A DEED AID 1 WORD. bt chab. HJLCXAT, A little spring had loot iU way . Amid the grass and fen ; A pnsmnr stranger scooped well. Where weary men might torn ; He walled it in, and hong with ear A ladle at the brink ; Be thought not of the deed he did, Bat judged that men might drink. Be passed again, and lo! the well. By summer oerer dried. Has cooled ten thousand parched tongues. And eared a life beside. A nameleae man, amid a crowd - That thronged the daily mart, Let fall a word of hope and lore, Unstudied, from the heart ; . A whisper on the tumult thrown, A transitory breath ; It raised a brother from the dust, It saved a soul from death. O germ I O fount! O word of tore! ' O thought at random cast ! Te were but little at the first, But mighty at the last ! Hataaa A Ta Wkert vVaaaea Are acare. Looked at from a social point of view, what Immediately strikes a stranger is that Havana,like the Rome,of Romulus, is a city without women. There die annual! v, out of a population of 205,000 souls, 3,082 white males to 1,204 white females, while the 'deaths among the colored people are for the males, 1.046; for the females, l,0t9. Thus, while the sexual numbers of the negro and mulatto population are almost balanced, with respect to the whites the proportion is something more than three males to one female. The fact, however, is self evident. Hardly any other women than negresseg are to be seen about. Ladies with any pretentions - to youth and beauty would sooner die than venture out unprotected, even for their early mass; and so uncommon is the sight of decent women unattended in the streets that foreign ladies, unacquainted with the cuFtom, and sauntering from shop to shop, become the objects of a curiosity not unfrequently degenerating into im pertinence. 'The cause of these dispro portions between males and females are not so far to beek. Besides the priests, the soldiers and sailors, and the public functionaries, whose tenure of office is extremely precarious, who are either debarred from marriage or dread its incumbrances and responsibilities, there are here thousands of Spanish immi grants of the lower classes attracted to the spot by high wages, but looking upon themselves as birds of passage, who, consequently, would hardly dream of sending for women from home, while their conu-mpt for the native race seldom allows them to look upon the Creole women with honorable intentions. I need not dwell iixm the obvious results of this state of things. isufliee it to say that regard for women is by no means enhanced by their scarcity." There en sues an exclusive male society. The charms of cafe and club life, such as they are, wean the Havana husband from a home where real femiuine accom plishments are as unknown as hearth rugs and fire-irons. Housekeeping in the town, and still more in suburbs, is terribly up-hill work. Foreign Consuls and other strangers usually try it on their first arrival, but soon learn to look upon the hotel, with its smells and noises, as a haven from domestic storms. Nothing like available free services is to be obtained in a slave-holding commu nity: the lazini-s, and, unless aweu bv the lash, the insolence of the negro bond men communicate themselves to the hired help, v hatever be the color, race or sex, working at the same task with him in a common household. Hence man's life in Havana is wholly out of doors, while for woman there is no lite within them. In no town in France or Italv have I ever seen so macy, or pro- porlionaU'ly, such sumptuous and con stantly crewdi-d calcs and restaurants. The Havana merchant is as eager to make money as he is to squander it. Hut the town supplies little besides gross material enjoyment for his money. A Itox at his third-rate opera, a drive in ins dreary prado, are all the amuse ments lie can have in common with his wife and daughter. For the rest the women are left to mope at home, play ing bo-iK-cp with the passers-hy from their window gratings, or pacing the Hat roofs of their houses like so many Sister Amies waiting for those who are never coming. With so little wholesome domestic society, it is pleasing to hear the characters universally given for good conduct to the Havana women. Few of them, even of the lowest classes, freqiicut the cock-pit and the bnll-ring, and the profligacy, the symptoms of which are only too conspicuous, is of Spanish or American altogether fo lorelgn importation. . . . . 'A Krpubllr mat Like Oar. The head of ' the government, the Grand Caliph, was elected for a term of twenty years. 1 questioned the wisdom of this. I was answered that he could do no harm, since the ministry and the parliament governed the land, and he was liable to im)icacliment for miscon duct. This great otlice had twice been ably filled by women, women as aptly fitted for it as some of the sceptred queens of history. Members of the cabinet, under many administrations, had been women. . . I found that the pardoning power was lodged in a court ot pardons, consisting of several great judges. Under the old regime, this important power was vested in a single official, and he usually took care to have a general jail delivery in time for the next election. I inquired about public schools. There were nlentv of them, and of free colleges too. I inquired about compulsory edu cation. J Ins was received with a smile, and the remark, "When a man's child is able to make himself powerful and honored according to the amount of education he acquires, don't vou suppose that that parent will apply the compulsion himself ? Our free schools and fiee colleges require no law to fill them." There was a loving pride of country aW'tit this person's way of speaking winch, annoyed me, I had long been unused to the sound of it in my own. The (jondour national airs were forever dinning in my ears; therefore I was glad to leave that country and come back to my dear native laud, where one never hears that sort of music. HloBdr. It is certain that this nineteenth cen tury is to be a century of blondes, like the sixteenth, just as the seventeenth was that of the wig, and the eighteenth that of powder. All women are blondes nowadays. Brunettes make themselves blonde by the use of fairy waters, or simply ny bathing their hair in ammo nia. Some of them color, others dis color it is a miracle of chemistry. When, twenty-five years ago, a young actress first had the fancy of making lierseil blonde, "lor a change, as site said, she never imagined she was intro ducing a fashion. Now, both the New W'orldand the Old have gone mad over it all women want to be blonde, espe cially those who are gray. Silly viola tion of nature for what is more sacred than a crown of white hair? And has not dark lieauty its characteristic attrac tion as well as the fair? Probably this inordinate admiration of golden hair arises from the fact that light is the ideal of all beauty. Apollo was all dis heveled with light. Homer compares all bis goddesses and mortals to the golden Venus. In history and in fash ion, therefore, we see the blondes tri umphant, until such times as the bru nettes regain their empire. Dr. Lindeman estimates the proba ble yield of the gold and silver mines of this country for 1S76 to be $100,000,000 about twice the average yield since 1849. ifincranm. Stackko Coeu-Foddik. Consider able care U required, says the Agricul turist, to stack corn-fodder in such manner as to prevent waste. It requires not onlv to be pot up so that it is safe from the weather and the ravages of vermin, but mat a part may De taken down for use without exposing the re mainder to damage, in the ordinary stack the fodder is taken from the top, and when s part is removed for use the rest of the stack is left without cover ing. A stack built upon the ground immediately -becomes the prey of In numerable rats and mice, by which it is not only cut tip and destroyed to a large extent, but what is not directly destroyed is so soiled as to become al most unfit for use. Now that the value of the corn-fodder is becoming more widely recognized, means - are to be taken to preserve it more effectively. In very rare cases there is not room beneath the barn roof for it, and it is necessarily stacked out. As we have pointed out, the making of such stacks as can not be removed for nse at one time, is objec tionable, as is also the plan of making a quantity of smaller stacks by which a much greater proportion is exposed to injury. A long stack, built in sections, which will contain the whole supply, is preferable to any other plan. It may be built along the north side of the barnyard, or any other exposed side, and made to serve as a valuable shelter. By setting posts in the ground and placing beams or poles upon them with a loose flooring of rails as a foundation, a double purpose may be served. The open bottom giving free access for air will tend to ventilate the stack, and if an opening be made, either by placing a few rails fastened together in the center or by placing the bundles a few inches apart in the center, there will be no danger of the corn becoming moldy. The posts should be dressed smoothly, so that vermin cannot mount them, and if they do succeed in gaining a tem- .porary occupation it will be soon ter minated tr a cat is allowed to range around the premises. The space be neath such a stack may be made useful, instead of being a hiding place for un clean beasts and for hens to lay where their eggs are lost. The stack is to be built so that the bundles of fodder do not bind lengthways, and ' Ty he opened at one end and taken down piece-meal, as, indeed, it is put up. Each day's supply may be thrown down and no part of the stack can be exposed long enough to become injured. " Jersey Cattle. If the value of Jerseys is to rest on color, deterioration will surely follow of the useful qualities that are far more noticeable in the good old-fashioned parti-colored cow, than that which will be found among the generality of fine, high-bred, whole colored fawns, grays, or foxy, so called Jerseys. I have owned hundreds of ac climated Jerseys, and have never, as a rule, found the whole-colored such large producers as many parti colored ones; in fact, by far the most butter producing cow 1 ever possessed was not only parti-colored, but the most ugly and ungainly beast of the lot; yet her stock have never railed to snow tneir large butter making qualities. The true tyie of a Jersey cow is, in fact, an ani mal that will not make meat. I do not say that it is not improved upon by ac climation and a slight introduction of a hardier breed, of which what are termed Chichester Jersey are the best description ; neither do I say that Jersey breeders in the island itself have not in some instances a breed that shows a dis position to make some flesh, and very probably may then be following up the requirements of fashion, yet I maintain that a pure Jersey should throw the bulk of her feeding properties into but ter, and with little to flesh. The parti colored good cow may have but a white spot, esecially under the belly, but throughout the body the rich yellow skin, under any colored hair, will be found, black, white, or fawn. I have seen the beginning of a whole-colored herd, the property of a noble duke, to obtain which I have seen large produc ing cows sold off to prevent an animal remaining with the slightest stain of other than one color. London Agricul tural Oazetle. . Poixtrt. Poultry breeding has now come to be regarded as iniKrtant a branch of farm industry as the raising of swine and sheep. In one sense it is of more importance, in that it is not every farmer who can keep sheep or swine with advantage, but every one who owns or rents a plot of ground, if only the size of a city lot, can keep a few head of poultry with both pleasure and profit. When taking into consider ation the vast number of eggs consumed in the United States the city of New York alone using during the year 1872 upwards of 340,000,000. costing at wholesale, about $6,292,000 and when we note, the immense number of tons of poultry sold in all the large cities of the Union, we cannot call the poultry in terest one of minor importance. Yet it is but a few years since the name of poultry seemed to convey the idea of insignificance. Xow, however, the proprietors of large stock farms have their flocks of pure bred fowls, which get their share of attention and study, as well as the horned cattle and horses; and the net income from a well man aged poultry yard is no small addition to the farm receipts. Poultry Record. Training Horses to Walk Fast. A fast walk is the most desirable gait that a horse can acquire in training. It is valuable in the farm and draught horse as well as the roadster. Some horses will trot very well until you come to an ascending grade or wish to relieve them by letting them walk a little; they then fall into a slow, lazy walk that is very trying to the driver's patience; but a well trained walker will step on at the rate of four miles an hour. A colt mar be trained to walk fast. This may be accomplished by commencing when it is young, before there has been any at tempt made to improve it in any other gait, simply by leading it at a walk by your side, urging additional speed, lit tle by little, without allowing it to "break" into a trot; but this must not be continued long at a time, lest it dis courage, worry or tire. One or two short lessons a day are sufficient, and will soon make a great improvement; but this mode of training must be con tinued to prevent a relapse. Gt-Axo kot as Excrement. The long received opinion that guano is the de posit of myriads of sea birds, accumula ting through long ages, is rendered un tenable by the recent investigations of Dr. Uabel. After treating the guano with an acid, microscopical and chemi cal examination revealed that the in soluble residue was composed of fossil sponges and other marine animals, and plants precisely similar in con struction to such as still exist in those seas. The fact that the anchors of ships in the neighborhood ef the guano island often bring up guano from the bottom of the ocean, is quite in opposition to the prevalent belief. Dr llabel there fore considers that the deposits of guano must be the result of the accumulation of fossil plants and animals, whose or ganic matter has been transformed into nitrogenous substances, the mineral portion remaining intact. Cark op Implements. Pon't leave your implements out in the weather. A great many farmers are too remiss about this important matter. They do not often see beyond the first cost of new tools, forgetting the constant accu mulations of interest which roll np into vast sums. Costly machines and tools are often injured more by exposure to sun and storm than by nse. iSmaix boy in a grocer's store "IIow do yoo sell these figs f, "Two for three cents." "Well, le's see; that's one for two cents and one for one cent, ain't it?" "Yes." "Well, I'll take the one cent one." "Yes, yes, young, man, eat all you want," Freezing Mixtures. Ont of the moat familiar i the common freezing mix ture which generally consists of equal parts of pounded ice or snow mod salt, which produces a reduction of temper attire to about 1 dear. C. (8-3 deg. Fall.), and is often used for making ice creams, etc If, instead of the salt, we used three parte of crystallized chloride of calcium at 0 deg. (33. dec. Fan.,) and two parte of snow, we ob tain a far more powerful freezing mix ture, the temperature falling to about 45 deg. (49 deg.Fah), and quite suffi cient to freeze mercury. The salt in the first instance melts the ice, the water thua formed in its turn melts the salt; ao we have both the solids changing to the liquid state simultaneously, conse quently absorbing a large amount of neat. For a similar reason, the solu tion of most salts in water is accom panied by the absorption of a large amount of heat ; nitrate of potash and chloride of potassium both cool the water in which they are dissolved. A useful machine is now made for freezing water without the use of ice, which cannot always be obtained, by mixing together powdered sulphate of soda and common hydrochloric acid. The apparatus consists of an upper and lower thin metal chamber, the upper one having two inner casings ana an interior revolving inner cylinder, ca pable of being turned by a handle at the top. The freezing mixture is placed in the inner cast tig, and the water to be frozen in the outer casing and in the revolving cylinder. Several yanes are fixed on the outside of the cylinder, so that, when it is turned by the handle, the acid and sulphate are kept con stantly mixed. After sufficient ice has been made, the water is drawn off into the lower chamber, which is prepared for holding a number of bottles of wine to be cooled by this liquid. Start on the Regenerative Furnace Principle. One of the most efficient gloves for warming houses is the Swe dish apparatus known as the kakelung, which is simply a great stove of ma sonry covered with porcelain plates, and having usually fire flues, through which the gases of combustion must pass up and down, a distance of thirty to fifty, or eren sixty feet, before es caping id to the air. The general prin ciple of the operation is that of having sufficient material to absorb all the beat from the fire, and to conduct the gases through these long flues nntil their temperature has fallen to a point that no longer gives off heat. This, it will be seen, is virtually the principle of Siemen's regenerative fur naces. The quantity of material in the kakelung is so great that the tempera ture from one tiring which is always enough will not raise the tempera ture of any part so much that the hands cannot be held on the outside. Two hours after a fire is made, and after the wood has burnt up and the flue been closed, the kakelung begins to warm on the outside, the light por celain plates give off their moderate warmth to the atmosphere in the room, and ten hours later there is not much difference in the temperature of the stove and that of the room. This fa vorable result in the amount and qual ity of the heat is greatly aided by dou ble wiudews and, in fact, the con ducting power of one thin pane of glass iuterpoeed between the external air and that of a warm room, can only be realized by experiment. St. Gothard Tunnel. The present state of the works here has been re ported on by Jl. Caillaux, in connection with M. Leon Say. On the side of Switzerland they are being pushed en ergetically forward. The tunnel is 3 miles long ; 2,700 yards are bored on the side ot Switzerland, and 2,100 yards on the side of Italy, leaving '21 miles to get through. According to present calculations 1,400 days will be required for finishing the works, which it there fore is possible will be competed by the end of 10. The approaches to the tunnel are not yet begun : they will give a great deal of trouble. The tun neling is performed by the force of falling water setting in motion com pressed air machines. These attack ihe rock, and drill blast holes of 40 or 48 inches in depth, which are after wards charged with dynamite. Before the discovery of dynamite it is hardly possible to suppose that more than half a yard a day could bave been bored from each side, and 15,000 work ing days, or more than forty years, would bave been required, for a work which it is now supposed will not take more than ten. In the week from Sep tember 17th to September 24tb, the whole amount bored was 64 yards, an average of 7'8 yards per day ; the aver of the preceding week was 79 yards. Poverof Gunpowder. M. De Saint Robert, in an article from his pen in La Berue tsuentifique, gives the follow ing calculation of the efficiency of a rined cannon, the diameter of the bore of which is 3 inches, the shell of which weighs about 83 lbs., and the firing charge of which is H lbs. It may thus be estimated: Experiment has shown that the velocity of the shell when it leaves the mouth of the cannon is about 1.300 fact per second. The height from which the projectile would bare to fall to acquire this velocity is 26,800 feet per second. Consequently the work actually done by the powder is equal to 219,000 foot pounds. On the other hand, Bunson and Schisch koff have found by direct experiment that the beat evolved by the combus tion of 23 lbs. of gunpowder is' equal to 619 5 calories. Hence the ' heat evolved by the above charge of 1 lbs. of powder is equal to 340' 7 calories. The mechanical work corresponding to this amount of heat is 1.050,000 foot pounds. Comparing thin, which is the possible mechanical work, with the actual work done on the projectile as given above, the ratio is 0.208 for the effectiveness of the cannon, that is to say, about 21 per cent, i . ; i " ; Cure for Love of Liquor. At a festi val at a reformatory institution, re cently, a gentleman said, of the cure of the use of intoxicating drinks : "I overcame the appetite by a recipe given to me by old Dr. Hatfield, one of those good old physicians who do not bare a percentage from a neighboring drug gist. The prescription is simply an orange every morning a half an hour before breakfast. "Take that,' aaid the doctor, 'and you will neither want liquor nor medicine.' I bare done so regularly, and find that liquor has be come repulsive. The taste of the orange is in the saliva of my tongue, and it would be as well to mix water and oil as rum with my taste." . Cotiferetf Graham Flour. Nearly all the Graham flour sold in New York, and perhaps in other large cities, is bogus. It is made by mixing the coar sest of the bran with either spoiled flour or with white flour which may not be spoiled. This flour is made into bread by bakers and sold to dyspectics who think it wholesome, but it is a poor substitute for the genuine arti cle. Those wnojwant a genuine arti cle must either make it with a home mill, or hare it made to order by an honest miller. When the air mores at the rate of two feet in a second, most people will be sensible of a draft, and if the air is cold it will be felt at a lees rapid rate. Now a draft is where a current ia felt, and in ventilating our rooms in cold weather the air should more through the roomssoas not to be too much more rapid than this. In hot weather it may more more rapidly. The Induced Current. "It appeared as if the current, on its first rush through the primary wire, sought a purchase in the aeondarr one, and., by a kind of kick, impelled backward through the latter an electric wave, which subsided as soon as the primary current was fully established." Tyn dalL It is proposed in France, by the tele graphic administration, to encourage the introduction of private wires, and to offer such inducements that no great factory and no rich man's house in the country will be without its wire. Window Plants. These should be divided into two distinct classes; those needing a cool, atmosphere, and others preferring a higher temperature. Of the former nothing excels the Chinese Primrose for continuous bloom all winter long. Camelias and Azaleas flower annually, but remain in bloom for a long time when the heat is kept down and the sun is not allowed to shine directly upon them. The per petual blooming Carnations, of various colors, afford an abundance of flowers, fragrant, showy, and of the very easiest cultivation ; every window should hare at least one plant. . Sterias afford a pro fusion of small pure white flowers that are very useful for cut-flower work. The violets, fragrant and cheerful al ways, will not stand a high tempera ture; indeed, they succeed best when grown in a cold frame. The Otaheitan Orange is a beautiful adornment for a cool room, either in flower or fruit. The Ivies, in their endless variety of mark ings and forms, cannot be surpassed for training around windows, or for hanging-baskets, etc. The second class of winter blooming plants, which require more heat, should have the benefit of the full rays of the sun, and are suitable for the living-room, with the mercury about seventy degrees through the day. The roses come first, as among the cream of all pot-plauts for winter blooming. Six excellent varieties for this purpose are, Agrippina, Saffrano, Bon Silene, Cels, White Daily, and Isabella Sprunt. Next to the rose must be classed the elegant Bouvardia, of white and scarlet hues, with all the intermediate tints. They require a strong beat to bloom profnsely. The Cyclamens are pretty little bulbous, fragrant flowered plants that always prove popular. Mahernia odorata, with its multitude of golden yellow, .sweet-scented flowers, should be in the smallest collection. Zonal Geraniums, selecting those best adapted for the culture, form excellent window plants. A pot or two of Heliotrope, say one each of the light and dark varieties, will always prove acceptable. And lastly do not neglect having a full sup ply of Hyacinths, Crocus, Tulips, and other Dutch bulbs on hand for a con tinuous bloom all the winter. A Floriti. To Make Boiled Cttstards. Take a pint and a half of milk, three ounces of loaf sugar, four eggs, a lemon, twelve drops of almond flavoring, a bit of stick cinnamon. Beat up the eggs with their whites in a half pint of the milk. Rub two of the lumps of sugar on the rind of the lemon till they are quite yellow; then put the whole of the sugar, the pint of milk, and the cinnamon into a saucepan. Let the ingredients boil for fire minutes; then throwthe whole out to cool for a few minutes; then beat all up together with the beaten eggs ; re turn it to the saucepan for a lew min utes, stirring over a very slow fire all the time till it thickens; then strain it through a fine tin strainer into a jug; put the almond flavoring into another jug, and keep pouring the custard out from one jug to the other till it is cold. If it should te inclined to turn to curd, which it will do if boiled too rapidly or over too fierce a fire, keep pouring it through the strainer into the jug; when cold, pour it carefully into the glasses. Over the tops of the custards may be grated some very fine nutmeg, or some blanched almonds cut up in fine shav ings. The aliove quantities will fill from twelve to fourteen custard glasses, according to the size of the glass. A Parasol Pen-Wiper. A very pretty pen-wiper can be made in the form of a closed parasol. Sharpen a thin wooden lead pencil that has an ivory tip. Cut a circle of silk, and an other, somewhat smaller, of thin black cloth. Point or scallop the edges all around, pierce a hole in the center of each circle and run the point of the pencil tli rough, leaving the silk circle on top. By a little ingenuity you can now crease, fold and secure these circles close to the handle, so that the whole will look precisely like a dosed parasol ; by experimenting first with a piece of paper you can best get the size of the circle required to suit your pencil. St. Xicholas. Bakers' Bcxs. Mix yi pounds sugar with 2 pounds of flour, make a hole in the center of the flour and pour in half a pint of warm milk and two tablespoon fuls of yeast; make the whole Into a batter and set the dish before the fire, covered up, until the leaven begins to ferment. Add to this, half a pound of of melted butter and milk enough to make a soft paste of all the flour, and let It rise again for half an hour. Shape the dough into buns and lay apart ou a buttered tin in rows, to rise for half an hour. Bake in a quick oven. A few currants are added with the butter. Sweetbreads. Scald them in salt and water and take out the stringy parts, then put them ia cold water lor a few moments. Dry them in a towel, dip in eggs and crumbs, and fry brown in baiter. When they are done take them on a dish, pour into a frying-pan a large cup of sweet cream, a little pepper and salt, and a little green parsley choped fine. Dust in a very little flour; when it bolls up, pour it orer the breads and send to the table hot. The true gamey flavor of a young partridge is never better appreciated than within a few hours of its being killed. This may sound rank heresy to some persons, but it is nevertheless a fact. Partridges will bear hanging, and their semi-decomposed flesh is not to be despised ; but this is a flavor quite distinct from the true gamey flavor of a fresh-killed bird. . Linen which has been laid by unused for a long time is liable to acquire a ?'ellowish tint. Washing in a weak so utlon of chloride of lime will speedily restore the original white color. After the soaking in this colorine preparation, the articles ought to be rinsed, first in a solution of autichloride (hoposulphate of sodium), and then again in pure cold water. Dripping Cake. Mix well together two pounds of flour, a pint of warm milk and a tablespoonful of yeast; let it rise about half an hour; then add half a pound or brown sugar, a quarter of a pound of currants and a quarter of a pound or good, rresh beer dripping; beat the whole well for nearly a quarter of an hour and bake In a moderately hot oven. A remarkable article called fish flour has been brought forward in the last few years. It is not as yet manufactured in any great quantity, as the article is still new in the market, and conse quently there is no great demand for it. The flour is prepared from dried fish of the first quality; it is thoroughly desic cated, and then ground in a mill. Yeast and Homk-madb Bread. Boil one pound of good flour, a quarter of a pound of moist sugar, and half an ounce of salt, in two galldms of water, for an hour. When nearly cold, bottle and cork It closely. It will be fit for nse in twenty-four hours, and one pint will make eighteen pounds of bread. . Qvekn op Pcddinos. One pint of oread crumbs, l quart or milk, 4 eggs, leaving out the whites of t ro, 1 cup of sugar, butter the size of an egg; bake, and then on the top put 1 cup of jelly and the two whites; eat cold. Meat should be cooked by a quick fire, as the rapid closing of the outer pores retains all the juices within, and these, becoming heated, create a natural process of steaming in its own gravy. Bexp Patties. Chop fine roast rare beef, season with salt, pepper, and a little onion. Make a plain paste, cut into shapes like an apple puff, fill with the mince, and bake quickly. BTOaWBwCf. CONTE8SI0N OF A HuSBAXD. It Was about the buckwheat cakes. I told Maria Ann any fool could beat her making those cakes, and she said I had better ory it. So I did. I emptied the batter all out of the pitcher, one eve ning, and set the cakes myself. I got the flour, and the salt, and the water, and. warned by the past, put in a liberal quantity of eggs and shortening. I shortened with tallow from roatbeef, because I could not find any lard. The batter did not look right; I lit my pipe and pondered ; yeast yeast to be sure. I went and woke up the baker, and got six cents' worth of yeast. I set the pitcher behind the sitting-room store, and went to bed. In the morning I got up early, and prepared to enjoy my tri umph ; but I didn't. The yeast was strong enough to raise the dead, and the batter was running all orer the carpet. I scraped it up and put it in another dish. Then I got a fire in the kitchen, and put on the griddle. The first lot of cakes stuck to the griddle. The second dittoed, only more. Maria came down and asked what was burn ing. She advised me to grease the griddlefc I did it. One end of the griddle got too ho and I dropped the thing on my tenderest corn while trying to turn it around. Finally the cakes were ready for breakfast and Maria got the other things ready. We sat down. My cakes did not have exactly the right flavor. I lost my appetite at once. Maria would not let me put one on her plate. I think those cakes may be reckoned a dead loss. The dog ran off and stayed three days after one was offered to him. The cat would not eat them. The hens would not go within ten feet of them. I threw them Into the back yard, and there has not been a pig on the premise since. - I eat what is put before me now, and do not allude to my mother's system of cooking. A Chattel. She was sitting in a rocking-chair, and held a newspaper in her band. From behind the handker chief before her eyes, there issued, every now and then, a smothered sob. ; -'Why, Alice what is the matter," I ventured to enquire. She did not answer at first, but presently became calmer, and ventured to tell me her trouble. "You know Harry and I hare been to the city." "Yes." All sorts of Improbable things were imagined. "Well, we stopped at the House. Before we were married. I had every thing that I desired. If I do say it my self, I never lacked for attention, and really had come to the conclusion that I was of some social importance. Now, what am I? An object, something to be classed in with the ns., and the hhds, and the pigs." Her tears began to flow afresh when she handed me the paper, and I saw, among the list of hotel arrivals, "ilr. Hairy Brown and wf." Winter Provisions. Some time since a Detroiter contracted with a farmer to bring him his winter supply of pumpkins, and the farmer hauled load after load, until yesterday, when the one hundred and ninety-eighth pumpkin had been put into the cellar, the citizen concluded that he had about enough, and remarked : . "There, I guess you may let up on pumpkins for awhile, and I wish you'd bring me three or four bushels of iota toes and a squash or two." Cold weather wou't have any terrors for that family. The Rotal Road to Eleoamcr. Little Splftkins (who can only afford one new suit per annum, but patronises a fashionable West End Tailor.) "O, by the bye, Mr. Brown, can you suggest any means by which I comld prevent my trousers from bagging at the knees?" Mr. Brown. "Well, sir, there's only one way I know of, and that's what most of my customers do!" Little Spill kins. "Tell me! What U it?" Mr. Brown. "Well, they order twenty or thirty pair at a time, sir !" Punch. The Wat to Get Even. There is only one way to get square with this Atlantic cable extortion, and that is to use the fewest possible words and the longest ones you can think of. Don't say, "I will come;" "father is sick;" "your draft is accepted," or use any of those terse expressions. Say "expedi tiously I circumundulate;" "father pleuroperipneumoniacally degenerates" or some little simple thing of that na ture, and then you'll get you moneys worth, even at seventy-five cents a word. "Papa, I want a new Bunker nill," said a West-side girl yesterday morning. "A new Bunker Hill ! What under the sun is that?" "Why, that's the name of the latest fall style of bonnet." "It Is, eh? Why do they call it that?" "Oh, I don't know, papa." "Well, what does it cost?" "Only $50." "Oh, I see now why ther call it 'Bunker Hill.'" "Why, papa?" "Because it's so high. ""Oh, you horrid, dear papa. There." - A Freeholder. He wa a sharp-looking little man, who had offered to go on the bail bond of a prisoner. The counsel for the people was suspicious, and asked him quite sternly : "Do I understand you to swear that you are a property holder in this county?" "You do," he answered, proudly; "I own two lots in a buryin' ground less'n a quarter mile from here." Brooklyn Argue. The rudeness of Dr. Parr to lad!es was sometimes extreme. To a lady who had ventured to oppose him with more warmth of temper than cogency of rea soning, and who afterwards apologized for, her lei f by saying that it was the privilege of women to talk nonsense: "No, madam," he replied, "it is not their privilege, but their infirmity; ducks would walk if they could ; but nature suffers them only to waddle !" Mrs. Snob U expecting a visit from Lord Vaurien: Mrs. Snob "Has no one called, Mary?" Mary (freshly caught) "Oh, yes, mum ; there was a party as said he was a lord, but I wasn't to be took in, I told him if he didn't hook it, I'd send for a policeman, and falammed the door in his face." . She was brushing his hair and he en joyed being fussed orer amazingly. Rolling up his eves he said : "My dear, why was Columbus, when be landed in America like me now ?" She couldn't tell him, and he explained: "Because he was tickled at being fust over." Ax exchange says: "Formerly, when a man got tired of the world, he went into a cave and dwelt alone; now he accomplishes the same result by opening a store and neglecting to advertise. "Bless Tor," said John Henry, with tears in his eyes, "she takes her own hair off so easy that perhaps she doesn't know how it hurts to have mine pulled out." - Therk may be a mirror in the moon but If so don't tell the women about it, for ther'd break their necks trying to see If their frizzes were in order. "Keep your patients alive, said an old doctor to a graduating class of students, "ueaa men pay no Ding." Whoever It was that called a sausage a "ground hog" has made the best pun of the current month. How Patrick proposes to get orer his single-blessedness: By proposing to Bridge iu . ' A Shanghai, eating corn, takes a peck ererytime. Spanish women are great S'noras. The coming key turkey. n.. Aa i I7fta -rnrMUv OT- Xjni - , - i.m.i ikiiinn nmu ahonld be allowed or presume to wear, a vizard-mask in eitner oi uie mwirra. time it was commanded that no person, of wllat quality so-erer. should presume to go behind ine scenes, or cumw ih, .r.ra jifhr before or during the .i.T-?r ni.v and that no nerson should come into either house without paring the price established ror tneir respective places. Ana mo umwitoicui won. nnhiieiv wrnrnerl that thev would be proceeded against as "contemners of our royal authority and disturbers of the Li: if rrUAo av1 Mimmindjl pu one peace. x ucj were not very Implicitly obeyed. Vizard masks may have been discarded promptly bnt there was much crowding behind k. wnoa ami nrmn the staee br Der- sons of quality for many years after. Garrick, in 1762, once and forerer suc ceeded In clearing tne ooarus wi 'c n.,i mnii nf annrtators. and secured room to more upon the scene for him self and his company, dui j "'J by enlarging his theatre, and in such wise increasing the numbers of seats ..-ii.iVvia tnr enoetatara in the auditorT of the house, that he was enabled to effect this reform. From that date the play-goers of the past grew more like the play-goers oi me present, unm flight of time rendered distinction be tween them no longer possible, and merged yesterday in to-day. There must hare been a rery important change in the aspect of the house, howerer, when hair powder went out of fashion in 1795, when swords ceased to be worn for, of course, there could be no more rUinr nf the nit to slash the curtain and scenery, to prick the performers, and to lunge at tne mirrors ami oomhi hiii rnlil anil silver lace vanished from coats and waistcoats, silks and relrets gare place to oroaociotn anu paniaiuuus, and when, afterward, trousers covered those nether limbs which had before been, and for so long a period, exhibited in S11K SHICajngH. iciiurw uicmuviiii were accomplished gradually, no doubt. AH was not done in a single night. Fashion makes first one convert, and then another, and so on, until all are numbered among her followers, and wear the livery she has prescribed. Garrick's opinion of those play-goers of his time, whom he at last banished from hia at. ira miv Iva aratherwl from the dialogue between -Esop and the Fine ueiitieman, in nis larce oi "i.eine. .-V.onn inniiirea. "How do vou snenil i' , - - . your eveuing, sir?" "I dress in the evening," says the fine gentleman, "and go generally ueniliu lie scriies wi win play-houses; not, you may imagine, to be diverted with the play, but to intrigue aud show myself. 1 stand upon the stage, talk loud and stare about, which nuilVuimta tlie aptnn and dirttiirTiA the audience. Upon which the galleries. v lit, uuic me aPciiraui; ui tnic ui us, begin to hiss, and cry, 'off, off;' while I, undaunted, stamp my foot so; loll with my shoulder thus; take snuff with my right hand and smile scornfully, tlka Thta BTtdMMM tlie uvuiml mil they attack us with volleys of sucked W . . 1 ... oranges anu nan-eaten pippins. aiio r,n retire " Witlinnt rlonlit if I am sober; for oranges will stain silk, and an orange disfigures a feature." All the Year Hound. A stacer Parisian. The following is from "Taine's Notes on Paris:" "What will they (the Parisian women) not do for a dress? There is in Paris an old photographer quite the fashion some five years ago. This man understood the art of notoriety and the display of his ware. ' He had a shop furnished in the fashion, with Sevres vases, and old illustrated books in full calf binding, tastefully arranged. By degrees the mania seized him ; he became a collector, bought old Sevres, rare books; he kept his carriage, drove to the Bois, went to his shop in his equipage, spent his money royally; protests, disasters, failures; seven per cent, to the creditors. His wife, formerly a milliner, set up a small dress-making establishment. He gives advice, the tide of fashion sets in ; they take a first story in theboulevard. To-day he again drives his carriage, and the women do all sorts of mean things to be dressed by him. This little dry, dark, nervous creature, who looks like a dwarf burned in the fire, receives them in his loose velvet coat, proudly stretched out on his divan, a cigar in his mouth. He says to them: "Walk, turn around; well, come back in a week. I will compose a suitable toilette for you." It is not they who choose, it is he; they are only too happy and to be served by himself a personal introduction is necessary. Mme. Francisque B., a lady of the best society, an elegant woman, went to him last month to order a dress. "Madame, by whom are you presented to me?" "What do you mean ?" "I mean that I dress no one who is not presented to me." She left flashing with indigna tion. Others remaining, said, "Let him he as rude as he likes, provided he dresses mo." After all the tiptop go to him. Some of these, his favorites, visit him for inspection before going to balls. He gives little tea parties at 10 o'clock. To those who express their surprise he replies, "I am a great artist; I have Delacroix's feeling for color, and I com pose," If you lose your patience with his exactions, "Sir, in every artist there is something of the Xapoleon. When M. Ingres was painting the Duchess of A , he wrote to her one morning, 'Mme., I must see you this evening at the theater in white, with a rose in the middle of your head-dress.' The Duchess countermanded her invitations, put on the dress, sent out for the bead-dress, and went to the theater. Art is divine ; the bourgeois are made to take our orders." A Hew aterlal tw rnXmrnllmg. The application of boards made of leather parings for covering roofs is steadily on the increase, says a foreign exchange, especially since it has been found practicable to impart to the ma terial the required durability, impervi ousness, aud its tine qua non, a great re sistance against the constantly chang ing influences of the atmosphere. Only by changing the mode of manufacture, these properties could bave been se cured. According to the German edi tion of "Engineering, " the board for merly used lor covering in roof was a spongy, easily compressible mass which received a single coat of tar, and with the great fault of softening, and conse quently losing its consistency in a damp atmosphere. This has lately been su perseded by a product manufactured by P. Desfeux and others, of fibrous mat ters, possessing a greater substance, such as leather, and which are in the process of manufacture impregnated with an oleaginous chemical composi tion, imparting to the material, when cut into sheets like paper aud dried, the appearance of real leather. This system of covering in roofs offers con siderable advantages, especially from an economical point of riew. The new roofing board is said to be rery light, aud consequently, as no other material, suitable for slight constructions. A Fa ws Medical laasttaUaa. (Fran the "ChJraco Tinea." "The name of Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buf falo. N. Y has become as familiar to the people all over the country aa 'household words. His wonderful remedies, his pant, phlets and books, and hie large medical ex perience, have brought him into prominence and given him a solid reputation. The Timet, in the present issue, presents a whole-page communication from Dr. Pierce, and onr readers may gain from it some idea ef the vast proportions of his business and the merits ef his medicines. He has at Buffalo a mammoth establishment, appro priately named 'The World s Dispensary,' where patients are treated, and the reme dies compounded. Here b early a hundred persons are employed ia the several depart ments, and a corps of able and skilled phy sicians stand ready to alleviate the suffer ings of humanity by the most approved v.j. m. .tMiiu are ia frequent eoesnltatisa with Dr Pieres. sad "r 00 biasd experience is hreag-t te bear sneeesef lAteeatnient of sbstiaats eases. The Doctor U a maa of a large expeneaea, aad sis extensive knowledge oi maw " . . i h. nvMentatlODS Of a as oewu icibu.iouj" v r ---- , degrees frsa. two of the first Medical Col leges in us lano. : If you would patronize Medie nes, smen tifieallr prepared by a skilled Physician and Chemist, ase Dr. Pierce's Faauly Medicines. Golden Medical Discovery is aatnUoua, tonic, alterative, and blood-eleanamg, and aa unequaled Cough Remedy; Pleasant .. n . 1 1 ,. (n,n mill. rurcauve reueu, scarOTij a . , . , j- raahla and re- larv imw, wiwuiw,. e - liable ; physio; Farorite Prescription, a re- medy lor aeoiuuuea Smart-Weed, a augical remedy for Pain, . . . . . a HHunalai1 T.tflU Bowei compitanw. maa mm - a v..k Vnmsa (4 harM-flftiB : m trail iur wui while his Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy is known the world over as the greatest spe cific: for Catarrh and "Cold in the Head ever given to the ablie. They are sold by International Exhibition of 1876. ' U. S. CsrraasiAi, Coimissioh, I PaiLADBiraiA, Pa., Nov. 24, 1875. J ir t n K.rrtm A r.n haTinreon- t :,k tk rVniannlal Board of Fi K with thm MinMHt and aDOTO- val of the United States Centennial Com mission, for the exclusive ngnt ana privi lege of publishing and Belling the Official Catalogue of the International Exhibition of 1876 and of inserting advertisements therein, and said contract, together wilh the copy right of said Official Catalogue, having been transferred to the Centennial Catalogue r k fn a. ill mmnwir Bad it vviupatuj, " ...... - r , stents sre alone authorised to publish and . .. 1 .l l.ln.i.. nl seU tne same, ana so m.w guide-book of the Exhibition containing ad vertisements will De permineu iw u within said Exhibition Grounds. (Signed) JOHS WELSH, Prea't Centennial Board of Finance. at nnsnoRN. Director-Geni U. S. Centennial Commission. Or r ici or CtrrtasiAi. Catalooc Co., Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 1, 1875. S Mean. S. M. Pettingill f Co., Advertising Ag'U of Philadelphia, Arm York and Boston. Gentlemen: This ia to certify that we have this day appointed yon onr exclusive agents for the United States and Canada for the Advertisin Department of the Umcuu Catalogue of the Centennial Exhibition of 1876. Tours, respectfully, JOHN S. .MORTON, President. 8. M. PrrrssoiLL k Co ' KiwsrAFU Adviktisiso Aoiirr, New Yobk, Dec 2, 1875. We are now ready to receive applications for space in the Official Catalogue of the Centennial Exhibiton of 1876. As the ad vertising space is limited to fiftg-omt pages in toe body of each book, those who wsnl space should apply without delay to 8. M. PETTENG1LL k CO., 701 Chestnut St, Philadelphia. . 37 Park Row, New York. 10 Slate St , Boston. Advertising received for all the Newspa pers in the United States and Canada at the lowest rates. Masses. J. R. Naole k Co., of Philadel phia, having secured the exclusive right to publish and sell the official catalogue and guide-book of the International Exhibition in 1876, and transferred all their privileges to the Centennial Catalogue Company ; that Company has appointed as sole agents to solicit advertisements for the same in the United States and Canada, Messrs. 8. M. Pettingill & Co., of "Ol Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, and 37 Park Row, New York city. The space set apart for advtrtisers is limited to fifty-one pages in each book, and those who desire to take advantage of the wide field thus afforded them, should make early application for space to that popular Advertising Agency. The Centenial Tear opens with a Great Centennial Concert at tort Scott, Kansas, Jakuaet 1st, 1876. Tickets $2. First Prixe, Davidson's Opera House, worth $V).00O; Second Prize, $-"0,000-, and 7,686 prixea, from $,0t down. The enterprise is endorsed by the best citixeos of the State, and ia the most liberal ever offered to the public For par ticulars address J. 8. EMMERT, Fokt Scott, Kahsab. eheaek e Mandrake Pills will be found to possess those qualities neces sary to the total eradication of all bilious at tacks, prompt to start the secretions ot tne Uver and irlTe a heal toy tone to the entire system. Indeed, It 19 do ordinary discovery In medical science to have Invented a remedy for these stubborn complaints, which develop all the re sults produced by a heretofore tree uae of calo mel a mineral justly dreaded by mankind, and acknowledged lo be destructive in tue extreme to the human system. That the properties of certain vetretables enmprlse all the virtues ot calomel without Its Injurious tendencies. Is now an admitted fact, rendered Indisputable by ad enylic researches; and those who use the Man drake Pills wlU be rully satLtned that the best medicines are tbOHe provided ny nature In the common herbs and roots ot tne Del da. These pills open the bowels snd correct all bilious derangements without Salivation or any of the Injurious effects of calomel or oilier pt sons. The secretion of bile Is promoted by hese pills, as will be seen by the altered color ot the stools, and disappearing of the sallow complexion and cleansing of the tonjrue. Ample directions for use accompany each Nx of pills. Prepared only by 1. H. Srhenck A 9on, at their principal office, corner Sixth and Arch streets, Philadelphia, and tor sale by all druggists and dealers. Price as cents per box. AFORTtJSI SOW ! ! Sir aMbn worth of aoaey maaiDa;. Samplea mat by Bail tar tea eaaa and one pHtag etaap. Affclremt J. T. Sarrm, 4-T K. 117th St, New York. tt-IO-lt ERJt AN EST and proSUWe employment eaa ba ccarei by one kvly In every Sawn ia the United State. Adilrea J. UENRT LIJiO.NIM. 6K Da toaaanu Sr., Bonos, Via, ll-23-tt MoOnrIM. 1 daCUd- SrunoB Cex, warn, aasreo Portland, Ma. XJC-lr CO sp a Ml a S3 5$ o o o m 7) a Sr. SB C a. in S J a S o 5 C 2 r 2 We n z ft n W C X a a o u r 1 Z a'i 4 4 5 O BROOKS! BROOXZS! ion i. Mills A CO IBS Washington Bt, Hew York. FTtnctpal Depot la Hew Terk far Uw ba Broom MaaaBKtana ia the Catted states, BraoaU frva SLM per iaiei 4 ward. 1 J"" srkxand (reXeet variety to Defend Alan aa entire new stack ef WOOD and WILLOW A fan Baa of the bat raetttr ef TIHWAEB. any armmalnn tae road. Order by nu niU re - eaca no raua, xnoa, mum, Mnta, To mm. Tf?. hc-VAmmr wttn a mil linn of Apple, d anicU Pip rag, Snaps, TaBBon!.: Una, Cattery, da. Sasnrs from S1A a SSU per aili. MUv WASTED I ' i -'- " r" "-"Tn i l easvasi tor ear new ore. "Tvt.WoanswJ- l . ij He.utf - Tl n".l- Ouutwl Aooa- TcTi-i.-. a t-.L4Ei.r. .tr!J ll-Ela The People's Remedy. Tlia Universal Pain Extractor. Note: Ask for P0XDS EXTRACT. Take no other. i Bcmr, lav I will weak Ucelleat thtasr." ,, PHI'S fXTIACT-Tho irt Teaetnbl, rl, Deecmyrr- Has been in saa over thlrry near, and for cleanliness and prompt cam tire eirtoea cannot be excelled. milEI. fawUyeaaatfoidmbewtthont Vead'a KsArmr. Aeeideata, kraZ Coattoe, fata, Bsnlaa, are relieves almost instantly by external sppUeation. Promptly reliews pains or Barns, Meale. Kxrnriatlona, ibaSaaa, Old Korea, Bail, Velaa, Corn's etc Arrant h. Bamatioo, reduces sweaines, stops blpedice, removes a irolonrionssnd heal rapidlr. raUEWUKIElSES,-! fi reWspH, m tn badt aud louuMnlmeae and pressing pia In the head, nausea, vertigo. II UBCIMHICA t -- oo nrnaL An kinds of aU eermttaas to which ladle nre subject am promptly cored. Fuller details ia book accom panyinc each bottle. f QJS blind or leedina meet prompt reBef and ready care. Kocme, however colonic or nbtinate. can kmc resist its regular see. VAIICOSI "tlHS.-" is the only (are cure tor tnts oHtreiii2 and aneeroasconditna. KIDIEY lUASU.-it has no equal lorperma nentcure. lilDIII from any eanse. For this b a sve. clc It has saved hundred of live when all oaacr remedies failed to arrant bleeding iron a onr, ntenmarh, lanxm, and elsewhere. IRIBMATISM, EURAUIA, JWhaehe and Karmrne re all aue reLerea, sad ones per manently cured. PNTtlCIAIt o all schools who are arquainted with foad'o Extract of V itrh Hazel rer. ommend it in tlieir practice, W e have If iter at eommendatiia from hundred of Phrsician, aaany of whom order it tor see in their own practice. In addition to the foregoing, they order its n-o for pivrelliass of ail kind, (ialnnv, Seae Threat, Inflamed Tenuis, simple snd.. chronic Irittrrho-a, Catarrh (fca- which tt wa eperiOc.) 1 nilslaiaa. Fram ed Feet, Ktiasrsof I narelo. Monwailoen, etc-. C happed Ilaadm lire, and indeed all manner of kin dieeaees. TOILET I Hid gSE. KfmoTe Woreaeoa, Fiimhni ia. aud ."-merlin-1 net Is c ntn, e.mplioaa, and Pinaplen. It rniw, tnnonratr. and re frame, while wonderfalry improving the ( 'nntplexiM. It fARIIIEHS.-l'sad's Extract. Jfo Stock Breeder.uo LivervManran anord lobe without it. It nsed by all the Leading Livery Stable. fHreet Rulmnda and Srst ilmemen in New York City. lthanoeuualforMn)raitifsi1ar memm or piaddle CaaBa HliSTarn, Hrratrhea, Mwellian-n.C'at, bareratioan, Bleediaa; Paeaavonia, Colie, ltarraaa C'billn, Cotdn, etc, ltaractfeof action is wide, and the relief it afford ie so prompt that it Is invaluable in every Farm-vard a well as m very Farm-bonse. Let it Ve tried once, snd von "will never he whbuot it. (ACTIO!. Poad'o Extract has been Imitated. Toeirennine article ha the word Paad'a Ex tra Mows m each hotllr. It to prepared by the ealy ne-rnaan liviaw whoever knew how to prepare it prone rlv. helu-e ,11 other pre parations or Vitrh HaxeL This i the only article need by Physician, nd in the hoxpi tl of thi country and Kurort. NISTORT AO BSES OF POND'S EXTIACT, in iwunntil't forru.itt frv n applet lot. to DIBS EITIACT COMPART, Lane, frew York. nri wk io AptutA. uti v X gQflta, M tin-. t,wk to AfCeuta. VM aid luun-z. M ,lr r-rm. anrtiHTrtr I'KKKY A ('".. Aa ll-La HORSEMEN! OW ALItS OF STOCK ! Save Your Horses and Cattle 1 CURE TI1EM OP DISEASE AND KEEP THEM IN A HEALTUT CONDITION BT G1TLN0 THEM M. D. ROBERTS CELEBRATED TRADC a .-- r " 7i BANC HORSE POWDERS, IN USB OVER FORTY YEARS! TBS OBLT roWDEBS COSTA1SISO TC2TI3, LA2ATT73 73 P2CP22TES OOBTBISBD, TBBBEBV BAK1BS TBSW TBB BEST COSDITIOX MEDICINB IS TUB WORLD. They ars mails of Pars Material only, on lablsspoonful going as far as on pound of ordinary oattle powders. Buy OB package and after nsing them joa will never get don praising them. Fur sal by ail storekeeper. USE M. B. ROBERTS Vegetable Embrocation FOR ALL EXTERNAL DISEASES BITBBB ov 1MA.1V OR. BEAST. FREDERICK SPIECKER, P -!-JCiT. 1 - V"'J 2 fit? 1 WBOLSI1LB BaALBm IS Leaf Tobacco,' Cigars, Pipes, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco, OF THE BEST BRANDS. SI 152 TiJZXZZITT PHILADELPHIA. Onr A rent far V. 8. lid Top Clrai AfMld. Cigar Stare saa bw saps&ed. MKT SHOW CASES! SHOW CASES! BBUUsJuq-nmnt. um uimj tmja,avci -' - fadTHTiiiiii OA.U- 6 1 1 L-1 V I 'Hi ai 1 tlsi.sC ATI X AffBl Ban nUDA,'"-! - TrhKH, c BOUm. AND OFT I CI. KUH?(ITTJR vQ fc AM lTCBAW BUia D-w mi I I wBM ill. an. - UB UJBfl Vera,. LEWIH Jbs JRO M ion, loss, io as ion ridgc ati mis r LTelTii-v. BLANKS aTWAiTv.T nuriu) at eb omcr.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers