(TENNIES BY THE POUND, One Weanch of the Sab. Treasury's Dusl. nossa ~Large Sams Handled Lo Very oo Swnll Colus. An Ttalian, staggering under a heavy load of coin which he carried on his shoulder tivd in one end of a stout grain sack, eut red the gsul-treasory building at New York. He was dirccted to the small eoin department, where all the nickels, pennies, three-cent pieces, and fractiouzl curr ney are issued and ex- cha: ged. The ltalian's load consisted of 150 pounds of Umted tates pennies, The bsg and its contents were passed throu h the Mile window over the mar. ble counter, & conditional receipt was given io the swarthy depositor, who placed it carefully in his inside pockel and stalked contentedly out of the build. What are you goinz to do with all those pennies 7 was asked of the offices in charge of the department. “l he same as we do with all such do- posits,” he replied, “we count them over, sort out the counterfeit p eces and tokens bag the good ones up for reissne and the uncurrent ones we set one side to be returned to Washington for recoin. age. To-morrow or next day the deposi- tor returns, presents his receipt and wo give him bills to the amount of his de- it, Jess the toiens and counterieils, there are any.” “Where does the man pick up such a quantity of pennies 7" “1 suppose he gets them from the rro- ceries, saoonkcepers and small trades le down in the neighborhood of wl street, where they are received in great quantites. He buys them up at a small discount, then Lrings them here for exchange, receiving their full face value, and the ditierence between what he receives and what he pays for them remunerates lum lor his tue and trouble ” “Do other people exchange pennica very often large amounts for exchanze, Beta l stores where the odd cents wre charged and street rulroads make exchanges almost every day. The Ury-dock Kul pickels the Froadway road atout £.00 a day. and the elevated railroad fron $500 to $1,500 in five-rent pieces.” “W ba: do vou do with all ths quantity of email sini 7” ff here 18 it. Almost as cot are depositors ~n change 1s tr Scarce otherwice, i Ded yan wo ship a great deal to the West and “outh, wher up to two | penny 8 Were Un xn pieces were rarely they have come + Five years ago you l-cent piece in New Ur there «id not know wi the nickel was culation, and even those we need, as 5 and 10-cent the staple small change demand keeps the coin movi briskly now, and we se great amount on hand had $2.50 in Scent piece fair average ivy ¢ nfter as LRN the sma { the amount this season of tl ent demand in the *outh often bad lar aantt the time 1 # YPAar, of the old come in for exchan “No, sir. not now. Th most y § ithered Vashinoton Sr smaller penny, the bro “Then the bronze cent per and some value to make t old big CORDOT PENT +9 Or red is made of eon of still greater fs much as the $ it not 7" ng ose worth per cent, “Well, the bronze cent is an alloy of copper and rine. Intrinsicaily, I pre sume, it is worth less than a quarter of the old copper cent.” “Then, wh.t is a nickel worth intrinsi- cally 7” “About a cent and a hall. 1 think it fe, it is not even pretended that it is worth | : 1 full five cents, When asked what apound of pennies | ora pound of nickels would be worth | the oificer led the way to a large iron | safe and swung open the ponderons | and retrenchment in the departments A doors. Within were piled a great num- ber of canvas bags of cons. | iilng one of these, the officer said } “Each of the bags in this compartment contains $10 in bronze fpennies, and weighs just seven poun's. That would make a pound of them worth about | Pointing to the other compart. | “Here are the five. | cent pieces, and these we put in bags of | $2" ment, he continued : $50 each, eleven pounds to the 8 bag of nickels would be worth “Here is $100 in fractional pacer eur rency. We get but little of this “for re- demption now. Not over 3000.05 all to'd came in last year, and yet there is $15,000,000, of it outstandins, It is esti. mated that $5,000,000 of th's fractional Surraney has laoan Hout and destroyed in circulating and will never be prosente for redemption. I think however it is more likely that $12,000,000 has been ‘ ed, All that does come in is in a dila state, worn, ragged, and easy and unlit for use. Lut strange ss may seem, people will not bring it for redemption until it is beyond using. They seem to hold on to it [ecanse it is #0 light to carry and so handy to use in sending small sums by mail,” ee A Freak of Lightning, bag; so £4.558, “ A fanny thing occurred one evening, when we had quite severe lightning One of our surveyors was out in the woods surveying. and on the appro ich of the storm took shelter under a large tron leaving his compass on the jackstal, ome two or th ee hundred yards away, | During the storms tree very near the tompas was struck by lightning, and, Wo relate, the effect upon the compass wos 10 reverse it so as to make the north po nt of the needle change position end pon’ south, The gentleman not know- ing that (act, when he want back to the 00 poss took a course and started, as he supposed for home, After walking eight or ten miles, going north, as the compass indiented, he, away in the nirht, came to the house of an old settler, who, upon in. niry, told him where he was and how ar from Orlando and the proper direc tion, which, of course, was directly op. peite to that indicated by bis compass, Alter beco ning setinfiod something wes wrong with the compass and that the settler was right, he retraced his steps and arrived at home, tired, wet and mad, The is the second instence. we have known of the needle of Afompus beluy ro Slip] bt tone 85 arts to A —- .. FR her | sauits und barking “Yes, some larze firms very often send | A | threatenin: dash at the interrupter road, for instance. brings in on an aver | wh fav ne . » age $500 a day in one-cent pieces and | Aliss Stith. and in order to express ap- | proval he jumped in the barton { ost alwars a demand for | { bv the more {| Chiiing Of strack | ROL A MUSICAL DOC. . Crlckeny, Linown asa “Whisper” Doz, Einys a Piano and Does Other Limnrvellous Things. - A Mis Ttillia Claire Smith, one of the fair puplsof Mme. Fursch-Madi, who charmed a Boston audience with her gir ving not long ago, has a “whisper” dog named Tricksey, that is highly edu- cated in musie. “What is a ‘whisper’ &: ’ every one will ask. It is one that taught to listen to what is whispered iRo its ear and then pretends to whisper aMansweor. Tricksey is a little black and ta® with an attenuated body and a bark all the way from a snarling grunt to a piere ng yell. He grew up with musical strains floating aboat his ears tour or nve hours a day, and when his years of canine maturity arrived, be knew what cigs of music he prelerred. He wae tanzht all the tricks that a elever dog is supposed to know. His pro ciency was go . arked that he gained the sobriquet of “ir.cksey.,” One o. lus best eats was to attempt to play the piano, but since he heard young Hoimann he has not been ambitious in that direct on W hen he is asked to perform on the piano he goes up to the stool. turns to those present and raising his right lore foot a little above his head, brings it down slowly, at the same time incining his head. Il he receives applause Le Lows again and then wito a vark of de- light lexps on the stool and then e to the ivory keys. ‘Ihe piece he plays is a dis ointed prsquinade produced by run ning rapidly to and fro over the keys. He doesn’t bark while treading the ivory end seems to be in earnest, He always wishes to conclude the performance Ly imitating a musical director. A piece of music is placed on the piano rack and up 10 Trick ey's fore feet against if, his binl feet resting on the keys. Slowly, raising his right fore eg. he points it eround. directing the invisible band. He is fond of Chop n's and Waldteulel musie and ox presses delighit by turning sower- Wagner is too much for him and he simulates death until the music ceascs. While his voung n.istress is singing he walks slowly aroun! the parior and « any one moves he makes a | he other day he heard a bantoue sin: with « lap end made the sign that he wasued W whisper 10 the stranger's ear. A Clock Crank, Ispentar o, and don't ther Loere in AwWakK house spend ane | a sieeper, wien ji am a hard at 10 clock that Ana time to cet Dae night | was aw ke the wir Of an « hall i" Ye Had nt rection of Yankee clock, with a busy. whangng kaocker, peit d of tweive In a jew minutes the soothing a pretty French clock peeped y bedroom floor irom the bave gone to sleep un but in a few moments ging voiee of another some other part of the house my eves. In sheer WK ater and counied ¢ wii of them had each #loen Fhien a nasty litle hrough I might ler this tn uence, mor + the oud, at Clock In par.or 2 and then, just as | had cone cinded that was the end of the procession of noises, big father clock of ali-—the one in the ha'l -struck one, and the rest fol- 11's exar morning 1 discovered that the were set just Live nunules : ole low Pp fiftecn ci apart ‘What do vou keep your clocks all set differently tor 7 1 asked “Well, said my uncle, ‘when 1 wake up in the night 1 like to know what time it is. Now, as] have my clocks arranged, one of them strikes every five minutes, CAS | 80 1 don't have to wait jong to find out whether it is time to get up.’ “He knew the voice of every clock in the house, and knew what time it waa w Lenever any one of them struck,” S— Hemors of Retrenchment, very now and them some fanny things occur in the attempts at reform + appeared in a paper that hence- for h clerks in the war department were ether to have th ir own towels washed | at their own expense or go with drty hands. The washing had been paid for out of a fund for necessition, and a cl rk v ho had ch rge of the accounts decided {hat clean towels did not come vad r that hoad, and therefore there was no ap- propriciion to pay for the washing of 1onels. A match to this occured some time neo when there was found an ong avoun's of an officer which were carded for audit $40 jor potige stomps. This last item was distiowed, for. said the Dogberry who wrots 10 the , “the law requires that an oller jor Lids should be made jor all suppli 8 and the cootr.ct given lo the lowest b.ddor r.ply the following was sent: “Aa terieiters are the only corn titors s government for furnishing post. ago sta py! thought it best not to open bids with them.” Another case (eon. Loe is stationed at Detroit. In a violent gole ho saw a government vessel wreck. ed with all aboard. He qu ckly charter. ed a tug nnd sent it to resc ie the men. When he sent the bill to Washington to pay for the services of the tug, the ae count was returned as disallowod, owing to the fact “that no bids had been open. ed for the furnishing of a tug to rescue the drowning seamen.” « oor eon wii ih Cx of Ancient Ballders, FF A personal inspection of the pyramids of Egypt, made by a quarry owner wo spent some tine recently on the Nile, bas led bim to the conclusion that the o.d Egyptians were Letter builders than those of the present day, He states tat there are blocks of sone in the pre amids which weigh three or four Hwee a8 much as the obelisk on the embank. ment. He saw a stone whose estimated weight was 880 tons. But then the builders of the pyramiks counted human labor lightly. y had great masses of subjects upon whom to draw, and most of their work was done by sheer manual labor and fores, 1 that they wera rubbed back and foi ward o exch other uni wa | Boe : or on SHAVED AGAINST THE GRAIN, A Ced-halved Young Man Has a Sct.to vit! an Untipped Barber, A red-haired young man, with an fras- eible look in his eyes, eae i.to a Broad. way baroer shop and took a seat Spreading himself out in the chair, und sai “Harber, you shaved me ones before, three days ago, did you not?’ “Yes wir," replied the artist, remember- inz that he received no tip. “Wel, | gave yon certain inctrnetiong about shaving me that I will nos rep ate My skin is t nder and 1 caution you iwi to shave acainst the grain,” The barver begun w lather his enstom- er's face und induige in meditations 1or- vign to the instructions be had ust re ceived. With deft strokes of hi # razor he entered upon the task 0: removing « very still beard. His strokes lor several wun- utes were downward, when, see ning 10 forget what had been told biw, he shaved against the grain, With a great vutn the red haired man sprang from the char, Without waiting tor suy expan tion, he truck the barber an‘ was stout 10 lol low up in true dullivan style, when the victim retreated, “L'il teach you how to shave aginst the grain,” roared the red-haired pugilst, rashing alter the baroer, ‘the 1atter redoubled his efforts to es cape, snd finally fell into the cellar knocking a coa: scuttle tilled with coal ater him, Barehended, a towel about his throat and the lather on his cheeks, on came Lhe aggrieved customer, shout. ing: “I'd wach you how to shave aga nst the grain!” ‘Ihe pursued fortived bim- self und defied the customer to come down and fight it out in the dark ce.lar, The customer answered by closing the cellar door and leaving the shop, alter emphatically expressing his belie! that the barber shaved sgwinst the grain Lee cause Lie had received no tp. Legal Don'ts. Ton't acknowledge a man ss an acend unless he can show that he stands in his principal 8 shoes a8 W tue business in hand. Lon't transcend your authority schedule annexed us every sgirticie 19 be covered by the Lien. Don't fat n conta a con i Ui Bae, Don't forge yo ympound interest | tract usiur ous t there 1s an implied ny rami { a demand an ¢ oluer { asbheriff to aid peaking sn arrest a wiiness who can't po i r ¥ uli [4 ail bon t testify to your own conclusions unless you are an expert Don't hold a paper or an account an unreasonable bine, Or you will be pre- sued to admit its correctness Don't erect a building n founda. tons sunken into the ground or 11 wid become part of the realty Don't take a Ltio where there is a igment ns & man of Lhe same as vour grantor, without ® prool Lal be 18 Got Loe Judgment or t think that a p up aga ne On. re 10 marry @ {i hecans: no! Ww RAR Féeamsnnia that a prom cent thr ¢ law Don t lorget the hands of in vyaloe shuis on on JLracia Advice to Brides, Three kindly-hearted women of hone ng expenence have Leed Woved W send some ® 10 brides Don's fix things any more than you can nasi help ) n't nes coal fire in the summer, oil is cheaper, cleaner and cooler ’ : when Alwavs have everything on the tab.e a small table close at your Daud when vou sit down to a meal [et your colinon seise interpret your I COOK book Remembey that variety is the best sance Or appeltes, Alwars or botled your coder, 'o not cul ore uread than yo need for a meal. Never serve cold sliced meas for break. | fast Always have your warmed.over dishes served as nicely as if they were oniinal | at the time. Put vegetables into hot water to ennk, Don't forget to salt the water in which | potatoes are put to boil. Wear a big white apron when at your | baking table, Kemember that punctaality is’ as nee. essary for the housekeeper as lor the business man Never under any circumstances try to imitate your husband's mother, love her, if possible, but don’t try 10 cook like her. Insist on yourself, and presently your husvand will be found quoting your cookery. . - Good Motives, + “on meant well enough, Maria” res marked Mr. Wipedooks, “iz making me a Chirstmas present of & box of these cigars, but your jndgment was a little at faut in the selection. Une of these day, ” he continued, blowing a clond of smoke from his mouth, and getting out of the way ol it, “would make a malig nant scoundrel of the prophet Llijah himse! .” “Nour motives were all right, Mr Wipedunks,” was his wife's reply, “in presenting me that set of furs, but if the dealer made you think that dyed rabbit skin was mink, and fixed the price ac cordingly, he took 8 mean advantage of aa unsuspecting nature,” The portrait of Mr. and Mm Wipe. dunks, on either side of the fraud move, “God Bess Our Home" looked witidpensive loterest at the wird Jap. aness monsters on the mantel, and amid a rhetorical pause that lasted thirty-nve minutes the head of the Wipeaunks family stole softly out into the g oamung and fervently kicked himsell, A Little Absent Minded, A very absent-minded doctor was din. ing out and the hostess asked idm to carve a leg or mutton. Te the astonish. maha. of She lady aid ha jeats, he cut off a huge chunk of meat, then whipped ont a lint bandage from his pocket, pare. {nly bound up the wiatiisted joint, and exclaimed on y 1 »seautifull With cars and repose potiont will now smeradly do weil.” hove the appetite ol the odors and even Kew vistors was destroyed for that repast. so mnk - 8 | borgoe as | agent, or you will become personaly fo- | sponsible. ! Don't accept 8 chattel mortgage unless | | the | #ny known temperature, ani | forg t that a chattel mortgage is, | . : have a clean cloth on your | table. even if you have burned your bread RETTY BUT OF HO LIST, Chaap Ornamentr YlLermome vrs Male Sad Bou by the Lhousan dt, ” hin Is a great year for ther omneter Lele 18 A 1 shana 0 or eo use hormo Liars thee ory of Ceiviviie WV lor oan 1 iit is Hig in dinars ury Lome stor s WIC 8 Pj oe | it have st retold tne ohion, 1a tof fitted u + ¥p cial thier vometer coniter and ha Liiva wantin tured and moa ated tn nn nor Jug ions ways, Unie of the 110m st ing versions was an car of cor Lt arnoncter let into one gd An th Lenn was apgnt bh Hoo with a Lier uo meter attach ol 1o the «vor handlo, Thin panels, plagues, banners, paieles or #ny- wing that would add 0 the degorativ as elect was utilized, how it is the thirg for a yvonne woman to buy the thermon et r, the rinvon und the car of corn, or whatever may be ned for mounting, and put them tog “er hersell. When a downtown thermo re maker was arked what e ‘ect tuo ca bad on his tease, ho replied “Very little. The che. p thermometers are made by the thousand, asd ar. sold for less than we can buy the glass tuiws here. O1 course, they are not scourate, a8 every tube varies in the quantity olf mercury that it contains, and they ars all mounted on a graduated scale, which is stamped out by machinery at the rate of 8 hundred every two minut's. Ac- curate ther nometers cannot be made for less than a dollar each, and many eost from $10 to $2) each. he glans tube must be prepared at Jeast three years in advince of use, or it will contract; an sbwlote vacuum must be pro iuced be fore the mercury is inserted: snl tho testing and graduating are hand work, re- quiring great care and valuable time, The most expensive thermometers aro Loose made for brew ra, chemion] ma uiacturers, incubator makers and plivsi ciuns. Mercury is principally wsdl tor all temperatures betwen forty degre below zero and 550 degrees abu freezes at the lower temper re, though its boiling point is vu 0 dey will in vacuum st nearly a8 Lu degre s lesa. Alcohol does no (Ts B80 10) TUK Ns 0 PRT We, 3 LEN - FER SE “ fore, u ia the d exclusivesy in thermo Ante regions, and in ia and or North LEH HR § IY Whats a B.0 sara sm a the peanle familiar w'th ti," probs “E-F =» - - » EE BE a TEs orres pon e 1 Pauw Ph Married in His Hat, > Lard & Tes It was the German's ttirn to rolate | marnisge experience ACen ONY Ww occurred in the Black Forest “| was ready,” he began, “my bride looked rony and beautiful in her wedding and 1 had do ‘el the green jac et for a splendid black cost op + cloth and my soft jell hat fora hi'h We drove in a closed rar - church, and on the road | was get ng ou from my seit to open the w.ndow, lo « getting that | am over six feet high, My Lad hat came with » tremen garme forest one sc.ond all was dark—the hat had gone down over my face, and my whole heal stuck tightly in it. 1 pulled and shout. ed, and screamed and groaned. The bride, weeping and terri led, assisted with all her power. We got out and got the driver to asst. It was all in vain ; the hat stuck fast. At the church fronds had each a pull ; but the cler sv. man arrived, and the hat still held me i1 bondage. ‘I can not marry you with out seeing your face,’ he shouted through the hat into my ear, and alter one long desperate struggle 1 decided to make an end ol it. “Take a sharp knife,’ 1 shouted to my friend, ‘and cut a hole around my face into the hat, but see that you do t well, for 1 can not allow this expensive hat 0 be spoiled.’ The hole was cut, the clergyman saw that | was the right man, and | was married with the hat over my face. Afterwards when 1 got cooler, 1 managed to get out of it Sy wife sewed the piece in again; and | Lave worn it lor many & year.” —~ A Ceneral Sherman and Dis Men, Sherman could be easily approaches] by any of his soldiers, but no one could venture to be fasuliar, His uniorm coat, naually Wile open at the throat, displayed a not vory military black era wat and Lnen coliar, and be goneraily wore low shots and one spur. Un the march he rodo with each column in tura, In pewssing onthe inarch he acknow oad our saintations es if Le knew us sil. Lot hadn't time to stop. On “the warch 10 the sea” a soldior ealled ont 1 Sherman. “LU nole Billy, | Jem Grant's waiting for us at Kichmon," Fhermans acquaintance ole ra wos remarkable and of vanisge, for he learned the character of CE ps, | We are now ready for spring trade, "BROWN BACK 10x | 12¢ ; WHITE WINDOW OUR (Tr. 8) azainst the rool of the carriage and in a | GOOr our | Groceries, SECHLER & CO. Provisions, FOREIGN FRUITS aad CONFECTIONERY. MEAT MARKET in Blas o Dvauniated Bugsr 8¢ 8 pound adet y lowest piices All ther BA BUPE. OGucd Surgalne in all grades, MOL ADEE eWinest Now Oriouns st 8c per gallon, OOFFEE Pine assortment of Coffs, both grees ana somted, Our roasted Coffees mre always fresh TOBAOCOCOS. ~All the now and desirable brands, CIGARS Special attention gives to our cigar trade. We try tosell the best 2for Se and bc cigars In | tows, TEAR Young Hyson 60c, 0c, $1 per pound. Im bal, 60c, Moc, ¥1 per ponnd Cuno 00, bor 81 per pound, Oclong, 60c, 80c, §1 per pound. Mined green and black, 60c, Bic, §1 per pound A very fine uncolored Japan tea. Also, a good bargain in eng Hysou st 40c per pound, CHEESE. Finest full cream choose at 16¢ por pound. VINBG AR Pure old cider vioegar made from whole elder. One gallon of this goods Is worth mers than two gallons of common vinegar, connection. { STONEWARE Yn ail sizes of a1) the desirable shape best quality of Akron ware, This is the most satis factory goods in the market, i | FOREMIR FRUITHE Oranges and lemons of the | freshest goods to be bad. We buy the best sud | Juciest lemons we can find. Ther sre better and | chenper then the very low priced goods, | FRUIT JARE We huve the pow lightuing fruit jo and Mason's poroeinin-lined sud glass top ure . Vightning jar is fur sbead of anything yet knows It be» Betis higher bo price then the Muses jar, but itis worth more than the difference in price, Buy the Nghtuiog Jor and you will sot regret it, We have thew in plate, quarts sod half gallons, BEATE Fine sugercurad Home, Ehoulders, Brosk fant Bacon. aud dried Beef. Naked and canvass | Wegnaraubes every piece of mest we sell, | OUR BEAT MARKET We have 81y fine lambs Grom for our market as wanted. Wa give specie attention to getting fine lambs snd siweys try to haves Sue Sock shoud Gur customer can depend on getting silos lamb stall mes SBRCILER & 00, GROCERS A NEAT WAREMY, Bush Heuse Block, Belleionis, Pa, WILLIAMS’ GODEY’S Wall Paper and Win- dow Shades. EMPORIUM i NO 48, HIGH STREET BELLEFONTE TE T— Fa Our ine is now full and o« choice $100 PATENT BACK BACKS 15 SBATINS 20 MI BRONZES from 40 to 50 cw EMBOSSE HAND PRINTS end V1 $100 1 $3 50 mplete goods of all grades from 10c, u AN Bik DGOLIS (r A FULL LINE OF SHADES AXD FIXTURE Can rt notice We alee have goed paper bangers, oiling decorst re and pee paintera ow aod brivg samples S. H. WILLIAMS. 1odm W.R.CAMP Manufacturer and Dealer in FINK FURNITURE, UNDERTARING and Embalming A SPECIALTY. ‘No. 7 West Bishop St, | Bellefonte, Pa. EASILY ACCOUNTED FOR ' The anceess of Bangh's $25 Phosphate sa excellent crop ned PATE RATE LADY'S BOOK FOR 1887. Sample Copy 18 Cents, ALWAYS 2 AYEAR .viovisce { Beantiful Premiums to Terms to Clubs. Club Ravsers 4.50 - - every Subscriber " ha Extra Premoums f« list of Premiums and ters to inrger send for Sample Copy, which will sll information, GODEY'S, mt ted DY pry sd superior n America, bav. of departments, the present time Je ## and peonie te Ww any indies’ magazine ing Lhe greatest variety ably edited CTAry Rerials Charades, features Shon are Stories Pomes Am est toi lat fs CoOnw © giar sutbo-s who will ite to Gopky, are; J. V. Phich- are, Miss Emily Reed, Jobe Churchill, | William Miller Butler, Emily Lennox and others | Eogravings appear in every number, of { subjects by well-known artists, and pro- {duced by the newest processes. In its { Colored Fashions Gopxy’'s lesds in colors {and styles. Both modistes and bome ! dressmakers scoord them the foremost | position, Paper Patterns are one of the Important features of this magazine : ench subscriber | being allowed 10 select their own pattern { every month, an item slome more than | subscription price Practical dios upon Dressmakink show | how garments can be renovated and made over by the paiterns given, Practically hints for the household show young bousekeepers bow to mansge the culinary department with economy and skiil. Fashion Notes, st Home and Abroad | delight every indy's heart | The Colored and Black Work ' Design, | give all the newest idens for fancy work, The Cooking Recipes are under the con tro of an experienced housekeeper. The Architectural Department is of practical utility, caneful estimates being given with each plan, CLUB RAISER'S PREMIUMS. GGY'Shas arranged to give slogan Silveas Plated Ware of superior makers » premiums, the value of which in some in stances reaches over §26 for one premiem. Send 15¢, for Sample copy which contain Hllustrated Premiums with full partica iars and terms, Address, GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK, Philadelphia, Pa, In Club with this r GODEY'S and The Gen. tre Democrat Price $2.78, which should be sent to the office of this Paper. ng the poy
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