Ba A Path Leads all the Way. I #it before my door at eve, And looking westward sivly say, Should I these garden precincts leave And cross the meadows sweet with dew, And climb the hills 80 deeply blue, And follow still the setting day— Btill other gardens I should find, And other meadows dowy sweet, And still the summer roads would wind, And still the patient earth would lead Though I a thousand miles should wend Herselt unto my patient feet, The rivers hide "neath many a bridge, The better pleased they greet the day: There's guidance o'er She roughest ridge; Aye, though "tis thousand miles or wore To where she sits within tone door, There is a path leads all the way. Oh, blessed land of the dear earth, Betwixt us still, though wide we stray, Thou seem ’st to lessen thy great girth In dusk and stillness for my feet; Thy furile hinting yvt is sweet; There is a path that leads the wayl And at its end she sits the same, With evening face serenely bright, With lips that sweetly speak my nama; While through her look and smile there play Suggestion still of holy ways, That couguer parting, change and night, BEFORE THE DUEL. in society they used to speak of hin as “that handsome Siguoll-s.” Hs title was Viscount Gontron Joseph de Bignolies, Orphan and master of a large fortune, he male a conspicuous figure in the fashionable world, He had a fine ap pearance, a good deportment, a facility of speech sufficient to gain him the reputation of a wit, some natural grace, snd an air of noble reserve, a brave mustache and soft eyes—just whal women admire, He was in demand at receptions, » Hesirable partner in a waltz, and he in. spired the men with that sort of smilivg confidence enj yed by men who possess | erxetio faces. He was suspected of ving had some of those amours which supposed to do credit to a youug belor. He lived happy, quietly, in e most absclute good morsl stanaing, t was known that he was a good pwordsman aud a better shot, “When I have to fight,”’ he would y, * I choose pistols. With that wea- n I am sare of killing my man.” Now, one evening, after having ao. mpanmed to the opera two young mar- ried ladies of his soquaintance, with eir husbands, he invited the whole rty after the performance to take me ice-cream at Tortont’s. They had jou there ouly a few minutes, when he erved that a gentleman seated at a ighboring table was staring steadily one of the ladies in the party. She wed to feel annoyed, embarrassed, kept her head down. At last she said to her husband; “There is a man over there who keevs staring at me. I doz't kuow hi at ali; do you?” The husband, who had not no‘iced anvhody; turned to look, and replied: *No; I don’t know him at all.” The young woman coutinued, half smiling, half angry: **It 18 very annoying; that man spoils y ice cream.” The husband shrugged his shoulders, “Nonsense; psy no attention to him, If we had to worry ourselves about all the insolent people we meet, there would | never be an end of 18.” Bat the viscount had suddenly risen, $e conld pot permit that iodividaal lo destroy the enjoyment which he had offered. The iosult was to him-—inas- much as it was throngh his invitation the party had entered the cafe, There. fore the affair concerned no one but he, He approached the man, and said to him: i “Bir, youn are staring at those ladies m a manner which I eannot tolerate, Will yon be good enough to cease this staring at once!’ ¢ I'he other replied: * You keep your mouth, will you?” The viscount, setting his teeth, ex imed: “Take care, sir; you may compel mu Yo violate politeneces. The suranger uttered only one wora— fiithy word, that resounded from end of the oafe, and made every in the house start as if they had been set In motion by a spring, Al who had their backs turced looked sound; all the rest raised their heads three walters simultaneously whirlec upon their heels hike so many tops; the two women behind the counter started and twisted themselves completely about, as if they were two puppets pulle by one string, There was a great silence, Then 1 sudden sound olacked in the air, The Yiscount had slajped his adversary’ face, Everybody jnmped up to inter fere, Cards were exchanged. After the viscount returned home tha night he began to walk up and dowr is room with great, qnick strides, Hi Jas too much exocited to think abow anything, Ouoe solitary idea kept hov ering in his mind—a doel—althougt the idea itself had no! yet awakened any special emotion. He had done jaw what he ought to have done; he ha behaved just ss he ought to have be haved. He would be spoken of, wounl¢ bs approved, wouid be congratulated He repeated aloud, spesking as mer speak in great me tal tronble: “What a brate that man isl” T he sat down and began # think, e would have to procure seo | onds in the morning, Whom should he | choose? He thought of all the mos celebrated and most dignified men o his seqnaiutance, Fivally he seleotec the Marquis de Ja Toar Noire and Col Bourdin: a great nobleman and a grea | soldier—that woull be just the thing | Their names would have weight in the | newspapers. He suddenly discoverec that he was thirsty, and he drank thre glasses of water, one after another; then he began to walk up and dows | again, Ile felt full of energy. By showing himself to be plucky, ready far | anything and everything, snd by fost ing upon ngorous and dangerous condi tions —~by demanding a serious, very serious, terrible’ duel, bis adversary would be probably seared and make He took wp the man's card which he he read it over and over agiin, as he had already read it in the cafe; with a glance—-and as he had read it ourringe bv every passing gashight, “Gerora's Loan, 51 Rie Mooocey.” Nothing more, He examined the letters of this name, which seemed to him mysterions—full of vague significance, (leorge Lamilt Who was the feilon? What did he do? What did be tare at the woman 1n that way for? Wasn't it disgusting to think that a stranger, a maa nobody kuew anything about, ould worry a man's life in that way. just by taking a notion to fix his eyes iusvlently upon a woman's face, And the viscouut re peated again aloud; **W hat a brute that man isl” Then he remaived standing motion. les, thinking, keeving his eyes still ized upon the ecard. A race arose within him aguiost that bit of paper— a fury of hate mingled with a strange sense of uneasivess, It was a stupid mess, all this affaur! He seized an open penknife lying beside him, and jabbed it into the mildie of the printed name, as if he were stabbing somebody, So he would have to fight! Should he choose swords or pistols—for cousidered himself to be the party in- sulted. With swords he would run less risk; but by choosing pistols, he might be able to frighten his adversary into withdrawing the challenra, It 1s very seldom that a duel with words is fatal, 88 a reciproeal prudence generally pre- vents the combatants from fencing at kuch close quarters that the biade can iuvfliot a very deep thrust, With pistols his life would be seriously endangered, but again, he might he able to extricate himself from the difli :ulty with hoaor, aud yet without an aciual meeting, He exclaimed: “I must be firm. He will be afraid” Tne sound of his own vo ¢s made him start, and he looked around him. He folt very nervous. Ho drank another glass of water, and began to undress in order to go to bed. As soon as he got into bed, he blew out the light and ciosed his eyes, Ho thonght: *1 have the whole day to-morrow to arrange my affairs, The best thing I can do is to take a good sleep to settle my nerves,” He felt very warm between the sheets; and still he could not sleep. Ho turned over and over, and remained for tive minutes on his back, then for five minutes on his right side; then he rolled over on his left side, He felt thirsty sgain. He got up for as drink, Then a new anxiety came upon him: ‘Is it possible that I would be afraid? Why did his heart start to beating so wildly at the least little familiar noise mn his room? When the clock was about to strike, the click of the little spring rising up caused him a violent start, and he felt such a weight at his hears for several moments that he had to open his mouth in order te breathe. He began to reason with himsel! op the possibility of the thing: “Am I really afraid?” No, certainly; how could a man be afraid since he was firm'y resolved to carry out the affair to the very end, since he was fully decided to fight, aud not to tremble, Dut he feit so pr» foundly disturbed inwardly that he kept saking himself: “Can a man become afraid in spite of himself,” And this doubt, this suspicion, this terror grew npou him; suppose that a force more powerful than us will, an irresistible avd mastering foroe stionld overpower him, what would happen? O! course he would appear on the ground, as he had made up his mind to do so. Yes; but what would happeu? What if he should be afraid? Waat i he should faint? And he began to think of his position, of hus reputation, of kis usa, And a strange desire suddenly seiz d him to get up and look at himself in the glass, He relit bis candle, When he saw his visage reflected in the mirror, he could hardly recogwizs himself; and it seemed as if he had never seen himself before His eyes looked enor- mous and he was pale—ocertainly he was pale, very pale indeed! He stood there In front of the mirror He put out his tongue as il to certfy the state of his health; and all at once this thought shot shreugh him like » bullet: “The day after to-morrow, at this very hour, perhaps I shall be deadl” And his heart began to thump again, funiously. “The day after to-morrow I shall, perhaps, Le dead, This un here before me; this ‘1’ that I see in this glass will be mo more, What! here I am. 1 looked at myself; 1 felt that I live, and in twenty-four hours I will be iying in that bed—dead, with eyes closed-—oold, inanimate, gone from the world of the living.” He turved to look at the bed; and be distinot.y saw himself lying there under the very same covers he had jast left His face had the hollowness of a dad face; his bands had the limpness of bands that will never move again, Ther he became afraid of his bed; and, in order to escape it, he went into bis smoking room. He took a» mechanically, lighted it, and to walk ap snd dowa again. He feit cold, he started to ring the bell in order to swaken his valet.-de-chamber; bat stop- ped suddenly, even while his hand was raised to grasp the bell-cord, “That man would see that I am afraad ” And he did not riog. He made thy fire himself, His hands shook a little, with nervous trembl ng, whenever they touched anytning His mind wandered, his thoughts began to fly in eonf brusque, painfal; a sort of drunkenness came u him, as if he had been swal- lowing liguor, And over and over again he kept msking himself: “What shall [ do? What 1s going become of m:?” Ha whole body shuddered with spas- I nduv. WO was dawn, “The roy hy mad aly, the roofs aud J rise; and with its coming there passed mto the vireouut’s heart a ray of hope, merry, quick, brats’! What a fool he | was to have thus allowed himself to be | worried by fear belore anvthing at ail onda had seen thoss of Ge ree Lami — | hefore he so much ws kuew whether he wonild have to fight at all, He nale his toilet, dressed and walked bur with a firm step, i As he went along, he kept repeating to nmself: “I must be energetic, vory energetio. | I mnst prove that [ am pot a bit afraid,” His witnesses, the mar nis and the oolouel, put themselves at his disposal; and after a hearty shake-hands, they bern to disonss the conditions, The colonel asked: “Do youn iusist upon a serious duel? T 1a viscount replied: * V ry serious,” The marquis asked: “Y ma wish pistols?” . YX , » “Wil. we leave you free to regulats the rest.” The viscount articulated, in a dry, jerky voice: “Twenty paces—to fire at the worl— to fire on the rise, instead of on the fall, Balla to be exchanged nutil ous or the | other be serious y wounded,” The cclonel exel med in a tone of — - to foot, so that the barrel of the pistol quivered and pointed iu sil directions, Then he said to himself: It 1 simply 1mpossible, 1 shall never be able to fight as I am now.” He looked down the in uzzle of the barrel, into the little deep black hole dishonor, of whisperiogs in the salons, of laughter at the clubs, of the con- sons in newspapers, of the open insu its he would receive from cowards, Btill he stare! at the weapon, and, pulling back the hammer, he su ldenly tiny red flame, The pio! had re- | wie - - -— A - BUIENTIFIC SCKAYSH, the swern tubes of steam vessels erable pressure, however, has recently brought forgetinlness, And the discover y filled i i 19¥. other mau, the cool and dignified de- portment which behooves tim, then he would be ruined forever, He would be stained, branded with the stamp of infamy, driven out of sociery! Aad that calm, fearless attitnde he would not be able to have; he koew it; he felt certain of it, Yet he was brave enough sinoe he wanted to tight! He was brave since ~ But the halfshuped thought never completed isel' in his mind; for, sad. the va rious purposes for which lignum vite has hitherto been so exclusively em- ployed. The soft wood is first lmpreg. nated with oil, after which it Eile jected to a great pressure, increasing the density of the material to a very great degree, in Steam fitters and encineers now to realize the valuable appear properties Inde- structible under all changes of temper- ature, a perfect lubricant, and an anti- incrustator, any joint can be made up perfectly tight with it, and can be tak- could, he thrust the mnzale of the pretol the trigeer, When the wvalet-de-chambre, startled satisfaction: ‘Those are excelleut conditios, You shoot well; and all the cbances are in your favor.” And they departed on their errand. I'he viscount returnei home to wait tor | their return, His excitement, tem po- ranily appeased, now began to increase every rhwute, He felt all along bis | legs and arms, in his chest, a sort of | shaking, s coutinual quivering; he | found himself utterly unable to remain | quiet mn any one place, whether sitiiug or standing. His mouth felt as dry as | if wholly devoid of saliva; and he | clacked his tongue loud'y every ounce in | a while, as if trying to uufasten it from his palate, He wished to breakfast, but could aot eat, ‘Then the idea came to him to take a drink, in order to g ve himself courage; and he ordered a decanter of rum brought in, from which be he'ped himself 10 six small glasses, after one another, A heat, as of a burn, passed through him, tollowed almost immediately by a sort of mental numbness, He thought: Here's the remedy. Now I am al right,’ But at the end of an hour, he had | emptied the decanter; and his excite. meat become intolerable, He felt a fon d dead. his master lving on his back, A gush of blood had sp ttered put together. Hubber or metal gas kets, when previously sineared with it, will last almost any length of time, surface and engineers TY clean put to valuu- ble mineral, and it is equally useful on shore, bright. Few "wp : er. 2 The superb black paint which is now of Work for optical and some other instruments brass formed a great red blot ummedistely u derveath the words: ————————— Besides the gigaulic tower which M. Eiftel proposes to erect for the Paris Ex wosition of 18-0, it seems the French the Engineers a M. J. Bourdais bas preseited to French Society of Civil ry 434 feel in Leight, in which Lo estab. lish a permanent museum of electricity as far up as 216 feet, and above this a vix storied column surrounded roc f, forming a promenade, and capa- ble of sccom «lating 2.000 Tue central vue, 60 feel in diameter, is is to be surrounded by an oruaweniyl framework faced with coppey. “AND %0 you are really 21 years old, Mr. DeCook?" she asked, “Yas responded that “lI reached my majority y-know," to-day, majority,” was the way she sustained Lies couversa' — a sam— Bhort liu mad wish to roll on the floor, to scream, to bite. soive his seconds, He dul not even dare to spk to them, not even to say "Good eveaing,” or auything else through fear that they might dwscover uniteration ol his voie, The colonel said: “Everything has been arranged ao Your adversary at fir-t claimed, ss the weulted party, bis right 0 the choice of weapous, but he almost immediately after waived his clam, aud socepted everything as you wished it, secouds are two military men,” The vlsoonnut sad: “Thauks" The marquis exclaimed: must excuse us for only eoming a thousand things to do, cure a good surgeon, since the doel is to end ouly upon the serious wounding of ove of the principals; and you know buliets are not things to joke about Then we mast settle upon a good place, near some house or other, to which we oan oarry the wounded party if neces sary; and all that sort of thing, In short we've got two or three hours’ work before us,” The wvwscouut a second time artion- med: “Thavks,” The colonel asked: “Well, you feel all right! you are 0001?" “Yea, very cool, thank you,” The two men retired, When be frund bimsell all alone again, he felt as if he wore going mal. When his servant had lighted the lamps, he sat down at his table to write the bead of a blank sheet of notepaper the words ‘This Is my last will and testament,” Lo rose to his feet with a sudden start and walked away, feeling incapable of putting two ideas together, of making any resolution, or deciding about anything whatsoever, Bo, be was going to fight! There was no getting out of it now! Wast was the matter with bim? He wished to fight; he had the firm intention of fighting; he had resolved upon 18; and nevertheless he clearly felt, 1 spite of his utmost determination, in Site ol the utmost tension of his will, he could not possibly find the foroe neces- place of meeticg, He tried to picture the scene fo his mind-—his own attitude “Does my adversary frequent the shooting galleries? la koown? Is his name published anywhere? How oan I flad out?” He remembered Baron de Vaux's stop- sv acrey Out, “Qreer craze Lois,” mused a Bouth Side saird resser as he bowed and scraped 3 stylishly dressed woman out of the door of his estibliishment. “Time was when women gloried in her tresses but she doesn't glory any more, Strange, that this mia should become 80 virnlent just as winter is about toset ir., and ata time when wan't all the bar without disgusting the men folks about the Louse, But it is the style, and [I don’t see why us Iressers * hould grumble, for every cus. omer means seventy-five cents in our pockets, Now, let me think a moment Yes, it was Ellen Terry who started the i craze, Rose Cleveland, the President's sister, was probably the first to catch { Lhe fever, and from thus lady the conta. | gion has spread until now pear.y every icity and town in the country bas a large number of well developed cases, | Neither the young n «r the old » snared, | Why, last week a woman about 43 years | old came bere and threw herse f ioto j one of the chairs like a three-Limes-a- : i 100, they could pile on | week shaver, Did she want her hair tdid. 1 run and down the back of her cranium un- til 1 found some wrinkles buck of her ears, and then [ stopped, In a modest sort of way 1 told her of my discovery and recommended a mixture | have for removing the furrows of time. Why, sir, that woman was so humiliated that she left orders to have Ler tresses made into a wig and switch, and only yester- day 1 saw this lady promenading on State street with ber hair fastened on with pins, nets, and strings, “Oh, this epidemic is just grand, Let me tell you of anoiber funny case over on the West Side. The wife of a wealthy man came home one night with ber raven locks wrapped up in a news- | paper which she carried under ber arm. ! At the table the servant girl ‘piped off” Lier tiistress, and was stricken with the malady. Next day the girl climbed into a barber's chair nd paid forty cents for # Tamany Hall bair cut. Then she was proud, She walizad into her basement Abode with a reckless hurrah, and got dinner with a masculine dash, When the mistress beheld her clipped servant she flew into a jealous passion, and, just to wound the poor girl's heart, donned ber bureau-drawer switches and pom padours, and in this head gear she may be seen almost any das looking dagge s ‘at the humble barber shop across the street, “It's sad, though, when a red-headed girl catches the fever. This young lady is all right with long sunset tresses; but | with them off the buck of her head looks like a brindle door step rug. | Then, besides, if freckles have Leen hiding around her neck and ears they are bound to come out and cause cow. , tment, “I predict a great and immediate craze for hair jewelry, switches, When the mercury gets down i ten or twenly degrees below 2810 you | will see these young women comi : nd here for hirsute blankets ‘ the like, I overheard two doctors talks with an undertaker the other day. One of the medicine men sald that he was confident that the short hair erage would result in & large increases in cs tarrhal affec the undertaker bowed low and divided an apple with his vomuanion.” of lampblack are placed in a smooth, two are thor. oughly mixed together, Just a suffi- cient amount of gold size is used tw hold the lampblack together. After the lampblack and size are thoroughly mixed and worked, twenty-four drops of turpentine are added, and the com- position is again well mixed and worked. The compound formed in LO possess very that have commonly employed for the purpose named. A method is mains des Constructeurs for preserving first thoroughly cleaned, washed in metallic brush file, and then painted several coats with raw petroleum, care being that each be thoroughly On is to be coat coat becoming dry, it Pp sinh, capable of resisting a high degree of heat and not susoe ptible « by rust, This condition defin ¥ the occa wits 1 HAABCK be 3 t3/8 iy } reserved and improved by tion of a single » ANY may ili- iz. » great elevator at Lalea, by sn Railway Company, for lo ships, has now been built on the - Jguay the Swedish-Norwe- wling iron ore direct nt finished, and its « 1% to be a su three trucks minutes, t along the rails to leading the hold of the ship, and The whole arrangement is ation is reporied elevator raising in two moved fimuitancousiy he same being then BLIOOLS into emptied. said to 80 perfect that a ship of some twenty- five hundred tons may be loaded n a day. In the engine room are two en- gines of sixty horse power each, steam being supplied by three hoilers. The engines pump water into two sccumu- be ground pipes to the elevator, which it will raise with a load of 120 tons on it 300 pounds per square inch. In a recent letter on the subject of continuous car heating, Prof. Lanza makes the statement that, according to experiments thus far, only a small per. centage of the steam generated by a lo- comotive is required for heating pur. poses in this line. The pipe supplying the steam from the engine should not, he says, be less than one and one-lalf inches in diameter, while that of the radiating pipes in the cars should be two inches; the con. nections between the cars should be rubber, as all metal joins will leak in course of time, however careful the original workmanship may have been. Again, direct steam must be used, all plans for effectively employing the exhaust in this way having failed. The principal difficulty met with on introducing this system, was to get rid but satisfactory traps are now plied. The difference in the vield of leather characterizing various hides, as stated by a recent writer on the subject, is very marked. Upper leather hides will, it is calculated, yield from 72 to 80 per cent. of leather, foot measure- ment. Plump hides have little gpread, but give a good split, spready hides being the reverse of this. Green salted sole leather hides from the stock yards yield at least 70 per cent. dry salable leather for each 100 pounds of hide. Texas and native steers, short-haired, plump, summer ocondi- tion, give from 75 to 80 per cent. in acid sole, and about 60 per cent. for non-acid; but the Colorado hides, being more spready, do ngt turn out quite #0 well as the Texas. Dry hides, if plump and not weighted with lon trim, should yield 150 per cent. aci sole leather to each 100 pounds of dry hide, some tanners reaching 160 pounds. IIS One of the sul est conditions in is to have nothing good to live for. The ran who at svervitung through money cannot see very far, 18 a vreat misfortune to + v born so all She laugh has to stay luside «f sup- A —— FOOD FOR THOUGHT, Iarorance stand« s 111, Bland behind the truth, No mau lives Lizher than he looks. Too many sailois will sink a ship, He bears mi-ery best that hides 12 mont, With broken rudder the vessel is soon lost, Error only moves to run against a post, The good that people do lives after them, No Christian can live any higher than he lo k=, No chienmstances can repa'r a defect of charac er. Luman improvement 1s from within outwards, Whenever you find a cross, die on i$ to self, Con'ent nent is a full brother to hap- Pitess, bs a wor er! FY auywheie. It costs wore t1 revenge injuries than to bear them, Don't be rude to your inferiors im BoCial position, Spend less nervous energy each day than you make, Hall temptations are extra danger Ous, Love i8 always the geiner by being Leslad, Failure ig ulways next door meighbor Lo su Coens, If you look wrong you will be sure to Blep Wiong. Lu morigages there Is prosperity —for the other fellow, Help'ug the unworthy is throwing Wailer iu Lhe sea. Custos are like grease—they make AuYililog » ip easy. The s: rest way Lo a man’s pocket is through his heart. The davs are always too short for the mau who loves Lis work, To have a big heat and a small hears 18 a very gieat misfortune, Pray tha' you may not think evil, and then you wiil not », vax iL. I dimly gues<, from blessings known, of greater 0 UL oi sight, L ve never has to be watched lo soe thutitd «8 a full days’ werk, The time to b+ most careful is when we have a haod full of trumps, A loafer is never hap The pext Lest (hing Lo owning some tiling is 10 Le wil ing to do without it A hanry home is one of (he strongest Castles Satan ever Lurns Lis gun agaiust, Noman can be tr lv brave who Is only trying to be Liuly gool. A good many people would say more if they dint talk so much, The time when we most need faith is when things look black all ar ‘und us, There are nt many poor m+n who would do a rich man's work for the pay J eI8, Ihe time 10 le pleasant and make 1% count, is when everybody ele 15 une pieasant, Economy is a savings bank, into which meu diop pennies aud get dollars in re- turn, it is ea Jer to pick a thorn up by its ro~¢ than it i8 to pick a rose up Ly its thorn, A focl seems 10 be a person who has more will than judgement avd wore van. | 1Ly than e.i ber, {| Don'ts xpress a post ve op’n.on unless you perfectly understand what you are ia King a out, The moon looks down at night upom the vices of the world, and yel remains | &s chaste as ever, | When a man is coavinoed that he | owes anything (0 himself, be is always | Very anxious to pay it, If it wasn’t for its ight nobody would ever lind out thal the stu hag spots on i. A discourag~d man is one of th: sad- | des sights that augels ever have §u look wl. A great manv people ara gl omy be 'eruse they Leleive nll Lueir joys are be and them. Tie man who can not repect himself has only one more step W ake to Tall iuto the pis The resson some peoples do not have more power is bx ¢ouse Ley do not have enous h weakness, 7 he measure of a man's real character {3 what he would do if Le kuew it would never be ‘ound out. {If some people cou'd look themselves | +q rely In the face, they would wan | Ww have their Lead cut olf | Nobody wants to keep a runaway hore, but a good many k-ep runaway | tempers and Sauk nodung of it Sweetness that never sours will do | more to smooth your pathway through ‘this vale of tears than © | money To have to hoe the same row over and over every day takes all the poetry fout of life, and Kills the good angel in tuany peo le Many of us live so low that we can’t see very high, or we wouldn't go about with long feces whenever things don't £9 Lo suit us. | Every ime ‘he sold'er handles Ins musket fn dri lit has some bing to de wiih the way be will handle it in bat tle. | There are people who would a good deal rather be the « histle or thie bell on asteun engine than © be ove of the | duiving wheel It » ill probally be a lone time before you me tn mun who issu ly of a fuuls that you have Bot commited iu heart, it not In practice. Boys have been ruled beoanse th bad 10 slay howe and turn the hey should have Leen al i ie i ‘ sloue, when 1 wed 10 go a Osbirg,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers