FOR TIIE FARM AM) HOME. Ililllirlioltl Hint.. Dried bark of sassafras root put around dried fruit will protect it from worms. Slightly dingy furniture may be made to look liko new by applying a "oat of pure oil. To remove oils and varnish from silk fabrics use benzine, ether, and s<>ap very cautiously. To clean and polish tortoise-shell, use a drop or two of sweet oil, and rub it in thoroughly with the ball of the thumb. To remove spots from furniture take four ounces of vinegar, two ounces of sweet oil, one ounce of turpentine. Mix and apply with a flannel cloth. To cleanse porcelain saucepans, fill them ha'f full of hot water and put iu the water a tahlespoonful of powdered borax, and let it boil. If this does not remove all the stains, scour well with a cloth rubbed with soap and borax. To clean decanters, take some soft brown or blotting paper, wet and soap it and roll it up in small pieces and put into the decanter with some warm waiter. Shake well and then rinse with clear cold water ; wipe the outside with a dry cloth, and let the decanter drain. Krrlpfn. CttippF.n REEK IN HL'TTER. Shave dried beef very thinly either with a knife or inverted plane. Put into a pan enough butter to cover the bottom when melted and then a cupful of shaved beef. Dredge with pepper. Jstir alsiut. When fairly hot through it is done. May be served heaped up on thin toast or in individual deep dishes. RICE BREAD.—Rice bread makes a pleasing variety at the breakfast table. Take a pint of well-cooked rice, half a pint of flour, the yolks of four eggs, two tablespoon fills of butter melted, one pint of milk, and half a teaspoon- ! fill of salt; beat these altogether; then lastly, add the whites of the four eggs which you have beaten to a still froth. Bake in shallow pans or in gem tins. Serve warm. t'UR CAKE.—Put three even coffee-' cupfuls of flour into a sieve with one even tcasponnful of soda, two tea spoonfuls cream tartar; sift it on a large dish, break three eggs into the ! pan. heat well, then add one and a halj cupfuls granulated sugar, half cupful soft butter, ->tir all till light and j creamy, then add one cupful milk, stir I a few times only; now add gradually the flour, b at well, flavor with lemon or almond; it will make two moderate sized cakes; throw a handful of cur "• rail's or >D>n-d raisins into it. PEA Sot p. —A pound of peas will make a gallon of soup. The |was should be washed and soaked iu cold water over night, then be cooked in live pints of water, with gentle sim mering. A pound of beef or a ham bone may be lmil .|; fur xp.T-oning, add an onion with a few cloves stuck in it, salt to taste, and almt forty w hob grains of pepper. An ounce or two of sugar will add greatly to the richness of this, as it docs to almost all soups. At the end of three hours simmering, pass the soup through a wire sieve or colander, with the aid of a potato masher. Krv brown some squares of stale bread iu lard or drippings, and add just lie fore serving, or serve these crouton*, as they are called, separately, to lie added at pleasure. Bean-soup may lie made in a similar manner.— American Agri'-ulturM. I'nrr-Rrrd As a rule pure-bred stock is not the most profitable for farmers to keep. Many who have triad to breed a herd of pure blood animals have failed. The cost to liegin with is large. The writer recently visited a herd of Jersey cattle, theWoWs in which had cost manyJiilhdreds of dollars. The pro duct in flesh and milk from these ani mals is not so much over that of the grade cow as to warrant the prices paid. The management that sueh close bre<l stock requires is much greater than that of grade stock; that is crosses between the pure blood and the native stock. Pure hi tod animals i ami herds, like the one alsive men tioned, are of value as breeding centres, from which the great mass of common stock can lie built up. At a low estimate the value of the grade product can lie raised #ls or #2O each, I the first season. It may lie that a far- I fner with a large herd of grades thus L produced can afford to keep two or I three pure blood animals for further ■ Improvement of the herd, but In many ■ cases it will be lictter to replenish the ■ pure blood from one of the centres of I such stock. It is a national blessing that fanners," as they are sometimes Broiled, are pleased to make such large ■ investments in pure blood stock, for by I this means the supply of any breed is ■kept up. It would lie a calamity If ■from any cause these carefully man lagcd herds should all be I • aken up and scattered. It is through them that the whole live stock of this country is to be improved by a gradual process of I grading. In this important work the j less fortune-favored stock raisers may liml a profitable Held of labor, AmerC i-iin Agrirulturi.st. l.k|tilt .Wiuiiirr. It Is a matter of great surprise that so many farmers allow the liquid con tents of their barnyards to be washed away Into creeks and rivers instead of utilizing it in fertilizing their land. Nor will it ever be otherwise until proper means are taken to prevent it. There certainly would be no great trouble in doing so. All that is neces sary is to dig a round pit or cistern of sutlieient size just outside the barn yard, and wall it up with stone, firmly embedded in cement mortar to make it watertight. A trench or sort of blind ditch about a foot in depth the sides of which to be also walled with stone —should then be dug all along the lower side of the yard, close inside the fence, for the purpose of conducting the liquid from the yard to the cistern, j from which it is to be pumped or em|i tied as nccdi d, into a live-barrel cask, placed in the hind end of a wagon to be ; hauled to wherever wanted. A hole should have been previously Imred into | the cask, near its lower heading, from which there should extend a piece of rubber hose to connect it with a dis tributer suspended from the rear end of the wagon by means of iron rods, the distributer to lie made of a four-inch ! pump stock, live feet in length, c losed ' at both ends, and perforated with quarter-inch holes at ihort intervals the whole length of the bottom, for the purpose of distributing the liquid over the land. With sueh a simple tlx it is an easy matter to distribute the liquid ;ts fast as accumulated, and it is par ticularly beneficial to grass land at any time when the grass is not large enough to lie injured by being driven over. By this means, and by carefully saving and utilizing all other manorial material found on the premises, we verily believe that on a majority of farms t lie most of the money now living spent in the purchase of fertilizers could Is* saved. ]inUimor> Sun. brilliant Meteor*. A surprising numtier of large and brilliant meteors have made their ajv pear.mee within the last two or three weeks. (>n December 20 a meteor w .is seen in New Hampshire shooting across the sky in broad daylight. A few nights afterward a very large me teor was seen in Connecticut. •>n New Year's eve a brilliant lire ball, who h burst into fragments, was seen from various plares in New F.ngland. I)n New Year's night, just before the snowstorm set in, atla-ti of light in the sky, believed to have l*-en cau*<sl bv the passage of a large meteor, was -• • n in this i sty. On Wednesdax night a big meteor was seen shooting OUT the Mate of Illinois, producing a startling illumination, and h ax ing a rsl trail of light in its wake. The earth is being continually bombardisl by small no te.r-, whiihare eallisl shixit ing <-'.irs, and many of which are pro! ibly no bigger than hickory nuts, so that the Intense heat generated b) their pas -age through the atmosphere quickly consumes them; but big meteoric masses, like tho-e recently seen, which illuminate the heavens during tle-ir passage, and sometimes fall to the earth with terrilic force, are rare. Whence they come is a mystery the astronomers have not solved. At any rate, nobody need lie alarmed. The chance of lieing struck by lightning is many times greater than that of being hit by a meteor.— N. Y. Sun. Watches anil Diamonds. The demand for American watches, both here and in Europe, has con stantly liven growing, and one Ameri can company, which is now producing 1,100 finished watches a day, is unable to fill orders except on long notice. There has lieen a heavy importation of Swiss watches the past year, but these are mostly of the cheaper line. The number of very costly diamonds sold in this country the past year has been remarkably large, the demand lieing unprecedented for exceptionally line stones, both single and matched. He. cently in several cases as high as #I.OOO per karat has lieen paid for diamonds in this city in the trade, and they ha\V been sold for this price by one dealer to another. Very high prices have lieen given by our dealers for rare stones In Europe, and when these dia monds have been brought here they have been resold in the trade at prices which have astonished the sellers them selves. Then, an enormous quantity of the cheaper diamonds have been worked up the past year in all kinds of gold and other jewelry. There has also been a strong demand for rubies and sapphires, which have advanced greatly in value, and there has lieen a rise in the cost of fine pearls. The Massacre of the Mamelukes. The Citadel, Cairo, was in lnl I the seeno of the massacre of the lust of the Mamelukes by Mohammed Ali, a deed of base treachery, but of consummate and successful policy; a coup d'etat, in fact. The Mamelukes had risen from the position of slaves to that of sul tans. The Circassian dynasty pro duced a raeo of military princes who waged war with the Ottoman sultans. The last but one, Sultan Choree, was slain in b:.'"* !u Syria, and his succes sor, Toman Iky, was routed on the plain between Cairo and Heliopolls. lie was taken captive ami hanged, and his head stuck on the- malefactors' gate way, Hab Zooaylen. Though the su premo power bad thus passed away from them, the* Mameluke aristocracy still maintained their aneient valor, till tlioir brilliant cavalry was routed by Napoleon at the buttle of the Pyra mids, and but a small remnant left. These Mameluke nobles had helped Mohammed Ali to the Pashalik, but it is supposed that they had changed their inimis. and were plotting to destroy him. At all events, having used them ;is the ladder of his ambition, he found it expedient to get rid of them. Ho therefore invited them all to be present within the citadel, when a Pasha was to he invested with some military command. Four hundred and seventy of these magnificent beings accordingly rode up in great state, but when they turned to depart they found the gates elosisl, and from every corner a mur derous tire of musketry rained upon them. From this horrible carnage one alone escaped, namely, Amyn Hey, who forced his horse to leap the ram part, a fall of forty feet. Happily he lighted on a heap of rubbish, and though the horse was killed, the man escaped, and giving himself Into the care of the Arabs, found protection during the ensuing days, when the houses of Muiiieluki-s were plundered, and all t heir relations, numbering atxiut 1.000, were murdered, and the gate of Haii Zooavleh literally covered with those ghastly trophies, the heads of the slain. It is said that from this final massacre one other man cscajMsl. Sulei man Aga by name, who disguised himself in the long ldue robe of an Arab woman, and thus \. iled, escaped his foes. This man h.VI liecn the Pasha's prime favorite, and the story goes tli.it. without show ing any sjN-cial di-giist at in- friend's trc.ii lory, he ro turned to his |h.s( ~f f,i\. rite, and even repeated the little joke of dressing up a an A rati damsel, xvho appearing be fore his highness as as a suppliant pleaded hirmvn cause with volubility, and carried her rase, whereupon, re moving her veil, she displayed the features of Sub .man. who is altirmed by living eyewitnesses to have contin ued for many years the cordial friend of the Pasha and other great folks in < "aim. Population of Is-aillmr ( ilios in Furope, The loilowitig statistics of the num l*r of inhabitants of some of the prin cipal cities in Europe have b< • n re cently issiu-d. There arc ninty-two citn-s in the whole of Kurope eh con taining a population of more than lOO.tKfU. but only four which have more than a million viz: London, I *; Paris, 2.'.2V.1"; lb rlin, 1,222,-VSt; Vienna, I,l'tit. IP>, Of the other capital . *t. Petersburg | --<-ssc. 876,570; fJoiist ant itjoplc, (> m.nfN i; Mad rid,Bß7J2Bo; Budt>Pi ith,860,580, War saw, 339,310; Amsterdam, 317.01<e Koine, 300.470; l.islHin. 240.34" Palermo, Ut ; Copenhagen, 21t,- 8-'i<i; Munich, 2J"."20; Hur harest, JJI .- hi*; Dresden, 22".5(,w kholm, ltls,- 77; ltnissi-ls, lid.**.'!; Venice, Stilt gards, 117,3"". In addition to these, Moscow < "Ht.nnst'd 1.97"; Naples, 4113,110; Hamburg. 110,12"; Lyons, 372,*""; Marseilles. 357..V10; Milan, 321,840; Hreslau, 272.910; Turin, 252,- 830; Hordcaux, 22o,'.it'iO; llarcelnna, 215,960; Odessa. 193.510; Ellierfcld, 1*9,480; Henna. 17t*.M'; I.tile. 177.1M0; Florence, 169,000; Hig.l, 168.810; Pra gue, 162,520; Antwerp, 1 5", 65"; An drinople, 150,000; I<ei|le, 149,060, Rotterdam, 148,000; Cologne, 1 1 1,770; Magdeburg, 187, ISO; Frankfort, 100,- 820; Toulouse, 136,630; Hhent, 127,- 650; Messina, 126,500; Hanover, 122,- 840; Nantes, 121.060; Liege, 115,850; The Hague, 113,400; o|*.rto, 105,840, and Itonen, 104,010. "What Was It You Said." No man, says an English writer,ever an joyed life more krenly than Anthony Trollope. He was full of common ense, yet ludicrously obstinate and perverse; roaring and spluttering, and wholly incapable of argument. Once ho and a partv of friends were In eon rla* at llenlev. Same subject of im |K>rtanee was being considered, and some one made a meg.* ion. TroL. '.ope, engaged in conversation at, the other end of the room, at once raised nis head and his voice. "I differ front you entirely," he roared, like a bull nt a red rag. "I differ from you entlroyl! What trot it you said t" "DAI BUTZU." A Vloll lon Famono .lupmir.r Mmiuo. A Yokohama (Japanese) letter to the Detroit'/'Vec i'rrss describes in pictures, que language a visit paid to one of the most famous of Japanese statues. Tint Dai Hutzu, says tlie writer : "Early Sunday morning a party <d three of us started from Y'okidioma on a ride to the far-famed statue of Dai Hutzu at Kainakura. Anxious to avoid the noonday heat as much as pos sible, we started at early dawn. Our road led us along the canal through tin outlying villages in the suburbs of the settlement. The people were just be ginning b> rise and everything—-except the canal appeared fresh and cheerful. Looking at the sluggish waters of the canal covered with slum, and inhaling its odors, which eanic up on every hand, we ceased to wonder at the rapidity and fatality with which dis eases—especially cholera arose and spread among the native people. It was an immense relief when we crossed the last bridge of the canal where it enters a long cut through the rocky bills, and found ourselves in the open country. This cut is one made fur the benefit of the kerosene trade, and took two years to finish it. besides the outlay of alargesutnof money. It is looked upon by the Japs as a big piece of engineering. Leaving the canal be hind us, our road wound among the rice fields, now pa-sing through some small village, ami then down a narrow path lined with tall bushes that shook their glistening dew-drops over us as we nishisl by. The rising sun saw us passing by the "Plains of Heaven." The road ascended and passed along the brow of a small hill, covens! with a heavy growth of ecdars, lielow ii*. stretching (ar away without a sign of human life to mar the calm beauty of the scene, lay the terraced rice fields with their green plants. Far off ahead of us, a single conical hill separated the valley from the one beyond, while opposite to the spdt w here we lingered by tlie gates hut entered not, the fields rose with a gradual swell till, the view was ended by a grove of cedars. It was a magni ficent sight ami one which fully justi fied the name the |x*oplo had given it After tarrying here as long .as wt dared, wo |pushi-d rapidly on, pass trig numerous xill.tgos and small temples, lxwides the wayside shrines which are to IN- found every where. The sun was l ginningto feel very uncomfortable when, at 1":30 A. M.. we entered the outklrts of the Village of Kamakura. Pa -ing through the \ lll.lgc W •• 1-nt* re<l the immense temple which is here, and nle for s..tne time under the shadows of the great "<slars which are the crowning l-aiily • f the place. The limits of the temple seemi-d vi rv large and and it wa not till 11 \ \! . that we caught the rcilec tionof tic sun from the bronze lead of Dai Hut/u. \ppri a hing the statue the fare ha a remarkable evpressian of placid re j> and ti"' w;t h-taiclmg it-immense -ize, i- so admirably j r >|>ortion<s| that it 1 - not lunged it-effect on a near appp eh. It is fifty feet high and rnnfj ox feet In circiimfi renee, th faio Iwing eight and a half feet In length. The km cis thirty-eight feet in diameter ami the thumb three ami a half feet In i ir umfcrence. It is cast in si vera] plaees, the lines of jointure 1 eing plainly seen and represents the g.si sitting on a jMslestal with bis legs i rnssed in front of him and his hands clasped. It was cast in A. I>. 1252 at theib-sire of one of the "Shoguns" or native governors. The casting is hoi low. ami one realizes more fully its im mense sj/c when standing inside and seeing the ladders w lib h lead up into the dome-like head. The inside is littisl up as a temple with numerous littli*statues arranged around its sides. Finding that a native photographer had taken up his residence here, for the purjiose of suppyling visitor* with photographs of the statue, and always desirous of improving our opportuni ties, the three of lis perched ourselves on the god's thumbnails and had our pictures taken. It is by such contrasts of the size of the human frame with the image that the photographer Iwvd expreasea in a picture the inmiesity of the easting. It is said that at Nara there is another casting of the same image, the face of which is sixteen feet long, and yet the hight of the statue is said to lie only fifty-three and one-half feet. In all their eastings, whether large or small, the workmen have devoted themselves to their tasks with an in tense love for them, and nowhere in all the world can better bronze work lie found than the work of "Old Japan." There are many secrets of the trade that they still keep, notably the im parting of a greenish tinge to the metal which is produced in the casting. A Florida youth has discovered that strong, soft, flexible rope ran be made from the fiber of thp common cocklebur bush. H>rcn In Life. Without unremitting labor, success In life, whatever our occupation, is ku jMihsililc. A fortune la not ruade with out toil, ami money unearned com oh to few. The habitual loiterer never bringaj anything to pain. Tlie young men whom you nee lounging about waiting for the weather to change before they go to work, break down before they be-; gin -get Htuck before they start. Abi lity and willingness to labor are the two great conditions of success. It in useless to work an electrical machine in a vacuum, but tin* air may be full of electricity, and Htillyou can draw no Bpark until you turn the machine. The beautiful statue may exist in the artist's lirain, and it may also lie said in a certain sense to exist in the marble block that htandH before him, but he must bring both his brains and his hands to bear upon the marble, and work hard and long, in order to produce any practical result. Success also dc jieniisjn a good measure upon the man's promptness to take ailvantage of the rise of the tide. Agri at ih al of wliat we i all "luck" is nothing more nor less than tiiis. It is the man who keeps his eye- open, and his hands out of his pockets, that succeeds. "I missed my chance," exclaims the disappointed man, when he sees another catch eagerly at the opportunity. Hut some thing more than alertness is needed; we must know how to avail ourselves of the emergency. An elastic tempera ment, which never seems to recognize th" fact of di (eat. or forgets it at oim and begins the \M>rk over again, is very likely to ensure success. Many agn at orator has made a terrible break-down in his maiden apcech. Many a mer chant biscs one fortune only to build up another and a large one. Many an inventor fails in bis first efforts, ami is at last rewarded with a splendid triumph. Some of the most jiopular novelists wrote very poor stuff in the beginning. Tin y were learning their trade, and could not expect to turn out tir-t-i lass work until their appis-ntid ship is over. One great secret of suc rirss in not to become discouraged, but always be ready to try again. High Food. may IN* laid down as a great principle that inat. fish or jmultry in a state of decay cannot be eaten with safety, since symptoms of irritant poi soning have -si frequently art-ii from this cause. Ilut a little consideration will show us the impossibility of draw ing a hard ami fast line upon this point. We relish venison which has partially undergone ill - ay. while we at iatis' r< jdt ls f or mutton in a similar i >mlition. Again. ] nitry to Is• palatable must le lri-h. yet we do not scruple to •at game which is far advancisl mcb ' iiip ' .n There is no doubt that in many • asm we are guided by our palates in determining what f l is wlndei-ome for us; f.,r while many of us eat moldy i -hee-e. a ' hiiianiiUi w ill swallow bad iy,-gj, and - line races enjoy Ash whim we should ■ oiisider putrid. Kvi u as regards oys ters, who h arc generally relishcsl in ] rojMirtion t• • ttii-ir freshm -s, it is -onus tiiie-s a matter .ft ,-ti Fur example, it is recorded of the lir-t im nari h of the house of Hanover that he objected to the Knghsh native oyster as Ix-ing (leAricnt in flavor. It was privately suggested by a shrewd rourtier that the native oyster should be allowed to b<- ronie somewhat stale l>efore Ising brought to the royal tilde. The king at onre recognized the flavor which had always pleased him so much at Herrenhausen. and gave orders that in future he should always IN* supplied from that particular Ins). The absence of evil consequence after eating food which had undergone a certain amount of decay is doubtless due in many cases to the completeness of the cooking pro cess; but tins does not militate against the general rule that food in any state of decay is unwholesome and should lie avoided. Of late years there have !>oon many cases of |mis<innus sym|- toms arising from the use of canned meals. The cause appears mainly to have been improper methods of can ning, or of the use of meat that was tainted before 1 icing canned. An ex amination of the outside of the can is our only available guide as regards this class of article. The head of the can should IN* slightly concave, where, as if it lie convex it shows t hat decom position has commenced within the can. Sometimes through careless sol dering the preserved article becomes contaminated with leal, and poisoning by this substance is the result.— Good Words. Example is the light of day, every man sees it, every man's life proves what his character is. If he is honest those he deals with know it. Every honest man does as he agio -s ami pays his debts. A dishonest man does neither. If a man's word is good for nothing what kind of a man is ha? Every man that deals with hitu is sure to have trouble. Hnowflukfu. Fallintf all the nlglet-Uma, Falling all the daj, Crystal winged and T<,IOSIMS, Ou their doevn weird wajr. Falling through the darknaaa, Fulling through the light, Covering with hnnaty Vale and Mountain h-ight- Nevwr summer blossoms Dwelt HO fair an th >*&', Sever lay like glory >u the liehl* and treea. flare the airy wreathing, Deftly turned the scroll, Hung in we/dland areho*. Crowning meadow knolL Freest, ehate*t faneie*. Votive art, may be, Winter's sculptors rear to Hummer'* memory. J. V, Cheney, in the >"rttic. POUKVT PARAGRAPHS. t play should !*• judged by Its acts. silence i the better part of some orator's elrxjueiiee. The man who lends his influene* rarely get* it ba k. The meat dealer should be a rieh man for he Ls always ready to make a steak. The bc*t time to offer your hand to a lady—when she is getting out of an omnibus. How to destiny. One of these (lays destiny may la- [elite enough to return the compliment. The man who was hemmed in by a crowd has been troubled with a stitch in his side ever since. A new hook is title*) "Short Havings of Great Men." When arc we to have "Great Savings of short Men?" It takes a girl about four hours longer to wash the front w.ndow.sofa house than the hack window s. S> long as the school-tear her keejet the pupils in his eye nolsxiy can d<my that he has a perfect right t*> la*h hla pupils. Many a man who *nal* and growls at his wife in public is very loving and tender when no one eLv is around. He has to he. "Whistlers are always ge**l-riaturcd, says a philosopher. Everybody knows that. It is the folks who have to listen to the whistling that get ugly. >oineiKly ha* discovered that the correct pronunciation of the word Khedisei* "Kcdova." Theymight is well tell u- that the proper way to pro nounce lieo-hive i- lahowa The town of Paris. T has rai*<xl a potato five f>* t long. The Colorado I M**t le hasn't heard that fashionable summer re rt. When it, does we *hall read of a potato bug rnat< h. iMi't Kjuamler any time over pro historic man, but rather put in your spare hour* wondering if the new family "ti tie corner a:-- tie- sort of [••-•jile to lend redo, .and sugar and baking powder. "Jones, if burglars should conic into /our house, wl t would you do?" "I'd do whatever they required of nm. I lev. r h i I my own way in that hoti*c jet. and it is t> > late to begm now alas ' it's t , late !" "What are y 11 l - king ar- und for *o mtieh?" askisl a mother of her sixteen year-old -on, with wh : shewas walk ing. "I am l.H.kmg around on your account." "f'n iny accountV" "Yes. I want to pick you out a g'ssl-looking daughter-in-law." The other day a stage driver in trie Black Hills undertook to hor*ewhip the passengers int • getting out of the stage and pushing it up the hill, but the passengers empties! their revolvers into hitn a few times, held a coroner's inepmst, and found th.at he had died of pneumonia "I declare," exclaimed a Hoarder at a Sinner table recently, "this is the most affectionate pic I ever saw." "Affection ate pie!" cried every one at the table, including the landlady. "Yes,"said the boarder, "the upper and lower crusta are so affectionate that they won't al low anything lict ween thein." At a dinner party the little son of the host and hostess was allowed to Come down to dessert. Having had what his mot her considered a sufficiency of fniit, he was told he must not have any more, when, to the stirprice of every one of the guests, he exclaimed: "If you don't give me some more I'll tell!" A fresh supply was at onco given him, and as soon as it was fin ished he repeated his threat; where upon he was suddenly and swiftly re moved from the room, but he had just time to convulse the company by ex claiming: "My new trousers are tnatte out of ma's old bedroom curtains."* There is many a soul trudging along life's pathway wilh weary, uncertain steps, sad and downhearted, who v -npl, if there was a kind hand re-a.-b tit to help them, walk erect tan ep lightly, and ex-eu sing whila m_ over rough [daces. There are people in gium, and they consume f10.000.000 epinrts of alcoholic liepiors. There is one public house for every tw elvo men
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers