FARM, GARDES AND HOUSEHOLD, Domestic Herfpes. Molasses Cake. One cupful of mo lasses, oue-half cupful lard, two-tbirda cupful of sour milk, oue teaspoonful Fnleratus, one eggtbree teacupfuls of flour,' one toaspoonfnl of essence of lemon ; bake in a pretty quick oven. Cold Sauce. Squeeze the juice of two oranges, add half a cupful of su gar (more or less, to taste), add a pint of cream or rich milk. This is nice with cottnge pudding, blano mange, corn Btarch, or anything requiring cold sauce. Batter Tuddino. Make a baiter with three or four epgs, two heaping tablo spooufuls of p'atu flout', aud a quart of milk. Add a pinch of Bait, and bo sure to sift the flour. When well beaten pour into a well greased dish or mold, and bake iu a moderate oven. Turn it out ou a dish, pift white sugar over it, and serve with drawn butter. Potato Salad. Boil the potatoes with the Bkin ou. Let them get thor oughly cold aud firm. 1'eel and slice. Make a dressing of the yolks of two hard boiled eggs, rubbed smooth with plenty of olive oil, a little dry mustard, onions, and parsley choppd fine, vinegar, salt aud pepper, aud the white of an un cooked egg beaten to a froth. Mix thor oughly. Fkench Tomato Sauce. For meats, peel and cook a few moments three large tomatoes, then pass through a coarse sieve and add one pint of the liquor from the boiled meat, aud one spoonful of flour; salt and pepper to the taste; a little curry or Worcester shire sauce; simmer for fifteen minuteB; a little butter may be added to increa&e the richness. Graham Bread. Take at night one teaspoouful of soft hop yeast to one and a hali teacupfuls of warm new milk, or lukewarm water; stir in graham flour to make a stiff batter; set in a warm place; in the morning it will be light; stir down with a stiff spoon; add more flour, if not pretty thick, and let rise agaiu; when light, stir and turn into a baking pan, and when light again, bake. This makes a lonf in a three-pint basin. Yorkshire Pudding with Boast Meat. One pound of flour, teaspoon ful salt, six eggs, and water sufficient to make a smooth batter. When your meat id doue pour off the fat and stand it aside while you make your gravy and dish your meat. Keep it hot by placing it over a saucepan of boiling water, then pour the fat back into your dipping pan, put it into the oven to get hot, then pour the batter in aud bake about twenty minutes or half an hour in a good quick oven. The Secret or Good rjuttcr. The Practical Farmer says it is ad mitted by butter makers of extensive experience that impurities and noxious odors in the atmosphere where cream is rising will injure the flavor of the but ter. X. A. Willard wiites on this sub ject that " wuen milkers are allowed to come direct from the stable to the milk room, it is impossible to keep the latter place sweet for the time being." There are hundreds of butter makers, we ure aware, on whom the importance of thissincle point cannot be too strong ly urged, since they consider many little thiuga of this kind iu reftard to dairy management too insignificant to merit attention. But in butter making the observance of little things is often the erent secret or success. There is no doubt that immense quan tities of poor butter are made from the milk set in improper places. The kitch en pantry; the living-room, the cellar used to store vegetables and other farai ily supplies, will impart peculiar taints to the milk and cream, in such a degree us to be destructive to flavor, even though the butter in other respects be skillfully bandied. Dairy rooms so sit uated as to catch the odor of decompos ing filth, cannot be used for making good and sweet butter. There should be a freedom from filth aud impurities of every description about the milk house, and the milk Bhould be delivered by the milkers in an ante-room, or some point outside the milk-room, and from thence conveyed to the place where it is to be set for cream. In this way the fumes and the litter from the stable may be kept from the milk-room. The causes of poor butter are various, the most important of which are lack of cleanliness, aud the want of proper dai ry utensils, the need of a good dairy room or place for setting the milk, neg lect in manipulating the cream at the right time, unskillful working, packing and storing the butter, and finally, lack cf knowledge in a part or whole of the process required for making a prime article. C'a-Operatlve FarmiDK. Dr. J. G. Fish, Marathon, Oonrtland county, N. Y., seeing an article in the papers on co-operative farming, was tempted to give his opinions on this sub ject to the American farmers' club. He believes that co-operative farming may be made successful as well as co-opera' tive manufacturing, for he asks: " If a combination of capital has been found economical in manufacturing, why not in farming as well ? If a systematized working of a large number of hands has proved a true eoonomy of labor in large manufacturing establishments, why should not such a combination and system of labor on the farm and in the garden, the nursery, the orchard and the vineyard provo equally beneficial f Ho has traveled over the sites of no less than eight Fourier associations and con versed with those who once were mem bers of them. All agieed, without an exception, that for profit on labor or money making, the systems were all that could be desired. Their several failures were not financial ones, but attributable directly to other causes, the common treasury, the interference with the fami ly relations and the unequal burdens borne by the different members respect ively. These three things must ever stand as obstacles to the success of all suoh organizations unless based as the Shaker community or the Oneida com munists on some social or religious idea to which all others must bend at least, if not submit to actual sacrifice. , How Indians are Armed. A letter from ex-Surgeon Hoffman, of the Seventh cavalry, tells the following story i In the Herald I noticed an edi toriid mentioning a subject of which I had intended writing you before. I have reference to the "source whence thd Sioux obtained their arms and ammuni tion." The officer1 stationed along the upper Missouri knew of the illegal trad ing carried on at Fort Peck, but were powerless, and had no authority to inter fere. Since 1873 some parties had stationed themselves at the above named fort for the purpose of obtaining the monopoly in bartering with the Sioux, THE 1SDIAK QUESTION. Wendell Phillip Wrlti-s rrnl Hhermn..lw Treated the Indiana., I,rtir to ttie While lon lme Wendell Phillip wtitoi to On. Sher man as follows I Bin An American citizen, entitled and bound to iuqnire whether the olucers of the repubiio are mn or something below humanity, I respectfully claim tho right to nsk yon, are the journals correct when they re present yon as advising the extermina tion nf the Indians ? This charge has and the only inducement to bring iheir been mado several timos during the last rustouiPis forward was the offer of arms Winchester rifles. The Indians, be ing only too anxious to secure these, ex eliHUged all the buffalo robes and pelts collected dnring their hunting excur sions, took them to Fort Peck, and re ceived their arms, though paying dearly for them. The price usually paid for a rifle was 300 robes, an equivalent of $2,400; thus the firm sent down the river 12,000 buffalo robes, besides other skins and pelts, as the result of one season's traffic). Now, thesa very Indians were registered at Grand River agency, now nt Standing Rock, where they should have taken their goods, but being limited to certain varieties of trinkets, etc., they preferred going north. Colonel J. O. O'Oonner, who was agent during 1S72 and 1873, was ordered to prohibit the sale of ammuui tion upon his reservation, limiting the trader, however, to tho sale , of two pounds of lead and powder each per week to such Indians only who had showed themselves friendly, ims was intended to lessen tho number of marauding expeditions, which it did for a short time, but finally some of the more dariug of the semi-hostile and hostile Sioux came to the agent's quar ters and told us "there was no use in Uncle Sam keeping up that agency that if the troops and other parties were removed they could live upon the game which our presence kept away from the river, aud that they could get all the arms aud ammuuitiou they wanted, ai they did not care for our handful of the Great Fathers's powder and lead." At the closing of this harangue Gall (who made the address, and who is one of bitting Hull s chief cutthroats) ad vauced, threw back his' blanket and showed two scars, saying : "This makes me angry at the white men." His body had been pierced by two bayonets in the fight with General Sully, passing clean through Uo shoulder blades, show ing his physical endurance, as ho crawled into his own camp the night he was wounded, a distance of about four miles. These troubles were expected five years ago, and we had only to wait until all tho warriors were ambly sup plied. That timo has como, as we all know. Grand River was to supply 13, 600 redskin.", 5.000 of whioh availed themselves of the annii ies )and weekly rations ; the remaining 8,500 kept away and were considered hostile. it supposed that this number, in all, could muster from 4,000 to 5,000 men aud grown boys. The result of the illegal agency on the upper Missouri was that. instead of having all the Indians nnder the immediate control at Urand Kiver, they went north with their goods, trad ing off at the lower agency but 120 robes to over 12,000 at Si ort reck. A Coal Burner's Vengeance. A Truckee (Cal.) correspondent of the Sacramento Record- Union tells this story : A German took a contract for putting up aud burning a certain num ber of coal pits. Ho erected a cabin and began work. Some Russian wood choppers working near by watched his proceedings somewhat enviously, and finally jumped tho cabin and coal pit and frightened oil the old German. Tho latter was without coin or friends and was forced to abandon the premises. The bitterest thought in the loutun a mind was that the wrong should be in meted by Kuspians. He was clearly out numbered and overpowered, but as his job was gone he had abundant time for planning revouge. The lvussians con tinued burning tho coal pit, buck after stick of number one pitch piiie was cut and carelully laid in the pit. One morning at daybreak they discovered 4ke old German sneaking away from the coal pit, but alter chasing him for a couple of hundred yards they thought no more of the aflair. In tluotime the pit was completed, covered with dirt and ignited. Very jubilantly the linssians watched the first smoke wreaths curl upward. They had fairly captured Dutchman's coal pit. Suddenly, as they were dancing exultingly around and over the smoldering mound, it rose up bodily into tho air with a violent ex plosion. Russians and dirt and timbers, dust and smoke and execrations promis cuously filled tho air. A quantity of powder had been stowed away in the center of the pit, and the fire had reached it. The Russians were more soared than hurt, and picked themselves np in time to soo and hear the frantic gesticulations and shouts of a trium phant old German who suddenly ap peared and as suddenly disappeared on the hill above them. The coal pit flamed up and bnrned to ashes, and the Russians went back to their wood chop ping, crestfallen and outwitted. An Avenger for Custer. United States Representative Thos. L. Jones, of Kentucky, has received the following letter, dated Louisville: " Dear Sir: As this is the centennial year of American independence, I desire to let the world see that we who were once dbldiers of the lost cause are not deficient in patriotism. Will you be so kind as to intimate to the President that I offer him the services of a full regi ment, composed exclusively of ex-Oon-federates, to avenge Ouster's death. I have cro-ised swords frequently with his command in the past. Yon know me and know my ancestry, and this is the reason I apply to you for this favor. "Believe me, very truly yours to command, "(Signed) Wb. H. Ronan." Spent for Rum. The Liverpool Mercury states that a borough magistrate has made a rough calculation of the amount of money spent upon drink in Liverpool per week and per year. He points out that there are 1,5200 publio houses where drink only is sold and 609 where food is sold in ad dition to drink. This latter number does not include hotels or eating houses. Of these 509 houses he hjkls that at least a third namely, 170 are drinking houses pure and simple. He adds this number to the 1,240 which vend nothing but drink, making the total number of drinking houses 1,410. He confines his calculations to these, and makes the fol lowing estimate of their weekly receipts Ten at 200, 2,000; twenty at 150, 3,000; thirty at 100, 3,000; fifty at 75, 3,750; one hundred at 60, 6,000; two hundred at 50, 10,000; three hundred at 40, 12,000; three hundred at 30. 9,000; two hundred at 20, 4,000; one hnndred at 10, 1,000; one hundred at 7, $700 making a grand total per week of 54,450. This weekly total, multiplied by the number of weeks in the year, gives an annual expenditure of 2,831,400, which he considers under rather than over the mark. A Liquor Cure. The following is the well known recipe used for curing intoxicated persons Sulphate of iron, five grains; magnesia. ten grains; peppermint water, eleven drachms; spirit of nutmeg, one drachm, To be taken twice a day. This prepara tion acts as a tonio and stimulant, and so partially supplies the place of accus tomed liquor, and prevents the absolute physical and moral prostration whioh follows a sudden breaking off from the use of stimulating drinks. throe yoars. If it be false, I beg you, for the honor of the nation and of tho service, to deny it. ' While yon neglect to do so the press uses your supposed example to commend that infamous course and to create a publio opinion whioh shall approvo aud demand it. It the charge be trne 1 os.imot, but re member that you are bolter acquainted than most Amerioaus with the real rela tions of our government to the Indians. Yen were, in 1807, the head of an Indian commission, and its report, siguod by yourself and printed by tho government, id one of the most ten illc pictures ever drawn of the wrongs tho Indian has suf fered from this nation. This investiga tion and your general experienoo showed you how cruel and unjust has beeu our treatment of the Indian for tho last hundred years. Yon know that wo have enrronnded him with every demoraliz ing influence, steeped him iu intem perance, incited Iiim to licentiousness by tho example of tuoso set over him, and tempted him to evil y vice. You have yonrself spread on tho publio re cords tho evidence that tho government has robbed him of his land, cheated him of his duos and uniformly broken faith with him. If any of the tribes Bre to-day liars, thieves and butchers, they may rightfully claim to have onlyi copied, at humble distance, tho example we have set them. Yon are not iguoraut that the Indian has been outraged and plundered by the frontiersmen without Btiut or redress, and butchered by our soldiers, under tiie American flag, with brutal and do testable cruelty the description of which in plain terms tho press would not admit to its columns. You know no one better that the worst brutality which prurient malice ever " falsely charged the Indians with is but weak imitation of what the whita mau has often inflicted on Indian men, women aud children. You know that on the plains we have violated every rule of civilized war, massacring women and children with worso than savago bi na tality. Your career has not shown you an instance where the Indian has luted his hand against ns until provoked to it by misconduct on our part, compared with which any misconduct of his is but dust in tho balance. Your experience will fully indorse what President Harrison, when governor of Indiaua, said to his Legislature in 1807, " that the utmost ofloiti to muuee the Indians to take up arms would be unavailing if one only of tho many persons who have committed murder upon their people could be brought to punishment. lou will not. in the slightest degree doubt or deny the grave charge which Ala or ueneral Harney, after fifty years service on the plains, made to a Con gressional committee, " that he had never known an Indian tribe break its word to our government, and he had never k nown the government to keep its faith with an Indian tribe. lou are too much of a soldier not to confess that had you been placed in tho In dian's circumstances you would havo been ashamed not to have acted as he has done. You would acoopt, as every honest man loes, the statement of Major General Pope, in 1875, that the army officer 'cannot prevent wrongs which drive the Indian to war. On the contrary, at the demand of every agent whose unfair dealing with the Indians has brought on a difficulty, he is obliged to pursue and force back to the same deplorable state and place Indians whom lie knows to have been wronged, and who have only done substantially what he would have done himself under like provocation." You must be keenly sensible what a re proacu it is to religion and culture that our multiplying millions, with all the re sources of civilization and Christianity iu their hands, have lived for two hun dred years close to this small and capa ble race and been able to give it only their vioes that all of good the Indiau has is his own; most of his vices ho can rightfully charge to the white man .Except the African no race will lift up at the judgment seat such accusing bands against this nation as the Indiau will. We have subjected him to agents who have systematically cheated him. We have made causeless war on him, merely as a pretext to steal his lands. Trampling under foot the rules of modern warfare we have made war on his women and children. We have cheated him out of one hunting ground by compelling him to accept another, aud robbed him of this last by driving him to frenzy, and then punishing re sistauce by confiscation. Meanwhile neither pulpit nor press nor political party would listen to his complaint, Neither in Congress nor in any city of- the Union could his advocate obtain a hearing. Statesmanship, good sense and justice, even from the Chief Magis trate, were unavailing when they plead ed for such long-time victims of popular hate and pillage as our Indian tribes. Can it be possible, then, that with such knowledge aud such experience yon, sir, the head of the army, and bound to show at least ontward respect to civilization, h ive no counsel to give except extermination the extermination of these plundered victims of a greedy, unscrupulous and cruel people I . Can you advise a professedly Christian peo ple, steeped in guilt, not to reiorm, but to consummate its wickedness by such hideous barbarism as only the most in human tyrauts have ever attempted ? The worst possible of inndals, do you affirm that a wise and powerful nation is safe only when it sinks below the level of savage life to clutch a coward's peace by sweeping every man, woman and child of this insignificant raee in blood from our path f Wise men laugh at such timid folly; brave men despise it. teacher and justice always a sufficient shield. If, indeed, this is the counsel you give from your high place, then, for the sake of that Christianity which we pro fess and that civilization we claim, I DEATH IX A LIMEKILN. Terrible Fata of Two I hlldren and I , Woman In rennsMronl. John E. Cameron lives on a farm one mile from Pottsville. Pa. He has a limekiln a quarter of a mile from his house, near tho main road . He started a fire in-it and wont away to his work in a hayfleld. ' Two of his children, a boy nine years old and a girl aged five, were playing about the kiln. Over the mouth of the kiln is a windlass bv which a largo bucket is lowered to tho bottom. Tb oldest of the two children thought it would bonioo to ride his little sister np and down in the bucket. She clam bered in, and ho let her down into tlin pit. Tho lire had by that timo got under good headway, and the stone was be coming boated and emitting poisonous gas. The little girl screamed to come np, aud her brother tried to pull up the bucket, but could not start it. After several attempts ho started on a run for home, where ho told his mother and grandmother, who wore alono in the house, tho situation as above. The two women ran to the kiln. Mrs. Cameron saw her child lying on tho bottom. She had fallen out of the bucket, being over powered by the gas. Thinking that tho child might be restored if taken out at onco, Mrs. Cameron drew the bucket np. Hlio placed her little boyiu it, and telling him to place tho body of bis little sister in it as quickly as possible, and get back into it himself, sho lowered him iutu tho noxious pit. Tho litllo fellow succeeded ill placing tho body in the bucket, and, clinging to the sido of it himself, was drawn a few feet upward, when ho sucenmbed to the influence of the gas and fell back unconscious to the bottom. Mrs. Cameron drew tho body of her little eirl to the top aud hastily removed it from the bucket and placed it on tho ground. She then cave the crank of the windlass toher mother-in-law, a lady nearly seventy yoars old, aud told hor to lower her quickly into the pit, to the rescue of her othor child. Sho then got into the bucket, ner weight was more than old Mrs. uameron conid con trol, and the crank slipped from her hand.-), and whirling round, struck her on the head and knocked hor senseless to tho ground. Hor daughter-in-law was hurled violently to tho bottom of the kilu, and no doubt rendered uncon scious before the eas affected her. The Pottsville stage came along about the timo Mrs. .Cameron was precipitated into the kiln. John Ivane, the driver, seeing tho bleeding body of the old lady, and the apparently lifeless body of tho little eirl, stopped the stage and jumped out. He discovered the bodies of tho other two iu the kiln. Calling a gentlemau in the stage to his aid, ho went down into the kiln by means of tho windlass rope, and placed the body of Mrs. Cameron in the bucket. It was drawu up, and the bucket lowered. Kane succeeded iu getting into tho bucket with the boy's body, but became unconscious soon afterward, and was taken from the bucket iu that state. It was some time before he was restored Old Mrs. Cameron was brought to consciousness in a short time, her wounds not being serious. Her daughter-in-law and the two children were dead. As soon as Kane recovered suffi ciently, the three bodies were placed in the stago and taken home, and Air, Cameron summonod from his work. Mrs. Cameron was thirty-five years old, This makes ten deaths t hat have occurred under similar circumstances at this kiln dnring the past seven years. WHITE MARBLE STEPS. Order of the American Union. The Order of the American Union has adopted the following platform : 1. we accept the isitue as the oasis oi all moral, religious, governmental and edncational undertakings. 2. We yield an unhesitating support to tho Constitution and government of the United Statos and of the several States. 3. We urge that the present system of one general unsectariau free school or ganization shall be maintained inviolate. 4. we claim that no part oi tue puono funds shall ever bo used for the support and maintenance of any sectarian school or institution whatever. 5. We are opposed to any interference in political affairs by any man or body of men acting in behalf or by direction oi any ecclesiastical body or power, yet we make no war on any mau s religious creed. florlnl Vnnltr that Cost Philadelphia 3,050,000 Kry Year, . This city, says a Philadelphia corre spondent of the Sun, has an industry peculiar to itself, and it is therefore worthy of honorable mention, iivery house has marblo doorsteps, and houses of. any pretension nave marble trim mings or foundations whioh rise above tho sidewalk froi.t two to fonr or five feet. The industry referred to is do votod to keeping this marble work clean. A stranger wonli think it a small matter, aud th.it a few whisks of a brush or broom would bo sufficient; but this is so far from boing the case that a great deal of hard work is required, and it must be dona in a scion tide manner. The reason for this lies in tho fact that there is more or less iron, or perhaps other minerals, in tho marble, which, con tinually coming to tho surface, must be taken out by l ard rubbing and scrub bing, aud likely enough with tears. Usually the work commences early iu the morning, sometimes at daylight. A bnokot and scrubbing brush are re quired, al.no soap, cloth, and soruo rot ten stone, and tho laborer gets down on her hands and knees us a hrst step if such a movement is a ttrp then begins to rub ou. one eidw, and painfully goes over tho surface, much as a carpenter would do if it were a pkco of black wal nut to bo planed and smoothed aud sandpapered. Nor will ordinary scrub bing at all answer; for the discolored spots are to bo watched and rubbed un til they wholly disappear; and it the spots will not "out," tliey must bo rub bed till they shall. Now, when it is considered that there are from two to four, aud oven a dozen steps, aud, bo sides, a lino of marble from fifteen to twenty-fivo feet long, it will bo seen that there is solid, honest work to bo doue. Sometimes a good half hour is required for two steps alone. What is singular about this matter is, that such is the social arrangement con cerning it, that it is impossible to neglect tho work, for if it is neglected, the next door neighbor, all the peoplo in the street, all tho passers by will notice the remissness, and a glance cf contempt will be cast at the front door, at the win dows, and tho whole house, aud tho so cial standing of the in mat. s will bo in danger, and perhaps credit itself will bo in joopardy. It is presumed that tho servant girl does this work, and it is certainly true that the operative looks like a servant girl. But the truth is the great majority of families own their own houses, and they do not keep servants, so it is the woman of the house who is out on her hands and knees, and at an hour when her husband and children are either in bed or helping in some way to get the breakfast, or, when there is only one servant she will be required at the range, or, if the servant has not done the scrubbing well, leaving yellow spots, and there have been contemptu ous glances, tho lady of the mansion goes out, but nobody is the wiser, for, dressed in an old gowu, and in wornout shoes, sho knuckles down to the great social duty, feeling assured that when, later in the day, she steps down those snowy stairs dressed in silk and all other things in the latest style, and perhaps admired or envied by every eye, she will not be shocked by seeing a single foul spot. And so day by day, month by month, and year by year, this Phila delphia industry goes on. Now, taking out factories aud strictly business houses, there are in this city not less than 100,000 houses whose mar ble steps and trimmings must be tubbed down every day. The value of the work performed and of tho material used will average fully ten cents for each house though in many coses tht work is richly worth twenty-five cents therefore the daily investment is $10,000, equal to 83,050,000 a year; certainly an enor mous sum, considering that it con tributes to neither food, clothing, re ligion nor politics. HALF A DGLUS Will Far few U ' CHICAGO HALF A DOLUS - Will !, teeth CHICACO LEDGER LEDGER For the Next Half Year. Tha I.IMDI ta a la Spaa. Btlanhrmn, Indepaarfmt Newspaper, which mo tntllljrni fnmllr shooM ba wltb. Cot. Thebt81ortParTirprfntd. Trrlt. Address, THIS LKIIUKR, Chicago, Til. For tho Next Half Year. The I .roan lanra "twa-a, M-enlnmn, MrynAm men no tnrnmifmiT innuiy inw. im ITT Jteffil-M1 ant 'Die I Add rasa. , Minrv Pun... n.iiif.rl I'll tear, m. A crowd of " horsemen " and others daily t'-rong the stores in oonnlry and town rnr frnsrtruin ft ;am'ry ixmuuitm rowaer. They nuddrHtaud that horses cannot be kept in good condition without them, and with them can be on a mnch leea quantity of grain. Tho relaxing power of Johnson't Ano dyne Liniment la truly wonderful. Caxee are alroady numerous where bent and widened limbs have been limbered and straightened by it. When used for this pnrpoee, the part shonld be washed and robbed thoroughly. Ap ply the liniment cold, and rub It in with the Laud. . Everett House, North lrt Unlnn Sqmin. Now York Oltr nnolmi nod M"M Oilrnl location la the ClW. Kopfcon ifce FiiriMwnn Hnn. rt KRRNKH a WEAVER. Clarendon Hotel. Fourth Arena, corner Bant 1 8th Street, B 'Tor Ollv. JnM. fltnlt. O. H. KKHWKH. A BOOK for the MILLION. Mtu'CAL ADVICE .WhOTPass Catarrh. KmiMirv. Uniuui Habit. Ac. SENT FHEfi on r:celp4 otiUeinp AiFIttm, I'r.ttu.ta liirDcntarr WO rr n.. rT. icmiw, ma RcHfCftCE1! Hka Wilt Tojna In ths atmosphere etpnrlenoftd hen flnrlnn the nmmer nmntbs, the letW rfry produced by fhe heat Ukei away the deetre for trhnleftoD.e food, and freqeent peraplratlona reduce Imdlly energy, particularly tboee nffertnf from he elffota of debilitation disease. In order to keep a natural healthful activity of the tyitem, we most resort to artificial meant. For this purpose Schenok's Bern Weed Tonlo la very effectual. A few doses will create an appetite and Rive fresh vigor to tbe enervated body. For dyspepsia. It is Invaluable. Many eminent phyel c'aos have doubted whether dyspepsia can be perma ifontly oared by the drum which are irmerally employed frtr that purpoe. The 8ea Weed Tonlo In Its nature la totally different frum saoh dm. It contains no corro sive minerals or acids; In faot, it aeelsta the regular operations of nnture, and supplies her deficiencies. The tonlo In Its natnre so mnch resembles the gastric jnloe that It Is ft 1 most Identical with that fluid. The gastric .ulon Is the natural solvent which, In a healthy condition of the body, causes the food to be digested; and when this jo Ice Is not uiareawd In sufficient quantities. Indi rection, with all tt distressing symptoms, follows. The Hea Weed Tonlo performs the dutv of the guatrlo Juice when the latter Is deHolent, Uobenck's 8ea Weed Tonlo sold br all DrugglBta. Y tint The Markets. IK 10BK. eJ ot' 1 -fi i!s,e to Extn Bollock, 'EX H .""OjI.h-m. t--Good l(jitii 07 V 07 MiioiOov 4) U0 '?8J tX Uog I.'-vo , t lr'Hrd 18 C9 the--,- V Of- Lanoa 06k 19 llntton MWs l'V I'lonf Jxtra wrtii,rn 6 IS 6 78 BuWEtrt 6 IB It BO .Vhtet l'.ofi V. Tr.V-.-a 78 1 ( So. 1 LH-iujc 1 fii 1 04 V MM 7.) H 78 rfrlry btt fc 19 -rly Molt v 1 8 us Wixed Wratern , S3 J 88 Joru &fl4 WMrtorn, 04 A Bt :y, per owl 60 m " Utraw, pwc-Jt.... 0 i110 Hop 7 I0.3i7 jldd 04 o W Pork Just. 80 1 A 20 Iff f.rl 11 11H V'jOi Mc!;.-rc-l Ho. 1, ui.. IB .I lfl oO o. 2, nfw r. :s ;a as PryOoil, r!r cwt tl t ID KurrtiV, ScMtd, c-t "etroU'ra lfwW 9VSK Vor' W.ir-rs't- ?' fco..... T:a " .'r-it.-M'ka " Batter "i-;o V-t'to I slry. ............ 'VeGTrrn Yellow...... Wetern OttV.i rr U'ae fltst. Factor ' tikuan.ea. ........... Ti-.tm- ;gi-,-iu;? BTryyALO, tHojr Wheat Nn. 1 Hprtug 1 86 Uoni ..mtd Oats , . Hye..., ... ...... Barley Surprising a Lieutenant. We wore encamped, sayu a correspon dent, at Crazy Woman, a thundering menu plauo and no Indians had beeu disturbing us for a night or two. The thing was growing stale and we were imputient for some kind of exciten ent, as we were slowly lrcezing to aeatn. "Let's go up to Burko's tent, some oue suggested, and there we all went. The lieutenant was engaged in making out a map bv the light of a candle. ' Hallo, Uurke, said one, "aint you afraid that the Indians will ventilate your tent if you keep that light buru- "Oh, no," liurke said. "The In dians that have been firing into us are a small flying party. You may rely upon it that we won't hear anything from them this tide of the Tongue river. I know their habits. The distance is too great and the weather too eold. Mr. Indian don t care about being frozen. Now. I'll show ou the map where they are going to at " Whizz I pop I bangl zippl came a volley from the bluffa above our camp. A bullet struck tue candle and put it out. Another made a large sized hole in the map. The group scattered quick er than a line of skirmishers, aud Burke was left alone to meditate on the in stability of Indian affairs. lie don't like to have that story told on him. A Pawnee on Picket. We were ordered, says a correspond ent, to make a detail for picket duty, and as the Pawnees were doing nothing in particular, we thought we'd give them a turn. My sergeant took half a dozen of them with the guard, and, reaching the picket post, explained that they would be two hours on aud four hours off duty. Je said to the Pawnee chief "Look at this watch, it is now six o clock. When the short hand goes around twice you will call me and be re lieved. Do you understand ?" "Hey hey good!" said tho Indian and stalked awav. ' The sergeant, who was very tinjd. went to blet.-p aud was not disturbed un til it was almost day. Then he was aroused bv a baud being laid upon his shoulder. He opened his eyes aud saw the Pawnee standing over him, watch iu hand. "Well, chief, what do you want I" asked the sergeant. " Pawnoe heap cold, much heap stiff," replied the warrior. "Ugh? That thing (indicating the watch) must lie. Long ringer (the minute hand) him all right. Short ringer (the hour hand) he heap tired 1" The sergeant laughed aud tried to en lighten the Indian as to his mistake. "Ughl" was all the disgusted chief would say, but he would have no more to do with the picket. Beef Oattlo Extra . mn.uiuHu. r,0 23 H: nn i, 17 14 .4 21 it . a 10 37 j V, i ,o aa la l 07 ( 10 t'8 0l 0) ' Off It 4 16X 8 ae q) m 1 86 (1 86 61 V (1 34 ( !' 78 ( 78 I 04 ( 07 04V(4 0X Hogs PrwMUd rcV( 10 Flour PennfyWuiiia Extra B HH ( 8 Oil Wheat Bed Western 7o BO Hye 7.' 71 Corn Vellov. , . (9 i 61 Mixed " m tl Oats Mixort 29 81 oelmleoro Omds 18,7 Kennnd, 17 WATKBTOWN. K&ftH. Beef Cattle foor to Cbolce " c 7 el Sheep 1 '0 te LtmlK O UU 1U MV OUR i Ltkmei In oil anlnrfi. to ihow oar work. palnlf1 on oanvafl, Btx7U from a photograph "r roe. freo with the Bom Journal. M2.mi a rear. Hvnple of oor work and paper, terra, to agents, etc, IO u. l. tju i aitii,iim village, ftne oonnty, ra. MY, 1. ainaerlnif. he l,'lruuiuf, sad Kiifrllth Branch. For (jlronlars. apnlyto UuL. THKO. HV ATT. Pres., r. M. A. Pf?NNVI.VAIA MILITARY AIUOKM 4 l.f1r. I'cnn.a Reopens feptmheT 1 ThonmKb IintrnoMnn In Mt'! ann Mlutar K.n1ne-I the l!lfuuioi, sad Kiifrllth Branch us. For (jlraaL AGENTS WANTED FOR THE GREAT UNTEHNIAL HISTORY tt ell fmfer than am other hook erer nnhllnhed. One Agent toM Hi copfea In one day. He"d for onr eitra tnrma to Aaenta. fUTIONal. I'tlBLISHLNO (JOMPAN1, Phl'ad-lphla, Pa. 1JAII1,Y BITTKItH. Indiof.btion Is relieved 1 with one dose. Dybpf.pbia. Constipation, Hkati Aona. Jaundice and BiLioi'BEsa currd In a short time. Nervous Irritability, hhkuvatirm, kipnkv and l.rvFn (Tompi-aint cnrt-d In a few d.ys. Onres PlI.FB, KRTBIPXI.A, NrROFI'I.A.UfXTEHB, Hoii.B, and all Skin Dibkabks bv purltytuir the liloo-1. They v.illDt Intotloate. hut win cure an.innnai inirnt lor .iron drink. Try them! M. S. JA.MKK, M. 1., Prom-lit, r. Brook'yn, N. Y. For Sale liy 1 TuggiM. f rlon n I ,llii, A Great Offer! n.irlnar iMh nioni It w ill ilUnitMe of 10 nrw nwt HPrond -litmil PhN'M ntiii TKH', lowrr urii-i thim rrr b..re lox-t nnd WliipiM iL i erin. jw n-n nn IO in on ih It until paid. New j Octiive H f op Oram nut. irih hnU rUmpi. aud f nl wnr. riminl t 1 rinrt r"l ?M mom lily until inil. lltiiruu il i 'titnlos'iirw imillfd. STOMGTON LIE Between New York, Boston, and all New England Points. The rtnlv rnllnhle T.ne i-tinnlm. A rrvdlns- the dancers and Sea Meknwa nf Point J -.ditLi Not a trip mlft'ed In sren years, fin est fl-et of Marnors on Lons; Island nonna. ijutve iew x iv h irnin nrr .-. .inn Itivrr Foot of .liiv t' , luilv (extiept Sun days), it I P. il. nrr vIiist ti ftoion nt II nVlork ticxi tiu.riilntf. i"a.lab y n timn. Iive liiitoo trora ibe isoMoti a rrnviiimce u n. uepn. Park Square anrt Odium us Avenut-.at S , .M. ar. Ic ing on iKinrd the Kteninttrs In tinie for nipper and In New York at ni(m mine;, ahead f all other Hns. Tl'-kete to all poln's via thi Iine for nale at ail principal Ticket OffloA-i. HfLKK&xm checked through. Ask lor Tickets la Stoninitton f.lue. Ij. vy. h uen. jrans. aru V. IS. I5ABCOCK, rrefl't. poPHAirs onpninin Slit In til Wcrli. WalpMkai.Hi ASTHMA011,11'1 T. 1-OlMIAM a CO., IDl.UhBt. Pbl..Pa. d per cent, paid to any one. 8arLpl9 for I Oo.,itb--paid. Jes.e Hrockay, Naaaan, Renna. Oo.,W.Y. ILL. OATALOGITF: OK ARTIOI.E8 FOR rrOll to Kri-i.. BOSTON KUV K.I.TY UU., Mass, "fa Ppon tnblis Pleaaant work ; hundred now employe 1 , hundreds more wanted. M. W. LovELL, Krlo, f':i. GTKltV desirable NRW ART10LK.8 for Agents. Mfr'd hy J. O. OAPEWKLI. & Oo., Cheshire, Conn. df CT nrint tnome. Arenta P-1.S free. A 'dreaa TKUK a OO., Anansta. Maine. $K COi adayat borne. Hamplee worth 1 aent U LO 3 A J t r. hTlXSON A OO., Portland, M- ,)r Kxlra Klna Mlied Uards, with Name fc-a post-paid. I,. jUMia a uu.. .Ll iiniuD. I'' ay ire. Nassau. N. Y. TK M Agent Wanted tn this county eeit plan ever offered Kxolusive trrt:ory glv-n Apply at once to the GrnatAu.ert. au Hepubllo Tea Oo., H I Hard y Sr.. N Y. $3 rimples on the laoe, rough skin. chapped bauds, aaltrhoum aud all cutaneous affections cured, the akin made soft aud mooth, by tba use of Jumipeu Tab Soap. That made bv Caawell. Hazard it Co., New York, i the only kind that can be relied on, astheie are man; imitations, made from oommou tar, which are worthier. cotiv, Souiethliig Hot. x Writing from Calcutta. India, in 1837, Macaulay said : " Wo are annually baked four months, boiled four, and al lowed four more to get cool if we oan. At this moment the sun is. blazing like a furnaoe. The earth, soaked with ooeans of rain, is steaming like a vet blanket. Vegetation is rotting all around us. in sects and undertakers are the only living They know that fair play is the best creatures that seem to enjoy the climate, i - s .i.. n .... .4 I oil,. . i..- :n it!., n4 l fl'-m 1,. wrote : One execrable effect the cli mate produces : It destroys all the works of man with scarcely an exoep tiou. Steel rusts, razors loose their edee. thread decays, clothes fall to wish it understood that one, at least, of pieces, books molder away and drop out your fellow citizens believes that you of thoir bindings, plaster era ok.', timber misrepresent tne army, wnose best offl- rots, matting is in shreds, iue sun anu cers have olten protested against our the steam of this vast alluvial tract, and heinous iu just ice to these wards of the the infinite army of white ants, make cation, sum mat. juu uingraua mo jjru- buoii navoo witu vuuuujgo wan fission of Du Guesclin, of Uayard and house requires oomplete repairing every Sir Philip Sidney, disgrace tne post three years, whioh Washinortori once filled aud the ; - " uniform that Thomas, Greene and Ham-! An old farmer found that wuen liia ilton have worn. Your fellow citizen, - boys were big enough to help him they Wenpell i'Hrujps. were too big to worit. Thb Pest op the Belles. Strange facts transpire after a man dies. Ihe Earl of Albemarle says tnat tue uuuun belies, when invited to a pionio, stipu lated as a provision of their acceptance that the mischievous boy, Arthur Wel- leelev. should not be there. i.nis Doy, tlie terror oi tne Denes, grew io or me Iron Duke, the victor of Waterloo, There is usually solid stuff in bad boys, and this is an example. Dr. gage's Catarrh Remedy ia no natent medicine hnrobusr, sot up to dope the ignorant and credulous, nor is it repre sented as being " eompoeed of rare aud pre anbHtanoea broueht from the four corner of the earth, carried seven times serosa the treat desert of Sahara on the backs of fourteen camels, and brought acrova the Atlantic ooean on two ahipe." It is a simple, mild, soothing remedy, a perfect speoirlo for catarrh and "cold in the bead :' also for offensive brealb, loss or impairment of the sense of smell, tasto or bearing, watery or weak eyes, pain or pressure in the head, when caused, as they all not iu- fiecjnently are, by tne violenoe of cacarru. Bee advertisement of Family Bitters. Sulphur aud molasses, the old fash ioned internal remedy for the itch, is obsolete. That aud other obnoxious skin diseases aro cured in half the time, without disorderiDg tba atomaob, by Glknn s Bulphub Boap, the giukl x i- nil anti-aoorbutio. Depot, tkitten ton's, No, 7 rixtb avenue, New York. The tints produoed by Hill's Instantaneous Hair Dje are Hfca tiiose of nature. OOK AGENTS WAITED BACKSHEESH THOrs.Nli9 of csnvsasers have snswered our cull to ectl this famoui new nook-snd yet ve wunt .S.Ono ih ort I It iKjrtrays life as it rtullu M i in Fgytit, Turkey, snd the Holy Land, and "a contain! i0 Magnificent new Eiu ravines. 600 Ou tilts were ordered, in auinnce, ana Azenu are apllin? lit tn till av d&v. UOth thuumml now m Aaeal now u nnnr time to make money u i'h the i attest telhng htink e'er yuhltf.l. OjT-OI TUT I lil i; to ail WTCIIKM. A Great Sensation. SampU Watch and Outfit free to Agent. Better Uiau Uold. Address A. 0' HJLTKR A OU.. Chicago. Addrs K A iHtMTU and traveling sinenses paid Monitor MANuroo.Cloolonatl, .Ohio. cents Vt--nd. -TwboiyMil I Mounted Uhro:tJS A as .a I... t. ..t nal Tjlta I'run. HitHTAL CBKOUO UO. 4 i ix furi1!. jj aa.iAip.aa by mall, post-paid, if l to. UCMl- a eViiltTrNK oan be made wltnont coat or nrk. i OoTTihln&ttou fonulnef. Particulars free. Address J. R. HUKGKS, Manager, Rawlins Ulty, Wyoming. AAPA A Month. Agents wanted. 30 beat fell H. A z 1 1 Ing art loins In the world. One sample free WUVv Ad d'ss JAY HKO.NMIN, Detroit, Mi uh and 9 ( or p nine Habit absolutely and suModilr fanred. Painless: no uaLuutj. Send stamp for Partloulara. Dr. OAitL- TON, I 87 Washington bi., iJhlctai-o.lll OPIUM All Wftnt It thoosilids of hja tnd iKlUiousot property safed bylt-iorfa ii Dlaide wltn ll pat ucu ura mo. J. m KM TOW A barj.,r.WY :ik4 b'Vl $250 A MONTH A g touts wanted every. ham Rnatneaa hunorahle ami Urst- el&stf. Particulars seat free. Addiea WORTH A OO., St. toals. Mo. WAS GLENN'S Sulphur Soap erad1catks All Local Skis Diseases; Permanently Bkautiviks tub Complexion, Prevents and I!emb- DIES KrtEBMATISM AND GOUT, Heals Soheh and Injuries op the Cuticle, and is a Kkliablb Disinfectant. This popular and Inexpensive reme dy accomplishes the same uehults as C08TL7 SuLPnuit Haths, since it PERMANENTLY REMOVES ERUPTIONS and Irritations of the Bkin. OOMPLEXIONAL 1ILEMIS1IES lire lll- ways obviated by its use, and it ren ders the cuticle wondrously fair aud smooth. Sores, Sprains, I'iiivisks, P-calds, ISurnsuml Cuts are speedily healed by it, a;id it prevents and remedies Ct.mt and Kheuma'.ism. Ir removes Dank huff, si renjri liens tin.' roots of the Miiir. and preserves itsyo'ithfulcolor. As a Disinfectant of Clothing and l.inen used in tlie sick room, and as a Protection against ContaoiousDiseases it is unequ .led. riiysiciaus emphatically endorse it. Prices, 23 and 50 Cents ter Cake, Pkr Box, (a Cakes,) GOc aud f 1.20. B. There 1b economy In buying the large cakei. Sold by all Druggists. " Hill's Hair an I Whisker Dye," Black or Krotrn, 50c. C, N, CE1TTEST0N. Prop r. 7 Sirtli k NT. THE .SKIN, rri- Kpiintil lltn. to sell a new X 1 f artlola. ev.ry bousli.epr will hnv : best oav avar ottered : L. K. BROWN k CO.. 1 .) W. tilltU bt.,(JlDCloDll,Q. THE MARKOE HOUSE, PIIII.AbKI.PIIIA. tW Oomfortabla Rooms and Kto-.l-nt Table. H, M. BB1DLEH. PBoymjTOB. IAIK lKV. If voo want anui iful bair. It laviaoraUia, oleansea. promcitee growth. Erteota mafcloaL Hxoele all otber urbparattons. bately aent by mall tor Sl.UU. Ad. dnwa, CaHLBTUM, EBB AUq.,04 heoond Ave .M.Y.Olty. WITH ITS MILLIONS OF POhES, Is tba (ffeatprlriHr ot tht bud y. Iraw thi Ii.fl .tuma tl.m aud fHjtBti tmru thtt J-ui tii, I tv-, Klaueys, Spleen, liuei, .lni.inr. ran ana iTUcie- inrouKU ino ftkln wtih l .-ltiH Volnoc .Mumi-th, nn-l biltb aurt ttappmiM itejonri. 'i'b--?ar ibe greatest medical dUcovfery oi the vtaturf, u.nd utUtly kurpaw al) other pU&Wrs. COLLINS' VOLTAIC PLASTERS Ootifltntof ullver and sine platn, cr.rufcllir attsct't-d t (ret her and inibt'd- d tn a Mndlcutei, Ptiroai i'liiter. (Ste cut.) A narrow rtrlp ol :litu, i- hirh i . to be re-fior-ri, It plaod uve t h i-Ihih. VSimu tti platr la uiioe t upou tht fttfei;ttd f;.rt, whi. h o n b dni iriicsily and o -iivtJa l u ly an with ibe onl uarj poroui pluiter.tbHt li.by iu-re pre- -nrot tm uiud, tbi naturttl Watriitb aud U' ht'iro ot tba fuctit vauT)S ima plains to tnrow out a ourrnl cf l(;trlcl'j Kfiitle tQat It IB ftcmrottly por-oll'lrt t i el tt otbTwlf.; ihnu t y tut ivtjoih U,g and Rraiefui wiuiirb un-1urHil. i o ptmtratluK tvs to top airu-.t tmintdli-ely tb inft t-xorut-iittiiig pain, runovH feo.mhb.lnitjnhss.and drra tuiUmiD'tttoa from th Iuuh, uvHr, kldneya. kplt-u, bontsla, bUddtir, heart, and muBcUa. A hiugl COLLINS' VOLTAIC PLASTER, For local pains, braenea, inienwi, weah-.t:a. Dumb. ne4a, and lotUniu anou ot tb luua, liver, kifluea,. apt eu. bowels, blddr. bfart, aud nmBcb-i. 1 euutti tt hu arm? ot l outoia and aorw. ot i-laut ind ihrut.. It JrjhtaDtly banUhea paia aud torm ts, givca lite as 4 vigor to the wnak-ubJ ttud p. raiyztrd niuacltta ai d lnibs, and t po sratwlul and hootbtUK tbht oncfUced la the above ailmenta every uthr ttiterul m pltu iiU.n, naub aa aalvtta. oi tuiHiitt, lotUnfi, ami liuimei ta, will ht onte be dlacardtd. Kven m pariiiyaia. eputpny or ins, bdh nervoua m isculr alfmsiioDP. ttiia plat r, br rallying the nui-voua fort e, baa etf cied cute wbbQ every other known remedy baa tilled. Sold by all DranRi U. Pr'ce 35 tenta. Sent by mall on reoel' t ot 2 centn f r oat , wi,'i- lo. hit, or for twelve, me niiy wrsp'.ie i ana w tu ira, by W KKKS A t'OTTKK, Proprietoifl, Ht -ht. o. Mb. TTRR f lMIPIt'A LJ luxarluua, radiant, beam Iful balr. dayntire. IHuatnUxt ' - tue fret, of our n rtiruiu'.a, CrvoD, and btiiifnl PU'Iun TTTnrfCrr!.Viiilin. RtwarrJ, Motto, Comic, utid Trtvn- ptrtnit CMs. 1 5 tfiinrl ci, Worth st, -nt pst' trl for Ht tvnU S10 $25- J.U.bHrOtU) OBU.Nb.lKJaluN.MAo3. LauUitlud leW. A NOVELTY. IS" "tSESS IJitrilau oontaintns a aoene when beM to theucbt (60 doal:na), aent poat-pald for oenta ; 6 paoka, 6 aamea, I. ISo other card printer baa the aame. Aeuta wauled; outfit 1 Oo. Card Printer. Lock Boi U, Aahlaod, Maaa. fflT A C Tba onoteeat in toe World importer H J ii Lia oriuea ijarseatuumDaav in America taple artiole plea everybody Trade eoutlnually lnorBAaluaT AaTsutai wanted evervwhartfr beet Induce- meata don't waste time aend for oircular to KOH'T 411 Vexey bu, ft. . f, U. iSui PRINTERS' ROLLERS Made from tba Patent " Kacelelor" linDSftliiew. will reeaat, not affeeted by the weather ; pilot, 3l oa Der poana. la omhi in pnnung idii paper. J. K. (OIK, At.. HI! Anu St.. N. V ft. In ri KeadlnaTa FiTrhonanef. Fnaelnn-tlan. IrX houl Charmiog, Mesmertam, atid Lovere Guide, uowIuh bow either aei may faaolnate and calo the love and atttMitlou of ant pMraou they ehfoce luat-autly. 41H Dagea. Hy mat! Jc. UuutAUo., I.tl a. 7lUbt..r'UUi sLJ MKN fcnd LAD1KH. A WttfeK MS TKI CO., UBKKUN EORAPHf ever niade lo You tin aareaa, who aiainp. CUVAKTII IIOltK 4 411 K.-Ten UUea from n Philadaui-ie UDdertheoaxeof ITiienda. Olvea a tbofoue'h ixUKii Eduoatloo to both east, who here Suraue the tamo oeraea oi atudy, and receive Ute aame ttee. ToUJ Kipenaea Including Tuition, Board, WMbiuic, I'ae of Book, eto., 0350 a Tear. No Kxtra Charge, ior Catalogue, glvtiif full partlonlara aa tu Coarceaof btndy,eto..addreaa, BDwihD u. MaoiXaL, Prabldeat bwsuUuuora UoUege, Leiaware uo., waua. Ther ore iiiurtvrg to headache who might be eared by ailng Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient, Theatomach.overbarddned ant 11 it recnperatlve power la weakened, revengne lali apon the pour bead, which it make to ache and tnrture the otteut1r. The uae of this apert-nt will carry lr nalurnily, and almont lmp-r-oeptltily, the otfundiug muee. ib dlaeaae U removed and the bead eearea to aoba. hOI.O BY AIX DRUOQ18T8. UK. J. A. RHKHMAW re8'C(fully m.tlftl'S the ainuu-il to beware ol travflmn lliioalir who are Koilig alwut the country aellhiif linllaliou aiipliatices and ul aouous mixture as curative com pound. traudulendyi re teudlnglo furnish lila utelhod, and tliuncndangi rliiglhe Uvea and caunlnK irreparable injury to the uiilortunate. He has uo aeutH, nor Iraa he ever instructed any oue In Ida butlneaa. Dr. bhcrmau la now in Chicago, where those interested may consult him in person, and reap the beueQ t of hia experience and remedies. For hisaddresa, s-e (idi-UKO papers. 1'rlncip.iludice, 1 Ann Street , New York, booka, with ltkencaaca of eaaea Liefore aud after cure, mailed uu receipt ul lu ceuta. MTMO HKN WRITING 0 AOVSHtWiar are, uleaaa say Iba4 f sa aw wba aui. jaralaa it 1 aiaU saas. ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers