NOBLESSE OBLIGE, It I am weak and you are strong, Why then, why then, To you the braver deeds belong; And so, again, It you have gifts and [ have non, If I have shade and you have sun, "Tis yours with freer hand to give, "Tis yours with truer grace to live, Than I, who giftless, sunless, stand With barren life and hand. "Tis wisdom's law, the perfect coda, By love inspired; Of him on whom much is bestowsd Is much required. The tuneful throat is bid to sing, The oak must reign the forest's king: The rustling stream the wheel must move, The beaten stoel its strength must prove. "Tis given unto the eagle's oyes To face the midday skies, ~Cariotta Perry, in Boston Transeript. LOVE OR MONEY. “Frank, old boy, I am so glad to find ! you an occupant of this hotel, and, as I| am a new arrival, and not posted, tell | me who is here this summer.’ Leonard Franklin hghted a cigar as be spoke, and balauced his chair dextrously | on two legs, as he puffed away in the | moonlight. . His companion, Frank Wyckham, smoking and rocking in precisely the same manner, as they sat upon the wide terrace of the Lakeside Hotel, replied: ‘Some of last season's party, and some | new ones.” *“That’s definite,” “My wife has a cousin with her this Year whose name is Annic Layton. She is young, handsome and accomplished. An heiress, too, Loonard.” *“What's her figure?" “Ten thousand from a grandfather in | her own right, and probably as much more when her bachelor uncle, who is! her guardian, leaves this world.” ¢‘1s there any chance?” “She is fancy free as yet, I believe, and I should be pleased to bestow my cousinly regards upon you, Leonard. But, after all, you have no occasion to look out for an heiress with your fortune.” “Bless your dear innocent heart, Frank, a man never has so much but he wants more, if it only bought dresses and finery for the future Mrs, Franklin. I think I will try for it.” Frank Wyckham and Leonard Frank- | lin bad been schoolmates and ¢ llege chums: and now Frank was & Benedict and Leonard a bachelor, close friendship still existed between them. Neither of the young men were aware that their conversation had been overheard: but leaning from an upper window aad con- eealed by the ledge, Annie Layton lis- tened to their words, and when the two men at this point started for a stroll, she drew in her head with a very decided Jerk. “Upon my word!” she soliloquized. “I am really much obliged to Frank! 8o bis friend will try and win my money, will he? Not a word about me! Don't even ask if I am an angel or a witch. Thinks he could easily dispose of my in- come, and would even kindly allow me to buy finery with my own money. The impudent puppy! I'll make him pay for this, or my name is not Ansie Layton!” There was a spice of coquetry in the heart of the pretty heiress that had not been crushed out in any experience of her petted life, and that fanned up iato a brilliant blaze under the provocation of this overheard conversation. She was scarce.y to be censured for her annoy. ance, and she firmly resolved that it the suitor for her money had a heart she would add to the sting of her refusal of his offer by wounding that organ if pos- sible. Bo when Leonard Franklin was pre- sented by pretty Mrs. Wyckham, to her bandsome cousin, Annie Layton, be found himself bowing to the loveliest, sweetest woman he had ever seen, and be was greeted by her with a graceful cordiality that was flattering as well as delightful. It was after breakfast upon the terrace that the introduction took place, and the gentleman, who looked handsome himself in his seaside suit, decided that the heiress was a very fascinating little | damsel. Her dress of clear white mas. lin was relieved here and there with | vivid red ribbons that well became her rich dark brunette beauty, for she was | something more than merely pretty, with her large durk eyes fringed with their Jetty lashes, and the heavy wavy masses | of dark hair, The crimson cheeks, and the clear olive complexion, showing to the best advantage under the brim of her straw hat. It was on the programme for the pleas- ures of that pleasant sunny day, that a "party was to wander in shady woods, and there to enjoy a pienie luncheon. | Bo, as the ladies and geotlemen mar- shaled for the procession, it fell out that | Miss Annie Layton found by her side Leovard Franklin's handsome, manly figure. Before the morning was over, Mr. | Franklin was secretly wishiog that he | had not been so frank with his old friend. | What if Freak betrayed him to his wife, and Bessic told Annie! He shivered at! the mere idea. i Already in Is heart he called her Annie, and ha bad found out that the baad be had held while assisting his charge over a rough pile of stones, was soft and pretty; that the voice that rip. pled vut of the delicate rosebud mouth was low and sweet; and that the deep, dark eyes could flash and melt, laugh wod sadden, in a way that was expres sive as it was delightful, He was in the net Mise Anule was! spreading for him beiore the place of luncheon was reached. | had given his heart to the woman. | rich { thought of her as making the evenings fly when a husband came home to din- | | ner. {| words warm and moments And the lady? Commencing her flirtation with her hoart full of pique, aud a desire for revenge, she would not admit to bersell what ence, this effort to please, was all as- sumed, to gain her money. She recalled words that proved her suitor no mere puppy, but a man who had read much and thought deeply. She was certain that not one of her numerous suitors offered attentions more delicately, or bore himself more gallantly. The summer days passed swiftly to two of the quests at the Lakeside Hotel, and meaning smiles hovered over the faces of the others when Mr. Franklin and Miss Layton were mentioned, or were noticed in each other's company, for the flirtation was carried on briskly. It was only a flirtation, to punish him for his insolonce, Annie sternly told her heart, when she caught herself musing over his words, recalling the expression of his large brown eyes, thinking how a smile would brighton his face, wondering if all men who had traveled were as fas- | cinating in conversation as this one; | sighing, too, sometimes, as she thought of the pleasant summer that was drawing to a close, and that the time was fast approaching when she must dismiss her 3 ] cavalier from her side forever. For-—and her checks burned then—it was to her money that this winsome court was paid, | and the smiles, the deference, the atten- tions to her were all for the sake of handling her grandfather's legacy. And while Annie sighed and mused, | the wooer was blessing the lucky hour { that brought him to that hotel for the | Season. Nover in all his travels had he met with a face, a volee, or a manner | that had touched his heart as it was now touched, He had forgotten his foolish speech made about the heiress, and he He saw her busy with feminine work in the morning, and his fancy pictured her do- ing emboidery in a home, He heard her contralto voice in song, and he He saw her in elaborate evening dress at the table d’ hote,and he thought { how proud a man might be of her beau- | | ty and taste, when the voice of society praised his wife. And all under these surface attractions, weighty as they were, he paid homage to the girl's diguity, modesty aod pure heart, Toe day came when his full found went in specch, ns the youug couple walked in a shady lane, Leonard poured forth his heart's great love in tender. It was some before the answer came, for Anuie had to battle with her desire to put her little white hand in his and give him back love for love. But the answer came cold and haughty. **Mr. Fraoklin,my answer to you must be to recall to your memory your conver- sation with Mr. Wyckham on the ter- heart rece, the evening of your arrival, every | word of which was distinctly au lible in my room.” ‘“Then yon have been playing with | mel” he cried fiercely. “I have been trying to prove to you that my money had a bumsa append. ” age. It was well for her composure then that he turned abruptly from her strode rapidly back to the hotel, watched him disappear from sight, then turned into a narrow by-path sobbed out her pain in solitude. For she now comprehended that whatever Leonard Franklin had sought in his woo- ing, he had won her heart. She felt lonely and heart-sick whea she realized all she had lost. hear the deep, musical voice speak ten- der words; never see the dark expressive eyes look lovingly into her own again: never again feel the clasp of his strong hand; and never agnin see his bright, winning smile. As the tears chased one another down her cheeks, one of the unerriag instincts | of true love came back to her heart, and | she felt deeply and keenly that the love she bad insulted sod and rejected was not the false suit of a fortune-huanter, but a true heart seeking what is the only | sure guaraatee for wedded happiness, She at last wended her way back to the hotel, hiding her red swollen eyes | under her veil and went to her room, hearing the voices of all at luncheon as she weat hastily upstairs. Upon her dressing table there lay an open letter, aad as she read it there stole through her brain a quick, luminous jdea. Over her sad face stole a look of resolution, and a certain hope, too, in her heart was pictured in her face. “I'l try it,” she said. “My oyes are in splendid condition for the purpose. I'll try 8.” She took ber open letter in her hand, and went mournfully into the room where Inncheon wes in progress of demolition, Her eyes were not so red nor so s¥ollen | but that they detected Leonard Franklin trifling with untasted food upon his plate and trying to look as usual. As she ap. | peared, Bessie cried out: ‘‘Annie, what is the matter! You look as if you had been crying your eyes out.” “You would look so, too, if you had my news to bear,” was the answer with | a little sob, “What is it, dear?” and Bessie was at her cousin's side, all sympathy. “The Northern Express Bank bas failed I" “Hy jove,” maid Frank, money was in that!” Annie hid her face on Bessie's shoul- der and sobbed, ‘Uncle George was married last week Frank's comment on that was con- tained in a long whistle, “Frank, you ought to be ashamed of yourseli!” smd eo indigoantly, ‘Never mind, Annie. Come to ay room, darling." And Annie allowed herself to be led away to her cousin's room to be petted and comforted and sympathized with, and to liston to the warmest sssurances ‘all your and | She | and | and | Never again could she | “Leonard Franklin loves you, I am sure of it; and I think he means to tel) you of it. But Annie, if you do not really love him, will you remember that #0 long as Bessie and I have a home, you are as welcome as a sister, and as dear to both of ust? “You may be sure 1 wil never forget it,” said Annie earnestly, “But will you please read Uncle George's letter while I am gone?” She found Leonard waiting in the parlor, and pacing the floor with true masculine impatience, Before she went in, she looked a mo. ment at the tall, graceful, handsome figure, so buoyant with animation—at | the handsome face, now so radiant with hope ; and in her heart there lingered the { refrain of a song, *‘He loves me, he loves { me.” All the gladness was banished from her step and face, however, ns she slowly advanced to meet her lover. He could | wait for no formality of greeting, Ab ruptly, passionately, and earnestly, with | his whole soul in his eye, he said: ‘*Annie, you rebuked me severely to. day for my presumptuous and insolent speech to your cousin, and I scknowl- | edge I deserved it; and now that the money is all gone and your uncle is married, will you not believe me that the the dearest hope of my life, and the dearest wish of my heart, is to win your love and make you my wife.” “You are sure it is I you love?” she | 3 : | thoroughly into this, and use cold milk asked in a very low voice. ‘“‘Before 1 had known you a week, I had quite forgotten you were an heiress, | , of stoned cherries in the bottom (resery- y : : : | ine {eet anf woman in the world I could ever love, or | IP8 most of the juice), and darling. I only knew you were the oniy whose love would be precious to my heart, THe few foolish thoughtless words, which I spoke to your cousin contained no meaning whatever. Burely you may trust me how. Bomy wife and every hour shall prove to you how ten. derly I love you. Speak to me, Annie, why do you hide your face!” She did not tell him it was to hide her smiling lips, and her dancing eyes; but she allowed him to draw her into his loving arms, and fold her in a teader embrace. “You will be my wife, darling!” whispered, and then she looked up. “You, 1 will,” she said Bushing, but meeting his eyes frankly sand bravely, ‘for 1 believe now you love me, and love you with heart. St Py Leonard, do not kiss me yet, but let me first rectify my mistake. I forgot to mention my Uncle George drew all my money from the bank before it broke, and now has it in safe deposit elsewhere, Also it was a mistake my saying uncle was married. Now, darling, 1 have proved your love.” Frank and Bessie received an explana. tion sad were considerably surprised. “‘But, Annie,” said Bessie, some time later, “what on earth were you crying | about" : Annie never told, but Leonard made he my whole | Blade. Brazil's Domestic Pet. Rats have multiplied to such a degree in Brazil that the inhabitants rear a cer- tain kind of snake for destroying them. The Brazilian domestic servant is the giboia, a small species of boa about twelve feet in length and of the diameter a man's arm. It is sold at from $1 | to $1.50 in the markets of Rio Janeiro, | Pernambuco, Bahia, ete. This snake, which is entirely harmless and sluggish in its movements, passes the entire day asleep at the foot of the staircase of the house, scarcely deigning to mise its head | at the approach of a visitor or when a | strange noise is heard in the vestibule. At nightfall the ;iboia begins to hunt. crawling along here and there, and even penetrating the epace above the ceiling and beneath the flooring. Springing | swiftly forward, it seize the rat by the of {nape and crushes its cervical vertebrms. | As serpents rarelyeent, even when at lib. erty, the gibola kills ouly for the pleas. ure of killing. It becomes so accustomed { to its master’s house that if carried to a distance it escapes and finds its way back {home. Every house in the warmest | provinces where rate abound owns its | gibols, a fixture by destination, and the | owner of which praises its qualities when he wishes to sell or let his house, New | York Commercial Advertiser. A Beautiful Description. Almost every one knows the distress | occasioned by a sudden tendency to ery | at a time when one wishes to appear par. | ticulatly unmoved and even stoical, Marjorie never cries when any little | mishap befalls her, and has been known | to sustain without shedding a tear severe | bumps that have rapidly acquired a black {and blue aspect. But the other day Araminta, her dearly loved and tenderly | cherished doll, fell into the open grate | and received a contusion of the nose | which was most unpleasant to contem- plate. Marjorie winked very hard for a fow minutes, and then running with her in. | jured Araminta to her mother, she buried | her head in her mother's 1ap, sobbing: | “Oh, mamma, I don’t want to ery, but my fears have all come unfastened |” | Chicago News. — a, The First Irish Immigrant, milk. | mold | well, being even better the second day | let it come to the boil, ' a hot dish, | cookery; they are rich. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. OREAM SALAD DRESSING, Beparate two yolks of eggs from the whites, mix with them one tablespoon ful of butter, two of vinegar, a saltspoon- ful of salt and half that quantity of pep- per; stir these ingredients together over the fire until they begin to thicken, but do not let them boil; draw the saucepan from the fire, let the dressing cool, then beat in a half 4 cupful of thick cream and use the dressing upon any salad ot tomatoes, MEAT TRIFLES, Take a pound of cold roast beef, mut. ton or veal, chop very fine, then put in a bowl with a seasoning of salt and pepper and melted butter, two tablespoonfuls of nice bread crumbs and a teaspoonful of chopped onions; mix these ingredients thoroughly and. moisten well with beaten *gge, and if too dry a few spoonfuls of good broth, gravy or cream. Put this mixture into & moderate oven for about twenty minutes, then turn out and garn- ish with fresh parsley and serve. — Chi- cago News. CHERRY PUDDING. Cherries make delicious puddings, Maske a biscuit dough of one pint of flour, one heaping teaspoonful of baking pow- der, salt, butter the size of an egg, and Sift the baking powder well through the flour, rub the butter enough to make a stiff batter, Butter a round tin mold or cake-pan, put a pint spread the dough over this with & spoon. Set the iu a steamer over fast-boiling water, and steam one hour, Serve hot with cream and sugar, or with the sirup of the cherries heated and sweetened, or with both, — Harper's Basar, s—— STEWED STEAK. An economical dish which warms up is stewed steak. Remove from two or three pounds of beelsteak snd cut into pieces of convenient size for ing. Put into a stewpan with a quart of lukewarm water, two preces, half a dozen pe all fat BETTY. spice, half a teaspoonful pinch of curry powder. and skim well, Then and stew two hours, steak. Rub into & dessert spoonful flour as much butter as it will stir this thickening into the gravy and Add a teaspoon ful of mushroom or tomato catsup and stir. Return this steak to the stewpan and let it simmer in this gravy for ten or fifteen minutes, — Brookiyn Oitisen, PEACH FRITTERS, Have ready the frying-kettle, skim. mer, psn with brown paper, ready for frying, nod finely sifted powdered sugar, NJ take up, some guesses to her io private that she | Make 8 French fritter batter by mixing | would neither deay nor affirm." — Fankes | spoonful of salt, a tablespoonful of salad | oil, the yelk of | cold water to make a batter thick enough in 8 bowl a cupful of flour, an even tea. a raw egg and enough to bold a drop let fall from the mixing spoon. Peel a dozen floe, firm peaches, | four at a time ; drop them into the batter, turn them over to entirely cover them, lift each one upon a spoon, drop it into | the fat sad fry them, four ut once. Just before peeling the peaches make sure that the fat is beginning to smoke, beat the white of the egg to a stiff froth and mix it into the batter. Fry the fritters golden brown, lay them on paper for a moment to free them from fat, dust them with powdered sugar and rerve them bot, piled oa a napkin folded on Five ripe, rare-ripe peaches fritters, Other fruits make delicious | may be tried in the same way, thus giv ing a change as the different varieties | appear in market. — Juliet Corson. HOUSEHOLD HINTS, The eggs of ducks should be eatea in Ll Celery is very good stewed in any brown or white gravy. Remember that sugar, butter and suet | become liquids in boiling. It is difficult to overestimate the value | of fresh eggs as an article of diet, even | at the highest prices. A tablespoonful of salt to every two quarts of water is the proper proportion for boiling green vegetables, Pudding, if boiled, mast be put into | plenty of boiling water; if baked, in a sharp but not scorching oven. Sultana raisins do not require time for stoning, but quite as much time is ex- pended in stemming and washing. Gum arabic dissolved in water and spread upon paper will, when tied over jelly tumblers, render them air-tight. The Dutch and French always bleed their codfish, which accounts for the | better quality and whiteness of their fish. Look well to your glass-preserving bottles, Soe that the screws work right aod that the rubbers are clean and flexi- ble. Rubbing a bruise in sweet oil and then in spirits of turpentine, it is said, will usually prevent the unsightly black and blue spots, which not ouly tell tales, but deform. 4 te A good way to disenver presence of moths and also to destroy them is to placo a water 2 - HIE i’s 2 i | men the right to vote in the selection of | NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Bouvenir pencils are here, Mrs. Cleveland favors pink, Queen Elizabeth is said to have had 4000 gowns. Bright yellow maintains its protest be- yond contradiction. Empress Victoria Augusta of Ger- many plays lawn tennis, The Chinese do not permit their wo. men to be photographed. The United States Quaker women teachers, Oné-seventh of the Great Britain are women. possesses 850 landowners in Mod jesks was not allowed to play in Russia because she is a Pole, A. couple were married on the Buspen- sion Bridge at Niagara Falls the other day. The divided skirt 18 now much worn by ladies addicted to horseback exer- cise, Mrs. Edmund Russell has written a book on how to yawn properly in so- | ciety. A novel feature of one of the new parks in Boston is an open sir gymna. sium for girls, In France women are employed in ! J freight and railroad offices making out 4 iY bills and selling tickets, Twenty-three States now give to wo- | members of Bchool Boards. i above the medium Wonderful embroideries are used this season for the corselet bodices and for the linings of the high Medici collars, An organized band of girl thieves, from eight to thirteen years old, has been broken up in New York by the arrest of the leader. “The German Union against the Tye- anny of Fashion’ has attracted cousidera- ble attention and many influential mem. bers already. understood to make the distinguish good from bad money in the United States Treasury Department. Miss Sallie Stone, s compasito Lewiston (Me.) Journal, di before the Women are best experts to day shortly for her wedding. Ex-Governor ton, four years ago entered into real es tate speculation there with 84000, and | since ‘hen has netted £700 WO The Cobden prize of 8300 offered for the best economic essay in England this year was carried off by a woman, Miss Victorine Jeans, of Manchester. Miss Snyder, the new American prima donna now in London, is described as height, slender and graceful, with a pale oval face, gray eyes sod dark hair, Miss Nikita, an American girl, sod a successful soprano, is engaged to be married to Prince Mirza Riza Khan, who bah of Persia. Miss Leale, of Guernsey, whose re. markable rifle shooting was the feature of the recent meeting in England, is not yet twenty years of age, sad handles her gun like a veteran Mrs. Logan does her literary work in General Logan's library, and his arm. chair is kept in just the same position ia which he used it, and the room is filed with mementoes ol him. Young Mrs. Oscar Wilde is said to be A very striking contrast to her husband, She is very quiet, while he is rather loud ; she is inclined to be commonplace, while he is brilliant in conversation. Mrs. Paran Stevens has excited New- port, R. I, by changiag the style of her livery and having ber coscoman and footman wear red top boots and black velvet collars, trimmed with red piping. Sorosis, the woman's club of New York City, which has met regularly at Delmonico’s for tweaty-three years, will bereafter hold its meeting at Sherry's, ws the club has outgrown Delmonico's patiors, A Lewiston (Me.) lady has a needle in her sewing machine that she placed there in the fall of 1874, and has not once been removed. It has done all the {amily sewing since that date, and continues to do it, although worn rather thin. One of the distinguished portrait | painters ia Germany is a woman, Vilmar Parlaghy. in painting portraits of She is especially successful men, and for | some time previous to his death she was Count von the field mar. occupied at the palace of Moltke in painting | shal in full suiform with all bis decora- i tions. A recent bonnet, worn by the Prin. cess of Wales: A delicious little creation in palest blue with just a touch of silver, and with pale and dark blue ostrich tips curling up over the back. The strings were of dark blue velvet, which served as an admirable backgronnd for a perfect turquoise set in diamonds which the Pria- cess wore as a lace pin. —— Yi var aly Cataieh a i" thee best for they svar sa. M, port. a well 1, Tho. hoi: olf Dera, Attsna, has a thirteen. ress. Headache Indigestion, Bi'iousness, Dyspepsia ees po A Unique Clock. One of the attractions of the beautf.' ful Monte Pincio gardens, at Rome, is a really unique clock, which is usually as object of interest to groups of passersby, who stop to minutely iospect it. A gen- eral view and description of this curious and artistic piece of mech anism is given as follows by the Horological Beview: The very charming case is composed of three branches in rustic work, It stands upon a square stone block, sur. rounded on its four sides by beautiful leaf plants, ivy and grasses. The stone foot stands within a water basin, The upper part of the case contains a dial covered with glass on each of its four sides, Upon the cupola stands a staff which carries the two bells for the full hour and quar- ters, At its upper end is a small vane in the shape of a battle ax. The frame for the wheel and levers of the striking work, in which a small cen. trifugal pendulum takes the place of the fly, is close underneath the dial. At the back of the clock frame oscilates the second pendulum, and before this is lo- cated 8 mass of large coral growth, small Jets of water at Two of the uppermost coral branches are water conduit pipes, from which empties alternately, at each swing of the pendn- ' « Quantity of water rustic work, simiiar to a from which issue regular intervals, lum, a smal into two lesflike spoons underneath, ‘mparting to them an up and down The pe culiar motive power by the water keeps the clock in motion, by a very remarkable escapement, so that it never requires winding, The construc. tion of the clock is due to 8 monk, as is the case with so many old pieces of art Work. motion. furnished The “Man-Eater of the Gulf.” The re ern 5 is gion extremity of the in the vicinity of the north. Gulf of California iby terrible ture—a member of the lizard called the *‘Man-eater of the Gu is hardly large en to inhabited 8 rare at Cres. tribe. - i He warrant his bout inches long. but i me of the 0 : is ¥, some akin d Gila Monster, and has body St. Louis ugh awe inspiring fifteen most poison naturaiists As mentions a member of the lizard family, to the fame most a8 Drittie ina as lass CAT It white man a craft is ERG LOR who ever —————— A Big Mistake, The moulting process i# one that debili. tates and prevents bens from laying. Many farmers and poultry-rasers at this season kill off their old bens, because they think they bave stopped laying and are fat. This is a great mistake, the proper material should be furnished them with their food to supply the increased demand for nitrogen and phosphates. Mr, John R. Jones, of Suf- Beld, Conn, says: “1 am a breeder of Mottied Javas, | have been using Sheridan's Con- dition Powder for years I find it very valu. able for poultry in the moulting season: it helps the growth of feathers. | use it also for show birds.” LS. Johnson & Co., Boston, | Mass, will send further particulars to any- { one free, is the Cousu! and side-de-camp of the | FITS stopped free by Da Klixe’s Guear Nunve insTonun, No Ots after frst day's use. Marvelous cures, Treatise and $2 trial bottles tree. Dr. Kiise, #81 Aron St, Phila, Pa 11 afMicted with sore eyes use Dr. isaac Thom son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at Ze. per bottle ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Byrup of Figsis taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts tly yet promptly on the Kidneys, ver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels coids, bead. aches and fevers and cures habitual const.pation. Syrup of Figs is che only remedy of its find ever duced, pleasing to the taste ao ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in ws effects, prepared only from the most beaithy and agreeable substances, ite many excellent qualities come mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known, Syrup of Figs is for sale in 500 and 81 bottles ' all leading drugs gists Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute, CALIFORNIA FI6 SYRUP CO. LAN FRANGISO0, OAL, , KV. NEW TORE. M8 ~ Abvice TO THE ACED:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers