TEE HDDES BROOK. BT JOBS TkOWBMDGk. WLX is this melody beneath the gnat ? Com hither, stoop and Satan nearer yet , " And posh aside the thick and tangled net Of bending manes and the brakes' green mass. It tones the shrilling of the locust's glee, And, like a harper's touches falling in With high notes of a master's violin. It binds a jarring strain to harmony. Bosh, bobolink! and cease to entnltte Gay bird, tboa haet not eaoght 'be gentle song; Too many roguish thoughts together throng. And mingle in thy carols to thy mate. Bat, fresh from grsver forest-symphonies, The winds, in Tsried movement, low and sweet. Within the pines and birch-trees may repeat Thia sweetest of the meadow's melodies. ScrOmert Monthly. Tits Fwr Seatf. From Mr. Henry Elliott's report on the condition of affairs In the Territory of Alaska, the following new facts iu regard to seals are extracted. Mr Elliott is employed now in the Smith sonian institute, and is a young man o, most superior attainment": "The male fur seal at the age of six or seven rears is described as an animal that will measure six and one-half to seven and one-quarter feet in length from tip of noe to end of tail, and weigh at least four hundred and some times as much perhaps as six hundred pounds. The head in comparison with the immense thick neck and shoulders, seems to tie tiiipro'iortioiiately small, but as we come to examine it we find that it is mostly all occupied by the brain; the light frame work of the skull supports an expressive pair of large, blue-hazel eyes, and a muzzle and jaws of nearly the same size and form observed in any Newfoundland doe, with the difference of having no flabby, lianjnnjr lips; the upiier lip support a white and yellowish-gray moustache, long and luxuriant, coin pored of heavy stiff bristles. The fore feet or hands are a pair of dark bluish black flippers, about eight or ten inches broad. The shape ol the flipper is strikingly like a human foot, providing the latter were drawn out to a lengin of twenty or twenty-two inches, the instep flattened down and the toes run out into thin, membranous oval-tipped rxiiuts. only skin-thick, leaving three strong cylindrical, grayish, horn-col ored nails, ball an wen long, nacK six inches from these shining toe-ends, without any nails to mention on the big and little toe. As we look on this fur seal's progres sion, that which seems most odd is the gingerly manner in which he carries these hind nippers. J ney are held out at right angles from the body, directly opiiosite the pelvis, the toe ends and flaps slightly waving and curling above the earth. The neck, chest and shoul ders of a fur seal bull comprise more than two-thirds of his whole weight, and in this long, thick neck and lore limbs is embodied the larger lortion of his strength ; when on laud witn the fore feet he does all climbing over rocks, the bind flippers being gatheied up after every second step forward. J nese lore feet are the profiling power when in water, the hinder ones being used as rudders chiefly. The females or cows, like the males, vary much in weight, but are much lighter, only weighing from eighty to one hundred and twenty pounds. The strons contrast between the males and females in size and sh:ie is heightened by the air of exceeding peace and ami ability which the latter class exhibit. They are from four to four and a halt feet in length from head to tail, and much more shaiely in their proportions than the male, the neck and shoulder lieing not near so fat and heavy in pro portion to their posteriors, me head and eye of the female are really at tractive; the expression is exceedingly gentle and intelligent; the large, lus trous eyes, in the small, well-tormed head, apparently gleam with benignity and satisfaction when she is perched u miii some convenient rock and has an opportunity to quietly lau lierseil. Squandering- Priceless ulfts. AmoDff the numberless marvels at which nobody marvels, tew are more marvelous than the recklessness witn which priceless gifts, intellectual and moral, are squandered. 01 ten have I ' gazed with wonder at the prodijraliry oisnlaved by nature in the cistus, which unfolds hundreds or thousands of its tarry blossoms, morning after morn ins', to shine in the liirbt of the sun for an hour or t wo, and then full to the ground. But who among the sons and danghtersof men gifted with thoughts which wander through eternity, and with powers which have the godlike rivilege of working good and riving appiness who does not daily let thousands of these thoughts drop to the ground and rot f who does not con tinually leave his powers to draggle in the mould of their own leaves f The imagination can hardly conceive the heights of greatness and glory to which mankind would be raised, if all their thoughts and energies were to le am mated with a living purpose, lint, as in a forest of oaks, among the millions of acorns that fall every autumn, there luav, perhaps, lie one in a million that w ill grow on into a tree somewhat in like manner fares it with the thoughts and feelings of man. What, then, must be our contusion when we see all these wasted thoughts and feelings rise up in judgment and bear witness against ns! t'erporal Pnnlshment In the RckMli. Within a few years some of our com munities have forbidden all resort to corioral punishment for refractory im pits. It is denounced as barbarous and degrading An indiscreet aciininisira tiou of it arouses an excitement as in discreet as the original sin. Instead of removing the one offender, we remove from all hands the weapon witn m mm he has offended. It is always so much easier to generalize than to discriminate. Nevertheless 1 relapse into barbarism suthciently to suggest that. In the pres ent state of our civilization and our school organization, corporal punish inent is a weans of grace w hich we can not aliolish, and have not abolished with out injury. The necessity of using it is very, perhaps increasingly rare. The teacher who frequently and freely re sorts to it is presumptively unlit for his situation. But the power to use it should vest in the teacher, and is a pre ventive of mischief. Corporal punish ment has never been abolished in the kingdoms of nature or of grace. Every teacher knows that there are boys, who, by some inward conformation or some defect of home training, do not respond to the ordinary motives of the school room. We give the little victims over, un- helped and hardened, to the cruel nidul gence, to the fatal unwisdom of their untaught, uncariable guardians. To turn many of these boys out of school is to turn them upon the street, is to let them loose into a lite of idleness and lawlessness, it is unjust to the parents, as well as ruinous to the child. The former have paid their share of the taxes which support the school and they have a right to all the benefit which the school is capable of bestowing. When they send their children to school, the school ought to teach and govern them, not send them home again. This is just what the naughty boys want. In very many cases the rod would not need to be used. If the boy knows that by playing tricks, or by prolonged idleness, or con tumacy, or rebellion, he will be only sent adrift, he will play the trick and wrench himself free from restraint. The sweeping away of corporal punishment from schools is the flowering of that tare of weakness which springs to vigor ous growth side by side with the wheat of kindness in yonr rich American soil. It is the same vague, blind, emasculate, injudicious complaisance which winks at crime and shrinks from punishment and pardons out, and is not so far re moved from cruelty to the community as it is from beneficence to the criminal. And always and everywhere it is, to the full measure of its influence, subversive of manhood and fatal to character. Gail Hamilton, t'a Independent. A Plea fer Ine Wild Elephant. A correspondent of Land and Water calls attention to the slaughter of ele phants, arranged to take place at Trin comaleev in Ceylon, on the occasion of the Prince's visit. The elephants are described as roaming about in large herds iu the most tame and inonensive fashion, almost heedless of man, for none have been shot for upwards of twelve months. There Is at present such a large class of society in England, who advocate kindness to animals in all its forms, that we ventf ire to predict that, when the battue and shooting down of these semi-tame elephants- occurs, the accounts will be received In England by the humane and thoughtful portion of the community with feelings the re verse of satisfactory. It seems a pity to destroy, tor the sake of simple Siort. such useful intelligent animals as ele phants. In destroying tigers and other strictly wild and des;ructive beasts, the sportsmen perlorm a puouc service, anu this knowledge doubtless adds additional zest to the enterprise; but the whole sale destruction of these huge and valu able assistants to man, on the plea of sport, when their hunting and capture for domestication would be equally ex citing and far more instructive, is a proceeding repugnant alike to the teach ings ot our nag, and to our nuniaue ideas of advanced civilization. If the risk of life from the furion9 charge of a wounded bull elephant is required to establish the courage of their future king in the eyes of his Eastern Empire, let some other plan be devised, and let his millions of half civilized subjects practically associate his visit with re collections of mercy rather than with the wantou slaughter of animals almost idolized for their utility, and tractability the most powerful, and yet the most docile, creatures in the universe. Wau ton waste brings woeful want. The commercial loss, though large, in an elephant battue is not of so much eon sequence as the example. The wanton slaughter of buffaloes of late years on the American prairies, and of moose deer in Cauada, has already excited the action of their respective Governments, and nearly every State of the Union has been compelled to pass severe repressive game laws to prevent the extermination of many of the indigenous birds and beasts, and this, too, in a wild country with almost unlimited range. We trust to hear that the royal party will have plenty of sjiort in every legitimate sense, but elephant battues are not legitimate sport. fport Is a misnomer : it is simple butchery. Twkis Children Can race. Courage is a vital element of Chris tian chivalry. Wiihout it indeed neither truth nor fidelity to promise can be hoped for. The coward is sure to lie when truth means punishment, and sure to retreat from his engagements when they involve peril. We need valiant souls that have learned to endure and scorn pain, and to face danger fearlessly and promptly when duty requires. Some parents evade this vital part of training by glosses and deception. A mother who has taken her boy to the dentist's to get a tooth out will often say, if he is shrinking, Sit still, my my boy; it won't hurt you." Now she knows it will hurt him, but thinks if she can only get him by this device to sit still and let the dentist get hold of the tooth, then his discovery of the pain will not hinder its extraction. This is a double mistake. It destroys her boy's confidence in her; for he detects her iu a lie. And though it gets the boy this time, to sit still, it is under the delusion that there is to be no pain, whereas he 6liould be taught to face the pain and to scorn it. This makes the difference between cowards and heroes. A regi iment of poltroons could march up to a battery as cheerfuliy as a regiment of heroes if tney thought there was no enemy at the gnus. The dinVrem-e is that heroes know the danger and yet f"ce it valiantly. ral ran rage. Sidney Smith, in his work on moral philosophy, speaks in this w ise, of w lint men lose for want of a little courage, or independence of mind : "A great deal ot talent is lost in the world tor the want of a little courage. Every day sends to the grave a number of obscure men, who have only remained in obscurity because their timidity has prevented them from making the first enort : and wno it tney coiuci tie in duced to begin, would in all prolwtbil ity, have gone great lenghta in the ca reer of fame. The fact is. that to do anything in this world worth doing, we must not stand shivering, and thinking of the cold and the danger, but jump in and scramble through as well as we can. Itill not do to be perpetually calculating tasks, and adjusting nice chances ; it did very well before the flood, where a man could consult his friends upon an intended publication for a huudred and fifty years, and then live to see its success afterwards : but at present, a man waits and doubts and hesitates aud consults bis brother, and his uncle, and his particular friends, till one fine day he hnda that he is sixty years of age ; that be hits lost so much time in consulting his first cousin and particular friends, that he has no more time to follow their advice. - Heme kins; te Me ns Thinking. Ninety years hence not a single man or woman, now twenty years of age, will be alive. Ninety years! Alas! how many lively actors at present on thest-ige'of life will make their exit long ere ninety years shall have rolled away! And could we be sure of ninety years, what are they? "A tale that is told ;" a dream ; an empty sound, that passeth on the wings oi" the wind away and is forgotten. Years shorten as man advances in age. Like the degrees in longitude, man's life declines as he travels toward the frozen pole, until it dwindles to a point and vanishes for ever. Is it possible that life is of so short duration? M'ill ninety years erase all the golden names over the doors in town and country, and substi tute others in their stead ? Will all the new blooming beauties fade and disap pear, all the pride and passion, the love hope and joy pass away in ninety years and lie forgotten! "Ninety years," says Death ; "do you tnink I shall wait ninety years? Behold to day and to morrow, and every day are mine. When ninety years are past, this generation will have mingled with the dust and be remembered not!" Walt. Wait, husband, before you wonder audibly why your wife don't get along with the household affairs "as youf mother did." She is doing her best and no woman can endure that best to be slighted. Kemeniber the long weary nights she sat up with the little babe that died; remember the love and care she bestowed upon you when vou bad that long spell of sickness. t)o you think she is made of cast iron? Wait wait in silence and forbearance, and the light will come back to her eyes the old light of the old days. : e - v. .. r 1- f ail, iic, wiure you sjjt-a re proachfully to your husband wheu he comes home late, weary, and "out of sorts." He has worked hard for you all day, perhaps far into the night; he hag wrestled, hand In hand witn care, and selfishness and greed, and all the demous that follow iu the train of money making. Let home be another atmos phere entirely. Let him feel that there is no other place in the world where he can find peace and quiet, and perfect love. AGKICTLTCEAL. : Foddkr Corn akd Hcxoakux Gkass. Prof. Atwater ends hi lesson in the September number of the Ameri can AgricnlturiMt by saying : "To econ-! omize in feeding, see was ine iouaer contains plenty of nitrogen. And this for two reasons: because stock cannot digest their food completely without it, and because they need aiDuminoias ior their nutrition." The "walks and Talks" lesson begin by giving a table compiled by Dr. Harlan, of Wilming ton, Delaware, showing tne amount oi nitrogen In a ton of different crops. "A ton ef Hungarian millet has twenty pounds, a ton of green clover twelve pounds, a ton of green corn four pounds. If by Hungarian millet is meant what we call Hungarian grass, or millet, then by mixing equal parts ol green corn and millet we nave in tne mixture a food as rich in nitrogen as green clover. If there is no mistake about this. It is a very important lesson. Fodder corn, which has not nitrogen enough to make it a first-class food, nnds, in Hungarian grass, a inena mar, has more of that material than the law, as laid down by Prof. Atwater, allows good fodder to need : but, ny putting their nitrogen into a common purse and then dividing equally, they can both stand m tne presence oi ciover which has been considered both king and queen of fodder. "Some experiments in feeding fodder corn this season satisfied me that the same law which governs the time for cutting rye, oats and grass, to get the most milk, governs green corn, v? nen in leaf and before it tassels, is the time to cut to have the cow give the most milk from what they eat of it. A lot of cows that averaged eight quarts a day on sweet corn fodder, tasseled and silked, wheu fed -in ground seed corn in leaf, not tasseled, tnough it stood six feet high, other conditions, as far as I know, being equal, gave an average oi nine quarts per day. , T , orrwrvn MriTva T know of some farmers that almost as soon as the hay crop is removed turn stock upon tlittm ami let it remain there durinir the growing season, and the conse quence is, that a productive meaaow will oecoine impoverisneu oy tute rui nmia muiro. an that. In n few vears it will not produce one-half what it did formerly. Then the owner negins to find fault and thinks it has run out and wants ploughing up, never once taking a sensible view of the matter. Some (Intra are nntnrallv rich in fertili- nnmartiM AT nprhllM have the i . 1 : r wash of a stock-yard, or by some means are kept up in a hign suite oi productive ness that will bear to be pastured to a u rti, , artant Rut rattle BrinilUl not be allowed to come on a meadow until the second growth has attained consid erable size, and then they should be re- moved before eating too ciose. anu i thing another important matter is in keeping up the fertility of the soil, and rx Liun t lio art-aav hufor the seed is rine. The hay is better and the fertilizing properties required from the soil to mature the seed It reiameu. a nave three acres of meadow and one year I decided to leave the second growth on to rot down. Now, what do you think my neighbors thought about it ? Some said I would go crazy; others said, "O, it is too bad that you leave so mucn nU iriau An v-mir mpsdneri" but 1 told them they should wait till the coming summer, that we would talk the matter over. The crop realized from my miMilnv u-a civ tnne of bar. The best crop before was about Tour tons. e . . .. . . r.. il vnn ..Irian i-irnnr nor in iw ainuu to leave on a little grass in the fall. Tne Tuns Test or Vw,etables. Large vegetables may indicate good strong soil, thorougn culture auu nign manuring, but it is a question in my mind whether the mammoth things should always receive the first award. At the table w here we give the true test to vegetables size does not rank as a very important attribute. I was as tounded to see so little tasting and ex amination of texture by the committee that judged the vegetables. No man is thoroughly callable of passing upon the relative merits of specimens in this class unless ho can go more than skin deep in the matter. I never saw so per fect an exhibition ol garden products a was shown at the State Fair. There was earnest and close competition Still iu the awarding of prizes 1 saw no judging of quality by taste, which is the true test. The prizes may be awar ded correctly, but not as the resuit of careful comparison or quality, a man may know vegetables so well as to judge from the constant surface attri butes that accompany first quality, but I have failed to meet the man yet who considers himself so skillful as this The judges of apples would consider it absurd to pass upon tne vaiue oi an ap ple by its size and complexion alone, Is it not equally unjust to pass upon beets, potatoes and turnips in this way? Tne quality of th'jrse vegetables is just as apparent to the connoisseur In its raw state as that of an apple. I do hope there will be progress in this matter, and that men who judge will have a solid foundation for their decisions. To ascertain if a plant wanU fresh Dotting, turn it carefully out of the pot with the earth attached to it, and ex amine the roots. If they are matted about the sides and bottom of the ball, the plant evidently requires fresh pot ting. Then carefully reduce the ball or earth to anout a mini oi its original bulk : single out the matted roots and trim away all that are moldy aud de cayed. Probably the same pot may then be large enough, but if it requires a larger one, it should be about two incites broader for a middle-sized plant; three or four for a large plant. If the roots are not matted but the Dots are filled with fillers, keep the baTl entire and carefully plant it in a larger pot. At the top of a large pot, and a email one. half an inch should be left for the reception of water, without danger of overflow. A little gravel, cnarcoai, or pieces of broken pots should always tie placed at the bottom for drainage. Sheep on a farm yield both wool and mutton. They multiply with great rapidity. They are the best or farm scavengers, "cleaning a field" as no other class of animals will. They give back to the farm more in proportion to what they take from it than any other animal, and distribute it better with a view to the future fertility of the soil. Prove this? There is no need of proof to those who have kept sheep, aud know their habits and the profits they yield. To prove it to those who have not the experience, it Is necessary tney tbey should try tne experiment or ac cept the testimony of an experienced shepherd. Sheep on a farm yield both wool and mutton. They multiply with great rapidity. They are the best or farm scavengers, "cleaning a field" as no other class of aminals will. They give back to the farm more in proportion to what they take from it than any other animal, and distribute it belter with a view to the future fertility of the soil. The best plan for storing rabbiges is to lay down two rails 4 to 6 inches apart, and then place the cabbages bead down wards on them, leaving tne roots ex posed : then turn a furrow towards them on each side, and by the aid of the spade cover the head with 4 to 6 inches of earth ; select a dry place where water does not stand. Thkkk are over 2,700 varieties of ap ples known by over 1,800 names; 2,200 of pears,200 of cherries,150 of plums,300 of our native grapes, 50 of currants, 80 of raspberries and 30 of blackberries,ac cording to counting up of somebody. A male egg, one that will hatch ont a rooster, has on iu pointed end, small folds and wrinkles, while a female egg has no wrinkles and is perfectly smooth at both ends and well rounded. sciKTrTnc .. Ilo House Air it SvoOed. The fol lowing facta will show how- the air in houses becomes contaminated : - 1. An adult person consumes 34 gramme ot oxygen per boar, a gramme being equal to 13 grains. . 2. A stearin candle consumes about one half as much. 3. An adult gives off 40 grammes per hour of carbonic acid. A child of 50 lbs. weight gives off as much as an adult of 100 lbs. weight. 4. A schoolroom filled with children will, if not well ventilated at the be ginning of the hour, contain 25 parts in 1,000 of carbonic acid, at the end of the first hour 41, and end ot the second hoar 81. 5. The air is also spoiled by the per spiration of.the body, and by the vol atile oils given out through the skin. An adult gives off through the skin in 24 hours from 500 to 800 grammes of water mixed with various excrements. poisonous if breathed. - - 6. A stearin candle gives off per hoar 04 cubic feet of carbonic acid, and 003 lbs of water. 7. Carbonic oxide is a much more dangerous gas than carbonic acid, and this obtains entrance to oar rooms in many ways, tu rough the cracks in stoves and defective stovepipes, or when the carbonic acid of the air comes in contact with a very hot stove and is converted into carbonic oxide. The dust of the air may, on a hot stove, be burnt to produce it; or it may flow out from our gas pipes when the gas is not perfectly consumed. 8. Another form of air injury is the dust of a fungus growth which tills the air in damp and warm places. We call it miasm from a want of true knowledge of its character. 9. Accidental vapors are thecrowning source of air poisoning. These are to bacco smoke, kitchen vapors, wash room vapors, and the like. - 10. When we heat our bouses and close them from outside air, the beat turns the mixture into a vile mess un fit for breathing. The only remedy is ventilation. Jsow that it is cold wea ther and onr rooms are closed from free currents of outside air. let as look after the matter thoroughly and do our best to prevent injury to ourselves from polluted air. Diteate and the Faculty oJcmorjf. The faculty of memory is one of the first to be obviously affected by dis ease. When disease for a time seems to suspend the action of this faculty, or visibly to diminish it, the result is not looked upon as pnenominai, ior it is common and expected. Bat when disease increases the power of this faculty, a thing not uncommon, the pa tient is not nnfrequently regarded as possessing more than human wisdom, and the case usually excites comment as one of great mystery. Dr. Stein bach mentions the case of a clergyman who, being summoned to administer the sacrament to an illiterate peasant, found the patient praying aloud in Greek and Hebrew. The case was deemed wellnigh miraculous. . After the peasant's death, it was found that he was aceastomed in youth to hear the parish minister pray in those lan guages, and it was inferred that be must have been repeating remembered words without understanding their meaning. Dr. Abercrombie relates the circumstances of a more remarkable case. A poor shepherd-girl was for a time accustomed to sleep in a room adjoining that occupied by an itinerant musician. The man was an artist by education, a lover of his profession, and often spent a large portion of the night in practising ditb'cnlt composi tions. The violin was his favorite in strument. At last the shepherd-girl fell ill. and was removed to a charita ble institution. Here the attendants were amazed at hearing the most ex quisite music in the night, in which went rnciiirn ized finely-rendered Pas sages from the best works of the old masters. The sounds were traced to the shepherd-girl's room, where the natient waa fonnd nlaving the violiu in her sleep. Awake, she knew nothing of these things, and exhibited no ca pacity for music. Popular Science Monthly. Ever since Schoenbein showed that a mouse shut np in an atmosphere of ozone died in anout nve niinui, a no tion has prevailed that ozone ict in an energetic way on the animal lio dv ; lint until these experiments were made, scarcely anything was known of the subject. 1 he couclusions, as sta tmI bv the experimentalists, are : 1. That tiie inhalation of an atmosphere highly charged with ozone diminishes the number of respirations per min ute. 2. The pulsatious of the heart are reduced in strength, and the heart is found beating feebly after the death of the animal (experimented on). 3. The blood is always found in a venous condition in all parts of the body, Inith in cases of death in an atmosphere of ozonized air and of ozonized oxygen.' (In this particular the action resembles that of carbonic acid.) 4. Ozone exer cise a destructive action on the living animal tissues if brought into imuicdl ate contact with them ; but it does not affect them so readily if they are cov ered by a layer of fluid. 5. Ozone acts as an irritant to the mucous membrane of the nostrils and air-passages, as all observers have previously remarked. What male Water Hard. But. though insoluble in pure water which is already charged with carbonic acid. and as all rain-water brings down car bonic from the air. it is capable of tak ing np carbonate of lime from the soils and rocks throagn wuicn it niters ; and it thus happens that all springs anu rivers, that rise in localities in which there is any kind of calcareous ruck. become more or less charged witn car bonate of lime kept in solution by an excess of carbonic acid. This is what gives the peculiar character to water which is known as "hardness ; " and a water hard enough to curdle soap may be converted into a very "soft" water (as the late Prof. Clark, of Aberdeen, showed) by the simple addition of lime water, which, by combining with the excess of carbonic acid, causes the precipitation of all the lime iu solution in the form of insoluble carbonate, which gradually settles to the bottom. leaving the water clear. Popular act' ence Monthly. Malarotf Matt. An a substitute for sails in stopping leaks in ships, Lieu tenant Makarotf. a young officer serv ing in the Kussian navy, designed a mat of peculiar construction. The MakarotT mat has for its basis a closely worked structure of rope abont I inch in diameter, made of the finest hemp. while the matlike snrface closely re sembles that common to all mats of the kind used for street doors. The tex ture of the mat is wonderfully close ; and as the whole is treated with a wa ter proof composition, it may be re garded as practically impermeable to water. The hairy side of the mat is that applted to the ship's side, and it is stated and we see no reason to doubt the statement that these mats mav be dragged over jagged edged boles in iron plates without sustaining any injury. . Pneumatic Foxtoont. Knapp's open bottom pneumatic jacks or pontoon are attached bv chains passing under Ube wreck, and the chaining is ingeni ously eflected by means ot a small tube passed under the wreck, through which a float and line attached to the cable are drawn. Compressed air is then ad mitted to the pontoons, which instantly give the lifting power. The advanta ges of this system consist in easy man agement and the possibility of being used in exposed situations ; ana it ap pears to be extensively patronized, Among the best bearings for water wheels are those composed of good oak, rock maple, or lignum vita). Shingle roofs can be made doubly durable by giving them a coat of thin oil before they get wet. The castor bean is now cultivated in Kansas, and a castor oil factory has been erected at Fort Scott, Receipt Books. Allow me to sug gest to all thrifty housekeepers that tney make their own receipt dooks. a blank book having its pages numbered can be obtained for a small sum of any dealer in stationery. Do not write any ieceipts save those that nave been tried by yoursel or friends. ' Have it ar ranged systematically, by being divided into different departments, as one for meats, another for vegetables, breads, 1 pies, puddings, 4c. Have an index, and allow space at the end of every different department, both there and in the body of the book, fn which to make entries at future times. Any obliging housekeeper will be not only will'ng but glad to give you receipts and ru.es for making different dishes; then write them out definitely, for it is of fully as much importance that a dish be properly mixed and cooked, as that the proper proportions be used. It may, at first thought, look like a hard task, but bave it lying handy and write in it at odd moments, and you will be surprised at the progress you will make, and then, when made, you will have such a reel ing of reliability about it, for you kwm what it is; no experimenting there. I have one which I commenced fifteen years ago,' and I would not give it for any one I have ever seen published. And what a treasure such a book would be to a daughter commencing house keeping all written in mother's hand writing, and tested by her good judgment and mature wisdom ! The Fcmes op Cabbage. Many per sons are fond of cabbage, but not at all fond of the unpleasant fumes which penetrate the entire house during the process of boiling. Therefore we recom mend a manner of cooking that renders the vegetable so pleasant to the taste as to obliterate all prejudice against its free use. Reduce the cabbage to small pieces nearly fine enough for slaw, then stew for half an hour in a covered saucepan with not enough water to coyer it ; when done, drain off the water and sea son with salt, pepper, and a liberal quantity of butter, using vinegar on the table. Served in this way, you have a nice vegetable, much more delicate than boiled cabbage, and suitable to eat with any kind of meat you may chance to have on hand. Pcriptixo Cider Barrels. A cor respondent of the Boston (Jultimttor ac complishes it this way: I cleansed a cask thai bad boiled cider in it; it is us sweet as a new one. I put aliout two quarts of lime In it and filled it with water and let it stand 24 hours, then turned it out and rinsed thoroughly with water. Then I took a piece of sheet iron and made a funnel shaped cup that would go into the bung hole, riveted a narrow piece of hoop iron to it, about i inches long, then put a red hot bolt into the cup and tilled it witn suipnur, anu put it into the barrel and cleansed the vents and bung. I let it stfy about five hours then rinsed well and it was all right. The handle to the cup makes it easy to rumigate barrels. Wholesome Put Crcst. The most healthy pie crust is made of thin, sweet cream and flour, with a little salt. Don't knead. Bake in a quick oven. Another way is, sift a quart or two of flour in the pan. Stir in the center a little salt and hair a teaspoonrul or soda well pulverized. Put in the hole a cup of soft (not liquid) lard, or butter and lard mixed; stir it thoroughly with the flour; next add two scant cups of good sour milk or buttermilk. Stir all quickly with the flour in such a way that you need hardly touch it with your hands till you can roll It out. Kake quickly. This will make three or four pies. Ax iMrRovrn Ltmpuxg for Chickes, Stews. &.q. With one quart of sifted flour mix one teaspoonful of salt, two of cream of tartar, and one of soda. Pour in sweet milk and stir until the mixture is just thick enough to form into biscuit. Place them upon the largest sized round baking tin, and set the tin in a steamer over the kettle where the chicken is boiling. Steam about forty minutes. Thicken and sea son the broth, break the biscuit apart and drop them in the gravy, boil ten minutes and serve. These are said to retain their lightness not falling as they become cool. Offensive C'isteks Water. The bad odor so often complained of is mainly due to the presence of tine particles of decaying vegetable matter. The best way to avoid it is to pass the water through a filter before it goes into the cistern. What is termed a double cis tern is the most convenient method of filtering that is a partition of brick is put in, which answers for a filter. For temporary relief from offeusiveness, sink a bag of charcoal iu the water. This will not purify it, but remove in a great part the unpleasant smell. Fritt Fl'DDtXO. Chop six apples fine, grate six ounces of stale bread, add six ounces of brown sugar, and six ounces of currants, washed carefiiily and floured. Mix all well together with six ounces of br"er, a cupful of milk, and two cupfuls of flour in which two teaspnonfuls of baking powder have been thoroughly mixed. Spice to taste. If necessary, add more milk in mixing. Put in a pudding bag, tie loosely, and boil three hours. To be eaten with cream sauce. - Salve for Chapped Hands, etc. The following is a well-tested, excellent remedy for chapped hands aud sores of this nature. I'ut together equal weights of fresh unsalted butter, tallow, bees wax, and stoned raisins; simmer until the raisins are done to a crisp, but not burned. Strain and pour into cups to cool. Rub the hands thoroughly with it, and though they will smart at first they will soon feel comfortable and heal quickly. The best way to admit pure air in the night (where windows are the only mode of ventilation) is to open the sleeping-room into a hall where there is an open window In order to avoid the draught. A window with a small open ing at top and bottom ventilates more than one with one opening only. The Best Wat to Coos Codfish. Strip it of Us skin, and cut it in pieces about the size of ones hand ; place it in water, and allow it to simmer on the stove until it becomes tender. It should never be allow to boil. Boiling hardens and darkens the fish, and deprives it of its flavor. ' To Extract Ink from cotton, silk and woolen goods saturate the spots with spirits of turpentine, and let it remain several hours; then rub it between the hands. It will crumble away without injuring either the color or texture of the article. To Clean Wall Paper. Tiie appear ance of old wall paper will be very much improved by rubbing it with a woolen cloth dipped in dry Indian meal. It removes the dust and smoke. Piece of stale bread are equally efficacious. Corn Meal Griddle Cakes. Scald half a pint of Indian meal, half a pint of the same dry ; flour, and stir all into a pint of milk with a tablespoon ful of butter and one egg. Spread very thin on the griddle. Cream on Onions. Putting cream on onions instead of butter (or even a little milk if one has no cream) removes much of the strong flavor and renders them less likely to affect weak stomach un pleasantly. Indian Rusk. Two light cops of inoian meal, one enp or white flour, one teaspoonful of saleratus, enough sour or butter-milk to dissolve, one cup sweet, stir in three-fourths of a cup of moiasses. Washing to Stiffex Fine Lack Dissolve a lump of white sugar in a wineglassful of cold water. . lUHMt . : n 1 VaBimnar nilb ITRTINAI.ITI. a. I .. . v.... an snyer lisner neing auwuk w "s-j- . . tlsement canvasser, thus interrogated the applicant, wno swiru " - s !.. tin hefore. "NOW. never iwu , said the publisher, "it is most likely , . I.K munr Mhll fl4 that you win mm tu" " and short answers. What wUl you do in that case?" "Why, call again . tin they become civil to me." "Perhaps you i will be denied admittance or access to the principals. What then?" " hy. I should sit down on tne uuwmicjj h came out." "Perhaps you would be put out at the front door.' "Then I should try to get In by a side -one.' "Most likely, in such a case, they would threaten to call the police.' ' "Then I should make myseir scarce, anu u-yio moot mr ventleinanon Sunday when he came out of church." The Wrong Place. An old man entered a Detroit shirt store yesterday to get himself a pair of mittens. He saw some chest-protectors there, and after looking them over he said : "Well, I'll be mashed if I know what these things are," "They are capital things for the winter," replied the clerk; "they are chest-protectors." ' .-"..' "Put 'em on the chest?" ssked the old man.' 'Yes, right over the lungs. I will sell you one very cheap, if yoo want it," , . "No, I guess not. My old woman never-strikes out from the shoulder, but always hits a down blow, aud one o these things wouldn't be worth a cent!" Free Press. The doctors were just as polite and gentle In those pioneer days as they are now, and, catching the spirit of the rapidly growing country, they felt that time was the great desideratum. A dot-tor living in Macomb county, when called upon to set a broken leg for a laboring man, examined the limb and said : "If I set this limb, it will be five or six months before you can walk. If I saw it off and make you a wooden leg, you'll be out splitting rails in less than three months." The man declined the generous offer, and the doctor sighed drearily as he rolled down his shirt sleeves. Detroit Free Prtn. , . ; The assurance of the lightning-rod man has always been looked upon as something appalling in its dimensions. It was never better Illustrated than the other day when one of them applied to the President of the South Side Rail way Company and wanted to put light ning-rods In all his bob-tails, "l.lgui n i n g-rods on our cars ?" asked tho latter. "Why, certainly." What in thundera tion do we want 'em for?" "Because they make such good conductors," re plied the Imperturbable lightning-rod man. It took him right where the back bone leaves off. Button Globe. , A Detroit bot surprised his father the other day by asking: . i- "Father, do you like mother?" "Why, yes, of course." "Ami she likes you?" i . " f course she does." "Did she ever say so?" "Many a time, my son." ' : "Did she marry you because she loved you?" "Certainly she did." The boy looked the old man over, and after a long pause asked : "Well, was she as near-sighted then as she is now?" To be Taken Two Wats. "How are you getting on at your new place?" asked a lady of a girl whom she had recommended for a situation. "Very well, thank you," answered the girl. "I'm glad to hear it," said the lady. "Your employer 8 veT l'.v and you can not do too much for her." "I don't mean to, ma'am," was the innocent reply. When a dentist U buried he has filled his last cavity. Among the liahiH- tiesofall firms should be put the lia bility to fail. When people write ojien letters the public generally wishes they would shut up. The burning of cofii-e plantations in Cuba will cer tainly overdo the business of coffee roasting. . iPrlem Jtej-ubliean. An oil denier sold some winter oil that was warranted to stand the severest cold. Shortly afterward it froze stiff. The purchaser went to the vendor with loud complaints. "I told you it would Ktnnd the coldest weather," said he; "I didn't tell you it would run. You see that it stands perfectly still, and you can't make it budge." "She never told her love." That Is, she never told him that all the beautiful goldeu hair she wore was false, and that the pearly teeth he praised were of the same deceptive character, tint he dis covered the fact soon after he married her, and now his faith in the honesty of the sex is considerably weakened. A case came up lor trial in a French court, and as the evidnnce was exiected to lie of a certain character, the Judge intimated the fact, and requested the decent women to withdraw. Not a soul moved. "I'sher," said the Judge, "now that the decent women have all with drawn, turn the rest out." ' Father," ' said a lady 'of the new school to her indulgent spouse, as be resumed his pipe after supper one eve ning "you must buy our dear Georgiana an English grammar and spelling book. She has gone through her French and Latin, and now she must commence her English studies." A whimsical comparison being made between a clock and a woman, Charles Fox said that lie thought the simile bad ; "for," said he, "a clock serves to point out the hours, and a woman to make us forget them." Persons who have devoted much at tention to the habits of domestic animals are generally agreed that a cat mani fests its sagacity by never getting its back up at a red-headed woman. Brook lyn Aryut. What word is that in the English language the first two letter of which signify a man, the first three a woman, the first four a great man, and the whole a great woman r Heroine, . A retired schoolmaster excuses his passion for angling by saying that, from constant habit, he never feels quite him self unless he's handling the rod. Romance of the kitchen. Cook (from the area) : "O, 'Liza, gi me my wlni grette. I've" 'ad a offer from the promenade sweeper!" Ax Ohio bot swallowed four or five of the wheel of an eight-day clock and he has kept the whole family running ever since the event. In South Boston a sign adorns the front of a tinsmith's store which reads: "Quart measures sold here of all shapes and sizes." Literart men can never be sure of having said a smart thing unless they see the "proof." Why is a solar eclipse like a woman whipping her boy ? Because it's a hiding of the aun. The man who "couldn't find his match" went to bed in the dark. Vested interest money money in the waistcoat pocket. The cheapest of lawyers Keeping one' own counsel. It is said soda water taken alone show a fizzical weakness. Sweets in adversity A sugar-house failure. Sweetness and light A love match. , The tobacco-growers np the Con necticut valley say that tne crop oi. to bacco on the pole sppears better this year tnan ever neiore. The Centennial Tear opens niui . at Fort Scott, Kansas, J ancart 1st, 1376. Opera House, worth $.10,000; Second $5,000 down. The enterprise is endorsed bv the best citizens of the State, aud Is the most liberal ever offered to the pub lic. For particulars address J. S. EMMERT, Fort Scott, Kansas. . A ' gypts CstnrrSA. ' - Th." knars headsehe. ebstroctioa of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tena cious, mneous, purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are weak, watery and inflsmed ; there is ringing in the ears, deafness, hack ing or eoughibg to clear ine inroa. espve- Attr. to tret her with IV ntiVH v " . w o scabs from nicer ; tne voice i changed sad has a nasal twang, Us breath is onensive, smell and taste are impaired; there is a sensation of dizziness, mental depression, backing cough, and general debility. Only a few of the above-named symptoms are, however, likely to be present ia any one ease. ' There is no disease mure eoeomoa than Catarrh, and none less understood by physicians. TJS SAGE'S CATARRH RMIDf la, beyond all comparison, the best prepara tion lor uatarrn ever aiscoeru. - uuw th inff nn nf ita miM. soothing and heal ing properties, the disease soon yields. The Uofclen Radical maeovery snoam om lun to correct the blood, which is always at f.,iU mn.i in rt anifleallv dms the dis eased glands and lining membrane of the nose. The catarrh nemeuy soouia oe sp- the only instrument by which fluid ean be perfectly injected into all the passage and chambers of the nose from which dis charges proceed. ThtM medicines are sold ny vruggisis. 3 Ichesck s BlMdraike Pill WUl be fonnd to pusHess those qualities neces sary lotlie total eradtcatloa of aU bUtons at tacks, prompt to start the secretions of tne Uver and Klve a healthy tone to the entire system. Indeed, il Is no ordinary discovery la medical science to hare Invented a remedy lor these stubborn complaints, which develop all the re sults produced by a hereto)re free use of calo mel a mlnwal Justly dreaded by mnklod. and .irnowu-riimd ui be destructive in tne extreme to tne human srstem. TBS the properties of certain vegetables comprise an the virtues of calomel without Its Injurious tendencies. Is now so sdmlttd tart, rendered Indisputable by scl enunc resesn bes; and those wno use the Man drake rills wlU be fully flattened that the bent medicines are those provided By nature In the common herbs and mots ot the fields. TIM pills open the rowels anl correct all bilious derangements without salivation or any ot the Injurious effects of calomel or other poi sons. The secretion of bile Is promoted hy hese plus, as will be se?n by the altered color of the stools, snd disappearing- of the sallow complexion and clesnsunr of the toog-oe. Ample directions for use accompany each boa orpins. Prepared enly by J. a. Rchenck Son, at their principal omce, cornvr pixia sua Arva bhwi Philadelphia, and for sale by all druggtats and AFORTCN NOW: 8rvn sollara worth of saosay Balctnr Satapkwwnt hy Bull (u IM rvatt and um ixMac rtaaip. Aultaai J. T. Sims, H B. 117th L,.tniwk. 12-10-lt a wcrk to Ajrrita. OH and Toaaf, Male and rVoMlc, ia Ihrtr kality. T-rw- aaa Ol'TriT PRICK. AMis P. a TICkSRI CO.. As lias. IHMa The People's Remedy. lha Universal Pain Extractor. Note: Ask for FOLD'S EXTBICT. ' Take no other. Ucatr, lar I will iwak nf excellent th !. PUD'S HTlAeT-'IirrTeswtWersJ Ueacraver. Itas twea in sue over thirty year, ud for cleanliness snd prompt cara tive virtars cannot he exceDrd. CHILDREN. fajaU can a (lord to be without !.' Extract. ArrideBts. I ntiSMih l ata, tsaraltas. are reti alinoat instantly by external spplteatioa. Pr-nai'-lv rrueves pains or Barns. SrmMa, Eirarutfiasa, 1 haSaaw, Old Harta, Haila, eelawa, t'erwa, etc Arrests in flamatmli, minces wellines, stops bleeding, Tfnmn fi;."'-olori!t)OBAnd heals rapidly. FEMALE VU(1ESSE.-It slwsys Roevspsta hi iln Inn It ii i n iim.f ullni 11 mlpneiiimiain In th hfd. narmea. vertigo. II UiemiHCA it has no equal. An kinds of al. ceratiaas to which ladiea are aabject are inaptly cored. Fuller details la book accoaa panTinc each bottle. piLES-aliad or blrrdlB meet prompt relief and ready core. Ho case, however cuidoic or onain ate, can long resist its regularase. UBlCtSE liS.-Itie the only sare rare for trn dit-ranuir and daasevosacofidttitai. alDIt' ISIAW. naa ao equal ior nen: cure. IfFDIIB from anr eanse. For this Is s otbrr remedies failed to arreet bleeding froax WHr, atawmelt, laasw, sad elsewhere. IHEUNATlSM, EURA18IA, TaMharfce mm . Kararhe are aU alike relieved, and often per Bjaientlv cured. HYSlCIAIS ( auarboob) who are arqoalnted wau Pead'e Extrart at Wltea llazrl reca onmend i t in tneir practice. We have letters ot . Vdsmendst ion from handredsof Physicians, nasy of j bom order t! lor nw in their own jractice.V In addition to toe foregoing, they oder Its ns for Hwelliaaw of all Kinds, siasy. Hare Thlwat, IsSassad Tsnalls, ftrople and chronic Dlarrbera Cataram, (tor which it M s pernnc,)ChilMaJaa, sweat ed Feet, Htiaas ef Inserts, Mawasitawa, etc, 1 harped ilaaea, Vict, and Indeed II manner of skin dn TI1ET and IE.-K. sad Ptaselre. It rariaat, iMwnva, and ra .ala, while wonderfnily improving the fenvniexlen. Tl IAEII.-Pead'e Extract. No Stock Breeder.no IJvsryMan can agord to be without it. It to need by all the Leading Livery Stsblea, tkreet Railroads snd arst Huraeswa in New York City. It tuw no equal for 8taJaa,Ba eas or pinddle IhaSaaa, HtuTneaa, fcrareaea, Mwelllasa,t ata, Lacerattewa, Bleedlaa. Pa eaie. C aUe, lHnirnstn, 4 kilhslolrfiH etc Iurangeofactlooiswida, sad the relief It affords Is so prosipt that it Is tn valuable In every Farm-yard as well ss In every Pans -boar. Letit be tried once, and vou will never he without H. lAOTIII. PswaPs F.x tract has been Imitated. Tu genuine article has the words Faaa'e Ex trart blown is each bottle. It is prepared hy the only pi mans livraar whoever knew how to prepare It proper Iv. Refuse sD other pre parations of Witch BszeL This is the only article need hy Physician, and in ths hospi tal of this country snd Europe. msTiiT aii itEi iMiiit Ernurr, m pamphlet form, ml frre oa .wpUcaUuti to 20! FANCY CAKPS. 7 atvlea. ana uaa. luc Al- draw J. B. HISTID, jlaeaaa, baa Co- H. T 1Z-11I $52$20r,T eases. eraovaai iBisaisSi n.ansssissi last hesls lata, fcraslieaa 1 a . o w S? 3 O "ex TeSMgrUC is? S'Hio I;I;Il5sr- a 3 ' xWgSW P3 Sis O HH -s a - 3 aa. Tense rree. Aedree Cel. ParUaad, Me. Hy 500,000 ACRES UZCIHO AIT 'LAUDS Ik I lata ef the Javkssn, landaar a gaglaaai Isilrssl Csstsaay are .en UaTsrsd For sale. They are atraatad alone Ha raflmul aiwl mill. u tracts of exralleat FAaK lNO and PI.M Laada TW nrxataa; buds tnelade aoaas at the anst fertile sad waU-watared hardws.4 laada is the State. TWy ate tanaatad naialy with hard aa.aU aad baaah; aatf Mach. aaasy loaaa, aad aanmla la epriaas af paa-aat water. MkaJaaaaoaaortlMkaatlaZ..dBal peaiaareae Saaf ta the thaioa. aad Ha atmara hava a greater variety at crape aad raeuaiiaa thaa any Wave a Stale. While eoaMvaT the prairie States aaay ara- - iney nave aa otaar a waea u that ttaa tala. daaatatkaa Mb, has haaa the case the paatvearla Baaaaa aad N ear aaha. Priea Iran 9.1M a S-VSw par acre. Send r a toatrated aaaaphlet. Aadrxai O. M. AsVSEa. Cssaflsslsnnr. Laaela, Bach iKRMA.NgXTandarofltaMa emptovaeat en ha ' aerarel by one bvly ta evarv town in the Called ' Statea, Adrireaa J. HKNKT LYMONUS. t Da vasasnu St., Buaras, Mia U-sVtt BEO OMS ! BROOKS ! . . ton i. BEI1TE A CO-, SSS Washington Bt, New Tork. Principal Detwt hi Itaw Tork Ibr the beat linn MaaaaKtaras ia the Csitad States. Broes fregi tiM per ioiea ud Mvaxa. . Ths lowest prlcassnd greatest vertety to be fcaad aaywbara. Aao aa satire new ataca or wwu ase aiuww WARM, each as Paua, Tala. Baaketa Mats Taiaaa. Cbrdaca. Wlcha, Aol, sngetbsr with a fall Uaa af Apple, Briar Weed sad day Pi pee. Paary Suapa. Taakee Ba tiean, Catlery, Ac Began ha U to $f par exilL A fall Has af the heat qaaltty of TI5WARK. P. 8. We sell oar gauda at pricea that do ao raqatra aarr araaenlne: oa the road. Ordara hy nasi will ia FREDERICK SPIECKER. (2 trssLBaiLB ssAAsa rn Leaf Tobacco, Cigars. Pipes, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco, Or THE BEST BKAKD8. VOL 152 FACHOTCTT AVZ1.UX PHILADELPHIA. Oaly Agent for V. 1 lelid Ttf Clgss Hsoxld. Cigar llotts tan he snspasd. SljUUilCSSS tf MATinE'S GREAT REItSDY." This CaedUal Is a CERTAUT CURE gar faaaaa. 4 adds, tntlauaiaaation mt tiaa Lean Sara Three aad Breaat, Breaaehl tia, aaul if taken tat liana, will amd that fatal sUseasa CaaaanaapUon. The basis at this Bardic late la a preparation t Tar ah tanatedl by a laeemUar praeeea front tha tap at tha Pine Tree, the aaaeltrtaal pe-epea. ties af which are well knarana, 1 Ith this penrerfatl eUaieat are tharaashly taarar poratid eetwraJ ax heir xraaretabte iagraaU ents, earh af which pnaaraars saathlasj aad healing attrlbatrs. there mahtnaj It tha ease POTENT ANTAGONIST te all allaeaaea af tha pealnsonarjr rgaaxs.that has wet been Intra el nceel. SS. L. 0. C. V7STTAT.rS PINE TREE TAR CORDIAL la nnt a new renardjr tha ha a never been heartl af fee fore, bttt an OLD, RELI ABLE, AND WELL-TRIED naedtrtne that has been tat dally naa by taaalltes mm totellianrnt phyetreeuaja far the last elatewn ass as speitem ar in tna auraeaa hy all waa have erecd tt. aa thaaa- ef UNSOLICITED TESTIMO NIALS prase. If yen enaTer from say dlaeaae gar which this Can-dial la recamnesdeaVwe nnhesttatlngly aayt " TRY IT. WE KNOW TT WILL DO YOU GOOD." A atawla bottle wLU etoenasaatrate ita ala a ads ejeaalittea. Sill IT III DHQCCISTS ISO STIREUEPUi PRINCIPAL DEPOT. ' 232 ? Forth Second St., ,' rhilacTd, HORSEMEN ! OWNERS OF STOCK ! Save Your Horses and Catllel CURS THEM OF DISEASE A5D KEEP THIM IN A HEALTH! CONDITIO" BT G1TIN0 THEM M. B. ROBERTS CELEBRATED HORSE POWDERS. Ef CSS OVEB, FORTY YEARS! m OHtT rOWDIBA eoaTAIZMt) TONIC, XViZATZTS LSH PUB177 XXrj P2CPS2TLES OBBISSB, TBtBSST BAIIIS TSU Hi ERST CONDITION MEDICIXM IX TUB WORLD. They sre stawle sfPars Material on!;, ess tablaepoeaful nisc ss far ss ens rouai tt rdiasry esttls powders. soy sas ysekB( sad After asing thaa yea will sever get doss praising (Asa. FetT sals bj ill etae-aksepers. UBK M. B. ROBERTS' Vegetable Embrocation TO at ALL EXTERNAL DISEASES' itiia MAN OR BEAST. Jaally Show cases! chow cases! AO atrVaa, SCver aloenrted and Watmat,Bew Bd earns a: band, aacareiy backed for alupatas. OOUATAAB, IUs.8HU.TUv, BTUhi ftX. motmm axd omox yuusrrrma aa Ths atrfaat and best assartiil asses, sat aaaanaVsaad fes lbs Otts. LEWIS Jfe BRO. 1M1, IMS, 1U ssd 10(7 lUMtE ATE., j naei wy ruto alix. 5u-