clean, but there are more ways of grooming a | horse than one, as may be witnessed by | the careless and skimming way in which many hired hands do it. The skin of | the farm horse should at all timés be | clean if not sleek, and a slap of the show if there The curry- below the For i cleaning the legs and feet, nothing Is better than the water b rush: and when fitting a horse for the showyard, it may also be used on the body with water, or | the hair. be used is loose dust comb should in not not required for common cleanliness, | but merely to impart a temporary gloss, | How many farmers can say that their | horses are cleaned as thoroughly as we | have advised in the above? How much | longer would horses live, work and re- main healthy if the above suggestions were put into practice? These are questions which it will be well con- sider and answer at leisure, abunaant in good to of is a bed shape, WHEN room 18 hardy roses, if kept very altractive., Roses do not stand being crowded in with other shrubs, or being planted against fences or build- ings very well, Their best place Isin a centrally located bed cut in the lawn, allowing plenty of air and sunshine. Circular or oval forms of beds are pleas- ing ones. The plants may be set two or three feet apart each way, starting néar the edge. Setting plants of other kinds in the bed between the roses is not advisable, Tne almost universal practice is to | make some sort of a hill about potato plants. It at least saves the tubers from becoming sunin which makes them worthless fo: ‘he hill. ing should done the tubers have set, as roots after crop lo form, his may ca: and neither crop will be of marketable | also saves labor. size, Early hilling After potato vines begin to fall down, got through the cultivator cannot be them without covering many leaves, which late in the season seriously in. jures the crop. int, cooking, before breaking the 15¢ a second be OLD beekeepers learn to handle bees without fear, and more especially at swarming time; when the bees are en- gorged with honey, and not likely to sting unless attacked. The avoidance | of fear 1s the best means of avolding danger, A timid, nervous person soon enrages the bees by parrying fancied assaults, while one who keeps cool soon learns that the thousands of bees buz- zing around him are not on hostile | bent Intent. If a new, or at least clean, hive is offered the bees, and the swarm shaken down in front of the entrance, few swarms will refuse their new ——————— MAukET chickens may be pushed to | advantage by frequent feeding, besides | having a free run, if possible, while | they are growing and before they are | put up to fatten. After ducks have | passed the delicate stage and have their | feathers, they may be given frequent | feeds of food to give them rapid growth and size. The earlief they are sold after they become marketable the Important te Merchant Tallors, M von Keller & Co. Successors to Kellar & at the old Cloth House, corner Ann and William Sts , New York city, are doing an ex. tensive business by means of furnishing to the | Merchant Tailoring trade throughout the Uni | States, compete sample oollections of Woolens in season, and receiving and orders rfceived through the sam. siyie has been sold out, their castomers 10 that effect, so | that the parties holding their sam sles are al- | ways properiy informed as to Ich siyies The Merchant | Tallor is thus placed in 8 position 10 show a of styles without encumbering ilrge stock. We understand 1allor desiring such collec. samples can have same sent free of Address Messrs, M. von Keller & O90, a—— nat A ——— A so1L but five inches deep cannot be worth as much as another that gives free scope to the roots of plants to what- ever depth they may penetrate in search of nutriment, charge. A SECOND brood of currant worms usually makes its appearance just as the fruit begins to ripen, and it is quite as injurious to the crop as the first if not promptly destroyed, SCIENTIFIC The limit of hfe in the embryo of seeds has long been a subject of experi- ment and discussion, Ia a late lecture, Professor Bentley, an English botanist, stated that it 1s perfectly true that oats and other cereals have been raised from seed found in a mummy's coffin, but that it appears Lo be equally certain that the grains were placed in the ancient coffin by some means only a very short time before the exhumation of the body. Not many seeds germinate under ordi- nary circumstances after the third year, and very few indeed after the fourth. Peas and beans are very tenacious of life, The oe has been known to grow after a hundred years, but there is scarcely another instance of such survi- val of vitality, tina When a worn car wheel tread is ex- amined under the microscope, it is per- ceived that the surface of the metal comes off In thin flakes or scales, Ex- amined under high powers the scales are found to resemble portions of a brick wall, the fractures being not in the particles of iron, but in the mater- 1a] which unites the particles in a man- ner similar to which mortar unites the bricks of a wall. Continous jarring breaks this cement or uniting material, thus allowing iron so treated to fall in pieces, op Astronomical text-books place the | sun’s density at a little more than that of water, but in a recent lectura Jv. J Norman Lockyer, the English as trono- mer, expressed the opinion that the sun really has not more than one-eighth the density of water, rect, the sun is simply an enormous possibly liquid at the centre in consequence of the enor- mous pressure existing at that part, Solar temperatcic is & matter at which men can only guess as yet, and scientif- 000 degrees, pp A new substance, lanolin, is prepared from the wool of sheep. It has great combining and absorbing properties and ointments. Though a fat, it will com- of its weight of under the present civilization, it is not new under the sun, as it is mentioned | and other Greek and IB eal tf yman writers, Important. When you visit « eave New Yorg City, save baggage expressage and §2 carriage lire, and sop giihe Grand Unlon Hotel, opposite Grand Cen. ral Depot, 0 cegant rooms, million dollars, w one eer fited up at a costof $i and upwards day. European Pan Kevalor, Heslaurant supplied with the best, llorse cars, stages ani ® eval el ralrosd to all gy Families can tive bet r eas money ai the Grand Union Hotel han al ar ay Gther Arel-cinss Hote In Lae CLV. rn Chide not Cheerfulaess with piety, -_-_—- If you have pum Sips, beats, t JIers, ous and irritable~dn danger mets OUBAN-W ED Tegu ind ¢ LOSES In arms or Limba, 1 are Dr. K reevcli heart humps or ff or y ery. f sh relieves KE ales, ATER, ————— A ———_— Ebony can be imitated on wood by first painting with a one per cent, sola- tion of sulphate of copper. When per- fectly dry the wood is painted over with a liquid consisting of equal weight of aniline, hydro-chloride and spirits of wine, The blue vitriol acts on the aniline and forms nigrosin, a black which cannot be affected by acids or alkalies, A luster can be added bY coating with simple copal varnish, s————— MENSMANS VEPTONIZED RERF TONIC, the only preparation of bee! containing Ha ewlire muri tious properties, It contains biood-making, force generating and lifesaniainmng properties; invalas. bie for indigestion, dyspepRia ner vous prosural ion, and all forms of general debility; alsa, in all on. feebied condi ther the result of exh aus. tion, nervous prostratlion, over.work of acute dis. ease, particulary if resal from pulmonary compiainia Caswell, Hazard b Uo, Propriciorns, New York, Sad by drug sia mn IIS Jim Gore, the crack son of Hindoo, >> The pain and misery suffered by those who are afflicted with dyspepsia are indescribable. The relief whieh is given by Hoods Sarsaparilia has caused thousands to be thankfal for this great edicine, It dispels the canses of dyspepsia, and tones up Ul Org ans, AID AI IO 5003555 ye digestive From recent experiments by Dr. Par- germs of ordinary infectious diseases | cannot withstand an exposure of dry heat of 230 degrees, or an exposure of five minutes to boiling water or steam of 212 degrees, pA — Fraser Axle Grease, best. Ask your dealer for the Axle Grease, and take no other. box has our trade mark on, ni Hydrogen gas has the lowest conducts | ing power of the gases; lead the lowest | Every asbestos the lowest conducting power of minerals, and cotton is probably the | lowest conductor among vegetables, | charcoal being also very low. ————_ i MP ——— An ordinary bee can draw twenly | times the weight of the body. large horned beetle, which was carefully ted beneath a bell-glass, two and two-tenths times its weight, sf rs som ITS: All Fits stopped free, Treatise and $2 trial Fe of Dr. Kilne'sureat Nerve Restorer, free ty Flicases. mendto Dr. Kline S81 Arch st, Phila, Pa The latest paper pul material is made on fine wire cloth, an all the strength of metal flexibility, smoothness and softness of . It can be pro- cured in all desired widths, os fn Tre habit of running over boots or shoes corrected with Lyon's Patent Heel Stiffen- ora, y making steel has been of great to the steelmakers of Steflield, in that while it has eheapened steel the de Wille It bug Sheupinel mit) ue. A A Piso's Whine og so Aetna gto 415-03 “HAVE you any offspring?” inquired the severe, long-haired passenger, through his nose, of a stranger by his side. “Oh, ves, sir,” was the polite reply, “a gon.” “Ah, indeed! Does he use tobacco?’ ‘“Never touches it in any form.” “I'm glad to hear that, Tobacco Is monstrously sinful. Does he indulge in spirituous liquors?’’ “Never tasted a drop in his life.” “Excellent. Stay out nights?” “No, sir, Rever thinks of going out after supper.” “I'm very much pleased to know this, sir, Your son is a remarkable young man,’’ Oh, he’s not a young man, 2 month’s-old baby.” ————— “You don’t love me as fondly as you did before we were married,’ sald the husband of a few years, “Yes, I do,” replied his wife. “Well, you don’t show it as much as you used to,” remarked he, “J don’t know how I could share my affections more than I do and still be fashionable,” replied she, . Just mention one little act.” “Didn't 1 give my new poodle your name for his middle name? What | more can you ask? suppose you think | T ought to have given him your full name?’ He's a | A GEN TLEM. AN trevelling through | the mountainous and Minly settled dis- | | tricts of North Carolina was overtaken | As he was og horse- unpgtected, he beheld with delight a log cabin In | the distance, and speedily betook him- | self thither. The old farmer greeted ‘as i one ner table beside “the old ’ooman,’ wife, while to the “uy ou ters entered the room, Turning farmer, he mildly observed: have a fine family of daughters, sir.’’ | “Well,” said the old man, mourn- fully, *‘we’ve been kinder unfort’nate | with our darters. The chimbly fell in | and killed all but nine on ‘em.’ The historian dares not guess how many there were at first. —— - He was just from the Pacific coast, and was telling about *‘the glorious climate of California’’ and of the fish and fowl of the region. The salmon of the Columbia river was the immed- ate subject, He told of a fish of enor- mous length, and passed on, when one of his listeners interrupted: “How long was that fish,’ He looked puzzled for a second and asked : “How long did 1 ‘“that fish was said, can’t you hear?"’ — and as 1 it was?” SAY jus st as Jy 3 22 long JAGLEY~—"*You say Ponsonby insult. ed you, Amelia?” Amelia—* ‘He did, pa. We ting together on the sofa and he were sit- sid - Bagley (indignantly)—*“Kissed you! Great Scott!” Amelia—*Yes, he did, repeatediy!”’ Bagley—**Did you not resist?’’ Amelia (calmly) —**Yes, pa! I set my face against it with all my might.” — “Juris, 1 can’t see Low you stand that Joe Bascomb."’ “Why, Fanny?" “Oh, be's such a mope!l One can hardly get a word out of him." “He doesn’t talk much, that's a fact. I can only recall one thiug that he said to me last evening. It was an exceed- ingly sensible remark, however “What was it he said?" “He said ‘Let's get some ice cream,” can . pa - How to Secure Health. SCOVILL'S BARSATARILLA STILLINGIA, AND LIVER SYRUP, perfect i the . AND OR BLOOD will store Te to physical organizatio indeed, & siren gthen take, be ana Las the effect ant to itself to best ever discovered, ually « iit Weakn { neys, Erysmipelas, Malaria, all N orders and Debility, Biliou all diseases indicating an { Liver, Oo ts Syphi lisorders, impure condition the bom, Kidneys, Stomad h, It when the comyia ut is having a tend rain and nervous system A Glue is rendered waters proof by first soaking it in water until it becomes soft and then melting it with gentl heat in linseed oil. ete. corre indigestion, especially f an exhaustive na- ture, ency to lessen the vigor memati “What a lovely head of hair she has?" | was said of a certain young lady not | | long ago, and if she would only tell the | world that she used Carboline, the nat- | ural Petroleum Hair renewer, she would | confer a great favor to all her sex, Sn -—— Herr Stutzer bhoids that “soda alone is as powerful a solvent of nitrogenous principles as when combined with pan- the crown. St. BERNARD VEGETABLE PILLS. The beat cure for Liver and Bilious Complaints, Uostiveness, Headache, | Dizziness and Dyspepsia. As a ey bhava no equal. No Family "should be without a box of the St, roard Vegetable Pills in the house, Price 25 cents at Draggists, or by | mail, Sempies wont YRER, Address, | + 88 Mercer St, New York, | The Mexican Resurrection Ei . when placed In water soon comes yA life, » all that Ants of the oon “ to 1y made, as it sells to four out of 24 por. po Ay ht. Bend To. for 3, or Me. for 7 Samples (sell for 0. each). Low by the 100 wid 1 1,000, A year's subsoription to one of six g.ven to first Soc, arr from each Sony and fire. order mentioning th is paper, on 313 Main Street, Vor NY arch, Tans, ATENTS an, Antes pla P Inventors Galle. LL Pisanan, Patent Lawyer, Washin rio DO J oy yar i a oy 4 ams —— 1 Innt, apparent seonstis vivii 1k oi — apo ra : PoxsoNpY—'*What! boating?’ Proprietor of Humpback House “Nary,”? “No bathing, of course?” “Certainly not,” “I guess 1 won’t stay, a single attraction,” “Yes, Ihave. There's a girl stops here who's worth half a million, She is all alone and—"’ “Give me a cheap room on the floor.” no fishing or You haven't third G “SAY, Flipkins, here is your baldness advertised paper.” ‘‘what is it?” “Old roofs repaired with tar and gravel,” grimly responded Dallywag. ———————— a cure for im to-day’s No other preparation restores the color to gray bairso quickly as Hall's Hair Renewer, “Ayer's Ague Cure is an infallible reme- dy for ague.” Wm. Wells, Btockton, Mo. — A Eprron—**Mise Deveraux is quite musical? Host—'*Y es, very much 80,” Visitor—**Does she sing in Eopglish?” Host—*‘She does, and I'm--——sorry she doesn’t sing in Kalamazoo, or some other far-away place, ’ "a BROWNS IRON > 7" — BII7ERS WILL CURE HEADACHE INDIGESTIO! BILIOUSNESS DYSPEPSIA NERVOUS | MALARIL CHILLS axp FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILI PAIN ix IMPURE CONSTI FEMA L. k RHEU IATISM NEUR. ALGIA KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLES k {LE BY ALL DRI 'ROSTRATION TY rie BACK & B31 L.OOD "ATION . INFIR SIDES MITIES i ne rade Mark and P WIAD ~AX¥. NO OTHER CATARRH ELY’'S Cream Balm =x» PAYS the EREICHT Ten Ww ngon Seales, wr JONES of "BIROHAMTEN, BINGHAMTON. N. 5. ARKIn of eanty isn yoy Aviad DRT. FELIX GOUR i or Magical Beautif Oriental Cream, No eautities other goametic the Skin, will do i, Puritiesas well Ba to be sure ths preparstion . sper. y Accept ounteriel of s1m tHent: h hou ls indies wili ues then, Vourand's 's Croan ay. Also Poudre Bublile removes superfio a injury to the skin rae 7 ott Hen snaeer, ¢ Bond St, N. ¥ and Fancy Canadas and ph Als XY City sti. 1. Macy's Stern's, Ehrion's, ¥ Pol i Goods Reparations” po in » dealers of base imitations, $1.00 Reward for arrest and proof of any one selling the sams. to SS a day. “amples worth Lines not under the horse's feet Brewsres's Sarory Res Houver, Hol Address Pleo’ Remedy for Ontarrh is the Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest, CATARRH Also good fur Cold in the Read, Headache, Hay Peover, &c. cette © Soldiers & Hairs, Seni “amp "PENSIONS for Girculars. COOL. I. BI HAM, Att'y, Washington, | FRAZER AXLE REST IN THE WORLD EF Oot the Genuine. Sold Everywhers, For large or wall gumeal BALLARD prmeall dhaes, The strongest sod the only wheslvisly wie ville on Ler the Hood. laim that Hood" » Bar he, medicine deserving pm we believe that to purify the Ul renovate the Y Bp do not ¢ whos gy" The nw be unequalled infigencs the health cannd Comes contaming by which the health is undermis able, Loss of Appetite, Le Dyspepsia, Debility, “Hl I" Bey Goyer at ved, the tra Ner ailments the and often fata Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1; Mad only by C. 1, HOOD & CO., lo 100 Doses One Dollar ASK FOR THE W. L. DOUCLAS Best material, perfectfil, equals any $5 or $6 shoe, every pair warranted Take none Gules slam ped “W. L. Dongle’ $5.50 hoe, Warrssted TEM, Button sud Lace, Hoys ask for the W. L., Douglas’ 82.00 Shoe, Fame glyics ss ° the $3.00 Bhoe. If you cannot get these shoes (rom deal % ers, send address On potie I» ard to WW, L. Douglas, SV ockton, Mass. A ed are us Ho d's gix for 8 NC LADY IB REALLY BEAUTIFUL a Clear, White Complexion pies, Freciies, Face Grobe, Sunburn, Cha : teh, ete, om 1 fh stifles the the Les! produced. uggs aad Fan vy Good ireglars, wi Testimonials and ¥ Dea’ ern a | W. M. THURSTON'S 7c. TOOTH POWDER Keeping Teeth Perfect and (Gams Healthy, and SCOTT & CO, PHILADELVHIA, PA Sfcatl © Rhe val Box, 81.600; re Pimples, Blotches, Hiemishea and tine and Complexion Deantitied b Beeson's Aromatic fia Sulph Bold by Drugpists monly Shim nll =} sees Unredé ur Soap. of Ma wo. inde phils Fa r sent he DRE por PEL. facturer, 208 North Frou: rece ing STHMA CURED! German Asthme Cure never foils 0 ghve emmediaie relief in the wors fortalie sleep oBec cures wheres w trigd comminces the mont shopticai. Trice HO ote. snl $1.06, of Drugpive or bs Eampie FREE So — Be SCHIFF MAN, — Pani. a — FA STEP IN ADVARCE OF ALL OTHERS. CTTER INGTRUMENTR, LARS TO BELIN BROS. ACO NEWARK, N. J. DREYDOPPEL BORAX SOAP and sweet, Excellent for Bath and Teller Full pound bars only, Forsale everywhere. TEETER No Rope to Cut OF Horses” Manes Oolenrae | ‘ECLIPSE HALTER and BRIDL E Combined. cannot peed By AGY horas, Sample | fren on receiptof 81 Soil byaliSaddiar Hardware: and Harness Deslers Bpocial dis gun Io the rads | Send for Price . J. CU. L iGirioy NE. iockoster, N TOPPcE FoEE 10 arion ST Pers i “ astored Dr. KLINE { J GREAT NERVE REGTORER Pow wl I RRATS & Numer Di SASK ly pore eure For Nevow AFpive » ARLE if taken Es deb A r wpe. Treatise snd $i » eats, they PRymg ex ores: hi , Send names, P00 sn any sfllioned vo Pe BLAINE i Trusts ai FE ARE PE Fears AL I 3: a pony aerakiish OF ¢ yw hs, deme ap ules cma ie ON ERED oo lA Phils, Hours trom ¥ AM 40 4 9M. at 9992 Rt Bios P.M. & sunday teoroing Stoll A ’ H A BE BEST IN THE 1 ORLD, Hie adn, . Perfect