FOR THE FAIR BEX. smUM NMM. Coiffures tend to compactness, and are worn lower in the back. Braids or short enrls down the back are worn with dressy evening ooiffureo. Bmall bouffant draperies or paniers are arranged back of the waistcoat on to drossy Parisian toilets. Oriental bilks, Persian end Egyptian silks, satins, velvets, brocades ana oor duroys are all used for waistcoats. Very small figures, checks and stripes on white grounds, are the featnres in the new spring calicoes and percales. " Pekin," the name given to velvets, silks, and woolens having alternate dull and lustrous stripes, is all the rage at Paris. A double eape of heavy ailk chenille, with tinsel thread twisted in the same, is the latest novelty for the neck in place of a scarf. The long waistcoats worn with dressy toilets are separate garments, and may be worn with several different kinds of •oats and skirts. White satin dresses of creamy or leaden tint are worn by elderly ladies for full dress, with foil trimmings of creamy old point laces. Birds of paradise, butterflies, and in sects of all sorts in the form of gold figures and Impegan feather ornaments are worn in the hair for full dress. The belted Josephine corsage, the corset basqne, and the oorsage with long points back and front are all worn for evening toilets with low, square necks. For street wear, under all circum stances, a very simple dress, although it be a little shabby, it is preferable to one more elaborately draped and trimmed that has lost its freshness. All morning toilets for the street should be short and very dark or black. The materials may be vigogne, cash mere, camel's hair, and all woolen goods, bnt the trimmings may be of silk. The fancy ef the moment in short costumes in a skirt and jacket of seal brown cloth, the wrap also of the same in English coat shape, trimmed with a collar, revere, ruffs and pocket straps of fur seal The newest hats for yonng girls in their teens are of felt, nigh crowned, with sqnare tops, trimmed with three rows of inch-wide ribbon in bands placed quite far apart around the crown. The brims roll in Derby shape. Other felt hats have a scarf of brown or navy bine satin with white polka dots. Cravat bows have superseded the eravats that pass around the neck; if the latter are used, they are placed in side the dress, instead of concealing the neat collar of the dress, and only the cravat bow is seen. White muslin cravat bows are preferred for plain suits in the morning and for dressy af ternoon wear. When colored cravats are chosen, they are folded like gen tlemen's scarfs to fit in the revers col lar of a coat, or else they are as narrow as the lawn neck-ties worn in full dress; the latter are made of foulard, and em broidered on each end. A Wife'* RIM Hatband. A fast yonng man who had Jived hard and wasted a splendid constitution fell ill at Rome. At one moment it was thought he wonld die. His disease was contagions. Hia friends fled from him with fear. When he reooverod from the danger which threatened he was blind. When he was told he wonld be blind for life he cursed heaven, hell and earth ! His enraes were answered by an angel's voio© and a woman's band gently smoothed his pillow. Never had a voice so touched his heart. Who was this woman who was caring for him when all bad fled ? Who was this ministering angel ? He was told that she was the i daughter of s family in the house, and . that when she heard of his desolate position she wonld have no nay, bnt spent her days and nights by bis bed side, never sleeping, never oeaaing her watch, until he waa ont of danger. When he heard this he forgot the terri ble misfortune which had struck him. He forgot that he was blind. He forgot everything, save the girl who had risked her life for him, and this time he blessed Providence for the inexpressible boon granted him—a true woman's love. They were married. Bnt each time that the poor blind man said,." I love yon, darling! Love yon more than I ever loved before I Nor did I think I con Id love so much I "—each time he spoke of love, each time he pressed her in his arms, the poor wife felt her heart beat loudly in her breast and her cheeks grow red as fire. Why? Becanse she was ugly and knew it. " Yon arc beantifnl, my own." he wonld say. " No, I am ugly," she wonld answer, with a forced laugh, while a tear of something like shame trickled down her cheek. He only thought she was jesting, and he kissed her all the more. Besides, what did it matter? Washe not blind ? And her voioe was the sweetest of any be had ever heard. Several years panned thus, years of untold happiness to the loving wife, who, on account of tier homeliness, had never dreamed she oonld be loved. Bnt suddenly one day her husband exclaim ed, " I see! " As soon as he found out that she was homely he ceased to love her, and resumed his old life of debauch ery. She has the crosses and suffering* of an abandoned wife. Her only hope is that her husband may again lose his sight and return to her anna. A >MIM-Uk I'MKtU*. Tbe Dmnport (IOWA) Democrat * says : A solitary gentleman, sixtv veers of AAA, possessing property end being filled with • desire to hero • home of bis own end e wife to keep it in order, conceived tbe idee of celling upon e very estimable lady whom be bed beerd of, bat never met or spoken to, end oil pre senting the ooee for her consideration. Be celled et the hanse where the object of bis choice resided end asked to see her. She made her appearance and be made known his business. He stated briefly that he was alooe in the world, derired to marry, had beerd of her emi wi oent qnaliflcatirm, offered to provide ber a rood borne, to care for her, and aaked her to become hie wife. In tbe ■rote strictly business manner the lady responded that she bad heard favorably of her present caller; she had no borne lit .. v 7- ', of her own end bed no objection to sharing one of his providing. The hap py arrangement was thus at onoe con cluded, and the gentleman left On Wednesday ho called again for her, they walked to a minister's residence and were married. Neither of the parties had known each other previous to this unique beginning of their aoqoaintanoo. The lady is abont forty years of age. New* and Nelr* far Wmm. Gerster, the opera singer, has fflOO a week. Minnie llauk lias S2OO. A New York jeweler exhibits a Chinese empress' robe, broidcred in gold. A New York lady has nineteen eats, collected with reference to their delicate shades and tones o( color. Professor Billroth, of Vienna r has founded a society for the odnoation of nurses for wounded soldiers. In the retail dry-goods stores of Berlin only yonng girls are employed behind the counters to display and sell goods. After s long snd-severo examination a Viennese lady has been admitted by the university of Zurich to the degree of doctor of philosophy. Bouquets of dried flowers and grasses are sold in England for interior decora tion, jnst as they are in America. The flowers are dried in warm sand. A Florida woman recently chopped off the head of a great eagle that had beoome entangled in a honeysnekle vine while trying to kill her chickens. A key was all tho present that a New York bride received from the bride groom's parents, hut it opened the door of a splendid house, and the yonng lady did not complain. Opera scarfs three vards long and more than half a yard wide are now popular in Paris for winding around the hair and throat. The newest opera cloaks, enveloping the whole person, are of thick, soft camel's hair, with a hood. The following extract is from an ao connt of the recent visit of the Marqnia of Lorne and the Princess Louise to Niagara Falls: The ladies all appeared at dinner in fall dress. Her royal high ness wore a black silk dress, with court train, the only trimming being crape. Upon her neck was a necklace of Whitby jet beads, throe strands, and diamond cut. Her hair was arranged in plain bands, with jet ornaments, and she looked lovely. The other ladies were also in court costumes, and the gentle* men were in fnll dress. ('•"•red With IMb mood*. " Rich and rare were the gems she wore," is s fashionable tnne in Ban Francisco. There is a lady at one of the leading hotels who never appears in the dining-room with less than from $25,000 to $30,000 worth of diamonds on her person. There is another lady at another hotel wh<> wears a pair of soli taire earrings worth 950,000. They be longed to the collection of jewels of Queen Isabella of Bpain, and were pnr chased at auction in Paris. These two stones were bought for $24,000. Another lady with a brooch shajied like a fern leaf and glittering with fifty or a hundred diamonds is estimated as hav ing a superficial value of from 915,000 to $20,000. Home thieves recently crept into a lady's room at a hotel while she was dining with her husband. They ransacked trunks and drawers and ob tained a watch and chain and some coin. But they got no diamomla. The lady hat! gone down to dinner with every jewel glittering in her toilet. lladly Bemurallxed. Tho insurance agents are not "chron ic grumblers," bnt there is an element of discontent among them that has a tendency to elongate their faces and make some of them ill-natured at the sapper table. Our reporter was hang ing around one of the prominent insur ance offices last week and overheard the following conversation: Applicant for insurance steps in and addresses the agent—" How ranch will von charge for 95,000 insurance on my house up on the 'reserve' for three years ?" Agent (smilingly)—" How much are yon wilting to pay ?" Applicant—" lam not willing to pay anything. 1 want to know bow cheap it can be acme." Agent—(tremblingly)— " My dear air, oar rate hau been one cent for each SIOO. With mv policy I shall present yoa with a pianoforte, a aewing machine, an or gan, a bedroom net, a lire baby in a patent jnmper, or at title of 100 acres of stamp lands ont of our gift department if yon leave the risk to me. ' Yon nays yonr money and takes yonr choice,' Will yon allow us, sir, to write the risk r f Applioantfftaming to leave)—" No; I will look about a little first and perhaps I can do better." The agent sank into his chair exhanst ed, and asked our reporter if he coald lend him half a dollar with which to in crease the next " bait. "—Sauinaw Herald. !*early Burled Alive. The New Fret* Presm of Vienna tells of the narrow escape of sn aged Hebrew of that city from being bnried alive. He bad been bedridden for a long time, and being taken with violent oonvnlsiona became stiff and cold, and was taken for dead. It is a custom among the ortho dox Jews, which may have ceased many a premature burial, and whieh the re formed Jews have entirely diaoarded, to inter their dead on the day of their decease, Fortunately for Pej rex Fischer, the day of bis supposed demise was Fri day, and it was impossible, on account of the approach of the Sabbath, which with the orthodox Hebrews begins at sundown on Friday, to bury him with the usual dispatch. He was laid out and two faithful believers were set to watch and pray over him until the close of the Bab bath. Toward dawn of Satur day, while the watchers were occupied with their devotions, Pejrei Fischer re turned to consciousness, and perceiving the meaning of his surroundings, arose with rage, horror Mid mad imprecations, while his terror-stricken attendants took to precipitate flight. One of them was so frightened that be fell sick rod . Or the leaven that flatter from tree-lope tail ? Gen yon run like the brook and never tire ? Can yon oJimb like (be vine beyond tb* spire? Can yon fly like a bird, or weeve a neat. Or make bat one festber on robin's Iveset ? Can you buUd a oell like the bee, or spin I.lke Uie spider a web ao One and Ibln ? Oan yon lift a shadow from off the ground t Can yon ace the wind, or tneasnrn a auund t Oan blow a babble that will not burat ? Oan yon talk with echo and not speak firat ? Ob, my dear little boy! yon are clever and strong, And you are ao buiy the whole day lons Trying as bard as a little boy oan To do big thing* like a " grown up" man ' hook at me, darling ! I tell you true. There are some things yon never can do. Maty K. folsom, in M. AWs-fcu Naaalr's lltrda. Many years ago there was a little girl whose name was Nannie. She lived among the hills which rise higher and higher until they form the Alleghany mountains. Like most farmers in these semi-mountainous districts, her father grew little grain, bnt kept all the cattle and sheep his land could support. Now-a-days he would be called a stock farmer. There were clumps of bushes and many stones, and a few great rocks in the pastures; and the little lamls often strayed awav from their mother*, and as Boon as they were out of sight the silly little things thought they were lost. Nannie liked to search in all the hiding-places for the wandering babies, and when she bad found them it was bard to tell which was the happier, she or the old sheep, Bhe made herself very useful in this way, and saved her father much time and trouble. Bhe was very brave, and never felt in the least afraid —not that there was really anything to be afraid of, bnt there are not many lit tle girls who would like to go out in the fields all alone. Bhe made many friends, and found many playmates among the little creatures whose homes were in the thickets. Bhe learned a great deal about the wild birds, and became more familiar with their habits than abe could have been had she only read about them in books, though no donbt books would have told about a much greater variety of birds. Nannie was very fond of her little |ets, and as she was always very kind to them they were very fond of her. Sometimes she did some mischief, bnt it was always unintentional. Once she found a robin's nest built low enough for her to reach the pretty blue eggs, and she used to take them out every day and turn them over in her hand and look at them. There were never any little robins in that nest. Once some bluebirds made a nest where the twigs grew so as to form a cup, with the nest in the bottom. Nannie put her banti over the twigs, and when the old bird flew out she < atight her and looked at all her pretty feathers. The birds never went bock to their nest again. A pair of ptuelic-birds bad bnill their nest under the eaves of the bam every year ever aince Nannie could remember. Every spring they came, and every summer at leaat three broods of young made their appearance from the* little neat. One Sunday afternoon,looking toward the barn, Nannie eapied aome naughty boy* with long polea reaching up to the pbwlx-a' neat. Hhc knew there waa cruel aport on foot, but *be oould do nothing until the boya ha.) gone away; thru ahe haatcued to aee what oould be done for the poor birda. She found them in great diatreaa, for the neat ha<) been torn down and the four little onea lay on the ground. One waa already dead, and the othera aoomed jnat ready to breathe their laat. Nannie picked up tboae that were yet alive and put them in the neat. Then ahe faatencd the neat aa near the place where it waa be fore aa ahe ootxld, and hid cloae by to aee whether the old birda would And their young. They were flying about in deep trouble, but they did not aee their neat. She moYod it to what ahe thought might be a better place, but with no bet ter ancceaa. She repeated the experi ment acveral time*, but failed in all her effort*. At laat ahe found a hoard, and making one end aeenre in a chink in the wall ahe put the neat on the other end. Then the old birda flew to it joyfully, and with warmth and food nnraed the poor little anfTerrr* back to life. Tbey cared for the little ones tenderly until they were aide to fly. Then they taught them the use of their wings, and sent them nut into the world to look ont for themselvee. They performed every duty faithfnlly until the last little bird was gone, and then they deserted the place and never risked another nest near the barn. Little Nannie's brown lock* grew thin and gray long year* ago, and now they are as white as snow; but she still re member* the old farm, ami her children and grandchildren are a]moat as familiar with every nook sod corner a* she was heraclf, though not one of them has ever seen it; and now her tiny great-grand children begin to clamor for " stories about when she was a little girl." Aa Awkward Blunder. In Paris a young lady went into one of tbe gTeat drapery 'booses to shop with her maid. They keep watcher* there; and one cf these, making sure he had eeen something, presently tapped the yonng lady on the shoulder and asked her to fouow him to the search ng-room. " Ton have just pnt a pair of new gloves in your pocket, mademoi selle; don't deny it." " I know I have," said the young lady quietly; "and if you will be good enough to look inside them you will see that, as they were bought at another house, they could hardly have been stolen from this." Tbe watcher had made a mistake; and he and tha whole gang of searchers be gan to grovel in excuses. " Now," said the lady, turning to her maid, "go to tha nearest commissary of polios and tell him tha the daughter of Prince Orloff requires his protection." It was the very awkward est of blunders; her father was the Russian ambassador. The contrite drapery company offered thousands to htish it up. The Chinese have a very effective, if somewhat primitive, way of preventing the directors of a savings bank running the institution they control into inset* | vency. Tbey reckon the preeident'u 1 head among the aaseta. Celery for Rheumatism. " Long MO we proteeted that in celery there must be some • pedal virtue, if we only knew what it wee," aaya an ex change, " Nothing ie made in vain, and the powerful smell and extraordinary taate of oelery were, we declared, inti mations from nature that it had some special mission. Mr. Ward, of Perria ton Towers, Koas, writes to the London Times to tell ns that rheumatism be oomes impossible if celery is freely used as an article of diet. Unfortunately, he says oooked oelery; and it is the article in its raw state to which we are all ac customed. 'Cut the oelery,' he aays, ' into inch dice; boil in water until soft. No water must be poured away unless drunk by the invalid. Then take new milk, xlightly thicken with flour and flavor with nutmeg; warm with the oelerv in the saucepan; serve with dia monds of toasted bread a round dish,and eat with potatoes.' ' Permit me to ssy,' he adds, ' that oold or damp never pro duces rheumatism, but simply develops it. The acid blood is the primary cause and the sustaining power of evil. When the blood is alkaline there oan be no rheumatism and equally no gout.' And Mr. Ward proceeds to say: • Let me fearlessly say that rheumatism is impos sible on such diet, and yet our medical men allowed rheumatism to kill in 1876 j 3,640 human 1 eingw—every caie as un necessary as a dirty tare. Worse still, of the 30,481 registered as dying from heart disease, at least two-thirds of these are due directly, more or less, to rheumatism and its ally, gout. What a trifle is Hmallpox, with' its 2,408 deaths, alongside an immense slayer of over 20,000 human beings ! Yet rheumatism ; rosy lie put aside forever by simply obeying nature's law in diet. j The largest Libraries. A correspondent asks which are the largest three libraries in the world and which the largest three in this oountry. By far the largest in the world is the National library at Paris, which in 1874 contained 2,000,000 printed books and 160,000 manuscripts. Which the next largest is, it is difficult to say, for the British museum and the Imperial li brary of Ht. Petersburg both had in I 1874 1,100,000 volumes, After them ; comes the Royal library of Munich, with its 18)0,000 books. The Vatican library at Rome ia sometime* erroneously sup" 1 posed to be among the largest, while in point of fart it is surpassed, so far as the number of volumes goes, by more than 1 sixty European collections. It contains ! 106,000 printed books and 25,600 manu scripts. The National library at Paris is one of the very oldest in Europe,bav mg been founded in 1350, while the , British museum dates from 1763,0r a trifle more than four hundred Tr-ara later. In the United States the largest is the library of Congress,at Washington, which in 1874 contained 201,000 volumes. The Boston Public followed very closelv sft or it with 260,600 volumes, and the Harvard university collection comes next, with 200,000. The Aster and Mercantile, of New York, arc next, each having 148,000. Among the colleges, after Harvard's library comes Yale's, with 100,000. Dartmouth's is next with 60, 000, and then came in order Cornell with 40,000; University of Virginia with 86,000; Bowdoin with 36,000; the Uni versity of South Carolina with 30/100; Ann Arbor. 80,000; Amherst, 29,000; Princeton, 28,000; Wesley an.|25,600; and Columbia, 26,000. —Arte )"orA- Tribune. Fire Worshiper* Oierthrewa. A curious story is current in the east ern portion of central Am* respecting the overthrow of the Onebre fire wor ship ODOC predominant there by the Buddhist creed imported from Chins. Whether historically true or not, the talc is st least thoroughly characteristic of the people and the country which pro J need it. It was the custom of the (inebrc* to insist that whenever any at tempt was made to introduce the wor ship of a foreign got!, the new comer's image should be brought into direct contact with their sacred fire, and that the votaries of the conquered deity should st once quit the field. For many years the fire had the liest of it, and the unfortunate gods who faced it either crumbled to ashes or melted away in a stream, according to the material of which tliev were composed. At length a colony of Chinese Buddhists came in from the East, and the usual test was applied to their sacred image. But the high priest of Buddha, thinking that the latter's divine power might be none the worae for a little secular aid, had previously filled the image with water, and stopped with wai tbe tiny holes which perforated its sides. Ac cordingly, the moment the wax melted, the hitherto invincible fire began to hiss and spatter in s very unpromising way, and finally went out altogether ; where upon its crest-fallen worshipers instant ly abandoned the field to their oppo nents. " Suppressing " a Marriage Notice. The efforts cf people to keep their names out of the newspapers are among the moat interesting features of journal ism, but they sometime* lead to amua mg results. In a city within three hundred miles of Detroit, Midi., the Mail is one of the liveliest paper*, and it hates to lose a good item. The daugh ter of one of that city's wealthiest crti xena went out for a sleigh-ride with a young man whom her father bad for bidden the house. They returned not Tbe excited parent found, on inquiring at the Union depot, that a similar pair had purchased tickets for Boston. Like Lord UUen the old man " fast behind them rode " on the next train, bnt he reached Boston only in time to find himself the father-in-law of that forbid den young man. Be returned borne, resolved to have the account thereof suppressed in the city paper*. Tbe Mall promised to keep out the name, and in the body of the article said that for " obvious reasons the names are not given." Tbe account ends with : "The young people were married in Boston, and their marriage notice is published in this paper." Of course everybody turns to the column bead, " Manias.*, and reads: "At Boston, by the Rev. Mr. etc., etc., etc., etc. Ifo sards," full names being given. This is ie of lbs best instances of suppxenaton on tecord.— Nam York JSrpress, Tha duty on sugar ia to use about wo lumpe to every cup of coffee. Qniet Lives. In valley, MdtariM f°, Orew * little fmra leaf, green tod *leo4er ▼etnlag delicate ud fiber* tender; Waring when tbe wind* crept down ao low. Bube* UU, and bom and ptN pn round It, Playful ranbeanu darted In and found its I >ropi of daw (tola down by night and ar own ad It; fiat no foot of man e'er eaane |H way, • Earth *w yonng and keeping holiday. Uaele#* '< hut ? Thar# oam* a thought/* man, Searching nature • aaeraU far and daap; From a fissure in a rocky ataap Be withdrew a (too* o'er which thai# ran Fairy penciling*, a quaint design, Leafage, reining*, fiber* clear and floe, And the fern'* life lay in every Una ! 80, I think, Ood hide* aotoe acral* away. Bweetly to rnrpriae na the laet day ' ITEMS OF UTERES!. Reigning favorites—Umbrellas. Fallen leave*—A dropping book. A dealer in extracts—The dentist. Excellent wash for the faoe—Water. A bad thing to sharpen—The water's edge. Wanted—A life-boat that will float on a sea of troubles. The fop feela too big for bis boots until be gets corns, Violet was at one time the prevailing color for mourning. Gi >vea were first worn by oar band ceetors in the tenth century. What is the aire of the needle that carried the threads of diaoourse ? Insects have no longs, bnt breathe through spiracular tabes in their sides. The locks ased in the new war offioe, in London, are of American manufacture. English life insurance companies charge an extra per ooat, on old bache lors. The power to do greet things gen erally arises from the willingness to de small things. We are afraid the London Truth does not always tell it It has five libel anits on its bands. Why doeathe new moon remind one of a giddy girl ? Because she is too yonng to ahow much reflection. Quiet is often strength; silence, wis dom. The awift stream is not always powerful, nor the noisy one deep. A cynical old bachelor saya: " Wed lock ia like a bird cage; those without peck to get in, and those within peck to get out" He put it down again without any one telling him to do ao, and peevishly remarked that •' a women was a fool to set a red hot flat-iron on a kitchen chair." The ladies who bang their hair have encouragement from -an unexpected quarter. Chief Joeeph wears his ooal blaek hair banged cm bis forenead and braided behind Examination of 8,000 grammar school pupila at Boston sbowa thai about five per cent, of the boy* are color-blind, and only about one-ball of one per cent of the girls. ' There is nothing impossible,' ex claimed a man who was discoursing on Edison's achievements. That man, to find oat bow egregioasly he is mistaken, has only to attempt to cat his own hair. " My dearest Maria," wrote a recently married husband to hia wife. Bbe wrote back : " Dearest, let me correct either your grammar or your morals. Ton ad dress me, 'My dearest Maria.' Am Ito suppose you have other dear Mariaat" The aong " Sweet By-and-Bye" was written by J. P. Webster, in Chicago, in 1868. The man who gave it the fame it baa attained in this country waa the late T. P. Bliss, who, with Rev. Mr. Whittle, introduced it in their famous gospel meeting*. - - Ixatitvillr Courier - Journal. A heavy man, while attempting to get into a carriage on Saturday, fell with the greatest display of cmphaticness ever witnessed in these parts. He mart# such a depression in the earth when be struck that he ia positive the flagstaff an the palace of the emperor of China gouged him in the back, We think he lies—at least be did be for about two minutes.— Xorristrm-n Herald. " Will yc lev* m# Urn* forever 7" And abs looked Into hi* eye* With * glance that e*emed a token Of the fervor of her aigha " I wttdnl guaranty it," With e smile responded Pat, " For I'm hardly av the notion That HI tasht aa long a* that!~ A dime, a nickel and a penny were found in the crop of a Montpelier (Vt.) rooster. The cat of a resident of East Berlin, Mo., swallowed a $5 gold puma; and the village butcher offered 82.50 for her. While Mr. Jaa. Rnby, of Bar tonia, Ind., waa feeding hut hogs, he dropped his pocket book among them, and ere was be aware of his loss they bad contracted the currency 1894. The New York commissioner* of mi gration expect a large increase in the emigration to America this year aa com pared with previews yean,' Since 1871 the emigration has steadily decreased from year to rear up to 1878. In 1878 the total number of alien passenger* ar riving at tha port of New York wsa 121,- 869, an increase of 10,811 upon the num ber of 1877. This Is counted by the commissioner* as an important indica tion Una the flow of emigration has begun to increase again, and they have many facts in their possession which make them believe tha it will continue to Increase The off years between the great world's fairs give mi opportunity— a* uslly taken prompUy—for corner* of the world a little out of the moot travel ed way*, to bold in tea naiiwisl exhibi tion* of their own. Bach was the case with Chili three or four yean ago, sad with Australia yam before last; and •Rich, next autumn, will again be the oi ve with Australia, which & to bold an a bibitton of all aatkma a Sidney. Erse •• woe, free motive power, and freedom fiom customs duties ale guaranteed, a d aa acre of exhibiting area ia aa a art for America. One w**el has e ready gone from the Untied States, c crying goods for the exhibition. There •re medals, mooey prise* and certificate* of merit tor Urn beat exhibits.