Vino lfiait in ifce ia. tt? .,. fc.T Kot tn squirrel uu lu lu 'all fiuiuo Uee, Sot Hie swallow, i..., nur lha t-bli&adam. Jot the little kt-.iy M-drr-ring mine, not at all, As they nibble at I he stout house wall, JCor the kitten out in the hern asleep, Kor the prettjr wh:tc lamo nor the mother ahix-u. Vrto" sfrakl in thedsrs? Who? Wbx? Afrswl cf sorae terrible bueebooT J'ut the dog who wake with a armn(f cry At t!ie step of a trailer passing br. 2'ot the rabbit at hnme in the woodland wide, Not the crow nor the little Mack baby crows, "fthu" afraid in the dark Who knvwaf Who knows ? ponwi one told me it was a little child. Mary F- Butts in New York IndepeVier.t. ! WOMAN'S AYOKLD. A LITTLE SOUTHERN MOTHER AND tR NEGRO SONGS AND FOLKLORE. Made Ike Monkey Sleli Prlarc-sa Smokes ClRnrel- are of Wlalrr (iarraeats Mtidejrs" ( ompliwr !. l'rttfrssloa cif Motherhood. Mrs. Jertnrtte Robinson Mar-phy. rLr.se banctucca uia'aiiee was a futb iiinable fv.-iit, is tbe latent example of tb tjiifailin criminality cf tliesontbern getitletvoiimn. Mrs. MnrpliT is yonni? an3 lovely, iK.tU the fiih-cicutiog iiiautier ciiaraeter i'.ic of th". women of the south. Her cnfrrtainiaeEt. which is gouietinien cdled "An Afternoon In Dili:." con t itts ;f slave Kin? hlJ stories told an 1 mug liy hor in an irresistible; fashion. Mrs. Murj by says : "Ever "ince child hood I have followed the ne;To- at Jbcir work and listened to their croon in;; ULtil I kuow every intonation and finaver. Every new cook in my father's home was a mine of wraith to me. I loved to Etndy negro customs and snixr-t-titioEs. and I early came to the con clusion that this wonderfn negro music and folklore, were hronht hy i.tv old slaves fioui the dark colitinent. I am alone in the original field which I have created. I am a -einiine soniherner, uot one hit of a new woman, ae tbe ;7 A' for I, - jh -sat Vr 1 y JKANKT1K l:olltKSlN MI !:P1!T. term is accepted, hnt jnst a little ponth ern mother, who ha turned her folklore resources to account to support two f.i therless little ones." Mrs. Murphy thinks it was a wise Providence which took the African from centuries of cannibalism and sav agery and gave him t- the training of American peoj le. "We of the smith," t-he says, "owe a lasting debt of prati tnd t' ll:" faithfnl slavi-s. We can bcv.t repay the dear old hlatk mammy for her gentleness, patience and loving care of enr little ones. We are Rratefnl to the slaves for giving ns 'this most wonderf d1 wn!c. Then, on the other hand, does Dot the negro owe a great, deal to onr sonth !" Mrs. Mnrpby thinks mothers should study the old black mammy as a model s:nd learn from her how to take no anx ions thought for the morrow. She calls her a natnral kindergarten, for she says the tnrronuds every stick and stone with a story all her own. The mammy nters into tbe heart of the child and loks at life from the child's standpoint One of the most charming songs Mrs. Mnrpby tinpi is a w ird African liilla y which was tanght her by Mrs. Jef ferson Davis. This lullaby was the one Mrs. Davis' rramniv san'jr her to sleep by. New York World. Made tbe Monker Sbrk. There's a eirl I know here in town who goes quite two blocks ontof her way whenever the gix-s down town tlns days to avoid the din a; store where she nsed to buy most if her ice cream sodas. "1 feel like a lunrderess," the says, "and 1 haven't the hardihood to revisit the ectue i.f my crime. You know there's e drng store over there by tbe Arlingtou where they've been having a little liioiikey iu a cage in the window. Well. Louise and I went by there the ether evening, and. of course, I had to no in and talk to the monkey. It was a ilear little fellow, with pretty brown yes and a look on Lis face of Lt in old er hi. n mankind. He folded his little lir.nds when I wanted to shake hands with him and looked bored. I thought he was hungry and thought the drng store, man hadn't remembered to feed Li:n. It seemed so crnel to neglect a jKior little monkey that way, and eo I put my hand into my pocket and took ,nt one of those little violet hearts you at those horrid things that make your breath smell as if you had been drink ing aud wanted to hide it. I gave it to the monkey. He sniffed at it and then pnt it in his mouth. He was still chew ing it when the clerk came up with something in a pan. The monkey didn't want it. 'Perhr.ps he isn't hungry," said Loni--e. Yen know how Louise is about putting in that way. " 'He's sick," said the clerk. 'We thought he'd die a little while ago. I'eople are always giving hiia things to eat. They don't s-etu to hive sense -notigh to leave him alone. Somebody gave him a lime, and he's nearly dead. ' "My dear, I jxit rabliexl Louise and tore out of that place. I knew if tbe man ever smelled the monkey's breath he'd know I'd giveu him something. I didn't dare stay, and I haven't leen back. The monkey may he dead, and if it id I killed it I hadn't sense enough to leave it alone, bat 1 ksow better now. I'll never five another anrmal anything except on a physician's pre scription." Woman About Town in Washington Post. Prlaeess Smokes C'lcfcrcttea. S:cietr is properly shocked but prop erly politic in expressing an opinion about tho discovery that the queen re gards cigarette smoking by women and by cme of her own daughters with coui ldaiance. if not with piMtive favor. One of her majesty's danhters left a cigarette case in the waiting room of l' rsi'.roal station at Windsor a day or two ago, and when an cfiicial fonnd it and discovered the name t.f the pr.ncs tugrnved ou its U-autifnlly ch:ied tide, with the worra "Fioiu Her Moil ir" li-neath, his British imper turbability was njisct altogether. The news spread rapidly aul mt nothing ii iie telling. There is no question that the habit of igaielte smoking by women and wi i.kd in the most exclusive set is fprad:ng. It is practiced iu secret and the exonse for it is that th f utiles of tobacco soothe and quiet ncrvauiade r.osteady hy the exactions of fashion able life. Physicians jay that in L.tdon it is on the increase to an alarming ex tent, and many young women, instead of obtaining the expected caltu and quietude after late suppers, and so 'm, are Uvouiing nervous wrecks. Five f ei;r r.go the mere suggestion that an English woman should imitate the women of Russia and the orient in the cseof the cigarette would have been repelle-d. -The dark eyed creatures who formed part of the household of tbe sli!,h of Persia were looked opon with mingled feelings of curiosity and dis- 1 pust when they twirled between their j fingprs the paper covered roll of tobacco md blew clouds of smoke from between their red lips. Tuey were tolerated in fashionable drawing roou:s because they Lad been educated ta s'iiolm. irsr tnsiisn gei.TiPtvomen naa reen enncatea to ride after tbe hounds, but there was no thorjtbt t following the example. Now thjt a prince has given evi dence that she is a cigarette smoker, and that tbe qnecn tacitly approves of the habit. Society is changing its mind. FashionaMe London never finds fault with any fad that enjoys the royal func tion. Loudon Cor. New York Press. (are of Winter Garmeats. Return of spring makes the packing away of winter garments and draperies imperative for the housewife who would preserve them free fioni moth nrtil another winter. Packing has develoed into an art, and it is nowadays the house-wife's pride to so pack each garment that it nay be Lronght forth in the fall as trim and fresh as though just from the tailors'. lu this sort of packing tissue paper is as important as camphor, and the fact is borne in mind that garments change color when packed away as well as -when exposed to the sunlight, and also that they crusJi and wrinkle from their own weight. Fur coats after being shaken and beat en and aired, before moth time, are hnng or a coat hanger, slipped into a moth bag or a brown paper bag with plenty of camphor gnm and hnng np in a closet. The bag is glued np close abort the wires of the hanger so that even the air is excluded. Before slipping the coat into tbe bag it should lie buttoned to keep the aides from sagging, and if there is a storm collar it should le left standing that it may not lose its "spring-" If there is closet room enough it is an excellent plan to leave skirts hanging np all summer, bat whether packr d or left hanging they should be thoroughly renovated Ufore putting away. Tbey should be iJred, brushed and freshly finished with new braids and dust nif ties. Then when a skiit is to be left in the closet' it should be slipped over a skiit hanger and wrapned loosely in fresh folds of pajier or an old sheet, pinned closely in place. A bag of cam phcr gum is sns;ended from the hanger. If the skirt is of light cloth or silk it should lie fii.-t covered with sheets of white tissne paper this is especially important with white goeds. as it pre vents that old yellow look that so often creeps into white stuffs in a single sea son's packing. Drooklyn Citizen. The Modera Compliment. One of the first things a girl has to learn is the art of receiving compli ments, neither appropriating them nor disclaiming them. It is sometimes dif ficult, and to blush is fatal. Oh, those youthful blushes! How distressing they i,re to th ir vcked proprietresses:, and yet what a charm they give to the in genuous girlhood, and how enchanted iugennons girlhood would be to ese'apa from them f.irever and lie clad in coat of mail, says the Philadelphia Inquirer. The skillful complementer embar rasses no cne. not even the shiert girL He knows how to convey an expression (f his appreciation without exactly say ing it. Su h a man can Hatter one's self love quite sufficiently in merely saying, "llov well yon look!" The tone and iniiumr are eliKjnent cnongh to supple ment the pt.verty of the words, and their very m-ageruess allows the recipi ent to accept it without embarrassment. A florid compliment makes a girl look or. at least, feel a perfect goose. But they lielong to a past age. Com pare the Sir Charles Grandison verbiage with the present day : "I say, what a swagger frock you have on I You look ripping." No one addresses a long speech about "your charms" to the admired one. That kind of thing has peine out as ut terly as the flourish of a laced handker iliief and the bow with hat on heart. In those dsys a compliment was re ceived with a courtesy, now replaced by a laugh and a nod. Motherhood as a Profession. "Ideal motherhood is the work not of instinct, but of enlightened knowledge conscientiously acquired and carefully digested," writes Helen Watterson Moody cf "The True Meaning of Moth erhood," in the Ladies' Home Journal. "If maternity is an instinct, mother hood is a profession, and yet many a girl undertakes it with less understand ing of its duties and less anxiety for their dieh:iige tb.au she gives to the se leetion of t!ie tailor who is to make her new gown. .r tht costumes of the bridesmaid.- in her wedding procession. It is quite, the fashion, nowadays, in well to do fai. lilies to provide tbe daughters with some special training by means of which they could earn their own bread and butter if the family for tunes h mid suddenly fail It is held to Iw altogether wise and prop;-! to '-Vji'vte a daughter for a iis siblt) proV.-sioo iu a remote contiu-fc-nry. yet, while lit tint of 20 of our girls many and become mothers, no training whatever for the real profes sion of their lives is thought to be uec .ary. Any practicing physician will tell you that four-fifths of the illness aim tig children could lie avoided by prcner knowl-.!ge and care on the rart of the mothers, and yet our girls feel that they must take np college settle ment work and scientific whist and the banjo to get n little excitement into their lack luster lives nntil the great excitement of marriage comes." The eek aad Throat. The reason why pretty necks and throat are much rarer possessions now adays tli..:: tiny were .ViorO years ng i is that for ii!!ijy years past it has lieen the f:hi. n to wear high, stiff collars, fastened tightly round the throat Tight collar cause the ne. to l-ecoine yellow j.nd the skin to become prema turely wrinkled and baggy. A graceful carriage of the neck is also impossible when a high, close collar is worn. We arc at last beginning to reouize these truths, and this season stiffened collars will no longer be the libnle. Often tbe first sigus i if age show themselves in tbe throat Daily massage, using a good emollient, is the best method of keep ing throat wrinkles at bay. This, if persevered with, will also prevent ytl lowness and scragiiiesa of the neck. Singing exercises improve the appear ance cf the throat, but, cf course, it is imperative that singers should avoid tight cellars. AVomen of WroalsR. When Wyoming women ask, they re ceive. The Woman's Volunteer Aid so ciety, which rendered Doble service in the early days of the Spanish-American war, recently asked of the state legisla ture nn appropriation of $1,500 to be paid from tbe state treasnrv to start the fnnd for a monument to the" memory of Wyoiuiug volunteers who di.-l during the term of their enlistment. "When the bill came tip for a vote, the gnli-ry was filled with interested and euthit-iatic vwuo. n The rules were sns;i. n.lel and the privilege of the floor wa : extended t- them, but thf-y kept silrr.ee and looked to the men they had helped t "" elivt to speak for them. The nn..-t dis t iaguir.he.1 member of bnlh bouse and senate eloquently advocated th" measure and it was passed nnaniui-.nsly. Women are h part of the "constituency" in Wyoming. Boston Woman's Journal New York Daughters of the A men fan Revolution are walking valiantly for tbe erection of a monument to Ilea bena Hyde Walworth, the young wom n who sacrificed her life caring for the aick and wounded soldiers at Moutack. Many well dressed women are wear ing with delicately tinted cloth gowns at fuiart functions tbe black glace kid glove black glace having teen long worn for evening, but otherwise rele gated to those in mourning. Tbe newest safety pin is of geld, en ameled an having a broad, flat piece at the lower side, into which the pin clasps. At the hiDge is an initial set with diamonds. A DOCTOR OF MUSIC. In This llmprn She Hanks With the I'r lares, of Walea. Mrs T!i-nlore Sntro is henceforth rn titled tn write "Mns. Dk" after her name. She i the ouly woman in this country who has a right to do so. She is one of only two womr n in the Eng lish speaking world with the same clis- tinction. Tbe other is the Princess of Wales, Those svllables signify "doctor of music," They became Mrs. Sntro'B frctiPitr recently at the Waldorf-As toria, when tite received a bcribboncd roll of parchment from the bands of Dr. Ernt Elieihard. president of the Grand Conservatory of Music of the City of New York. It i a rare distinction even for a male musician to attain. Thoei who received the honor with Mrs. Sutro were John James Wwttiu of England, M.ax Wertheim of New Yt.rk. Edward M. Westbrooke of Paternon. N. J., and Herman Rannefeld of New York. Appropriate remarks about woman's sphere in the arts were made by the Iiev. Madison C. Peters, who presided at what was tbe celebration of the Ml:s TIlLODOUK SITTUO. twenty-fifth anniversary of tiie conserv atory. After quoting Knskin s saying that it was wrong to draw compari sons between man and woman, because each is tbe complement of tbe other, Mr. Peters continued : "We need a system of education which will i:nt prepare onr IkiVS to be milliners nor our girLo lie politicians. We iieeil a system of edncatioti which will give prriftic.il recognition to the distinctive traits of each sex and the training necessary for their different spheres of .ac tion. The education that men follow is that which prepares them for life. Alas, too often the education of our women is considered only in the light of a means to the attainment of what is known as a successful marriage. "Woman was made for a better pur pose than to cultivate fashionable little- ne.-s and fascinating airs. Woman's genius is liold and daring, and the edu cation she needs is that which will make her a coworker with man and his equal in whatever blesses humanity." Mrs. Sntro. who looked charmingly unlike a bluestocking, nodded her bead approvingly at these remarks, and all in tbe room looked at her as they clap ped their bands. New York Journal A Valuable Shawl. A recent gift to the czarina of Rus sia by the French nation consists of a chantilly lace sbawL It is about 3 yards long and 1 wide and is wrought of jM.lychrome threads, like Venetian embroidery, instead cf being in one color only. Around the edge runs a border of narcii, exactly imitating the delicate hues of nature. This in cludes two sprigs of red and yellow roses, which trail intertwined along the four sides of the rectangle, the cen tral space of which is dotted all over with lilies, on a ground of tbe fiaest point d'alencon. In each corner is the monogram of Alexandra Feodorovna, surmounted by an imp -rial crown worked in gold. Mlu nrnddon. Appearances are proverbially deceit ful, and certainly few people would pness ou meeting Miss Braddon for the first time that she had it in her to be tne writer of the most popular sensa tional novel of the day. There is cer tainly nothiug at all sensational in her appearand, and her kindly manners and peasant face are suggestive of the ordinary English gentlewoman of do mestic tastts and simple pleasures. Miss Eraddeu is a notable hostess and has welcomed nearly all the well known men and women of tbe day to her pretty home at Richmond, England. The Need Flat. An excellent box in which the seede for early fiuwers can lie sown is about 18 inches long, 15 inches wide and 3j inches deep, says Vick's Magazine. This Ikix can be placed in the window beside tnecut'ing box. A good soil for the seed box is made of three-focrths of noddy loam and one-fourth saii.L This mixture gives a soil tuat drains well and does not run together after it has been watered a few times. Enough (lantscan l u grown in a box of this size to supply a good sized flower gar den. A C'rrat Woman. Rea Eon hen r has just celebrated the seventy-seventh anniversary of her birtu, but she is by no means on the re tired list of the world's great men and woiiieu. She has a big picture nnder wav and woi ks on it several honra dailv. Sixty years of work promises to be the least record she will leave, and it may even grow bevond that limit. She was tbe danghtei of an artist and began work so early in life that tiefore she was 20 she had already exhibited two pictures which established her reputa tion. Women on School Doarda. Rev. Dr. Lorimer, in a sermon at Tremont Temple, Boston, spoke cn "Tbe Education of Scciety." He said, among other things, that the school board should be small, so that the mem bers could sit around a table end talk across it. He would fear to take the women out of the school board. If the board was to bo composed of 16, be would have one-half of them women. for," he said, "the school board needs a touch of mother in it." The the Girls Cleslrd. It occurred af a wedding in a Kansas City church. The minister was yonng and nervous and instead of saviug. Who gives this woman T" etc., be a-ked gravely, "Who gives this man to this woman V If the bride bad not been four inches taller tnd many pounds heavier thfn the gloom, the slip would have attr, U ed less attention. As it was, tbe other girls in the church were not to be Llamed for tittering. Iter Arlatorrar-r. "Every woman is an aristocrat at leart." said the youngest boarder. "Yes." said the cheerful idiot; "she bates to think of herself as classed w ith the plain people. " Indianapolis Journal It Waa Taatamoant. "Hat she told yon that she loved yout" "Not in so many words. She merely isked Eie what life insurance I car tied. "Cleveland Plain Dealer. A four months' temr from E 'land to India can be made, includir all coat vith economy, or (1.500 luxnri nsly for $2,500. i Among the fuCP cbr.9. in ancient lays, the wparir cf earrings wag a bude cf servitude. The Art or Kevrln.1 t otto if. The Frenchwoman knowj a good oal about the gentle trt of keeping yonng and comely as well as the ntt of preserving ber health. She lielieves in be-rb tens usually the only Fort of tea she drinks an! spring doses and die ts. When she is thin and run down, she takes gruels and possets. Just at this season she eats a great deal cf spinach because it contains iron, and she de vours dishes of green salads, snch as water cress, dandelion, monk's beard, chicory and sorrel that wonld make the overage American salad bowl crack with amiz-itent. If she is tliiu and pale, the French, woman drinks gruel This is bow she makes it : Take a pound of oatmeal and a pound of barley tfotir. Boil with about three quarts of water and four or five apples cut ia slices. Le t it boil until re duced to ahout half the original qnan tty and add sngar to taste. To follow the French regimen, drink a glass of this gruel on a wakening as early as pos sible so as not to pjioil one's appetite for breakfast Another glaos at alniut 11 o'clock in tho forenoon and a third upon going to bed. Result an "em bonpoint raisonnable. " A Sensible Health d. Women have begun to nnderstar.d that health as well as wealth trends upon the footsteps of outdoor work. Several broken down society leaders in a certain western town have bad the courage to persist in a half day's garden Work regularly for a stated period. The result is very much more in their favor than tbey had dared to imagine. Im proved circulation, rest aud digestion have thrown themselves in the balance against disordered nerves, ale-eplesg nights and the hollow eyes and worn face attendant npon prolonged social dissipations, and nature has asserted ber immortal rights before the paints and lotions and powders, the parapher nalia of the toilet table. The rosy health and wholesome strength of the average English woman are the outcome of ber outdoor life and exercise. Annettu Halliday-Antona in Woman's Home Companion. A Brsvf Woman. Mrs, Fowler, tbe wife of the keeper of the North Dumpling light, near Fisher's island, has recently received a letter of commendation from the Unit ed States lighthouse board for her cour age and thonghtfulness. It happened that Mrs. Fowler was left alone in the lighthouse when the machinery broke down and after a hazardous climb she managed to ring the lighthouse bell aud so call assistance. The letter runs thus: "Tho lighthonse board has learned with pride and gratitude of your thoughtful courage. It i espocted that brave anil thoughtful men will be found in its service, but to find a woman able at a perilous time to assume the duties f alisent man and thns prevent peril to life and property is a matter for double congratulation." Wanted Ills Heart. Princess Victoria, daughter cf the Prince of Wales, is lieing congratulated on her engagement to Prince George of Greece. Here in America it is consid ered the proper thing to congratulate the man in such a case and wish happi ness to the girl. Bnt no such chivalrous distinctions seem to lie observed by the English papers, which bluntly remark that it is said that the princess has been in love with Prince George for several years, but is now "warmly congratu lated because she refused to marry tintil she had won tbe heart of the man who could make ber happy. " It is also said, however, that be held hick because be had very little to offer her nnt l tbe change in his fortunes recently, when he wai appointed governor of Crete New York Sun. Bernhardt and the I'oets. Sarah Bernhardt has taken the minor poets of Paris under her wing and inci dentally is giving the Parisian public a treat on very moderate terms. Every Saturday, at ber theater, she gives readings from younger poets and charges only 20 cents for admission to the lie-st seats, jnst enough to cover ex penses. Mmc. Bernhardt says she is actuated by a desire to teach love of beauty to the masses and to elevate them from the sordidnessof their every day life, says The Criterion. The "masses," however, that patronize suc h functions when they are made fashion able by Kimebly like Bernhardt, axe generally curiously well, dressed, well gloved and coiffured "masses," wear ing a halo of respectability and pros perity. "Ilroderle K ana Tola." Queen Ranavola. although she has lost the rulendiip of Madagascar, has set a fashion cn the Riviera. When th.; deposed sovereign arrived in Marseille , ber dress was ornamented with piee-es cf the most delicately embroidered gauze, which at emce canght the fancy of the fashionable women of tbe town, who bad come en masse to see the dusky exile. Queen Ranavola bestowed a piece of similar ganze upon a dressmaker who visited her in her hot! and now the bappy modiste is keeping a host of church embioidery workers busy copy ing tbe rare stitches, which are not very difficult to imitate, the colors be ing the greatest drawback to the execu tion of the work. "The Little Qneen" Protests. Qiieen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands dislikes to tie called "the little queen." She thinks the phrase reflects upon her kingdom, as Mie is 5 feet l't inches in height. The queen of Spain is only 5 feet 5 2-5 inches; the empress of Rus sia, 5 feet 2", inches; the empress of Germany aud Queen Victoria still shorter. The young Dutch qilevn is said to le of the best build. Her powers tif eninrance were tested n coronation day. when for six hours she wore the ceremonial mantle of red velvet trim med with ermine, a weight of not less than H J pounds, and showed no BiGikel latigue. SnaL.cs' Sense of Smell. Snake's have the sense cf smell. It is difficult to obtain fcod fcr the rattle snakes and copperheads cut at the zoo logical park. The keeper lias been try ing them on tbe house rats and mice he has caught about the building. He wocld leave them in the snake cage over night and through the day. They would run ever . the smites with impunity. The ernki' would pay no attention to the in. but wlun he Lapptnc-d to secure soiiiii Laid mice und put tiiem in the cage tbe snakts ate them at f.nce. He pnt in sevi:,l rats end mice f the or- dinaiy bouse variety that were living out of doers nr.der the sidewalk, and this; vvre seized by the snakes almost as readily n. the wild species. The keeper then conceived the idea cf making an i arth box to keep the rats in for awhile lnTore finding, and he found that if they were put in there for 13 h.n.r or so before they weie given to the snakis they would be eaten. The oulv apparent explanation is that the smell of the ei.rth is agreeable to the smiLes. ar.d that the smell which the animals acqnire about buildings is ob jectionable. Chicago Recoid. The Albany Capitol Calde. One of the first things done by a stranger visiting Albany, siiys the Phil adelphia Call, is to pay 25 cents and put himself at the mercy of a capitol guide. The gnide makes a profound and obsequious bow, like a prc-stiJigitator atont to charm an audience, and pro ceeds to lift the veil which bides the mysteries of tbe great building. On a recent occasion the gnide led the stranger regretfully past "McGin ty's" empty frame and proceeded to identify the heads of notables that deco rate the stairway. He did fairly well nntil tbe stranger pointed out Shakes peare and Homer and asked who they were. "Them," replied the guide, undaunt ed, "aiethe beadt cf two politician whose names I tlihreinem hex." TOIL LITTLE FOLKS. THE BABY'S RIDE. With l'ass and MsMsn Utah l'n on an KlepUnnt's Hark. Lilian Allen Martin describes in St. Nicholas a baby's ride on an elephant. Cnui Mootii, tbe nurse, took Ruth from her crib and sniffed with her nose the warm little cheek and neck. This is the Laos way of kissing. "Ntti noy pi doy I" C'The little lady is going on tbe moun tain! ") she repeated msty times while dressing hi r. Out on thu broad veranda where Ruth sjieut all her waking hours it was very lively and entertaining.' Such a running about and ordering and packing as there were! jllattretses, pil lows and blankets were strewn over the ti.Mir; dishes, clothing and provisions were liticg packed into bamboo baskets. In tbe cptn space before the house, lie low the high veranda, four big ele- THE riiOCKSSIOX MOVKD OUT. phants leisurely broke np and chewed long, juicy banana stalks, making a great rustling roise as they swept the broad leaves ov-;r tho ground. By and by the hubbub on the veranda qnieted down. The tilled baskets were fastened two by two, tine on each end of a short pole; this polewa9 hoisted over a man's shoulder, and off he trotted with his load. Down among the elephants was a great shouting and groauing and strain ing. The elephants were made to kneel down while the heavy howdahs, or ele phant saddles, were put in place on their backs. Two of tbe howdahs were packed with bedding, two folding chairs, a coop of chickens, a stone wa ter filter, cans cf kerosene whatever could not be p'lt into the bamboo bas kets. The third eh pliant was led np tr the first landing of the long flight of veranda stairs, and Rnth's mamma stepped njHin a chair, then on the stair railing, mid then on the flephant'f head, whence it was easy to leach tht seat of the howdah. Pnp:i made tht passage to the bowdah more quickly and with less trepidation. Lastly, deal Dr. McGilvary, who was speeding tht expedition, handed the baby over tc papa and a chorns of "Nai noy pi doy !" went up from an admiring crowd as sembled belov. The procession moved out of the gate, the brass bells at tut elephants" necks chiming melodiously. Her I'sps l'"lrst. O'jly 4 years old is pretty Helen Syl via Gjrdoti, but still she did what all Lt-rovs have dr.ue thought more ol others iu lim of danger than of her self. Her father's ship was wrecked several weeks ago and for nine day floated alxmt helpless npon the sea witt nine people on board, among whom were this little one and her father and mother. When day after day had pass ed and still no ship came Ly to rescue them, the sailors, and even her father, lost all hop;, and then ibis wee girl cheered them np and said God would send some one to save them. At bsst a millionaire, Mr. John U. Ilanu ol New York, sailing about in his beauti ful steam yacht, saw the wreck mile away and nude for it. But when they wanted little Helen to leave the sinking wreck, which they had all prayed for days to lie saved from, she said: "No, take my papa first," and would net go nntil he was taken on board tbe fine yacbt. Then she did a fnnny thing. It was her mother who had told her that Gcd would save them, and when she saw Mr. Hauan she ran and threw her arms about his neck and kissed hiiu and said: "Mamma, is this Godf" Bo.-iton Herald. 'Ueaatas; of a Nursery lthyme. Like many ether nursery ditties, the rhyme about tbe "four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie" is an alle "' Tho "four and twenty Llackbirds" are the ti hours and the pie the legal day frciii midnight to-midnight. "When the pie was opened" means the dawning of day; "the birdi began to sing" de'ciibea the melody or discord of la!;r just beginning. "The king," who "is iu the parlor," is the sun, and the "money" be is counting is tbe glo rious sunshine. The fjne-cu," who is np stairs or "in the kitchen," as is variously rendered, is the moon. "The maid in the garden banging out the clothes" is the goddess cf dawn. Aurora, arranging fleecy clouds in the tky. "Up jumped a little bird, "or "black bird. " means the first morning hour, for Aurora always disappears with the ris ing cf the sun. Ill HoMuson-s Thrift. While we were eating breakfast the f.ninr srid: "Th;;t remark o' yourn yisteddy about fellin Elmiry the dishes an bavin the coffee fer nothin 'minds uic o' tht! way Hi Robinson got some thin fer nothin ont ' the storekeeper at the village. Yon 'member Hi, don't youT He's kinder slow spoken, 'u' some folks culls him foolish. One day I was eettin in the store a spell, with a lot more, ;n in comes Hi. lie gooti up to Lish, who k"i p.s the storn, an takes an egg out o' his pocket an says, 'How'll yon ewapV 'Oh. I d'n' kno's I want to twap fcr one egg," says Lish; 'what do yon want fer itt" 'A darnin needle.' 'Well, I'll swap with yon.' says Lish an took the egg an giv' him the darnin needle. "Hi stood ronnd awhile, an then be says, drawlin'like, Say. ain't yoti goin to treat t' 'Treat! On one darnin needle t says Lish. 'Not much,' 'Feller "cross the way will,' eay Hi. Lish grinned. 'AH right." says be, jest to humor him; 'what'llyou have!' 'Cider 'n' egg." says Hi. That tickled the rest o' ns. bnt Lish brought the cider an broke the egg into it Hi's own egg an Hi see it was a double yelker. Hi took np the glass an looked ft the egg some time. Then he sty-s. s-iys he, Say. hadn't yon better gimme 'nother darnin needle!' " Forest and Stream. lie luetied. A literary man who was compelled by circumstances to nse bis family sit ting room as a study missed his pen holder one evening while absorbed in writing a story He louked over his desk, through the pigeonholes, and in the drawers, but it was nowhere in sight. It was not on tbe fitter. He felt behind hu ear. It was not there. "This is whst comes." be said im patiently, "of trjing to work where ther-j is a bouscfr.l of children. Which one of yon has taken my pent" The children looked at each other and laughed. He became irritated. "I d.m't want any" foolishness I" he exel timed. "Where's that pen! Who has taken it!" AfU-r a moment's pause one of tbe cbillren said slowly: "If vein '11 laugh, papa, yon will find it." Ee strred at ber in astonishment. Then, as ber meaning slowly broke in npon him. he joined in the laugh, and the pt cbclder fell t ut of his month, v. he re if bad been all the time. How ninny of tbe little diflicnlties of this life one can extricate ouest If from ty u laugh I- Youth's Ccuipuniou. They rettled, Lor.g before the v.ur General ButlcT, who wa3 then a strcj-gliu young law yer, lived np in a Mita-arhn setts mann factniing town. He had displayed abil ity nt college, bnt bad to wait tho tisnnl nnmler of years for his firt case. At last a young girl who had worked, in a cotton mill "came to hiiu for redress against her employers. She had been discharged without wage, and on a re quest for three weeks' wages wr.s un ceremoniously thrust from the door. The case looked bine, for the firm was a very rich one. but she needed mo'jey badly. She offered Ben one-balf j col lect it Tho next nmrning, while on ber T.iy to look for employment, she came upon a great gathering at a crowing. She inquired rhat was the matter and learned that the factory she bel left had shut d iwn for the first time in HO years. Wondering what could have brought about snch a state, she passed on and jreseiitly met Butler. He was leaning aguinst a lamppost whittling a stick. " 'Tsail right," he called, waving his knife with a jaunty air. " 'Tsall right I've got 'em!" "Got who!" ventured the ycung lady. "Why. those old skins up at lhn fac tory. I went t. "ui right after I saw yon yesterday and demanded the bill. They told me to hnstle. I then got tint an attachment on their water wheel and shut np the shop. Yon own $15 worth cf the entire machinery. Oh. they'll settle by noon!" And they did. Cincinnati Enqnirer. The Mystery of Saasnge. The composition of the sausage is not only complex, bnt ,it is often obscure. In this country the preparation cf this (as it should be)nsefnl article of food is confined to the employment of minced beef iind pork. Tbe only exception probably is t':e so called "black pud ding." which is made with pig's blood and perhaps some heart and kidney. Abroad, however, the sansage is compound- cf a ninth wider range of sub stances. These include brains, liver and horseflesh. The last substance is gener ally considered repngnant, .while, of course, it is fraudulent to sell sausages as beef or pork containing horseflesh. Occasionally, however, sausages do not contain meat at all. bnt only bread tinged with red oxide of iron and mixed with a varying proportion of fat The remarkable feature of horseflesh is t!e high prcjKirtion of glycogen which it c jntaius. and this fact enables" the pnence of horw-tlesh to be detected with some amount cf certainty. The test which depends on a color reaction uith iodine ha recently been more carefully studied and with more satis factory results, so that the presence of 5 per cent of horseflesh in sausages can be detected. Lancet. A Street Hostler. "What's your business?" asked the police magistrate of a man who was be fore him for abnsing his wife because snpper was not ready. "I iu-i a street hustler," was the repl . Explications showed, says the New York Herald, that tbe man represented a large numlier of fellows in New York who nave no regular occura iioii, nut ... t , j nevertheless manage to make a gced living, particularly at ims nine oi toe year. Thev luitir around the struts ,i;,ni.ir , iki. ;.,..! -,. n-, , . i , until they see a vanload of fnrniture going somewhere. Then they follow the wagon, oftentimes for miles. The wag on drivers do not take kindly to these men and will not let them ride. Men who are "handy with tfceir bands." as it was explained to the magistrate, have no difficulty in get ting a job laying carpets, cleaning win dows and furnaces or hanging out clotheslines. It is a poor wagon-chase that does nut net from $! to $4 a load. Sometimes, when two or more men are following the same load, competition is keen. Th wagon driver whips his horses, and the prize falls to tbe man w ho has he fleetest foot and the great est wind power. A Sense of Seenrlly. "Ei'dora."eaid Mr. Cumrox. "I have been seveial times annoyed by tbe way yon see Ct to worry about my gram mar. " "It's awful." said bis wife, "Yen nse commas where they don't belong, and yon forget all about your periods. Yon'U lose all your friends." "Eudora, let me remind yon that I have money enough to float any scheme I take a fancy Co. A man may be loose on bis pnuctnutior, but when he en joys i.iy facilities fer a capitalization he is bound to have friends that he couldn't lose if be tried. " Washington Star. Kenny's Faitare. Benny, the 4-year-cld member of the family, had lieen trained to believe in tbe deep water form of baptism. This is believed to be the reason why be was trying to plunge the household cat into a bnckrt of water. The animal resisted. It howled and scratched and clawed and I vi. 1. , f l..n..n.w r;r..,!l I. ,,r- 1. r . 1 i . 7 " "1 . . 1'" wii.li i.is iitiuoa oiiocu uu eei.'.ieilt'S pun . nn tears in ins eyes, gave it up. "Darn you!" be said. "Go an be a Mc-thodis' if jou want to!" Chicago Iuiudeaee. "I have jnst learned." she said, with a perceptible tinge of aperity. that I em the ninth girl to whom yon have been engaged. " "Well."" he suavely replied. "tLaf ought to make you glad." "Glad !" she exclaimed. "I'd like to know why T" "Dou't yen know." be answered, "that there's luck in odd numbers!" Chicago News. hfie Onlit to Mir lllni Confess. During the first tliiee months of ev ery t -cgagpi.it nt the gill makes a con fts ional of the man. Liter she wishes she hsdn't confessed so much. Atchi son Globe. Thn date of th K ruli!i.-nn State Con vention is not ypt fixed. Th Democistii; ron-ention meets Wednendiv, June 11, In Harrisbtirg. "Throw Out the Life Line" Tbe kiJnevs neej help. They're overworked .-ant eetthepoisoo illefo" out ot the bljoi They're gct'.ir.g orje every minut Cryim; (or lielp Crying "r Yes that's what that t-iriUe backache menns It s the only way the kijneys have of telling you tiiey need help. Tl:ry are gradually sn.kir.c sinking I deere r and deeper into tlie in:re ol disease, v W.U you belp Iheui 1 , . Doan's Kidney Pills Have brought thousands of kidney suffer ers b:i:k bom tiie vere of despair. W:I1 cure any farm of k:d::rv trouble. y.r. l.-ir.e ti. K 'irsr. of No. 44 Seventh Are., Jli kiri!r", f', marine Kr.iruieer ho ha! bsii loitv rears experience !esmliOhi in tumid river. ay fur eteial u-ar I had tH-riol.f kl1Ii.-r lomplninl. sD'l to la 1 were tnaie the- stttt k (list mors tbsn one t s compelled 10 rer mrk:n? IttKiiih stl.n L k-it in. t virulent. I.en.Iichel were lreqi:e!!t ud sri-oinfltitr1 witli 'l--.oie. l .hV.fi.Hv lrel n rkerk ihe trnullt- ln.l un til I procured l.ii Kidne-. PliSsn.l took a thiffoi.eh eonrw 14 ti e treatment 1 m-I at;:h rr little, if inr. surer- When D-jan'i kidney rilti cured rx I be Iiev t they wl bring relief to anyone." Doan's Kidney Pills for sale by n dealers. Price ?o cents. Mailed by Fostsr Mii"urn Co . Buflalo. N. Y. So t an'. ;o the U. S. Renrm'-r the name. Dan s and take no subT:tute. fish That Kill STen- The sbaik is generally .um-"1 l tbe most to lie dreaded of all fS he, but it rarelv In ppeii that an Hiitheiitic coi -m .if the dest ruction of lifiman lif by a shark is recorded. Tbe sword lish sometimes dashes into ships, burylog Its sharp weapon In their sides, and causing tbe vessel to spring a leuk. A ship may be struck by a whale In nibl octan and crushed. These are tbe no table casualties that attract attention on ai-iunt of th. ir -eii.-'atknal feature.-., ytt lives are 1t annually where fl-di" of s.uail ri.c- are tbe dirvct or indirect cause. Id the Islands of the PaciuV a small gnrfisti Is very common. It has long, sharp t-eak, which give U an arrow like sliip. This living arrow, when alarmed, dashes out from the water and goes soaring away over the surface In short bounds with such force that when it strikes a foreign bmly it either pa through it or inflicts painful and se rious wounds. Native shell hunters wade over the reef Jii search of shell, lifting bunches of coral with a view to taking the small shells from them. TliU aecom dished the coral is then thrown down. The noise often alarms the gars: tbey go darting away like ar- r,.tta -ml shell hunters have been s - - V- asa- pierced and even killed by them. Ad English officer was struck by one on the visor of bis cap. This resulted iu an investigation by a reprentative of the British Government, and It waa found that men bad lost their lives from this cause, says the New York Sun. Among the casualties from fl-dies in America may lie mentioned several iu which the gamy tarpon was the cause. Near the mouth of the Mississippi the seine haulers sometimes take a tarpon in the long nets, and ou one occasion a large fish leaped over the enclosure and struck a man, killing biui instantly. Two men were nearly lost off the coast of Florida by a tarpon, which leaped into the boat and knocked out two of the planks with its head, literally go ing through the light craft, A well known Texas fisherman waif kiljed by a tarpon when landing it. The fish, in making one of its leap, struck him, knocked him overboard and caused him to be drowned. Size is by no means a fuc-tor In deter mining the dangerous nature of fishes This is well illustrated in South Amer ica, where the moat dangerous fi.-h in the fresh waier streams is a creature not more than four or live inche In length. The danger of these creatures lies in their numbers and their insa tiate rapacity. They are veritaMe blood hounds that fairly fi 1 the waters and attack all comers in drovesaud swarms. If any foreign object drops Into the stream it is at ouce surrounded by thou sand, and if alive it is reduced to a skeleton In a remarkably short time. Horses in wading a stream have ben , . i. . r ! so terrorized by the attacks of these s' unseen ioes mat inn ieu "u, and ! l...r,u on.l riilur uoria drownp.1. These lliilsu a u . ..... . fish have sharp teeth, and they literally strip the tiesh from the'limbs of horses or other animals that are exposed to th-ir attack. 'It was almost a miracle. Burdock Blood Bitters cured me of a terrible breaking out all over the body. I am very gratefuL" Miss Julia Filbridge, West Corn well, Conn. Many Replenishments. "They say the Smilers keep liqtior in their house all the time." "Well, if I haven't misjudged Smile r terribly they don't keep the same liquor all the time," Chicato News. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. fTca iTtuDtna timc IN EFFECT JUNE 27, 1898 00.1DI.VSID SCBEDULB. Trains arrive and depart rrom Uie station al Johnstown a follows: W tCMTWAR7. Western Eipres, 4 B. m H.iutn winter 11 Kipfw n.-to " JotiiiKlo-xn AeeoniriiHtnt'.i)ii. t:SJ .l.ilinslown Arc-iinimxialioa :i0 " P:tci)e Kiort-xK.- Way rHsePker........ I'tHsuur- Kxpres-t... :v p. m. - 4 SI .van v-lt I Fast I.tne... .-: 1 :;15 1 juuemowa Aocoiiimodatiou... , ICSTWARD. Atlantic Express.. .. 4 is a. ru ora-Kuore r.xpmcs 5.0 , Ailowna Arcotuitiodatiou S:j4 1 ay Kipn-.. n-itf n,n si 10:;. " I ail K'urna to oiiauou li-tj p. nx i Johnstown Ace-oinnuxlation.. . 4 1:1 " :"Jl " T:U " ' ptsla.Jeiphia Exti'VSH fast 1.1 n-j ... llr 10 - SOMEr-SET MAIIKET U'iPOrtT CORKfclTKD WEtk.LV bV Cook & Beerits, Wednesday, Mity 1o,lsui. fpet bo.. Apples-.' Jn.il, 1 vs punt ted B...... Apple L'i;lt r.j-er gul ( roll, per th . Cutter. fresh ke.; per lb (ervHinery, per 9 Iieeswax per lb ., . country huu, nr B dO-7V 4e .!: W 111 V I V lil t. 1 ISaeon.-i ""f"Kumi uhui, per 1: ,. 1 si 1 " .- iiui.y p-r B Khoulder, per l .IU lo rv l.i:iia, per S Coffee. TT'f' A" lie IV ....lu ii I re m t. 1 ""I'-eriHCil, per Lbl Jl.nj u, iM ( fon.'Kud, per bbl jtLij :0 4jV ronimel, per to Kttes, per 'io. '""" " .,;v Fish, lake herrin-. i H Vr " -' . , , I H bbl per 311 Bi! ;C Honey, while clover, per v,,. Jjir.1, per Si .'l7 w'il.K I.irne, per bbl Molassea, N.O per 1 Z..2' Oiil.ms. per bun, 7.-, w PitutK-s, per bus , w w) Peacrie-s. tvapo.-utrd per B 1" i "ul.k- Pru..? per lb ZZ "J u, IZ IN. per bbl . u .1 1-. I Pitlburit. per bbl '1 ".ij Malt, j Dairy, bus sucks ZITZZs, I i bns sacks..!L".l irroun.l alum, loo fciaeks m"m- f maple, per ZZZZ 7 li Me I imporu-d yellow, per to " Sut-ar. i wlute, A. per to ..ZZ 7 .r l'-Sc ernnultited, per to. l-tr''c leulwuor puiveiiztd, per k T....io fyrnp. i tl-lJ-Z-Ti -X ftorieware, rllou... Th How, per to , i't., pel i) tolk: e Viuec-tr, per hI 1 ZZZ- u ti nwiUiy, per bus. , - , ciovter, per bus " eriiii,n. p.-r UaaZZZZZ' 4 "to " atirmper bus Z Seed. , & per Millet, Oermaa. per bus.... 1 -e, jir uus.. . . per bus ! :.: j. -ii ue-.iru reus, per bua 1 V, buckwheat, per bus corn shelled, per bus ZZZ i'l'ui oala. per bns Zv, t a rv-e. nerbus . -j Jie huriun -1.1. " - Qruln 4 Feei I wheat, per bus :1 lintu, per loo s.... 'J rn aud rati chop, pVr iTsj i "iu h.1 flour, roller process.uer bl.l .?Jf Flour, i K, . "pnt'B pateut aud funcv' I ngn crude ti iu ( flour lower icrad-. rr i'i tos 'lUis" 1 red. per ItU ton " CONDENSEDJIME TABLES. Biltimora and Ohio Riftm Somewt and Cambria Branch MORTHWAHII. John-rtnwn Mali FxpreK. KorVot 11 , m., Kumerset ll::;4vewnT. Vi " rsville ixti, JohnstownT-eio'ri; - V" Johnstown Aceommodtion.R).,ww, - ,. er-rvillea-la, Jolin,..,wn 7ft . 7 Uuu- lU'TB W RO. Eipre-ta. Johnstown ?-J0 n m 11 wood 4:li owoerset iai, Itock- Uaaly. D B. MARTl" " tTNi?'", g I 1 iS we arc sure to have it. Yon are alwaj3 sure of gettir kept in stock. Satibfaction guaranteed. tz Diiiir-ri.-t. oucni.i.iA. Loutners uim mi Main Street, Somerset, Pa. ThisHcdwl Dng Store is Rapidly Ecccniig aGr; Favorlts with Pespls in Search cf FBESH . AHD . PURE . DRUG Medicines, Dye Stuffs, Sponges, Trus Lomlier's PrescriDtionstFaniily Receo OBXAT CAKZ BCI'O TAKE TO C9 0!I.T FKXSH AJI D PC KC Af.TIi LEn. SPECTACLES, EYE-GLASSES, And a Full Line of Optical Good3 tlvrays on Latd F-c large assortment all can be suited. TBE FISEST BRAIDS OF CIGABS Uways on hand. It is always a pleasure fr display our ? to intending pnrchasers, whether they buy from U3 01 elsewhere. J. M. LCUTHER M. D. 1 MAIN STREET - - SOMERSET. F Somerset Lumber Yai- ELIAS OUNNINGHA1I, MASCrACT Ja 451 D BALKS A SB WHOLES. LI ASD F.rTAILtK CP Lumber and Building Materials. Hard and Solt "Woodl lValont, Vellow Pine. rivorluKs HHh. StarRa Lath, 11 hlte Pine Ullnd, Xewel Vosi, Lto. A general llneofaJl gn.,t-tot l.nmberand u'.Mlng aleriat and K. "". : toek. AImi, eui famish auylhlng to the Unej uu: tu-in-.-8 b!e -pramplntsia, men u Bracsebi, td J-f t:l.t.r ijef . "t Elias Cunningham, OHlce nl Tdrd Opposita S. t C R. R. Station, Fifty-eight Year Old!!! J o N U a hvft Ii-V, 1 nt i'. : fVv iiiterest-) aril priri:y 1 4 olilatteall the vi'aot; ai'iU:-' r-' r k-CY:-: strengthened anl rpeiit'J I J li-.e .'',r' acknowl--lgpd ther-oiintry over a Ihe la.linj National Family Ne -! ("' Keoo-jiiizin-r its valu.- fcj tti.w who dire ail the new of th State ' -v"" publisherxof TitK SoMKtcst-r tlrrtvLn. (vourown favorite home 1 yr '' ' into an alliance with "The Nw- York. Tribune" which ei-al lex thein t. : - paper-t at the trinin- cixtt of J-J 00Mr year. r-very fitrmer ami every vilier owes to birr.se!f. to hi-- fainiiy. :? , mnnity in which he liven ctir.lUI support of his local nc w spuper. a" i: ''' stantly ami untirir srly for h's. iulerrtU in every way, lrirr to :; news and hartpeniriirt of hi-t neiahlx-rhisxl. the doiugt f hit l'r:ei ..!-. " and proapecu for different err-p. the prices in home inniket.-, "'. ;1 irehiy vis-tor which should be found i: every w ide awake, jr. ere--;.e 1 - Ju.-l think of it! Ii l h of these Drtuer for only fi") a year. S:-nd all orJer 13 THHdALD. 3lT. . IT VILL PAY YOU TO BUT YOUR " Jlemorial Work WM. F. SMAFFER, HOMER!ET. PEN? A. ManufWtar-r of and Dealer Is Eastern Wor,r 'nn:lshd oq Short Nolle Also, Agent for the WHITE BRONZE ! flTl"?-.'?! '.1 of Muraent Work wt . i 1'.r oil---,,-, v call at my s:u ' . - i--"ht a.iowiriK will fcs given them I ' 'V' Uim...).:liU!ai-,inl Whits Brn, Or Par. Zino Monumt't, 1 1.0 ir7 11 . ,t , tJ'Hir.i -i i j.aii 1 iit... .... W . Rfi, si a d--l l "l RMill rM 1 ,1,1 ill al Trnloi I d Mtlai I t ht ti 1 - tiini. ..MaMM4Kr-Mrr! ttlrtlrttttl ftttfl H r tf TH f 11 111 Itst-w & wuminnliiiiiiintiinu 1 11 n i.tiiiiiiiuiiuHifnrrM Snyders Pharmacy, it rc.iuirc-i a good selected stock aad a neatlj arran r u) room to do a Lriak Lo3iac3a. - WE HAVE BOTH OF THEM. Rure Drugs largo lino of Drugai in a l'Ufl fresh and good condition. Ia the way of Pr--rinf inn CoffiPundin2 wc a I IHS .1 I I II Kill ir-iUnAi ..K-;,! . . , a! C i T Pnnrlc CIa33C3 CUetI t0 SUit err, UDtlCal UUUUO CaU aud have your ey:, t, Trusses Fitted. All of the best and moat approved Tri.,.,, j JOHN N. SNYDER, r-.t-t e-rir-. v., si .mi 111 111 imilllllllllllllfiillllll'li;.; iWiiiUiiiiUl mUi U MllwU M riWiMe.3tWlUeitHMtU4irt t ,1 1 n . 1 f Supporters, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, &c. TH DoCTO8VK3rOJl. ATTKSTJOU TO TH COXPOCNMNrj vf 1 Oak. Poplar. Sldlnr. Pickett. nali!ft Clierrj, Shtneles, Boon. IlAluter9. (liotnaB NEARLY .1 :?;f A . Tt-ople h:m won f.r it !'' rears nlf ti !-y ai-'l 0:o er:;; v.;f"---" its fa.nily pa-fil t ttt-ir re-tr-i. .i- admirer urn loy an l : . !'" '' ith faith ill it teaehii-S. 1 '' ; - ;' ' the ii.furriation nhieh 11 Ir tJ4 hemes ac.il tirKitU. r-" i of ver half a crutury. It hat livrtlon its nicrit.i. tu-.-l en t;-" Jial sujfiort of proprii A""'11 It is "The New-York We y Ir.ti. IN : r i vi fir, irrrflTTT'r I, jfatwiiwniiiu 1 7-i w s-'--.i. Ti'c---!" LMri.'.t'- STiJ iiMlvlu li.uiiy V y Over SOO Beautiful Designs H.mj u j ivj a wi.1 A I 1 I 1 'V ( J. Vin. F. Shaffjr.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers