| Ouly ten per cent. of the sugar we wonsune is grown in this country, This is an estimate in the Atlante ngitution: The wealth of the South in 1860 was $4,000,000,000, and in 1890 about the same. The war cost the flouth about $2,000,000,000, She has just about recuperated. F Tests of modern rifles are being made by using human corpses for tar- gets. ‘This sounds brutal,” musesthe Ban Francisco Examiner, ‘‘but it really 4s less brutal than making the tests on bodies that are not corpses in the be- ginning." ‘ #¢ M. Gault states that the Rus- sins, since their occupation of the district embraced by the valleys of the 8yr Daria and the Zarafshan, have given a very great development to the cultivation of cotton, and have intro- duced several American varieties of the plant, notably the At first the natives were so prejudiced against the new plants that the experiments failed, but the Russians persevered, and, whereas nine years ago Turke- stan produced only 8300 poods of cotton worth $1433, the quantity ex- ported in 1890 was about 2,000,600 poods, of an estimated value of $7,000,000. upland, ' Word has been sent to the courts of Europe that the Shah of Persia intends to visit Berlin, St. Petersburg, Berlin and Vienna next spring. He will start on his journey in May or June, and will remain in Europe several months. The rulers whom he is to honor are iv an unhappy state of mind already on account of the proposed visit, alleges the New York Tribune. No povereign, in all probability, is a more unwelcome guest than the Shah, but his cousins in Europe are obliged to receive him with all the honors due to his rank. is more expensive than entertaining any other monarch. His retinue legion. ™ One of the latest and most popular developments of New York society is the lady lecturer, who talks to an sudience exclusively feminine upon the topics of the day. they are called, are held only in private living Entertaining him is almost a score or more of women who have elubbedgogother $0-engage scmo well. informed woman to post them, viva voce, upon all subjects with which they should be conversant. This isa charm- ing way to acquire knowledge, and one which will nndoubtedly grow more either have not the time or the inclina- tion to study for themselves, oe ——— —— ; That typical Arizons town, Yuma, will probably soon be lifted from Ari- zona into California, it is claimed, it has always rightly belonged. Up to about fifteen years age the point where, suthorities both sides the the Arizona authorities llect taxes kas been dropped. The suthorities have always question. was indicted by the Federal grand jury for selling liquor to Yuma. evadod the Indians in the court to try his case, citing the | suthority of the treaty of Guadaloupe | Hidalgo and the recent reports of the | international boundary commission to show that Yuma is in Oalifornia. It is thought ont there that Hycks may win kis case and that the town will soon be Yuma, California, instead of Arizona. Yuma, The dismantlement of World's Fair structures has in one respect proved » godsend to the poor of Chicago. In Jackson Park there were recently 2000 wagon loads of excellent firewood which the officials were glad to get rid of. The Chicago Relief and Aid So ciety obtained permission to cart the wood away, and put up the following sign on the park fence pesr the Sixty: second street gate: “Free Wood for the Poor.” Any person with a horse and wagon is now admitted to the park and allowed to take away all the wood his wagon will hold, the ouly condi tion being that he shall present a per mit from the society. The pile of debizis through which the wood is seat. terod has a length of 300 yards, 2 width of 100 yards sid a Leight of twelve foot. It consists of bea’ ets, boxes and barrels. The man in need of fuel has ouly to delve in this pile to get ns ser viceable kindling wood as could in found anywhere. Tho applicants are foreigners for the most part, snd judy ing from their ragged coats and pinched faces, “Sey culd ged the means of | general warmth for their families nowhere else. : | mitted, These “talks,” as | | son-in-law of the Emperor, | none in Yams, the question | . ter for the season. land office | \ or accept the He denies the jurisdiction of | +I sheep had entered more largely into our agriculture during the last quarter of a century,” maintains the New York World, ‘‘thers would not now be so many run-down farms." English scientists are very much worried over the results of an investi gation which has shown beyond per adventure of a doubt that the seas around the British coast are being rapidly exhausted of fish. The sub- jeot 18 receiving grave consideration, and it is probable that elaborate meth- ods of restocking the waters will be undertaken within a few years, The ‘“ireat American Desert," which occupied ‘a vast area on the maps of the time when school children were taught that perhaps sooner or later lines of stage coaches would con- vey travelers from the Atlantic to the Pacific, has gradually dwindled. It was still formidable on the maps of thirty years ago, but now it is con- fined to sn hundred square miles in Utah, west and south- west of Great Salt Lake. area of a few A few weeks ago a train robber in Missouri was sentenced to twenty-five vears' imprisonment. In Texas four | train robbers have just pleaded guilty State Prison for The New York it and been sent to thirty-five years each ! Tribune confesses that is most en- class dealt with so promptly and rig- orously in the West and South. | Texas gang were disposed of within ten days after their erimes were If the States deal with rascals in this fashion there will be no | | need of making train robbery a capital | offence, as Las been proposed. The talk of restoring the monarchy | in Brazil has torned public attention | to the unpopularity in that country of the Countess d'Eu, who is in the direct line of succession from the late Em- alleged for it the real cause of Brazil's dislike was the royal lady's humanity, | : . . ** | transforming the grave into a flower She was one of the principal advooates | of the emarcipation of the slaves in that country, says the New Orleans Picayune in explanation, and being | drawing-rooms, and are listened to regent at the time when the decree | ‘with the most intelligent interest by a | was passed, insisted that it should go into eflect immediately, instead of giv- ing a period of six years, as many de- | ig ; | Pordercd ranch life in the Par ’ sired to do, to allow the slave-holders | : | the only remedy for weak lungs and | time to pregare for the change. This made her very unpopular, and a plot Prince was on foot to place Pedro, a on the swept the throne away. The report of the last season's seal ing shows that the regulations decreed | by the arbitration court have come too soon. The figures of the catch in the Pacific are: American and Russian sealers, 69,936; Canadian | . | sealers, 69,741, was often contended between the loeal tine b . h . Sisputed that these returns are not " a 1) y | | jane, but singe the arrest, in /1%%, OY 1 As most of the sealing was done in the of a San Di- | ego (Cal) tax collector who tried to | gests the San Francisco complete, open sea it certainly does not repre sent anywhere near the actual slaugh. Whether we take the revenue officials’ . | the poachers get only one oux of five Recently William Hycks | of the seals they kill in the open ses, that they secure five out of six, the figures sealer's estimate represent a sianghter that the existing seal heids cannot stand. The guns of the sealers can kill faster than the herd ean produce. Seal hunting io the open sea must be stopped if the seal herd is to The regulations announced by the arbitra. tion court should be strictly enforced. be preserved. It is said that a good deal of talk has been crested in Washington by the fact that visitors of the Capitol are de- barred the privilege, which they have hitherto = egjoyed, of inspecting the Senate chamber when it is not in use. Formerly, from 9 to 11.30 a. m., who- ever pleased had free access; now the visitor finds the doors and windows guarded by pages, who forbid ap- proach. It is said that the Senate of- ficials have been driven to make this change by the extreme destructiveness of relie hunters during the past three mouths, Expensive damask silk cur. tains in the reception hall back of the Senate and ir the President's room have beon nipped by the relic hunters and in the marble room a piece of the magnificent Smyrna rug nine inches square was taken, In the Senate proper they have interfered with papers loft by Senators on desks, On the white marble column at the head of the west simircase leading to the Senate gallery initinls and dates Bave been seratehed and, eoncludes the Now Orleans Picayune, ‘there has been # disregard of propriety, of the rights of Uncle Bam sad of all de: » : cency. The | | needs me this very moment, snd with | Jack how could I be afraid?’ com- | such | | ranchman | grave, pretty child to a gentle, beanti- | were 1 { mother's 14 " ; | tender, reassuring smile. { throne, when the revolution arose and . and more popular among those who | It is probable, sug- | Examiner, | statement that | ] | in spite of himse!’, he shuddered visi- | | bly. A SONG TO THEK The springtime hath its winds that kiss The roses, white and red ; Nor shall one sweet wind go amiss Where any rose fs shod, And summer hath her sigh and song But I love theo the whole year long! The winter hath its frost And roses, born ol spring And summer's flowers in ice are lost, And birds forget to sing! Ah! winter doth a grievous wrong, But I love thee the whole year long ! Life hath but little space ; Men love, and then they go For all their glory and their gracs— Beneath the stars and snow, 0, Death! it doth & grievous wrong, Bat I love thes a whole life long! ~Frank L. Stanton, ia Atlanta Constitution. n— TWO MOUNTAIN WOLVES. BY MARY ANNABLE FAXTON. T ise wild venture, Nancy girl, out on the prairies ten miles & night | like this, with the ground as soft as a sponge and the wind still blow- ing straight from the south. Why, the road takes you | stillness of the so bad, The constant suction of the alkaline soil kept the horses irritated beyond words. " It was slow work to anxious ‘hears, Half the distance was past and the shadow of the bluff over them before a word was spoken. Beyond them in avery direction to the edge of the hor- izon the prairies were bathed in a cool, pale gray mist. The wind in the shining, low drooping pines murmured a perpetual requiem, Buddenly Nancy's horse shied, near- expected was the lurch. Jack pulled watched him quiver and tremble, iver quiried. The girl made no response, grasped the reins tightly. body bent forward and her peck but in her concentrated As Jeck would breathe, to hear. breath murmuring, ‘Hush, Jack, lis- ten!” Her lover leaned forward, but rather to be near her than to hear, al- most smiling at her in the death-like night. But, as he listened, the smile died away. sharp, crackling noise of broken un- derbrush. A moment's silence directly under the bluff?” “Yes, yes, I know,” the girl answered | impatiently. “I know the ground is! bad, but the road is safe enough. The, last wolf was killed three winters ago. hungry beasts. The wolves had scented their prey In an instant Jack was on the alert. “Nancy ! Nancy!” he eried. “Don't And, in any case, it does not matter, | father, for Jack has come for me and | couraging to see law-breakers of this | his mother is dying. Think of it, | father, not a woman to speak an last word of love or comfort, only the doctor and perhaps, the Bishop, fhe | Naney's voice was brave enough, but her moist as the color deepened in her cheeks. Jack's heart | OVER Were | beat quickly with love, the love of a brave man for the woman who trusts him. James Hardwick was a genuine | He loved the life well, It health and home, | wns not Nancy's mother him had brought and besides, | buried at the foot of the knoll just | back of the ranch? True, there was | { no white stone to tell her name and | | peror, and has brought out the fact | woe to curious strangers, only a clump that whatever reasons may have been | of red cedars with a rustic bench circling their roots, and in the summer roses and wild camellias in profusion, bed. Here Nancy had grown from a : i : ! 3 i : | i | i i ful woman, the morning star of her | father's life, and until the past six | months had thought her life, with its | monotonous routine, perfect. | Early in the past summer Jack Du tuvalid wother, whose physicians had | failing strength. Jack was to grada. ste in the spring, but his ambitions at resolutely aside, and his remonstrances met with a And now she was dying, his efforts had all been vain. The heavy sacri fice had only been the preliminary to | a heavier sorrow. When, iu the morn- ing, the doctor had rendered “is Snal verdizt, Jack's first impulse was for Nancy ; he would start at once and bring her back before sunset. But Nancy was away when he reached the ranch, and did not return antil the prairies were gray and the last ray of orange hight had traded down the ho- | rizon, Now Nancy was bogging earnestly to gu with her lover, who was blind to | any possibility of danger, knowing so | weil his own strength ard courage. And, above all, far away in the cabin | was the loved “little mater” dying. | The time seemed very pescioas, and, | Nancy read his heart as quickly as though his lips were voicing every “You were always too much for me, | little girl,” he said, ‘Tt lias abways been, ‘yea, yes,’ where it should have been ‘nay, nay." Yon areall I have, Nancy child, and to-night my heart is on the ground (an Indian expression for ‘the blues’). All day the wind has moaned in the clump of cedars 1 can't shake off the feeling of fore- boding it brings me. There, there, no tears. I know yon would be wretched not to go. God keep you snfe.”’ Then he turned abruptly, and, fae- ing the man who had taken so much out of his life, said curtly : “If sught happen her to-night, Jack Du Bois, reme «my life ends with hers, and both sre in your keeping." “Father! Father!” Nancy eried, throwing her arms about his Beck “You are breaking my heart. You shall sot speak so to Jack, He would | give his life for mine.” The frown that had deepened in Jack's forehead disappeared at Nan. ey's words, *‘Nancy has spoken the truth,” he answered (uietly, speaking her name slowly, ecaressingly, ss though each syllable were a mystic rite, In u few minutes the horses were at the door, Hardwick helping Nancy to mount. As she watched him examine every strap and buekle, solicitous asa lover for every trifle, she began, for the first time, to comprehend w little of the pain her new happiness had brought him. Regardless of Rraneing borse and impatient lover, again throw her arms about her father's neck, Neither of them spoke, bnt when Hardwick re-entered the ranch bis face was wel with tears, “Jack bind come over he monnisib + oe when m "of the molture had drained off, and had pot thought the lower road esuld be | unsteadily., easily, Nancy, if yon will only listen sit motionless like that, They are almost npon us. Use your whip; strike Modoc square between the CVOn, He must die for you to-night, if need w," The horses quickly responded to the unaccustomed touch of the whip and broke into & smart gallop, in spite of burning hoofs snd quaking ground. At the sound ravenous mountain voices two broke of human wolves through the brush and settled into a } steady trot iu the horses’ trail | seemingly made no effort to lessen the They space between them, following st an even distance, like two mocking, sinister shadows, But the space grew less and less, for the horses were be ginning to weaken. The whip, corx ing words, even caresses from Nancy's soft little hand were of no avail. The | hoarse, oft repeated cries of the wolves affected the horses like ague. As Jack watched Nancy's face, the deathly pallor, the drawn lines at the corners of the sweet mouth, there was no need to explain the situ- ation to her, but not in the face nor ina single line of the supple, young body was there a trace of cowardly fear. What if she wonld not listen to him ; would not let him save her!” “Nancy! sweetheart! No, no, do Bois had come from the East with his | not stop,” as she drew her rein at the abled, sound of his voice. “Give Modoc rein «and plenty of whip and cerd tos helpht of seven miles and then, dear, listen to me. Listen with your heart and swear you will do as 1 say. Nancy, we can't both get out of this alive. Let me live up to your trust in me.” Then, ws for an in stant, the girl's lips quivered child ishly. Jack's voice broke aud he put his hand on his throat to choke back a groan. ‘Don’t chill, don’t,” he ssid, “I can save you, oh! so and do as I say. Modoc has some strength yet. He is afraid of the whip and will keep up if he only has time time.” He repeated the word half deliriously, it seemed so unattainable a thing. “I will manage this way, dear. | will loave my horse, it will stop them | for & little and then,” as Nancy shook her head resolutely, “‘l can keep up with Mode for— Nancy, you father's.” So earnestly was Jack pleading he had forgotten how the distance was narrowing at every word. Now, as he jumped lightly to the { ground, a yell of ferocious triumph | cose up, almost at his very feet. | chaoge and plesaed with ner father | | until his reluctant consent was won. gor “On, Modoe, on!” he cried as he | snatohed the reins from the girl's horse | The | still hands and struck the wildly on the neck and flanks frightened beast plunged farionsly for a moment, then darted across the prairie, but unincumbered, for Nancy bad loosened her dress and dropped from the saddle to her lover's side. The beasts were now advancing in fantastio circles, fawning to the ground and opening wide their mouths with hideous yawning sounds Jack stood rigid, as one suddenly awakened from heavy slumber. The horror of it all was upon him. If only he were alone it would not be so hard, just the sharp pain, the short struggle and the farewell thonght of Naney aod the ‘‘little mater.” Nancy ?' he moaned her name aloud in his agony. At the sound Nancy flung herself on his heart. ‘Jack! Jack! forgive me! I could not go, darling eart of mine, it was worse than death to go. Kiss me, Jack, once. Good bye. 1 can almost hear them breathe.” Jack took her close in his arms, pressing her face to Lis breast, ‘Shut your eyes, sweetheart, Tt was nothing,” as Nancy started. Bat he onion. 8 face, lest she should see that the horse had gone down before them. Jack stood with his back to the snarl ing beasts so that to the last moment Nancy might be spared. As he stood facing the south he suddenly realized that on the road, coming py ward bim, was a dark shape too for a wolf and if a horse, riderless. ly pitching her from the saddle, so un- | broke into a gellop. the beast up sharply, astonished as. he | ““There’s nothing insight.” was second bullet: followed by the shrill, savage yell of | not vntil the revolver was empty and he knew | must, | {you shall for my sake, for your But ‘‘Nanoy! | from which she had been shielded, The wolves, half tired of their prey, were looking up with fierce, wild eyes and dripping jaws, The night grew bluck about her, and earth and sky seemed rolling away together. Then, with a sudden inspiration her | mind cleared, and grasping Jack's arm | to steady herself, she began to whistle, | soft and low. but clear ns a bell or the | plaintive morning cry of the meadow Inrk. The wolves listened mutely, but { the horse pricked up his ears and He bad known | the eall since a pony. As Modoc reached her Nancy threw | her arms over his foam-covered neck, What happened him, Naney?' he 1 and Jack just heard her words: i “Quick, in the saddle pocket at the | right. Oh, | Jack, the wolves are moving! Can't stretched out she scarcely seemed io | you find it, the pistol you gave me in effort | the fall? It is loaded. have touched her hands she drew in her | gone, and she lay very still at Modoc's gre love me! But Naney's strength was feet One of the beasts had already | erawled over the prostrate horse, but | his temerity cost him dear, The bullet | from a clean, straight sim took him squarely between the eyes, and he fell | First | quivering on his prey. came the soft, thick sound of a padded | his mate sprang high in the air, but footfall on moist ground, then the | her ugly, revengeful cry ss she vaulted | At the report toward Jack was cut in two by the then a third, a fourth, ! both wolves motionless did Jack throw | aside his weapon snd turn to living, | It was past midnight, when, ‘with | Nancy in his arms, he staggered to the door of the little cabin. The kindly, | white-haired Bishop was first to meet him, and lifting the exhausted he placed her tenderly on the ministering to her gently as a woman The doctor grasped Jack the hand, and, with a warning gesture of silence, led him to the sick bed, where to his infinite joy he found his mother alive, and sleeping like a little child. A strong hand ou hs shoulder, and he | heard the Bishop say : “My son, it is like a miracle to-day we thought her dying, but now the doctor bids you hope been very merciful this night And Nancy, had come back to life in the warmth and light, crept to her lover's side as she said ‘Amen. . The Voice, the iri, conc, by Twice (od has who EE — - Great Human Endurance, President Jeremiah Head of the sec- tion of mechanical science of the Brit ish Association for the Advancement of Science in his annual address oslls stiention, among other things, to the power in man fo withstand varying st- mospheric pressures. ‘‘ Thus, al | though fitted for an extreme stmos- | pherie pressure of about fifteen pounds {to the sqnare inch, he has been en- as exemplified by Messrs | Glaisher and Coxwell in 1862, to as : | breathe air at a pressure of only three and one-half pounds to the square | inch and still ive, And, onthe other hand, divers have been down into the water eighty feet deep, entailing an ex tra pressure of about thirty-six pounds per square inch, snd have returned safely. One has even been to a depth of 160 feet, but the resulting pressure of mixty-seven pounds per square inch cost him his life. These are, however, extreme cases. Most men experience great inconvenience at any altitude over two and one-half miles, and few can stand the rarefied atmosphere above the three-and-a-half-mile limit [in the Andes or Himalayas. So, too, | with the increased pressure; few can long withstand the benumbing effects | of fifty feet below the surface in water, | although the knowledge of the case with which the normal pressure may be again reached lends courage and | assurance, very important factors in | J | and tell her this minute. | such cases, tothe daring experimenter, | while the extreme labor of ascending | mountains or the uncertainties of balloon action are deterrent in the other direction. iin I — a Transient Island in the Pacific, The Western § vifie is a great place for islands that exerge from waves un- expectedly and as suddenly disappear. merely temporary. The wonderful skipper misses a familiar land mark, by which he hase been accustomed to get his bearings, and perhaps the next day he runs his of territory that has sprung up out of | the water since he last came that way. | The region south of Japan is so given { to this sort of eccentricity that ships \avoid it. Voleanic action is respon- | sible for such phenomena. Reports of them will be noted on the pilot chart | in every oase, though -they are not always reliable, because backs of sleep: ling whales and schools of fishes ran: | ning along the surface are frequently | mistaken for islauds and shoals, —Sen | Francisco Examiner. ER ——— : | Animals and the Weather, The tortoise is particularly sens | tive and falls twenty-four hours be fore rain falls will look for a conven | ient shelter. However bright the weather may be, whenever tortoises are obsdrved making for shelter rain is certa.n to fall shortly afterward This prescatment, which ecists in many birds and beasts, is doubtless due to the increasing weight of the atmosphere when rein is dating BD ih pacultae Tce to gr L] movements dence of an impending change in the weather, while in America the rst Hird Ja nefarious for iu netng in: stinet warn an ape th retorm. Its method (I had forgotten all about it.) | With her | There! there! nearer the girth. Quickly, as you | | Journal, | what i= meant by “he | you last night, Miss Wolcots | Wolcott (languidly) | pleasant Sometimes they come up and stay, but | more often they have an existence | Fo | furnace work this weathor? vessel's nor » upon a brand new piece | EVENING, Par o'er the plains the setting sun Binks in a flood of guid light The creeping shadows dark and dun | Speak the diurnal journey ran, And herald the approaching night, The slanting sunbeams glance and gleam On many a broad and winding stream, / Whose slowly winding waters seem Full loth to lose a ray. The smiling groves, the frultfai troes, Deserted by the wand’ ring breeze, Fade dimly on the eye that sees The gently dying day, The mountains bare thelr storm-Deat bread In gladness to the golden West, And overy shining height Ambitious rears its joyful peak | To cateh the last faint golden streak or Of slowly waning light. | Bo dies the day, and as it dies, | Fair Luna mounts the Eastern akles, Calm, cold, majestic, as to say {| “Why mourn the slow-departing day? | Let grief for fair Aurora's flight | Be lost in rapture for the night ohn Ransome, - I HUMOR OF THE DAY, “Why do yon eall your father-in- law ‘Silence,’ Markham?’ “‘Becausd he gave consent,” — Truth. . It is impossible to have the last | word with a chemist, because he al ways has a retort, joston Courier, ¢ “Pretty is as : Is an honored saw Dut it’s one for Do not « nretty does prett H o girls 4 are v v - Kansas City Journal, “She is the girl of the period. “Well, 1 thought it was sbout tim for her to come to a full stop Bostog i Gazette, stay 7’ “Come to “Oh no dropped in Journal, i the fish, rm “Just ndianspolis $s much , i sleeping t Sarab, that vour J us : Ry Rd leat, 2 sald the for a bite, A man who unconsciously does r the milk Ww wWio nores io & Bam's H J ERs siuden w made “Nea; made of silk Detroit Free Press. { Keel FRE but the finest Hes Bre and satin Sarah ‘She's worth a millio just the right age for you “Any girl worth a million is the right ge for me." Detroit Free Press, Because she will not soo Own that she is twentv.one ~ Kansas City Journal, \ ner Wibble—"“The fellow that invented the pneumatic tire got on to a soft thing, didn’t he?” Wabbie-—8So do the fellows who use it. "~Indisoapolis Jobbers {(unheppily rw tedy ey wonder if all men who get married lead hives of endless torture? (bitterly) — “Oh, Some ale, . Chicago Enpeck noe of thew Record, \ Clara— “Us girls are getting up 8 ety.” George ‘What's ject ? | “1 don’t know I'll tell yon all about it after I'm initiated \ gecret # the ot yet, tut tell me yme industries? Billy Bright (promptiy)— “Up to our house they're mostly sawin' wood an’ carryin’ in coal. ”—Baffalo Courier. 4 “Cholly inherited a good deal of money from his parents.” ‘Yes Buf not much in the way brains.” “That's true. They left him all dol« lars and no sense.” — Washington Star, Caller — “Ts Miss Sweete st home?’ Bervant-—*“No, Sir, Caller— Please tell ber I called. Don't forget, will you?’ Servant — “No, ; I'll go ~-Tid-Bita, Tis now the prudent mother Lge her children wildly rove Lost they hear their father talking When he's putting up the stove LY Atiants Jcurnal, * dreamed about Miss -*‘Did yon really? Well, I'm glad to bear that vou have dreams. "Somerville Jour Teacher. "Caz i Of sar Mr. Westeriy--*‘1 nal. “Mow Honee-Owner- does your Tenant «The exercise of raking it keeps me warm enough, bat the other members of the family complain.” New York Weekly. Professor ‘And my boy, what ie your ambition mm Jife—the Inw, the ministry, politics, science" Johany: “Ef I ean't be captain § wauter be halfback | "Cleveland Plain Dealer. Friend “1 don"t inorme, now, see how, on your you manage to winter in Florida and summer in Meine.” Sharp p— "Yon forget that by thet [pine I dodge both coal and ice bills,” New York Weekly. Yeast— “I wouldn't believe a man who goes about proclaiming every thing from the housc<top.” Crimson beak-~ "Why, I should think you would consider that high suthority.” «Yonkers Siatesman, “What on earth did vour uncle mean by macrying that old, duedaap thing?" “Well, you sec, he's been a collector of curios and bric-a-brae so Jong that the habit was tou strong ta resist," Atlanta Coastitution. “Hullo, Chimmy. Isdey -y more Wl books in de ‘You ory P. 1 dunne; but 3 hear tell Fliot what by dey all “Daniel Ronnder.* Shouldn't wonder il das might be preity good.” —Brosklre Eagle. «= "Would you weally | a person, me for ine stance, to aw-think twice before ay onde Jie Binntiotyo.~ . s po; Mr. Boftleig on don't Jdeem me so ernel as to vast to strike you damb, I bope, "Buffel Courier,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers