TEE S01T OF T LOVES. BT VVflU UU UUIOCM. O. boat of mj lorer, go softly, go safely ; O. boat of my lorer. tbmt bean him from mo! From the borne of the clachan.from the bora, singing sweetly ; . From the loch and the mountain, that heU O. boat of my lorer, go aoftly, go safely ; Thou beared ay soul with thee orer the tide. I said not a word. but my heart it was breaking, For life is so short and the ocean so wide. O, boat of my lover, go softly, go safely ; Though the dear Toioe is silent, the kind hand is gone ; Cat eh! 1ot me, my lorer, and IH lire till I find thee ; Till oar parting Is orer and onr daik days are done. Good Words. A tllttrlBB; Mystery. AVhat becomes of the precious metals? asks an Eastern journal, and then pro ceeds to consider the question, and suc ceeds in throwing much doubt upon it, or, rather, leaving it in just as much doubt as before. The question, "What becomes of all the pins?" has been oft ener asked, perhaps, and has been an swered with about the same illumina tion. Ferd Ewer, many years ao, in this city, was hugely amused at a ques tion asked in the Sacramento L uion namely, "Where does all the water go?" To which interrogation the questioner proceeded with the philosophical sobri ety of an ow l, to reply through a column article, when it might hare been an swered in two words the ocean. But it is not so easily to answer satisfacto rily the question as to what becomes of the pro-ions metals. That a vast amount has been extracted from the earth, according to an Engli.-h writer who, of course, must depend to a great degree upon guess worK, not less than $3,000.OUO,OJO, iiicc the days of Xoah, in gold and silver, there can be no doubt. Of this amount be thinks that $3,200,000,1)00 have been produced since the discovery of America. The Chris tian world is credited with having had l,000,000,(KiO, most of which has" been disposed of by shipwrecks, gilding, fire and various other ways, as effectually we might suggest, as many of our citi zens have disposed of theirs by invest ing in stocks, lie thinks this loss pro ceeds at the rate of sixteen millions an nually, while the production he puts at forty millions, which is undoubtedly too low. One-h.ilf of the balance, three hundred and fifty millions, he thinks is held in the form of plate and orna ments. Of the balance of three thousand millions in the anti-Christian world, w astes and losses omitted, he thinks that over a thousand billions nave been hidden in Asiatic lands in different aires of the world, and be continues that it is well known that a thousand millions were thus hidden in India and 1 hina in the six years succeeding 1S51 ; that is during the time when wholesale murder and slaughter and wholesale robbery and despoliation was the busi ness of the natives and their enemies. One would think that China must I carpeted with gold leaf, paved with silver dollars, glittering with the pre cious metals, did he think only of the vast sums sent their for hundreds of years past, little or none which ever comes back. But somehow those metals have a fate there as they have elsewhere they disappear. Like many other commodities they serve their purpose anil disappear. What became of all the gold with which Solomon covered his grand temple ? W hat became of all the Spanish sjioils in South America and in Mexico? One might ask such ques tions forever and be no wiser therefor. Gold aud silver serve their purposes and disappear, as to the human race and old boots and all other material things, aud there is none so wise as can tell us accurately what has become of them. When the faucet is turned, where has the gas light gone? one miglit ask, aud the question would be as reasonable and perhaps as difficult to answer. We know pretty well where our little portion of tilver and gold has gone, but that knowledge does not give - us any particular gratilication. Life in Klnc Kalakana'i Capital. Horseback ridingseeras natural to the ll.iwaiians, and they dash along streets and roads in troops aud cavalcades which till the air with dust and them with de light. The women all ride man-fashion, neatly tucking their long, flowing robes tieneath them and being as bold and expert in the saddle as their male mates. They often ride without shoes on their feet and have spurs attached to their bare heels, which they use most vigorously on their poor animals. On market days Saturday afternoons there are often as many as three or four hundred equestrians at the fish market, down beside the bay, in an old portion of the city. They ride all kinds of old nags and come from all parts of the country and make tfiat occasion a regu lar gala day. The fair damsels generally dress in their best bib and tucker that day, put on hose and shoes which their liberty loving feet abhor and abominate at home, wear white underskirts and hatt wreath ed with flowers, or flying long red or blue ribbons. Nearly all the men and women wreath their hats and necks with yellow flower-, and sometimes with roses and a kind of berry. One afternoon I aw a native woman dressed in rich silk rolcs, wearing a costly hat and kids, come to the market in a ba rouche and get out and pu-h her way among the crowd with her more com mon sisters. The fish market is a scene of lively excitement after four o'clock, when the laborers cease work and come in to swell the crowd of animation. The market is a large oon shed beside the water, and containing numerous stalls for fish and meat, fresh and salt. All kinds of fruit are also for sale, and when I left the middle of October there were plenty of fine icy-mountain water melons in the market. The n.li are of 11 kinds peculiar to the waters about rlie islands, the mullet being the finest. Some kinds of shrimps are brought from the mountains done up in biro leaves. Several thousand persons will crowd In to the market in the space of two or three hours, and at the end of that time leave it bare aud solitary. The belles aud beaux may be seen among the crowd casting sweet sly glances at each other, amid all the excitement and bus iness of the occasion carrying on des perate flirtatious. The sorriest dogs I ever saw are to be seen around that market. Nothing can equal them outside of Constantinople. Each dog is expected to remain beside its own particular stall and devour only such offal as falls to its lot. But some of those dogs are wandering Arabs, and in addition to eating everything given them by their own masters, go around to other stalls and steal all they can lay their mouths on ; and one or two of them have become so large aud tough that very few other dogs dare tackle them. The manner of eating among the Kan akas is almost shocking to our ideas of usage and propriety. Around the cities and villages, and where they can get it, they will eat meat and bread, but their staple food is pol and raw fish. The pol rs made of the taro root, with a calla lily top, and in a muddy patch, and is pounded up fine and put into a large calabash to ferment. It has a rootish taste, and is somewhat sour. The na tives mix it with water, and then a whole family will squat around the cal abash in the centre of the room. Before eating they sometimes rinse the fingers with water. The way I saw a woman do this one morning was by taking a mouthful of water 'out of a email calabash, then squirting it out of her mouth over her fingers; then she sat down, and, plunging her fingers In tothe pol, stirred it around and thrust into her mouth what clans to the lin gers. And thus they each and all eat pol with the first two lingers, men, wo men and children sitting around and eating from the same calabash. In like manner they eat the raw fish with their fingers from the same dish. They live in this manner all over the islands. San Francisco Chronicle. The rwlptta etf Amtwarm. The pulpits of Antwerp as well as those or uneni ana nrun, io " ! -1 . 1 ... rH HAm vaii AnH mlf prising uuMiw. am j Lie and oak so wedded hy the cunning or art mat it is uuucuit hi j a "tMi the oak grew out of the marble, or the marble in a liquid state, was poured over the oak and moulded into shape. Sometimes an oak tree throws its k .nku ,lvtiit a marble ahrinfl wherein VlWivm. wvw. - the preacher stands surrounded by a wnoie menagerie. jirus hui perched on the balustrade, with the strutting cock on the top of all. Per haps the little ones who sit under the drippings of these particular sanctuaries resolve in their minds that "this is the cock" as well as the "cow with the crumpled horn that tossed the dog that worried the cat that killed the rat," all of whom are immortalized on the premises. The Calvary at St. Paul's, which is entered from the street of the ih..i, sinora in aim of the curiosities of Antwerp,' and perhaps one of the most interesting religious uuinuw this part of Europe. Within the court adjoining the church, once the cloister of a Dominican monastery, a path leads to an artificial grotto in imitation of the lloly Sepulchre at Jerusalem. The whole side of the church is covered with bits of rock and slag, and white statues of saints, angels, prophets, and patriarchs peer out from the rustic niches with faces full of agony and n. Aa.nA r'hrist lloa within the UU. A 111. UlUV 1. . . ..w - sepulchre; white angels watch OTcr the place as mej nave wauruvu iui tuwc than rvn ntii r.r Children stand un and look in upon the motionless figure of the Redeemer that is scarcely visible. for the deep anu proiounu snaaows uim are never lifted from the mimic tomb, birds hover above the court as they al- ..a Kinla milat tftft rplifiollft- theV are' so fond of these old churches. .Sua Francisco Bulletin. Mherldaat sued the Elector. As Sheridan was visiting London in oue of the public coaches, for the pur ose of canvassing Westminster, at the time when Paul was his opponent, he found himself "in company with two Westminster electors. In the course of the conversation one of them asked the other to whom he should give his vote, i v : c i l : -.1 I. .. 1 n.. wueil His menu orjiwru, av tainlv; for though I think him but a shabby sort of fellow, I would vote for any other rather than for that rascal Sheridan." "Do you know Sheridan V asked the stranger. "Xot I, sir," an swered the gentleman ; "nor do I wish to know him." The conversation dropped here ; but, when the party alighted to breakfast, Sheridan called aside the other gentleman and said, "pray, who is that very agreeable friend of yours ? He is one of the pleasautcst fellows I ever met with, and I should be .glad to know his name." "His name is Mr. T.; he is an eminent lawyer, and re sides in Lincoln Inn Fields." Break fast over, the party resumed their seats in the coach, soon after which Sheridan turned the conversation to the law. "It is," said he, 'a fine profession, Men may rise from it to the highest eminence in the state, and it gives vast scope to the display of talent. Many of the most virtuous and noble characters recorded in history have been lawyers. I am sorry, however, to add that some of the greatest rascals have also been lawyers ; but of all the rascals of lawyers I ever heard of, the greatest is one T., who lives in Lincoln Inn Fields." "I am Mr. T.," thundered the gentleman. "And I am Mr. Sheridan," was the laughing reply. The jest was instantly seen ; they shook hands, and instead of voting against the facetious orator, the lawyer exerted himself warmly in pro moting his election. Birthday Ulna r the Pale. The Poles, it is said believe that each month of the year is under the influ ence of a precious stone, and that this influence has power over the destiny of a person born during the particular month. In accordance with this belief friends and lovers, on birthdays, make presents ornamented in some way with these natal stones. The stones, with their significance corresponding with each mouth are said to be as follows : January Garnet : constancy and fidelity. February Amethyst : sincerity. March Bloodstone : courage, pres ence of mind. April Diamond: innocence. May Emerald: success iu love. June Agate: health and long life. July Cornelian: contented mind. August Sardonyx: coujugal felicity. September Chrysolite: antidote for maduess. October Opal: hope. November Topaz: fidelity. Iecember Turquoise: prosperity. The old style name-rings are also be ing used. These probably are French in origin. In English rings of this kind the first letter of each gem used will form a name or sentiment Regard and Dearest are not uncommon. We saw one recently with the latter sentiment illustrated in this manner: D iamond. E'merald, A(methyst, K(uby, E(merald S'ajiphire, Tpaz. Protidtnce Journal. Activity Is aa. Always Energy. There are some men whose failure to succeed in life is a problem to others as well as to themselves. They are indus trious, prudent and economical; yet after a long life of striving, old age finds them still poor. They complain of ill-luck. They say fate is always against them. But the fact is that they miscarry because they have mistaken mere activity for energy. Confound ing two things essentially different, they have supposed that, if they were always busy, they would be certain to be advancing their fortunes. They have forgotten that misdirected labor is but a waste of activity. The person who would succeed In life is a marksman firing at a target; if bis shots miss the mark they are a waste of powder. So in the great game of life, what a man does must be made to count, or it might almost as well be left undone. Every body knows some one in the circle of friends, who, although active, has this want of energy. The distemper, if we may call it such, exhibits itself in vari ous ways. In some cases the man has merely an executive faculty, when he should have a directive one; in other language, he makes a capital clerk, for himself, when he ought to do the think ing of the business. In other cases what is done is not done either at the right time or in the right way. Energy, correctly understood, is activity pro portioned to the end. Scientific Ameri- Old Saa. Among the wise sayings for the year are the following: A blind man's wife needs no paint ing. Death is before the old man's face and may be at the young one's back. Keview the time you have misspent ; think upon it and lament. Sloth is an argument of a mean and degenerate mind. Evil company makes the good bad, and the bad worse. Good men are safe when evil ones are at variance. In a thousand pounds' worth of law there is not a ehilling's worth of pleas ure. Recreation should fit us for business, not rob us of time. He that can do us an Injury may at one time or other do us a kindness. isnccuosaL foi and Bsxf. Food is the support of the cow that to, her system, and the calf the carries, or the milk after ward aa a substitute. She can digest and use only a certain amount no more. Now, If there to much milk, the food eaten and digested will mostly go to form this an dit requires good feed ing to produce and keep up this large flow of milk, as with the Ayrshire, the Jersey, and, lu many instances, the native cow. . This to evidence against the Idea, entertained by tome, that both milk and flesh .(including fat) can be secured at their maximum in the same animal. To divide equally what to di gested, so that the milk get half, and the flesh, fat, etc., the other half, could not possibly, it seems to me, afford a maximum quantity of milk, and at the same time, a full development of beef. It is true some animals, like some of the Short-Horns, afford a good carcass and, in addition, a large flow of milk, when they are vigorous digesters. At the same time these animals never get fat while producing largely of milk. It to a rule is it not universally the case that the milk must be stopped when the animal to to be fattened stops itself, indeed, when fattening. Besides, there to an aptitude for milk or fat, which to bred. We breed the one in the Ayrshire, the other in the Short-Horn. This aptitude must con sist in applying the food for the pur pose intended, either to produce fat or milk. The stomach is the means of carry ing out one or the other of these pur poses, to convert all the food it can, and the quantity cannot be made suffi cient to carry both purposes to their (lightest extent unless the digestive ca pacity to increased sufficiently. This, then, it strikes me, to the point. In crease digestion, and the two may be earned, aided by breeding for the two. Or either may be correspondingly ex tendedThe milk increased in the milk ing strain, or increase of flesh and fat in the other. Top-Dressiso Meadows. The re sults of a single top-dressing on eight plots of nearly half an acre each of sandy warm soil of our State Agricul tural College Farm exhibited the fol lowing facts at the end of three years. The top-dressing was applied in 1864, and the grass was cut twice each season in 1864 and 1365 and once in 1866. The produce of each cutting and of each lot was weighed separately and a perfect record kept. The results for the four seasons were as follows : On the plot to which no manure or fertil izer was applied the total weight of hay yielded per acre was 8,740 pounds. Where two bushels of plaster per acre was applied the yield per acre was 13, 226 pounds, a gain of 4,484 pounds. Where five bushels of wood ashes were applied the yield per acre was 12,907 pounds, a gain of 4,165 pounds. Where three bushels of salt was sown per acre the yield was 13,969 pounds, a gain per acre of 5,227 pounds. Where 20 loads of muck per acre was laid on, the yield per acre was 13,816 pounds, a gain of 5,074 pounds. Where 20 loads of horse manure was laid on, the yield was 14, 686 pounds, a gain of 6,254 pounds. These are results which indicate that there are fertilizers which will pro duce as good results as plaster. For in stance, the plaster yielded a gain of 51 per cent, while the horse manure gave an increase of 71 per cent, or nearly a ton more grass per acre in the three years. Michigan Farmer. Pastures and Orchard Grass. A Southern Indiana correspondent writes : "Orchard grass, Kentucky blue grass, and white clover, and, if the grouud is low or moist, and red-top, and you have the finest and most productive pasture known among extensive stock- f rowers, as it requires no re-seeding, ut improves in quantity and quality, carrying more stock each succeeding year invaluable for woods and past ures, and should be extensively sown in burnt forests. Leaving out the or chard grass (as it to too rank and rapid a grower) you have the best mixture that can be formed for lawns, yards, etc Orchard grass alone makes the most profitable meadow, as it is im mensely productive, makes excellent bay, and twice as much of it as timothy for a terra of years. With us timothy and red clover cut only about two good crops, and frequently but one. The farmer needs reliable meadows. To sow corn, millet, Hungarian grass, or some other substitute every year or two to make up for his lost clover or timo thy crop, is very discouraging, it being expensive as well as annoying. Or chard grass is the remedy, and Is des tined at no distant day to stand at the head of all grasses for pasture or hay. Barking Treks rt Rabbits. A cor respondent of the Weekly Granger says : "1 have a receipt to prevent the forag ing of rabbits on young fruit trees. I have practiced it for eighteen years and know it to be a specific. I have in tended to give it to the public every winter since I proved it by experiment but somehow I have hitherto failed. I was recently reminded of it by reading a lengthy, troublesome and expensive remedy. Mine Is simple and eay. First, catch a rabbit and kill it. I'll guarantee it will quit Its depredations. jut its influence to not done yet. Cut it open and take out the bowels, lungs, liver, etc., and rub them on the young trees as high as a rabbit can reach ; when you get through with that, cut a piece of the flesh, a quarter for instance and rub till you get through. One rab bit Is sufficient for five hundred trees, and it will last all through the winter. I have rubbed them so in November, and a rabbit will not touch it all through the winter, provided you had no tar or grease previously on them." The Use of Fallen Leaves. In the Gardener's Monthly, Mr. Meehan says: These have to be gathered up. They are excellent to mix with hot-bed ma terial, and, where practicable, should be saved for this purpose. They do not heat so rapidly as stable manure, and in this have an advantage; as temper ing the violence makes manure last longer and maintain a more regular heat. They are excellent material to put round cold frames to protect half hardy plants. A board is put up to the height of the frame boards, and about a foot or more from them, and the leaves filled in between. If the plants are somewhat tender, the bottom of the frames may be filled in a few feet with the leaves. These leaves, after having been two or three years decaying, make admirable stuff for potting plants and for flowers in general. Keeping Apple. A correspondent of the Boston Cultivator kept 1,200 bar rels of apples, mostly Baldwins, in his cellar last winter, by dally expelling the stagnant air and replacing it with pure. He attributes the early decay of apples largely to a vegetable miasma in the air, which is communicated to it by vegetable evaporation under certain conditions. The effect of this miasma is first seen in minute specks on the apple. Brittls Feet. Some horses have such brittle feet that it to difficult to keep their shoes on. This is often caused by a sudden change from excessive and long-continued wetness to extreme dry ness. The best treatment is to rub the sole and shells of the feet with a mix ture composed of the following: Tar, two parts; beef suet, two parts; whale oil, four parts; beeswax and honey: one part each; melt over a slow fire and mix well. To Destroy Lick ox Cattle. Boil until they are soft a dozen or more Irish potatoes In water, and with a sponge wash the animal thoroughly along the back and behind the ears, choosing a drv dar for the purpose. The potatoes may be used for food for poultry, or otherwise. CIKJTTJIC, The Science of Adultermlion-Somt, months ago in examining a specimen of cream of tartar. I found two or three) per cent, of gypsum along with a con siderable amount of nee flour . I was at a loss to understand bow the gyp sa m came to be there. It waa not in sufficient quantity to pay for a addi tion aa an adulterant, and the adult eration waa evidently rice 0n looking the matter up I fboad that aa adulterated article of nee floor con taining from 15 to 20 per cent, of gyp sum waa on the market. This at once accounted for the gysum in the cream of tartar. The manipulator, wishing to buy bis rice flour aa cheaply aa pos sible, had bought the adulterated ax ticle. 1 ! Powdered sugar has long been noto rious for iu adulterations, but granu lated sugar is generally supposed to be all right, I waa recently, however, shown an article prepared from rice, which waa not to be distinguished from granulated sugar by color or general appearance. It waa said that this tide waa josed for adulterating a par ticular grade of granulated sugar that was sent West to be used by the con fwtinnera for manufacturuiff the pow dered sugar. - Kice nour seems to oe an enrenwu useful article In this branch of busi ness, Hassal gives s list of no less than ten different substances in which it has been detected, and yet his list is not a full one. It has the great ad vantage over common flour that it does not cake when packed and become clammy. It thus more nearly resem bles the various spices and other ar ticles with which it is mixed. This adulteration can only be recog nized by the microscope. The starch grains of rice are very small and angu lar ; they polarize very slightly. The adulteration of bread with alum has attracted a great deal of attention in England, and it seems also to be practiced to some extent in this count ry. Numerous methods have been gi ven for the detection of the alum, but none of them seem to be as satisfac tory as the analysis of the ash. All the other methods are liable to error. Journal of Chemistry. Pedestrian Training. Pedestrian ism, as an athletic exercise, has become de servedly popular. There is no course of gymnastics so well calculated to d en velope a large n um ber of m useles or to, produce so beneficial an effect upon the system. There is a right way and a wrong way of walking the one be neficial, the other negative in its re sult. What the right way is, a writer in an English contemporary tells us in the following: The body must be held erect, with head well thrown back ; the movement of the legs must be from the hip down ward, and the body should be held mo tionless. The arms should be swung well forward in harmony with the legs, and the elbow should, when in front, be nearly oo a level and at almost right angles with the chin, the hands being open and extended. The leg should be brought well round from the hip, and the heel deposited on the ground in line with the rear foot, so as to leave your footmarks pretty nearly in a line. Bat above all things bold your head up and the body erect. Stitches and other kindred annoyan ces are common in learning to walk, but the beginner would do well to walk it off, and never ease if he is seized with distress. , To do so is to throw away the pace he has acquired from the commencement of his walk, and to knock all the regularity out of his stride. Copper in the Human Organs. Some recent experiments made by MM. Ber geron and L'iiote, demonstrate the presence of traces of copper in the hu man body. The fact that copper, when introduced into the system through the alimentary canal, accumulates in the liver and kid hey s, served as a starting point for their inquiry. These organs were analyzed in 14 cases, whose his tory made it practically certain that no copper compounds had been swal lowed fer a considerable period before death. They were invariably -found to contain traces of the metal, varying in amount from a quantity incapable of being numerically' estimated in a young man of 17 to one or two milli grams ; this latter in the case of a man of 78. The conclusion is that when the total mass of the liver and kidneys contains more than three milligrams of the metal, it must have been introduced into the system ia unusual quantity. The traces normally present are attri butable to such accidental causes as the use of copper utensils, which are so generally employed in the preparation of food ; the greater part of this is eli minated, but a minute trace of the me tal is found in the liver and kidneys, and this is true, whatever the age, sex, or mode of life. A mong the many processes proposed for the preserving of meat, is that which requires that it be placed in an atmosphere of compressed air. The results obtained by this process seem to fully justify the claims of M. Alfon-so-Reyhoso, the patentee. As illustra ting the general method pursued by the inventor and the character of the results obtained, the following instance is given : A half carcass of lamb was hung for several weeks in an atmos- bere of compressed air, and then ta en out and cut in quarters. One quar ter was submitted to connoisseurs, who pronounced it excellent ; the other was exposed in a room merely protected from flies by a light muslin wrapper. It dried up, but retained its natural co lor; and, when subsequently cooked, was fouDd to be as sweet and agreeable to the taste as the other portion which waa eaten while fresh. Should this process prove to be in truth what is claimed for it, then is answered a prob lem which has commanded the atten tion of inventors for years. The pro cess is certainly a simple one, and could be readily adopted in the meat-producing countries. Appleton's Journal. Baryta Green. Make a mixture of two parts of caustic soda and one part chlorate of potash, and add very grdu ally two parts of mana-anese in very fine powder. Raise the temperature gradually to very dnll redness. On reaching that point allow the mixture to cool, and after having powdered it exhaust it with water. Filter the liquid thus obtained, and add to it when cold a solution of nitrate of baryta. There is formed a violet-colored precipitate of baryta, which is washed with care. It is then dried and treated with one half to one part of caustic baryta, hy d rated, and gradually heated up to the commencement of redness, with conse quent stirring. When this operation is at an end, the mass, on eooline, ap pears a tine green. It is powdered and finally washed ia order to remove any excess of baryta. Dingiest Journal. A New Mucilage. The Journal de Pharmacie states that if, to a strong solution of gum arable, measuring ti fluid ounces, a solution of 30 grains of sulphate of aliminum dissolved in i of an ounce of water be added, a very strong mucilage is formed, capable of fastening wood together, or of mending porcelain or glass. Scientific. From researches made on hen's eggs, Oelacher came to the con clusion that the ova of vertebrates are capable of presenting the phenomena of parthenogenesis. This tickles the bens mightily. Metre rcaaaiert. Though sometimes small evils, like Invisible insects, inflict pains, and a single hair may stop a vast machine, yet the chief secret of comfort lies in not suffering trifles to vex one, snd In prudently cultivating an undergrowth of small pleasures, since few great ones are let on long leases. The gold and silver products of the mines of Colorado Territory during 1875. to estimated at a total r t7 047.. 800. n.uw Tre up,luil - irnnt tn a size corresponding with the quantity of your game. Cut with a sharp knife the flesh from the best parts; keep each kind separate, ana set inem asiuo iur moment, Then split the heads, break tha bones, ana put tnem wiiu me i ln- fer lor parts Into a stew pan, with a roastea onion, a carrot, a laupwimui salt, twenty black peppercorns, sprigs of V ... f J F common thyme, two bay leaves, half a clove or garlic, anu nau a pouuu gravy beef. Stew in very little water (according to the quantity of the meat) five hours. When done skim and strain, and set It aside to cool. Line the whole f vAtir raiawi rraat with a thin layer of short paste, then a layer of fat bacon or bam, cut in tnin slices, now put w your different kinds of game in layers, nn nuinil hut fmm the bottom, filling up the corners and crevices with force meat stuffing. Having mixea logciuw two teaspoonfuto of salt, half a tea spoonful cayenne and half a grated nut meg, sprinkle a little of them over each layer. inisntne niuug wim of ham or bacon, put over It a layer of the short paste; then cover with the raised crust. Pinch round the sides, nmamont h, rlmnlnfr leaves set ac cording to fancy, and bake in a moderate oven an nour, au nour auu a tjrA hnnra acwirtlintr to size. When both pie and gravy are nearly cold put the point of a funnel into the small hole li .U SK. w nn mnai malts in I W lllClla; Uy l)Ut3 JV nssxAOW a-. ... the pie before jou bake it), and gently 1 a. Ia iL. . Kava pour inrousu n prepared. This U a pie fit to set before an entire college or coots. TTYaur vrk A iturviaTrn i TlcOr? RaTH. The method of administering thia a a. 1 V. 1 .A...l sW tNlhll . oao ft J practical experiment, and the following ilinvtinns should be exactlv followed U oain naa oeen luuruuguiy usicu uj the effect desired Is to be realized. Take the child upon the lap, pin a large Deu Dlannei arounu me nccs., suffering It to fall closely over the whoie body of the child and the person hold ing it, who can completely undress It without suffering the air to reach the ol-ln - tnatsail ni a hathinir or Common tub, fill, w hile the child is being an- wi.ana on AwUnarvvtuh hnileF with water heated as warm as one can bear the band In. Slip the ciniu irora me k IntA tK. twiilr allowing the tuna .uwv w , n blanket to fall all over the vessel, not . . . ' . ..I. T . V. uniastening it irom mo un.. ac waMF mnu nuite over the shoulders and up around the throat. Time the bath by the effect, ir re i.tinn nf rh atrlefiinHi take nlace at once, continue not a moment longer. If relief is not experienced, ana tne cnua la mmlrafjlir strong, it ma V be Con tinued as Ions as ten minutes. Lift the child gently to me lap, suuermg me Hlanlrora fi11 Mnaelv around lLS Per son, and draw as near the Are as may De, ana Wltn a SOU cioin, neaieu, ruu ,K. olrin .1 mm LoATt til l)lilll elnwlv wrapped in the blanket, without dress ing, lor some time, as a suuueu muru of the paroxysm may necessitate a repetition at any moment. ThA BomA tnprhry) 111 M V he tlgPtl 111 &!) V case of violent cold, cramps, or wherever great care is needed to prevent the ac cess of cold air. Gams Sour. This savory and highly relishing stew souo may be made of any or every thing known by the name of game, if rresu. lake irom two to iour pounds of the trimmings of coars parts of venison, shin of beef or knuckles, or lean scrag of mutton, all fresh. If game is olentilul use no meat, take out the bones, and boil this in five pints of water, with celery, a couple or carrots and Butrips, four onions, the larger portion of a Jamaica pepper. Strain this stock when it has simmered for three hours. Have ready cut down a woodcock, half a rabbit, two partridges, four quail, and season the pieces with mixed spices.. These may be floured and browned in the frying-pan, but as this is a process dictated by the eye as much as the palate it is not necessary in making the soup. Put the cut game to the strained stock with a dozen of small onions, a couple of heads of celery, sliced, half a dozen peeled potatoes, or an ounce of rice flour, and, when it boils, a very small white cabbage, quartered ; black pepper, allspice, and salt to taste. Let the soup simmer till the same is tender, but not overdone, and. lest it should, the vegetables may be boiled half an hour before the meat. This soup may be colored and flavored with red wine. Scgak and fatty matter fatten those who eat them and' can digest them. All the grains are fattening, and all animals that live on grain become fat if they have as much as they can eat. On the contrary, the animals which eat the flesh of other animals exclusively, never do become fat, no matter how much food may be at their disposal ; but they do not feed on stall fattened beef, but catch game as it runs, and this is not fat enough to fatten the lion, tiger, or eagle. Eat lean beef, mutton, and fish, and avoid sugar, butter, and, especially, fine flour iu all Its forms, and eat but little breadstuff at all. Use tart fruit and common vegetables, and exercise freely. As to men, we say, when the hair be gins to fall out, the best plan Is to have it ' cut short, give it a good brushing with a moderately stiff brush while tho hair to dry, then wash it well with warm soap-suds, then rub into the scalp, about the roots of the hair, a little bay rum. or brandy, or camphor water. Do these things twice a mouth, but the brushing of the scalp may be profitably done twice a week. Dampen the hair with water every time the toilet is made. Nothing ever made is better for the hair than pure soft water, if the scalp is kept clean In the way we have named. Potato Socttlis. These delicious blistered potatoes are prepared a fol lows : The potatoes, if small, are simply cut in halves; if large, cut into two or three slices; these are Tried in tne usual way. but are taken out before they are quite done, and set aside to get cold; when wanted they are Tried a second time, but only till they are of a light golden color, not brown. Jlural Xeto Yorker. Poached Egos with Frikd Ham. Fry the ham, take a clean frying or omolet- pan, nearly flu it with boiling water, set it over a gentle fire, break the eggs singly into a cup and slip each luto boiling water, cover the pan for four or five minutes when done, take them up with a skimmer on a dish, sprinkle a little pepper and salt over, add a small bit of butter, and serve in a dish or over the ham. Tapioca Ptddiso Without Mils ok Eggs. Soak a teacup of tapioca in one and one-balf pints of water over night. Pare and punch the cores from six apples, till the holes with sugar, flavor with a lemon or nutmeg, and pour in one teacup of water. When baked soft, pour over the tapioca, and bake all one hour. Eat with sauce made of butter and sugar stirred to a cream. Foam Fupdino Sacce. Four table spoonfuls of sugar, two of butter and one of flour, beaten to a cream ; add the white of an egg beaten to a froth, and pour into the whole a gill of boiling water, stirring it very fast. Flavor with lemon, rose, or nutmeg. Apple Ccstakd I'iic Beat tart, well flavored apples, and stew until soft, then run through a colander; add to each pie one third of a cud of butter. one-half cup of sugar and three well- oeaten eggs, t lavor wltn nutmeg and bake as a custard pie, anil 4t,t it nn Una. ariil half a ntnft nf .n - piece of butter rolled in fine flour and a very little water. Boll all np together. vaoBons. r, ... Wna AIontT abOUt bed-time the Detroit wife says she 11 go -H and her husband yawns and goes down the hall. After half an hour he Joins ber up stairs anu inquires: l-ld you DOIl uia auro "Yes. "And the back doorf". "Yes." "And you fastened that cellar door?" -a am rui nnt a hr6 under the AUU UIU wwaa aw knob of the hall door ?' .r ta Sure that all the windows are nailed down?" iru i I'll 'bet the window In the spare bedroom to ur no." "Did you see If the blinds to pantry window were fastened?" "Yes." aMw.ii .. vaiii MVAivpr on the the chair, leave a bright light, and if you near a nurgiar id ua rwu -aake dont wake me up. for I know I should scream right out. v..nv.n t Vm. "Youne ladles have the privilege of saying any thing they please during leap year, she said, eyeing him out of the corner or her eyes wltn a sweet too. His heart gave a great bound, and while he wondered If she was going to ask the question which he had so long desired aud feared to do, he answered, "And the young men must not re- ruse," saiu sne. "So, no! How could they?" sighed he. "Well, then," said she, "will you He fell on his kness and said : "Any thinir anvthlnir rnu ask. darlinir." "Walt till I get through. Will you take a walk, and not hang around our house so mucn r ' And he walked. Oil City Derrick. The Lawteb's Trade. A day or two ago, when, a young man entered a Detroit lawyer's office to study law, says the Free Press, the practitioner sat down beside him and said : "Now, see here, I have no time to fool away, and if you don't pan out well I won't keen vou here thirty days. Do you want to make a good lawyer?" "Yes. sir." "Well. now. listen. Be polite to old people, because they have cash. Be rood to the bovs. because they are grow Fne uo to a cash basis. Work in with reporters and get puffs. Go to church for the sake of example. Don't fool any time away on poetry, and don t even look at a girl until you can plead a case. If you can follow these Instructions you will succeed. If you cannot, go aud learn to be a doctor and kill your best friends." A romaxtic young lady fell into a river, and was likely to oe drowned ; but a preserver accidently appeared, and she was conveyed in a state or in sensibllitr to her home. When she came to herself she declared she would marry the saver of her life. "Impossible," said her father. "Is he already married, then?" inquired she. "So." "Is he not the young man who lives in our neighborhood?" "o it s a ewround land dog." A French ladt of title fell ill and called in a doctor who cured her. The man of medicine requested to be per mitted to print on his card, "Physician to her grace. "Impossible," said the latter; I have a physlcian-ln-ordi- nary." "Well, we will get over that difficulty," replied the doctor. "I will put on my card, 'Physician to her grace when sne is Ul.' tiyiro. A traveler, among other narrations of wonders of foreign parts, declared he knew a cane a mile long. The company looked incredulous, and it was evident they were not prepared to swallow it, even should it have been a sugar-cane, "Pray what kind of a cane was it?' asked a gentleman, sneeringly. "It - 1 ' (, l : .1 . 1 . I was a uurricaue, repueu me iravcier, "Beaut, my dear," said poor Mr. Jones to his better half, "you have sadly disappointed me. I once con sidered you a jewel of a woman, but you nave turned out only a Dit or matrl monial paste." "Then, my love," was the reply, "console yourself with the idea that paste is adhesive, and will stick to you as long as you live." A gextlkmaX at table remarked that he could not endure fish unless It was well cooked. "This," said the waiter, as he handed him a plate of the desired dish, "is, I hope, suf-fish-ently cooked to suit, sir?" "Well, ves " replied the gentleman, as he tasted it, "it is done a good eel better than I anticipated It would be." "I hear that you belong to a whist ciud," said a gentleman to a young lady friend a short time since. "It must be a charming way in which to spend an evening." "Oh, yes," she sighed, "the first evening we played 'Pedro,' the second 'Railroad Euchre,' and the last 'Old Maid.' We have not met since." Perhaps children are the silver cords that bind us to heaven, and vet a man doesu't think about that who, after listening until 3 a. m. to the music of his infant, just glances wearily at his watch and remarks to his wife, "My dear, I think I'll go out Into the wood shed and try to get a little sleep." Art received rather an awkward criticism from a free and easy young man who recently met a sculptor in the social circle, and addressed him thus: "Er er so you are the man er that makes er mud heads?" And this was the artist's reply, "Er er not all of 'ein; I didn't make yours." Too Matter op Fact. Grandmother "You ought to be ashamed of your self, Matilda Ann to 'a sat without a tear when the good clergyman was a talking that beautiful, and every one else was a weepin' so!" Matilda "Why, how could I cry when I hadn't got a pocket 'andkerchief ?" Ax rxcoMBED agriculturist walked into Providence the other day, to visit the Centennial cafe on Westminister street. He waa a little taken hai-k at the surrounding elegance, but at once asked, "Whar is he?" "Who," asked tne attending lady. "The centennial calf?" "As a husband," says a man. "I'm ever willing to do my share about the bouse. My wife, for instance, nuts uo all the preserves in summer it Is pleas ant, then ; but when cold winter comes I don't ask her to do anything about them I put them all down alone." The Glass or Fashion.' Mrs. Dram- drop: 'It's all very well for you, my dear; but when my husband grumbles and MVS. whr don't I smart mvaiflr nn in the fashion, I tells him beauty un- auuriieu uon i neeu no adornments. lyt Varvana. when a Hiiihlfnir folia -n.l kills two or three people, the jury first hunt nn th. mnlrui'tnr anrl hano him and then bring In a verdict that nobody a iai umiuo uut uie contractor wno can not be found. A cousmucmirr ask-a? "SnnnLl - hen feel proud when ridins In a conn. eh?" O is a slovenly letter. Whv? Be cause it to always out of order. Paradoxical. The more a dentist 'stops" the faster be gets on. A miss DEED Givinir title to a vounr lady's property. Scotchmen est three oatmeals a day The market was held in a tiny, open. nvsi space in irvu v ; , undeUVshadeoftwo "umbugold showS tho u oT rood 5 Wik j5S SJ5S5 heinar then ana ibbit , breaa; on w i v..v.t r lees lumps or porx ni t . abated aardin-this last, fried in oil. being almost the .to?! everr meal Oi tne opaowu everf Spanish market, the marked f eatare was the abundance of suecu lenl Savory vegetable, from the few neighboring irrigated gardens. The Spaniard, whether nch or poor. to. vegetarian ; "--hlM tne staple si , : Z were piled on the ground in beaps. the women quu i - . -xrT .i i ... l.iMi, Mma at una. tnem, tne "ck j - Here were bright carrots and turnips ; here small green onions, full-frrown o nions. and ararlic; here cow-cabbages of fabulous sue; nero uuko !" or pumpkins, with a skin like the bark of a gnarled oak-tree, and sold in lumps of one pound each for two far things, the nch deep orange of the Bean looking quite luscious; here lay heap of the enormous, but tender dravanoe. or radish, of Spain ; or a heap of fine potatoes, and the bright-colored pimt- - Mai.iimi Th aeene was WIWl V . ---- striking for its simplicity ; even the irentleiuen of the town were there. draped in their abundant capotes, or i kiunA th.ir tinr bit meat and their wealth of vegetables m . k . il..fa Muiuimnlinn. A feW iur iub uaj . ... . - .-- words were exchanged here and there, but the piafa was soon sirippvu i wealth, and as the last onion was car tied off in triumph, "clang, clang, . .1.. knll Vnm lha nlH rluirch tOW er above us, and we, with some half Hnn lailiMt. in deep mourning, anu UVSVU sSMSIVDt r a ri ra v IMAf! VAIlt 111 til lOlD tilt tmtf- I Aa.aw anil aaatr ftW k hiatal all II (T OD D VI OUt, ulUi vwb-sj mum ' J day that lay before us. Temple Bar I ate CarK SMfaasl. "Courage," says Richter, "consists not in blindly overlooking danger, but in seeing It and conquering it." xms description of courage appears to have been displayed in a remarkable manner the other dav by a soldier at J utog, near Simla. In the gun-room or tne mouu tain batterv stationed there, some ser enty leather ammunition boxes were deposited, each containing eight loaded shells. From within one of these boxes a slight explosion was heard, and smoke was seen to issue. There were eighteen or twentv men iu the room, whom the Sergeant" immediately ordered out of danger and himself uplifting the box by the two handles, he staggered out with the deadly load poised upon his chest, and deposited it full twenty yards away on the middle of the parade ground. As he did so, the coo tents irave forth another warning report. On eventual examination it was discovered that some of the friction tubes bad be come displaced during battery exercise, and had worked away under the base of a shell, the weight of which had ignited them when the box was set down. The Serireant certainly deserves, if not the Victoria Cross, at least some signal re ward for bis presence or mina ana bravery under circumstances or no or dinary peril. A Mdl Wife. A popular essayist writes as follows: "A I went up the new Massa road the other day I met a ragged, stout and rather dirty woman, with a large shal low basket on ber head. In it lay her husband, a large man, though, I think, a little abbreviated as to his legs. The woman asked alms. Talk of Diogenes in his tub! How must the world look to a man in a basket, riding about on his wife's bead? ne put nim down beside the road, in the sun, and almost In danger of passing vehicles. I sup- nose the affectionate creature thought if he got a new injury in this way his value in tne Deggar-marKet wouiu oe increased. "This custom of carrying one's hus band on the head in a basket has some thing to recommend it, and to an ex hibition of faith on the one hand and of devotion on the other that to seldom met with. It to at least a new com men tary on the apostolic remark that the man Is the bead of the woman. Br. chSBek's Btatadard Kswedtaa. The standard remedies for all diseases of the lungs are Schenck's Ptlmoxic Strip, Schexck's Sea Weed Toxic, and Schexck's Maxdraer Pills, and, if taken before the lungs are destroyed, a speedy cure Is effected. To these three medicines Dr. J. H. Scbenck, of Philadelphia, owes his un rivalled success in the treatment of pul monarv diseases. The Pulmonic Syrup ripens the mor bid matter in the lungs; nature throws it off by an easy expectoration, for when the phlegm or matter is ripe a slight cough will throw it off, the patient lias ret and the lungs begin to heal. To enable the Pulmonic Syrup to do this, Schenck's Mandrake Pills and Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic must be freely used to cleanse the stomach and liver. Schenck's Mandrake 1'ilU act ou the liver, removing all obstructions, re lax the gall bladder, the bile starts freely, and the liver is soon relieved, Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic U a gentle stimulant and alterative; the alkali of which it is composed, mixes with the food and prevents souring. It assists the digestion by toning up the stomach to a healthy condition, so that the food and the Pulmouic Syrup will make good blood ; then the lungs heal, and the pa tient will surely get well if care i taken to prevent fresh cold. All who wish to consult Dr.Schenck, either personally or by letter. Can do so at his principal ofiice, corner of Sixth and Arch Steekts, Philadelphia, every Monday. Schenck's medicines are sold by all druggists throughout the country. "racts sir Slakhvsra Tblaws." Thousands of h u man bei ngs are yearly borne on the swift current of disease down to the grave, just because they do not possess a sufficient knowledge of themselves. A man meets his neighbor, and the first salutation is, "How are you ?" or "How to your health ?" The reply frequently Is, "Oh, I am well, with the exception of a cold." Most persons lightly regard a cold. Header, do you know that a cold to one of the most dangerous of maladies ! A cold not only clogs up the pores of the entire system, and retards circulation, hut It is Productive of I'afarrh a-hliK la mil.. apt to lead to Consumption. "Oh," you j , iv is notning put a coia in my head." True; but that cold to really a mild form of Catarrh, anil if nnt arret ed in iu course will become chronic catarrn is one of the most disagreeable, offensive affections in the catalogue of diseases. The structed, the sense of smell impaired, and there is a disagreeable sensation of pressure in the head. In the more ad vanced stages, there to a discharge hav ing an offeusive odor. If the disease be allowed to continue iu its course, thick, hard incrustations will form in the head, the bones of which sometimes be come softened and break away In pieces. Why will persons continue to suffer from such an annnvtni dlimntSio .i: ease, when they can just as weU be ,,i age t atarrh Kennedy will cure the worst forms of Catarrh ; In fact, it to the onlv aura ani remedy which has yet been offered to the public. Many harsh, irritating pre parations may, for a time, relieve the urgency of the symptoms, but they do not cure the disease. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kemedy is soothing and healing in Its woen usea wltn lr. rterce't Aaaal Douche, according to directions, does nnr fall tn nv . d.i.i v U Druggists. ia "SI The People's nemedy. Thfl ITnTsrsal P: . kirx Bote: Ask lor ruJD3 EXTllo ... - Take no other, Hear, lar a .i wait c! eiTir-. thing-a.n ,U'H ran t DTMei-iviiiwtTtwrt, Omrnlmrr. lias bea In ce oCTV yer.aod fnrrleinlu-a and 5i " tiTarirtorf annot ha axorUrtL i-.."a fcmrt. Areidrata, s!? C laalaaa. Cala, Sina7ai3 almoat tortanlly l.r mm-a Promptly rehnws painnr lirT' Jr Karariatlaaa, ( baling, UU T BM, !, l ariH, rtt AnCT laButxm. redocra twrliinrt, itarm biZL nUWUHEt8.7it .w. 3- iu I ue iMc at and iotuasfn i lorw auU prea In the hwirl. narmrau rn prv. -m UICIIBHCA U h. BooUii AH la,,, caraiiiai lo wbirh kvlw ir nhj, promptly enml. Fuller details iB wL? panyirachltl. "" nil radr com. Norx h... : - - "rwnaa-. ..I. n urn. r.i.r r. t u ditrvawiD! and dtiieriTWj.fr-,.::. ; Kroner isEASu.-ii ino Dnt cam. BlfiOlll s any eanw. Fortl, w else, lttawaavwl haudrli,)f liwwjJT Mix fated lea faikdli. an-t fcWtia71 KUBMATISM. IEURAIS1A, tmi fcararha are ail aiiie rci.erti, ana ot:rT. mielAM ot allarboola whotm wild Vmmd'n Extrart af it. a l.Z onameotlitiii irwirptart-e. Wehs-ev. ' conuBcndauiaifttaii bniwlr-'do.i jasyol wbomortl.T ir lor i.!a rw-r prariKe. idhuuuwi "Mwiij.flr, . ori its a- for Kwrlham of ilfVM alaay, are Thrval, lnaaMTaa aimpM and chronic DinrrlMra. tatvn ior wbkh it w a rpirc.) c kilklala C4 Fer. Sti af la-l,iT ete. Chapped llaada. Face, au 4Z all manner of akin d seata. TBI1 IT SIC Kemove.fareaa.Brf aud Naaartiss't hl ai. kf, and Ptaaplra. It -, iriu'.,.,T ('atnptexiM. -; TS f AS Pera Extract. T .. ifcettler.110 LiwrtMiB can Bunt tofex. It. ltfci oard byallihek-adin'.rLmnwvi, Ri-Mt Kailroada ai.d flrat H.jrwarai. 1- York City. It ha no eunalf. Maraun.Be, m i mm or ?dlle toaaaa, mm! kierarrhea, KwclliiMr,t at , Larrrui Hirrana, r mrimmumi our, utarran i hilla, 4 alU, ttr. lt. rarjLf of vt:, ana IK mra 1. ftuunjB c 0 prompt lifi . inrainahto in erery Farm-vard avm ererr raraa -notnw. un rt oeirM ma. ron "will ncrrr be without t, CABJIOB.-'-"' Katrart hwhwaapr 1 ne genuine arucie naa ine wtra. I aa. t L. trmrt blows in wh bottle. Itamag. the aatljr swrswaa llvtatf; aha rar b sow to prepare it properly. Refaa al r praaararkiwa of Witch Uaaai, The a a. , article aaad by Phyniriaaa, aod a lb haKL ot inia amir, mnm ft.is . HISTOKI A.M Cb Or njD"S mu ia amphltH IbrTn, npnt fr na fiplicie r05BS KIT BAIT OOSPAM, lUiaalo ew lorB, ANY ONE WHO CANNOT CI rataloiruc awl price. D. waav, fmllaxleipniav. IT i : r. vi n i sre wia f. lmrtidr-d byJeniiis- J un, Jui 1-rtt m I ermwwill. o receu of sWaWrM.tiuti mm 1 1 wot M lrf. yvt-p-iui. Anil "furrr f: II nCtlHlMX of M.O worth tvf 'si W It it MM mf (- iVt tArr.fr Nfvi m frv4.N AaU!owALA,6EUSNUMr ! I lu aft sl rtri ttumtt to mat tn"-, nr-1;, fc- O 2 s o O as PS OB . P P M s 0 g 0 1-0 o 11 - aa H 2W e Oo LI pi 5? LI 3- z ? z o z - r Hj OBQ aa o SB 2 c J0 0 - - 2 ma $77! ta Areata. Old ana i"ar. FRKIt Addnaa F. O." VKkWY i '- gotta, Maine. DlJUf AMI! and prontaMr pl.)j""t ..i .... I k. L- i- . .-. t. n in th. I' BROOMS! BRCOW JOES' J. EZI5TE2 & CO. MS Waakladaa Strert ew Tart Msdpal Depot in New Tore r tlx- b-t Bra" tactnna in the Initrd fuirm. Brooma from $2.00 per dazes n- -Pn- Tbe loweat prkaa and rreataat nrittj u w a r-aara. ........ - ,r Xi.in aril i WAKA each aa Paila. Tula. Ba-krt. Mn ftWarwood and Clay riwa. tucj Si. '"-. ' I, Catlary, Ac nrfara tiuai lj k i r" A foil Una of the beat qculit of Tl F. 8. We aeU am- guoiM at prw- llut "',rr iy eremauai on the moil. i " ! aaJ - cava prompt attention. EtuM .trd l CnillTBATO IRON BWJf ".,-il-4f C..rn..,M l-ase .SH'ltT5. gatlsTtstiF" . - I, sendf'.irtx.-ai'j SHOW CASES! SHOW CAStS AD errles. Sttrar Montit.! t-1 w.ltm. aacona-baaa. securely h'"1 ivt m. -tl jp HOUBK AND OrFK'E T..MTTJ T Tna lareeal and beat aaaorteu n- aneoaa-naiul la loa uty. LKWIH At ten. ion. ' inn am " oOAper day at boa-. J)CtJl. sTixaua a 0 IIDCCID TO A ftllTtl"' Cksace ta mV ItlUwtt MB- llan.1 WiT Mnillll - e tarns to lose. ALLEN X CO.. V NEW YOB1C 20 FANCY CARDS, T ft-lr". "'"'Icv' A4drft J. a. Ul'aM, -Naaaa, Ba- RliH.ru 4k Monumental Marble I. linaBtrset, abovsOiw U rHTLADKLFHIA- jobti x'--a L.t.MtRETI Taft-" r-, i -. v: M
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers