PRIDE. I had a little rosebud girea to ma. I dropped it aa I wore it one fair day ; 1 would not turn to seek it no ; for tben Twere plain I prized it ; so I went mj way. IL I had a lore that made my life a Joy. It seemed to falter, one bright summer day ; I oonld have won it back with bat a smile , I would not smile, and so I went my way. nr. 1 0 pride, thon atealeet our most treasured thing. Things which to gain we'd risk all els be side ; Lost, lost my rosebud, lost my love, alas! I might have found them but for thee, O pride ! The Galaxy. Charefe) CeramMlet tm Modern Athens. The clrarch ceremonies are perhaps tbe nioKt interesting rights in modern Athens. The tnost enthusiastic ritualist who has been at Koine throughout HoIt Week. and has conscientiously attended all the Church functions, such as they were when tbe 1'opeand his court took their share in them, may be inclined to hope, dazzled and delighted and ira- Eretwetl as he may have been, that he as done with ceremonies forever, lie will be charmed to tintl that his jaded tast can be refreshed, and a really new lield of interest opened to him in the service of the, (ireek Church. Lent is . very strictly kept throughout the ortho dox East. On Thursday and Friday in Holy Week, large docks of sheep and lambs were driven from all the country round into the waste lands outside the town, and one met everywhere shep herd lads in filthy fustanellas bearing on their shoulders lambs which they offered for eight, sis, or four drachma!. Sometimes the poor patient beasts were 1 slnng over one shoulder only, and held by the bind legs, their beads hanging down behind; sometimes drawn around the man's neck like a comforter, and held by all four legs before. On Satur day morning one met the same lambs, which had now changed masters, and minus their lives and their skins, were carried by butcher-boys on trays to their purchasers. On Easter Day every household has its lamb. At Koloky thon, a village outside Athens, on Eas- ter Eve, we saw an old I 'all icar prepar ing his for the tire. The animal was spitted on a strong pole and round : smaller spits the liver, ic, chopped small, with herbs and salt, were bound, to tie roasted and furnish the. next day, a favorite l'aliicar dWh. During Good Friday all the shops were shut. In the evening the whole population crowded to the churches, where the choir intoned a monotonous chant, and on a table before the holy doors was spread a veil or pall of silk, on which was embroidered or painted a figure of Christ, either on the cross or , resting in the tomb. Throughout Saturday the chnrchps remained open, but they were chiefly occupied by the persons who cleaned them. Until about an hour before mid night every one made their way to the Cathedral; the streets were lined with troops, and a carpet was spread down the nave and steps. For nearly an hour the cviolr chanted, or rather droned, ' antiphonally, short hymns or prefaces, the Archbishop sitting peacefully, per haps wearily, on his throne, in black robes; a little before midnight he en tered the holy doors, and taking his vestments from the altar, was robed by his attendant clergymen. At last, most gloriously vested, a crown on his head, and holding in his right hand a triple, ! and in his left a double taper, symbols I respectively of the Trinity, and of the I two natures in Christ, he came forth, I uii'i Dinuiiiiiji in iui . I. tier utri'i n, " il 11 , i iti cathedral clergy gronped rouud him, chanted : Clirit if rifi from the Havinc rrud'k-a doeo death by d-th And tfivetl lift Tu them ilia Mrs in the tombs." Then, as first the clergy and choir, then the people, advanced to light their tapers from the candles he bore, he sung or said : -Torn take Ileht From the light that know nu etrUtn, And glorify lliri-t, M'bu u rweo from the df-ad." The effect, as the lights passed rapidly from one to another down the church, nntil nave and galleries were flooded with sparks of flame, was very striking; every one had brought a ta per, which were now first lighted. Presently the Archbishop and his at tendant clergy, oneof whom boreltefore hinihif pastoral staft'.asilvercm toll, with a handle of twisted snakes, proceeded to a platform outside the western doors to await the Kins and Queen. The tramp of cavalry, the blare of trumpets, and thunder of cannon announced their ar rival with royal punctuality. The Archbishop announced to their Majes ties the tidings of the resurrection, and gave them tapers lighted from the holy tire. Then the procession entered the church. The King and Oueen re mained abont half an hour standing before two thrones, close to that of the Metropolitan. Thechoir took the chief part in the preliminary service, with an occasional versicle and response by the Archbishop and clergy. This chanting was nasal, and to our fancy anything but joyous. When this was over, their Majesties were again conducted to the door by the Archbishop, who then re turned to begin the liturgy proper, the first mass of Easter Day. Good H oros. The Utau That Wedded aJtnamrtto. The story of the marriage of Lamar tine, the great French poet and states- , man, is one of romantic interest. Hie lady was of an English family named Birch, and very wealthy. She first fell in love with the poet from reading , his "Meditations l'oetiques." She was : slightly past the bloom of youth, but still young ami lair. Mie read and re read the "Meditations," and nursed the tender sentiment in secret. At length she saw Lamartine in Genoa, and her . love became a part of her very life, Xot long after this she was made ac quainted with the fact that the poet was suncring even touiinanpinesslrom the embarrassed state of his pecuniary affairs. Miss Birch was not long iu de ciding upon her course. She would not allow the happiness of a lifetime to , slip from her if she could prevent it. She wrote to the poet a frank and wo- - - manly letter, acknowledging her deep uteres! and profound respect, and ol- fering him the bulk of her fortune, if be were willing to accept it. Of course .Lauiartine could not but tuspect the truth. Deeply touched by her gener osity, he called upon her, and found her to be not only fair to look upon, . but a woman of a brilliant literarv and artistic education, lie made an offer of his hand and heart, and was promptly and gladly accepted, and in after years Alfonse de Lamartine owed not more to ' his wife's wealth than to her sustain- ' ing love and inspiring enthusiasm Tbe Alltuwr Business. Between 17,000 and 20,000 alligator skins are tanned yearly, which are con sumed by boot and shoe manufactures in every portion of the United States, as well as exported to London and Ham 1 burg. The alligators formerly came almost entirely from Louisiana, and Xew Orleans was the great centre of business. The Florida swamps and morasses are now the harvest liel'lsand Jacksonville, in that State, the great depot. The alligators often attain a length of eighteen to twenty feet, and frequently live to a very old age. The bides are stripped off, and the belly and sides, the only portion fit for use, are packed in barrels, in strong brine, and shipped to the Xorthern tanner, who keeps them under treatment for from six to eight months, when they are ready to be cut up. So far the leather has been mainly used in the manufac ' ture of boots and shoes, but handsome slippers are also made of it. -A great sale of autographs is soon VP take place in Paris, and includes Napoleon's, Louis XIII, XIV, and XV, Bobespierre and Voltaire. AeBICULTTKAU Pawt Tor a Farm Impumkxts. Millions of dollar are lost annually In tbe United States, by neglect to paint farm wagons, plows, barrows, Ac These things if well painted and kept under cover when not in use, will last three times as long as they will wnen not repainted after two or three years or use. Any farmer can paint tnese things. AU that is needed is Venetian red and linseed oil, half raw and half boiled, tben wash the implement to De painted thoroughly .and proceedto apply the paint. Even pleasure carriage can be nicely painted at about one-tenth the cost when painted by a carriage maker. A fanner says: "After paying twenty dollars every other year to the carriage maker for painting and Tar nishing my buggy, and being without the use of it for fifteen days while at the shop, I concluded to inquire into the matter little believing all that a farmer can do towards keeping his tools and farm machinery in order should be done at home. We toe often employ the mechanic to mend our harness, when we can do it quite as well, though at all times not quite so smoothly. The next time my buggy needed painting, I called at the carriage shop, and en quired what they would paint it for. They would clean and put on one coat of paint and Tarnish for fifteen dollars, and for all necessary repair in wood, iron or leather, they would charge at the rate of thirty cents an hour, and add the value of the materials used ; tor two coat of paint and of Tarnish, twenty dollars, and two weeks' time to do the work In. I concluded to paint and varnish it myself, and the result was that It cost me in paint and var nish only f 1.50, and tbe work was done as well, so far as I could see, as they would have done It. I gave it two coats of black carriage paint, and one coat of varnish." Fall Crmxos. The fall season is a much better one for taking off cuttings than any Tother, and there is a large number of plants that can be propagat ed in this way. The currants, goose berry, quince and the grape among fruits; and the privet, honeysuckles, wiegela forsythia, mock-orange and many other things among ornamental shrubbery. Indeed there are so many things among these hardy plants, Jtc, that will grow well in this way, that it is much easier to give a list of (he things that will not grow from fall cut tings, rather than the things that will. The great difficulty is that they draw out of the ground by freezing and thawing. To avoid this the cuttings need not be set out at once in tbe ground, but they may be tied into bun dles, each after its kind, and buried un der ground till spring, and tben put out in rows where they are to grow. Of course they must be looked after ear ly in the spring, or the buds will sprout and rot. In sandy land, or earth that keeps good hold of things, cuttings may be put in at once. Ceiient for Cracked Hooks. Mr. Defay has discovered a preparation by meau of which stud cracks or fractures in hoof or horn may be durably ce mented up. Even pieces of iron can be securely joined together by its means. The only precaution necessary for its successful application is the careful re moval of all grease by spirits of sal am monia, sulphide of carbon, or ether. Mr. Defay makes no secret of its com position, which is as follows: Take one part of coarsely powdered gum auiraon iacum and two parts of gutta percha, in pieces the size of a hazel nut. Put them in a tin-lined vessel, over a slow fire. and stir constantly until thoroughly mixed. Before the thick, resinous mass gets cold, mould it into sticks, like seal ing wax. The cement will keep for years, and when required for use it is only necessary to cut off a sufficient quantity and lemelt it immediately be- lore application. IIocse Scraps for Fowls. As the weather gets colder, fowl are cut off from many insects, fruits, seeds, etc. To compensate for this, it is necessary to supply your birds with an equivalent in nice but. This can often be done with scraps from the the table, leaves of vegetables, etn. This is especially re- qnired u towls are limited to a small run, for though every one who keeps fowls may not own a five acre lot for them to run in, yet he can keep them in health and with profit to himself, by giving them proper attention. When fowls are supplied with the change of food they require, they sel dom peck off each others feathers, but if they once commence it Is very hard to break tbem of such a habit. Pieces from the table are used with more pro fit to feed poultry than pigs, and they supply that variety which nature re quires. Ex. The Value of II kx Manure. But few men who keeps fowls are aware of the real value or ben manure, and 1 may not be much in error, if any, when I say that where manure is scarce and dear the manure that each hen will pro duce in a year is worth what it costs to feed her. Fowls average a bushel a year, when their droppings are careful ly saved say 23 pounds each, worth two and a half cent per pound to ferti lize any crop. This manure should be composted with any good soil about four parts of soil to one of manure, and allowed to remain in the heap a few months, to become disintegrated, and diffused through the soil, then a pint of the mixture in a hill of corn or any other crop will produce as good results as a shovel-ful of stable manure. Salt to Fattesixo SwrxE. Some years ago, a friend experimented in giv ing salt to swine which he was fatten ing. He selected two pair of barrow hogs, weighing 200 lbs. apiece. One pair received with their daily allowance of food two ounces of salt ; the other pair similarly fed, none. Jn the course of a week, it was easily seen that the salted pair bad a much stronger appe tite than the others, and after a fort night it was increased to two ounces apiece. After four months, the weight of the salted hogs was 350 lbs. each, while that of the unsalted, five weeks later, reached only 300 lbs. The exper iment was repeated with almost pre cisely the same results. Boom for More Sheet. Last year we paid foreign countries fifty millions of dollars tor woolen goods and eleven millions of dollars for unmanufactured goods. When we have in the country twenty million more sheep than we have now. we shall only produce the wool we use ; and yet there is no coun try on earth where sheep could be so profitably raised as in the United States. But we are coming every year nearer to supplying our own markets with tbe wool they demand. In 1875 the wool clip of the country was nearly 200,000, 000 pounds, while in I860 it was only 65,000,t00. Ex. Profits of Sheet Last year Mr John T. Koss, of Loudoun county, Va., bought nine hundred dollars worth of sheep, among them two hundred and thirty-five ewes. These be divided at lambing time into four flocks, which he watched wit h tender care, and tbe result is that he raised two hundred and seventy-eight lambs, and for the lambs and the wool he obtained $1,246, or $138.41 for each one hundred dollars invested. . An old experietmed and educated farmer says: Three requisites that every farmer should have, to wit: brains, muscle, and industry; and they should all be alive and active, per forming their duties pleasantly under the wise guidance of the first of them. Salt put on land, or mixed in the manure compost heap is not of suffi cient value to pay at ordinary prices. If a waste article can be bought at 13 to 20 cent a bushel it will pay to use It, but at no dearer rate. SCIENTIFIC The Life of the Eotut-Flu- The com monest insect on onr continent is tbe house-fly (Musca damestied); and yet bow many know it life history! Every body is familiar with it habits in the adult state, when it buzzes noisily around sleeping anu living-rooms, wherever it can penetrate, and torments the most patieut spirit with its restlessly-impertinent, meddlesome dispo sition, i et ask where it was born and bred, and what sort of a life it had prior to iu appearance upon the scene, full-grown and equipped as a two winged and six-legged bandit and skirmisher, and the answer will prob ably amount, in the sum of its infor mation, to a cipher. It is only very lately that naturalists have learned its mode of growth; therefore common folk are excusable for ignorance of its complete career. In the A merican Xaturalist, M. A. S. Packard, Jr., gives an account of bis investigations into the subject, which were panned two summers ago. This observer placed a house-fly in a glass bottle, where she was secure and yet visible; and in fourteen hours noted that she had deposited 130 eggs. These were long, slender, and cylindrical, and a little smaller at one end than the other. They were laid in irregular beans on the bottom of tbe bottle, and. just forty-eight hours after, a number of them had uatcnea. anu uie young maggots were crawling around in quest of something to eat,. Again, the ob server placed some fresh horse-manure at an open window in the sua, and ad ded new masses from time to time dur ing several weeks. This, being suited to their needs, attracted many flies, which deposited eggs in the cracks and crevices or on the surface; and thus their young were under tbe eye of the naturalist in all stages of their develop ment. The shell of the egg is so dense that the changes of the embryo are bid from view, tut in twenty-four hours the young maggot was ready to come out. Those hatched In confinement were four or five hours later, and the young were smaller. When one day old, the maggots weut through the process of molting; and, when two days or two days and a half old, repeated the pro cess. After tbe second molting they lived three or four days, and then passed into the pupa or chrysalis state. In this dormant condition they slept for from five to seven days, aud tben, pushing otl the end of the pupa-case emerged in tbe form of a house-fly. ready to course through the air aud alight on some human nose, and tickle it intolerably with. their fast-playing feet, or to dip into some dish ot eutic ing sweets aud suck their till of it. "When free from its prison," says Mr. Packard, "the fly walks, or rather runs, nervously about, as if laboring under a great deal of mental excite ment, and quiie dazed by the new world of life and light about it; for, as a maggot, it was blind, deaf, and dumb. Now its wings are soft, small, baggy, and half their final size. The fluid that fills them soon, however, dries up, the skin of the fly attains the colors of ma turity, and it flies off with a buzz of contentnieotand light-heartedness horn of its mercurial temperament. That tbe By not only throws on, in its buzz, songs of the affections, love-ditties, but also may vary its notes accordingly as it is elevated or depressed in spirits concerning more trivial and less ab sorbing matters, we are assured by Sir John Lubttock, who says that the sounds of iu sects do not merely serve to bring the sexes together : they are not merely 'love-songs,' but also serve, like any true language, to express the feelings." lbe life of a bonse-fly born in Au gust is generally closed in from four to six weeks, and is cut off by the frost or by the attacks of fungus plants. A few probably survive until the ensuing summer, and these serve to perpetuate the species, the bouse fly ot America is supposed to be identical with the house-fly of Europe. The lntttnlor of Has Liuhts. The inventor of gas lights is said to have been a Frenchman, Philippe Le Hon, an engineer of roads and bridges, who in lTbd adopted the idea of using, for the purpose of illumination, tbe gases distilled during the combustion of wood. He labored for a long time in the attempt to perfect his crude inven tion, and it was not until ,'M that lie confided bis discovery to the Institute. In September, 100, he took out a pa tent, aud in 1401 he published a me moir containing the result of his re searches. Le Bon commenced by dis tilling wood, in order to obtain from it gas, oil, pitch, and pyroligneous acid ; but his work indicated the possibility of obtaining gas by distillation from fatty or oily substances. From 1VM to 1S03 Le Bon made numerous experi ments. He established at Havre his first thermo-lamps ; but the gas which he obtained, being a mixture of carbu retted hydrogen and oxide of carbon, and but imperfectly freed from its im purities, gave only a feeble light and involved an insupportable odor, and the result was that but little favor was shown to the new discovery : tbe in ventor eventually died, ruined by his experiments. The English soon put in practice the crude ideas of Le Bon. In 1404, one Winsor patented and claimed the credit of inveuting the process of lighting by gas; in 180.1 several shops in Birmingham were illuminated by gas manufactured by the process of Winsor and M unlock ; among those who used this new light was Watt, the inventor of the steam engine. In 1810 first use was made of gas in London, and is was not until 1HIH that this in vention, really of French origin, was applied in France. Treatuxcnt cj Ash. Woodworkers will find the following advice, from the AorthnresterH Lumberman, useful in the treatment of ash, to render it pli able. Steam is the ordinary means em ployed to soften ash ; but when it is practicable, boiling water is best. The chief thing is to have the right kind of ash, as some kinds bend and others do not. One tract of land may furnish tbe best of ash ; while another, lying close by and having just as good a soil, may produce only an inferior quality. Tbe timber mnst be heavy and tough, and cut from good trunks. No matter if it has been cntand dried three years. A splinter of this quality of ash can scarcely be torn off, and runs the whole length of the wood before it ceases. Half an hour's boiling is sufticient to soften a piece of wood 23'4 inches thick. When the wood is taken ont of the ket tle, put itin the brace, screw and wedge it in the desired form without relaxing, and let it cool for a few hours. After tbe wood is thoroughly dried in the brace, unscrew it and take ont the wedge; it will always then retain it form. TJie medical journals, last spring Bublisbed repeatedly tbe formula for r. Ferrier's new remedy for cold in tbe head. As the season for that dis tressing malady is at band, we print the recipe, which is: Trisnitrate of bismuth 6 drachms, pulverized gum arabic 3 drachms, and hydrochlorate of morphia 3 grains. This is used as a snuff, creates no pain, and causes, says the London Lancet, the eutire disap pearance of the symptoms in a few Lours. A harmless glaze for earthenware, destined to replace the lead glazes hith erto employed, has lately been devised by M. .Constantin. One recipe is 100 parts silica of soda,15 powdered quartz, and 25 Meudon chalk. Another is the same with the addition of 10 parts of borax. The articles glazed can be col ored by copper tor green, and manga nese for brown. A good Cement for Clots. Orange shellac bruised, 4 org,; rectified spirits, 3 ozs. Set this solution in a warm place, and shake frequently nntil the shellac is dissolved. This shellac will stand any contingency but a heat equal to that of boiling water. To purify glycerin, add 10 lbs. iron uiiugu ui every iw ids glycerin, in a faw week a all imnnritifa will lav of tk. bottom. MnsTIC To Cook Pigs Feet. Having been well cleaned, split them In two, length wise, and sew or tie up In a piece of linen, and put in a srewpan witn lour onions, a little parsley, two carrots, two bay leaves, three cloves and a cup of wine. Cook slowly for five or six hours. When done, and nearly cool, take off the linen, slip the feet in melted butter; then put in fine breadcrumb and broil over a good fire or a gridiron ; or, dip them in a butter, made of one cup of milk, thickened with four, one egg and a little salt. Fry in hot drip pings till brown and crisp. "Pigs' feet" is a dish usually regarded as very democratic, but If properly cooked it is looked upon by most people as a great delicacy. Some of our commonest dishes, skil fully prepared and well cooked, are considered fit for auy table, when, with ordinary care and handling, tvy are thought to be but cheap provisos for the poor only. Bar leaves can be had of any druggist. A couple added to any kind of boiling meat greatly Im proves the flavor. Whole clove should always be at hand, and parsley, a most useful herb in cooking, is easily grown where a few feet of ground can be de voted to it. It handsomely decorates almost any dish of meat, and is very useful in sauces, soups and various other dishes, in cities it is usually to be had at the grocer's. Wedding Cake. One pound of butter, one pound of sugar, oue pound flour, twelve eggs, two large nutmegs, one teaspoonful ground mace, one teaspoon ful cloves, one teaspoonful cinnamon, one half teaspoonful allspice, and one half teaspoonful ginger ; grated yellow rind of a lemon aud the juice of it, grated yellow rind of an orange and the juice of it, one wine-glass brandy, four bounds raisins, four pounds currants, two pounds citron. Half a pound of sweet and half a pound of bitter al monds, blanched, and beaten In a mortar to a paste, may be added ir desired, in bounding the almonds you must pound only two or three at a time, and use rose water to moisten mem auu assist in forming them into a paste; put in a few drops at a time. Be very sure to sift some flour over all your fruits after thev are prepared and ready to mix in the cake. I use prepared flour, and al ways sift it before 1 welgu IU l use uie best and largest raisins, as they are much the richest. You can substitute rosewater for brandy. This la a very rich and handsome cake. It takes eight hours to bake in a moderate oven, if baked in a large loaf. Chickens ix Jelly. This looks very handsomely on the table and relishes always, although it is a cold dish. First, prepare the meat jelly in which to en case the chicken. Boil four calves' feet, three onions, one-half teaspoonful whole cloves, the same of pepper corns, one teaspoonful salt, one carrot and a bunch of celery Iu six quarts of water, slowly for six hours. Strain and cool ; when cold, take oil the fat. aud just put the rest in a preserve kettle with three sliced lemons and the whites and shells of six eggs. Boil twenty minutes, tben add one cup cold water, let it stand fifteen minutes: then strain through a jelly ba. The birds should have been stulled and roasted, anu men put into the mold, breast downward; then tne molds tilled with the hot jelly from tbe iellv-bair. The mold, of course should be wet, so the form will come out hand somely, serve from a platter, uarnisn with bright colored jelly and sprigs of parsley laid alternately around the edge. Roast Pio. Wash and clean the pig thoroughly; then make a dressing of breadcrumbs, salt, pepper, sage, mar joram, onion chopped fine, two eggs, a little salt pork chopped fine, mix all well; stuff the pig aud sew up; baste it ol ten; allow hair an hour lor every pound to roast by an ordinary fire. Put in just cold water enough to cover the bottom or the pan. At nrsi oaste with melted butter, afterwards with the drippings. The kidneys should always be left In a pig for roasting. Put a stone in the mouth beiore roasting anu when ready to serve remove the stone and replace it with a red apple, uarnisu with pastry plentifully. Washington Pie. Twocups of sugar, one half cup of butter, three cups of sifted flour, lour egg, one-hall tea spoonful of soda, oue teaspoonful of cream tartar, tor tbe tilling: One tablespoonful of corn starch boiled in one-half pint of milk ; beat the yolk of one egg very light, and stir into the milk, flavor with vanilla, and when cold add the other half of the milk and the white of the egg beaten to a stiff froth and stirred iu 'quickly; spread this between the cakes and ice it with the white of one egg and eight table- spoomuls of fine silted sugar flavored with lemon. Fish Cakes. Take one pint bowlful of salt codfish picked up very fine, and two pint bowlfuls of whole raw peeled potatoes; put together into cold water, and boil until the potatoes are thor oughly cooked. Remove from the fire and drain on all the water; masli with a potato masher; add a piece of butter the size of an egg; two well-beaten eKK pepper and salt to taste. Mix well, and fry iu hot lard, butter, or drippings. Do not freshen the fish be iore boiling. These caxea meet with much favor whenever made. Shakers' Pickles to KeepTen Years. Half grown cucumbers fresh gathered ; wash clean and pack in jars. Make a pickle of salt and water tbat will bear an egg; put in a piece or alum the size of a nutmeg to a gallon of brine; boil and skim it, and pour hot over the cu cumbers; let it stand till cool, then pour off. Boil enough vinegar to cover your pickles, spice it to taste, pour it over hot. first adding a small piece of alum. In two days these are ready to eat. Potato Pcff. Take some cold meat, either beef or mutton, veal or ham ; clear it from gristle, cut it small, and season with pepper, salt, and cut pickles; boil nnd mash some potatoes, and make them into paste with one or two eggs; roll it out, with dust of flour; cut it round with a saucer; put some of your seasoned meat on oue half, and fold It over like a puff; pinch or nick it neatly round, and fry to a light brown. Howxr Muffins. Take two cups fine hominy boiled and cold; beat it smooth ; stir in three cups sour milk, half cup melted butter, two teaspoons- ful of salt, and two tablespoonsful of white sugar; tben add three eggs well beaten, cue teaspoonful of soda dis solved in hot water, and oue large cup ol flour; bake quickly. Mildewkd Clothing. Soiled cloth ing put together when damp, and al lowed to remain so some time, is often covered with mildew. The remedy here, too, is in the prevention. Dry the clothe before putting together and never allow an article to be rolled up damp and thrown Into the basket for soiled clothing. Roast "Spare Rib." Rub over with salt, pepper and powdered sage before putting in tbe oven. Tbe gravy should be made of tbe drippings as in roast beef tbat is, thickened with browned flour. Allow fifteen minutes to every pound of pork for roasting and serve tart apple sauce with it. Inflamed Eyelids. Cut a slice of stale bread as tbiu as possible, toast both sides well, but don't burn ; when cold lay In cold spring or Ice water, put between a piece of old linen and apply, changing when it gets warm. Salad Dressing Withoct Oil. Tbe yolk of one hard-boiled egg, mashed and well mixed with a little salt and mustard. Add one small desert spoon ful of vinegar and two tablespoonfuls of cream, 1 uaoBora. Unpatented, But Efficient. A rov ing agent (topped at old bra house on Friday. .... "Ah, sir, I am introducing to the citizens a new and excellent patent fire kindler." He sat down a tin bucket aud pulled ont one of his turpentine swabs. 'Wha' do ver calldat?" asked old SI; That, sir, is my patent fire kindler. which largely facilitates the operation of" "An' yer wants ter sell me one oo dem tings?" "Yes, sir, I shonld like to." "I'm 'bleeged ter yer fer de kin'ness, but yer see I'se got a eight-year ole gal In dis bous'dat' got dat fire-klndlln' contract, an' dis heah right ban' ob mine ferlisertates de onerasbuna when- eber dar's a fallin' off ob de wlllin' ness." The agent decamped, and old Si turned around to remark : "Long ez dar'g llght'ood In Georgle n' marror In Ha nlfl mlll'l bone be ain't gwlne ter freeze ter deth Ver de want of a turpytine Are-starter." Atlanta Herald. Got off at the Wrong Station. The death of one of the oldest citizens of Brookfield recalls an incident in her career which happened some fifteen vears a?o. She was going to Stamford to visit a daughter, and took her seat in the car ror the nrst ana oniy time in u me. During the ride an accident occurred whereby the car in which he was seated was thrown down an em nana ment and demolished. Crawling out from beneath the debris she spied a man who was held down in a sitting nosture bv his legs being fastened. "I this Stamford?" she anxiously innuired. The man was from Boston. He was in considerable pain, but he did not lose sight of the fact that he was from Boston ; so he said : "Xo. thi is a catastrophe." "Oh !" ejaculated the old lady, "then I hadn't ouirhter got off here." This was so evident as to make a reply unnecessary. lA'ibuiy Aeies. Mr. Peabopt, with all his prodigality on work of benevolence, looked closely after his pence. He hated nothing more than the notion of being taken in, and it was rare indeed that any trickster could make that boast. On one occa sion, when travelling in Ireland, he was greatly annoyed by what seemed a very extortionate demand on the part of a car driver, and he accordingly re sented the attempt at Imposition by giving the man his bare legal fare. Alter loosing ai me coin iur ir seconds, Pat began to laugh. "Dedad," said he, "tbey may call you Mr. Pay body ; but 1 call you Mr. Paynobody." v.vi- fii iinr h-irlv looking female of unmistakable Celtic origin was re cently arraigned berorea magistrate lor some ordinary offence. While nature bad magnificently endowed her with good health and physical strength, the question of good looks had been neg lected in the haste in which she had been prepared for the world. "What are you up here for?" inquired the magistrate. "My beauty, I reckon." "Yonr what?" "Mr beauty." "Are m, Mrruin rt tliutV 'till bedad n,.'i mliialp " "Then I discharge you you ain't guilty!" And the ac quitted lady too ner uepariure. "Brutus Blinkenbkrry," said that gentleman's wife, drawing a paper from her pocket in the privacy of the chamber on Sunday morning, "Brutus Bliukenberry, I've counted, and out of the last thirty days you have come home intoxicated twenty-seven nights; what do you think of yourself?" Blinkenberry groaued. "Well, what are you groaning about now ?" "Them three nights." replied Blinkenberry, with an expression of horrible suffer ing." A young Danbcrt boy proposed to his father that he should go fishing, but hi father bad other business ror him that day. "Father," aid the young man, "do you know what solomon said about boys going fishing f" "bolomon didn't sav anything about it," replied tbe parent. "Yes, he did. He said, if vou spare tbe rod you spoil the child "I won't spare it," said the old gentle man, promptly. And he did not, but the son thinks he got hold of the wrong rod. Butter is very high just now, and Spilkins' landlady remarked to that gentleman, with emphasis, this morn ing, as he was preparing a piece of bread : "Mr. Spilkins. thai air Is Uosli iug butter, aud will make you sick if you spread it too thick." Spilkins says tbat many is the time when she has snatched him froo the tomb by her carefulness. The extensive authority of parents under the Chinese laws is well known. A Chinaman of forty years, whose aged mother flogged bim every day, shed tears in the company of one of his friends. "Why do you weep?" was asked. "Alas ! things are not as they used to be," answered the devoted son. "The poor woman's arm grow feebler every day." "Matilda Jane," wrote Artemus Ward as he stood at the tomb of Shake speare, "this man was a poet. Xot such a one as the young man who used to write verses to our Sarah Ann. Shake speare was a boss poet a man who. when an emergency came, could rise up and cave in the emergency's bead." The clerk of a cockney church re cently made the following announce ment to the congregation: "You are desired to attend a meeting in the vestry, at four o'clock, to consider on the best means of, eating the church, and to digest other matters." A lady who was suffering under a slight indisposition, told her husband that It was the greatest difficulty she could breathe, and the effort distressed her exceedingly. "I wouldn't try, my dear," soothingly responded the hus band. 'What abominable weather!' said Miss Mille-fleurs to Mr. Bon ton yester day. 'You ought not to find it so,' was the renlv. 'for it's frooil wenthpr for ducks!' 'And moderately good for geese, sue rejoiueu. "Ann," observed a young house keeper to the hired girl, one morning, "as we have just entered upon another century of our nation's history, I guess you had better get a tooth-brush of your own." A 'well-known author hung up his stocking in lest last Christmas Eve. and bis wife, very much in earnest, put a baby in It. W hereupon the author said, "Jiy dear, darn that stocking." Joen Billings was not ten miles out of tbe way when he got this off: "Men who have a grate deel to do with bosses seem to demoralize far more than tbe bosses do." The first lesson in arithmetic When Abraham was told to be "fruitful and multiply." "Is it pRorER to call a retired black smith an expounder?" asks an ex change. A ringing master in Boston call himself a "voice builder." Give ua a "rest." A Cincinnati fiend advertises for men with fever and ague to shake carpets. Why is a hen immortal? Because her son never sets. A nimble fellow: Tbe man who ran up hi flag. nnra coixmj. - ! should like to see... boy beat m at '" man either. as tor tnav ' " . . i i ..AMWi Kw & twelve- IU1 worus i nearu uu" " , . year old lad. 'he toWaloft two balls at once, anu caunui. Tk ' descended, one with eac h hand. T hat was certainly very well done but let me tell th boy who read the bt. SKkolas of some "catching". that I have seen in far-off lands-catching with the mouth instead of the hands, and they hall judge whetner my "?""'",", j .i. Koiu won Id be likely to carry off the palm amid all competi- - f. . T .llnaaaoil fllPHA featS of agilitw was at the palace of the King . . - V ft 1 1 . .lininl. HlS ot siam, wuere i uau - m - - , 1 - ' n a M 111 - lavonie oauu ui gjiuu , ,, i tendance that day. and he challenged as to see loeir exploits, ui u i: k.k.An AAnnrrvmAII COD 111 CO 11111 WUOUICI U wum"' " " anything more wonderful in the way . ,- l: -n.l oBrohinir. So ha seated our little party on an elevated plat form, where we could see readily the movement of the actors, and tbe first thing that met our view was a swing- : . - nl. wl tv. Iota lnjlnF nolHS that weie planted perpendicularly in . l A Alunr lurul.a TISMA Otl WHO JCXVUUU. rtwww , was another pole, to which was su spended bv a funny hook a silk net purse tilled" with gold. The purse was full fortv feet above the ground, while the stage swung about five feet lower, and was kept swaying to and from the pOlC UCIU WOWMJOW, J - of a lonng rope pulled by men standing on tne grounu. uo me niw eiwu four men, and as it veered toward the money parse, he who stood nearest was allowed one trial of bia skill at catching the purse with bis mouth. If be succeeded, the money (about sixty in gold) was to be his reward, and he might descend, as he bad mounted, by a rope ladder; when tbe next one wonld take his tarn, till all who wished to do so had made the attempt, a new pmse being supplied each time one was carried otl by the teeth of a victor. 1 tbouebt it a fearful risk and almost held my breath in dismay : but every body around me was laughing and the gymnasts themselves did not seem to think of danger. As easily and natu rally aa you catch a ball tossed toward you by your companion, the first man opened bis mouth just at the right in stant, touched the purse with bis lower lip to dislogue it lrom the peg, and t. . ..A lk4.VAAfft l.iiA tJUttll just aa his time waa np, by the veering away ox me stage, oevenu omen mi- lowed, with the same success, eacu I. .mt I v r)iuruil anil AnnAA.rinij'trilininh- antly happy. Then for one poor lel- , i 1 a - . .1. . v. low, wuu muru w eweu mo prize, came tbe usual penalty of being hissed and booted at by the crowd ; but worst of all. lie had to let go tbe stage, . . .ft... .A 1. 1 . 1. , k . u .,ir.iA u.-MiA attached, and, with bands and legs en- . . , . . twined, slide uown as oesi ne com a iu the ground. 1 thought, of course, be would fall ; but he let himself down as readily as a monkey or a squirrel could have done, and appeared too crestfallen at tbe disgrace he had incurred to care about tbe loss of the money, or even tbe danger of a descent by that bare . ,ff aaha mil. fuw seconds of time for bim to seize the poie as the stage swung away, anu nau he halted or hesitated at ail, be must inevitably have been dashed to pieces. iit. A ienoUis. '- Johnnie's Pets. About a mile and a half from Littleton, Colorado, there lives a little boy, about nine years old, whose name is Johnnie Febles. He is his mother's, father's, and grandmoth er's pet, being tbe only little boy they have. Johnnie is a good boy. His being a pet does not spoil bim. Tbe dog is a pet; he is not spoiled: the chickens are pets : they are not spoiled : but tbey all live happily together. Johnnie rides his dog. frolics with him, and feeds him : and the dog takes care of the chickens. You will be surprised when I tell you bow many chickens there are. and will say, "What a large number!" There are seven hundred. Each mother has her own little coop, andherown little brood of chickens to take care of. Now, Jocko, the dog, will see that all these hens and chickens are in their home before he goes to rest himself. Another thing Jocko doe: if he catches one of tbe hens or chickens visiting her neighbors, or eating break fast at tbe wrong coop, he drives her to her own home, for be knows where every one of these seven hundred chick ens belongs. At a school exhibition of a town in Maine, the following essav received the prize: "On a turkle. This animal is found most always in the water, and then he comes on dry land. Tbe tur kle cannot fly. If be was the right kind of a bird he could fly : but if he was a goose bird or an ostrich be could not fly. The turkle has four paws and a mouth like an American eagle, which ma kes the British lion and the unicorn tremble. The turkle has a shell, and sometimes folks put lire on it, and the turkle crawls oat- When the turkle crawls out of bis shell he is very wet and sticky ; there are two kinds of tur kles ; mock turtle, and the other kind. We don't have any other kind in our pond. French and Irish people eat turkleand frogs, but I should not like to. I caught a turkle once, but it did not do me any good, for 1 exchanged it for a jackknife and cut my lingers. Father said it was a judgment, but I thought it was a kmte." A big Plum-Puddina. What do yon think of this account from an old book, of a plum-pudding T Tbe June re ferred to was the summer of 110. "On Jane 8th, at Paignton fair, near Exeter, the ancient custom of drawing through the town a plum-pudding of immense size, and afterward distribut ing it to the populace, was revived. The ingredients which composed this enormous pudding were 400 pounds of flour, 170 pound of beef suet, 110 pounds of raisins, and 340 eggs, it was kept constantly boiling in a brewer's copper trom Saturday morn ing to 1 ues dav. when it was placed on a ear. deco rated with ribbons, evergreens, &c. and drawn along the street by eight oxen." of. A icnolas. Didn't Want the Yayes."l bare left my place, motner." "Why, tny son t. Was your employer unKind to your' . "No, mother, be was kind enuuli "Didn't you like tli work V "Il was the wages I didn't like. Mv employer wanted me to lie about tbe poods and cheat tbe customers. 1 told tiiiu I couldn't do it. 1 would leave mv place first. I didn t want tbe wagts that came from lyinft." The world wants more suvh boys. There are plenty of places waiting tor tuera. BielaMtl Dehaw awi Eitravaat ! i a lea wiavtem. Prudent financiers, in considering the security offered by municipal loan?, will regard rather the proportion tbey bear to the annual tax-levy; not, of course, because it is supposed that tbe whole tax-levy for three or four years could be actually applied to tbe exclu sive object of paying the municipal debt, but because the ability and wil lingness to bear taxation is an iliustra tlon likewise of tbe ability and willing ness to pay off indebtedness. We have already seen that taken in the ag gregate and measured by these tests the indebtedness of the cities and towns in the United States, although amounting to a formidable sum, is not daugerous; and although some cities and towns have suffered debts to ari-te which are larger than can be desired, an examina tion of particular cases will show few, if any, in which tbe immediate adop tion of safe and prudent meas ures will not enable the city or town to extricate itself promptly from a position likely to cause either present or future embarrassment. m. ,...f,a nr the British Museum AUV w " - nrie. n..rehaaed for the SUES Of -.2,000 an antique bronie statuette, rather more than nan me "'c enting a bearded Bacchante dancing. reahinirling stop leaks effectually and cheaply in roofs of ill kinds, or lay new room. " free to ny one Stating where they saw this. Goods sent to ana part of the U. 8. N. Y. Slate Roofing Co., limited, 49 S. Front St., rnua., or o From William Van Gexer, Eq., of Lewis burg, Umoa Loamy, ra, pi.:. that bt wife baa been af- ..i -:,L ..mMina for the last four mcit wim ..v- r .... Tears and had become so reduced that she was unable, at umes, 'T " , , aal ea meUUu TtaVrl of the time unable to be out of bed. Shs would be seiied wUh violent attacks of eoagbing mnui sns woum , ..knl rwt helcless. 8ns ro ue aiftww- -- r eeived the attendance of as good physicians as could be found in rauaaeipma w country, but to no effect. I was at last in duced to try ur. n istak-s " Casaar, aad the effect for the better was really astonishing. Before she bad taken two bottles she felt and appeared almost as well as ever ; so much so that it is seldom necessary for her to use any now, except occasionally, from baring eaoght cold from exposure, or from sudden and unfavorable changes of weather. I have always been opposed to patent medicines and pro nounced them humbugs, but I must say tbat Dr. WisTab's Balsam or Wild Chibbt is an exception. I unhesitatingly recom mend it to the puMio a decidedly ihe b t and most efficacious remedy in eases f consumption. William Vas Gma, Caution '. Beware of preparations bear ing similar names. Examine the bottle carefully before purchasing, and be sure you get Dr. Wistab's Balsam or Wild CBiaay, having the signature of '-L Bcrrs" on the wrapper. 50 cents an J $1 a bottle. 38 Djapepslal Ifppall Djsprptla I Dyspepsia is the most perplexing of all human ailnieuU Its symptoms are almost infinite in their variety, and the forlorn and despondent victims of the disease often fancy themselves the prey, in turn, of every known malady. This is due, iu part, to tho clone sym pathy which exista between tbe atom ach and the brain, and in pait alm to the fact that any diturbanre of the digestive fuurtion necessarily dtsoidens the liver, the bowels and tli nervoon system, and e.flWt. to aoine as tent, the quality of the blood. E- F. Kuukel'a Bitter Win of Iron sure cure. This is not a new ptepr atlou. to bt tried anil found wauUug: it has been prescriln-d daily for many years in the praa-titf of emiiieut physi I'luun itli unparalleled kikccks; it is uot eipei ted or intended to cure all the diseases to which the human family la subject, but is warranted to cure Oyspcprtia in its most obsliuate form. Kunkel's Bitter Win of Iron uever fails to cure Symptoms of Dyspepsia or loss of appetite, wind and rising of the food, dryness of the mouth, heartburn, distension of the stomach and bowels, constipation, headache. dizziness, slrep I ess ii ess and low spirits. Try the great remedy and lr convinced of its merits. Get the genuine. Take only Knitkel's. which is put only in $1 Ix.ttles. lepot, io'.i North Ninth Street, rhiladelphia. For sale by all Diuygists and dealers ectvwbre. WfliNit 1 V- . - m Worms 1 E. Kuiikrf's W.Mm Syrup ner fails le-irr fin, !el and Stomnch Worm. Ic Kuukel, tbj enly mrcwful Phjrici wbo remoYrs Ti e worm " 2 hours. alie wiib bead, and bo fee until rea.od. Cooj mon sens-j teaches if Tape woim be removed all otbrr worms eaa he readily -iesiroyeil Send for circular ' E f Kunkcl, 2V rlh inh Srrert. Philadelphia, I'a , or call OB your ilriigpwt for a mii1c of Kun kel's Worm Sytiii.. rrice !H. 1 m-Ycr NiU Matsritareriof SJa'.e and Mir tie MANTELS Sew destirn. beam 1 ui eolnrv matrhln? car nets. trmuiiiic or dV.'onMi'Ui innuin. we are sellluir T aar low rairas. Very nawfcwme oo-9 fur Hi. B..k of deslrfin aad price list for aanlej on application. Vocbcu-'4oiu is soi.it.rrKn. Call na warr. Y. Slate Roofing Co. Limited, 49 Front St., l'hlla. CeUr st , s. . 13SC9 3t ktt a CO. TOWER HALL CLOTHIK BAZAA3. S13 Market St- Philadelphia. Tli! end Djr mn. prepjia samples of materials f jf Mix Soy ciorais. w.m prices sod tr.str!K-tiLn 1c me&?ureiutat in application, .'lothtn? ord-r-d will Resect Ot iprvs. to oe leiururJ i out ixeent tct eiprea-e ;f aot aoractcry. is-t-u aw EST Bankrupt r A J.-wrlr Sale of 0J HJ pains ever offer-. Willi "jrooua ai 0) III U S'lH I I .-tJ wttisfycrwiitorw. m " GBtf)' SOLID COLD Pariiaii, Diamond Pio $, Uvnu" SOLID COLD tnK " Srt, t La.iirV Fiavud'omc & u, Brooch ami Ear 1tom to match, $, Handsome EnjrraTed GoM flaied Ring marked K net. hip, 50 cents. Hcavv Wedding Rii,;. Treble Plated, aot to be told from GoM, 50 cents. Hamlaome EngraTrd SOLID COLD ond Kinger King, Ladie' or Genu', $1.50. Parwian I Ha mood Kinr. Ladie' or Gent , Solid Gold. $3. Open Face Watebea, Verjre Movement. 3, White Metal Hun ting Cane. $5.50. LaI Imitation Gold, H untitle- Cim. a splendid Watch, $3- ,rnts" Huntin Ca.c SOLID SILVER w $3. licnu' Imitation tiold Watrh. KxpnHn Bal ance, Uiuitiug CaKS, look like a $130 Watch, sip. ora The a bore are offered at leaf than one fonrth the usual retail rale. Best Milton Gold Jewelrv Combination ont, Conxistinr of eleiant watch chain, ladiea' jet and fold brooch, jet and sold t-ar-dropa. pair elrsant atone time buttoaa. art fpiral Uud. collar button, beary plain wedding rinc. and treats' Parinaa diamond pin. The abore S arti cle nt. poM-paid, fur 50 cent, have been retailed for $. F. STOCKMAN, 27 Bond St.. N. Y. The hoor ft. a thoroughly reliable one in eTery iwipeet Saturn Wttldf b'U. OttuUr S&, Is;. ATTENTION. WATCH SPECULATOR! e baye lie test Imitation - Geld Cliains - t at $3 eirV Rt TT rk Ul. to any Post-Oincc in the United States. MT CVlf TU r a Tyr it-Umcc ia the L mtcd States. 'E SELL THE WATCH WITHOUT THE CHAIX FOR TEN (, J. BRIDE & CO.. 767 & 769 Broadway. Mre You Going: to Pain' Ten Buy trie W. Y. ENAMEL PAlNTCOjrti U OS nimnV thonaamiaal n tKa a T-t. J: fllZl W .A-a lMVt t-10 1 lH nnd now kanfe mm1I a. saiawAwa, VW1IUIUK tm t k. at . . . 'iTl r"n ,b t'"- BAMPI, CARDS Of COUra?NTRKS. A-MtJ" iui w, 103 Chambers B 8. T. - - - -t-irras4S-,oKl niMa . SS fU5 tn ftOn f t twa WW III Vrtl ma. atna4vTT"ft, - oavttl.' and Mlla, .aai a aad ateptwaaber. -It "Va. irrMTC fnarSJo 01) fJW. ranted. Jio Knifc.C1fc.tta, lmgiL?'rK i-VII aaa mmt fra hartienlin B 1rrw fcT claim aijp apacialtMa. Adrka trm. la&ft1 THOSJIclilCHAEt, tf j, 707 Sat. Jt, a1 TE ASa PJctetnlSlrj La America lpi -- r rlrn, continually lncraing Aetata mm beat inducement dont w,t Timr iftj fcj to Roam Waua. U Veeee st 21 r . - "m THE BEST YE1 Tbe iHnndjtj SrhoM Ttm. of which H. rvv bull and tiortT A. Flu itrtMitin.uMi niaktr t putlibr. will, tn isTT. cuntaja rn on ibe lii ter national It-won, by rroa ai4 A. U KMiirw k: a popular tipom I .on (ion : and practical avplteanotr J' trutb..lr H. OnyTrombulL Th !v iu tMrur iwua ain loan can at cav whffw. TIm TimM m ftt-ni Ut iiini-T months on trial, fc.r 2S cntji; onTwrrjT Kor wvmj tnu thTT will b-t,t j. of tne HrbolarV Qunrterir. tbe hsailJ UaaiMaB haells acT WaKaUiaM asJa-rf. SiH'imn nf the WwklY 1 mmmt Tw . Tta mwi cmplt frfolay, aiUiiAmi sat. lalW at. Iirv-a AddlVM. J'JU-N U, WATTLFS. Jmrlf.w-, Stack Specula iiU ADVK K AND fNFORM ATlOTt rTKftSflj;. TO THE BEST MODE OT OPIEAIB, IS WALL STREET. STRADDLES,' OUR SPEt IALTT. Realizing Fronts la every cfat. Send tor our new Pamphlet entitle! -sctii Sent tree oo appUcauoa. W. F. HUBBELL & CO. Stock Broken, 46 Broad Suit loop wpraefLT READ & LIVE ONE peramii te ll -ur rtt. Atiit twivtbirkai rjici"! afsire tt it. the surw rroa pepala.aBlall ran, raralfth mesial ina Meat, t BWMIt). X"iiOiVE'S SPRING PAD BELHS'l Tor the treatment and cure ot RuptoreiadSr nla. patented iT6. Is Uie only sieiunc iia Invented. Hxery phynlolan endrseoltftl ant paticnta lu it at siifht. Rwatlarea farra rmm oM-A melaiiu- and hard-rubber prlnirs BuUiinnr send $i.oo lr sample Tru.-a. i-iTcuum-. doraruienta of thousands wh ha br and ot the leading physician in Ue ti siata. Including the wnrvat duclor ail ft-V Greifory. principal of the Ml Lull IMi lee. All say 11 is the Beal Traaa asm It has cured a year rupture innteer' la cent fur Mir wee'LUv Trus Daper. ex. " Howe, ilie pa-.entee. Is ruptutvd o b-o oaaiy. ana UAsncentorsyeiti3.uuie-"i hlsireTraturU;ui3.-il jiuj. M tbem tor Men, Women and C hilar.: who dally bl.nw Mr. IL for his mtenOua. THE HOWE I-EJsAI.Eat rH'tTn is the best Known for abdominal tffrrUuoa. If you have a friend ruptured, aua by sending us his name at utn e, XAddre-M 1 uriwE TRfSS CO Box UTS. IH1DCU B.ii4s,Io r soee TravHUng At-enis nvati. iMinnM ann iiwmuii a ur sue. v.- n AGENTS WANTED FOR HISTOETf riiTrii'i rvuiDinri vrc.lllt.ll U LAIllUlliui' It aell later than any otaer buuk. Oaar-ae-73 eopiea In two daye. Send far ear ",r Axeau. .NlT-wau. It'aLUUllM Co- hi!" 25 Fancy Card, all atvlee, wita f i. K. U carts. Saaaaa. KenD Co.. S- ' Til fY'ANCKESIS' U I I Iw MmiAimiiBE. Dr. S. .lias" v n-ki i- i.i :k m t-o le JOnufi"-"""- -ANAJWR-.13." Box an. SeW Vortu sis- from Brui-ifisi-i. be careful t -Jf ine article. ..bserve thai the aiifiur SILSBKK.M D." Is on eac M " S552$77p.g JOB PRINTING waATLT ixicrriD at this eTrc Watch in tbe Met for Tniin K lief The "! other metaK-""", g,,ld that the . the vinra ri ' CAN rel.ly. rfl ,f you Wl "-. use or to malce a, , Owing to " enabled t" "Jf'S tSA they are"" Stcamen. aa and other Zkt"f tiBeeirequ-yi vucuoa. " ta w any P" "j.'o D .,11 be Kt - wotnu MI M' . . m Cim fX, T.T Mail in a K .-vt fttr a tt IV s7i"it , . .n- TV rawjUirr, ntaWTJ s -- - - UiJfT rtaaa- ,T U nn..wutr.i kMtaMlIrUl ill sr MILLEa BHUS ii " " A srrmpwle ew-lctar HlHstrsled, !WoftV iaaaMamiT? wasted. Sena W tall pwu,,, l . . . , , . . Wftatft - aectreti
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers