- Jos rwsley AetMma Car. ' "You see," said the bartender, "we ere trout-fishing on the Skohola creek, In the wilderness of Tike County, Pa. Ex-Judge John Scott, ofXew York, w as one of the party. The Judge is airlicted now and then with the asthma, aud one evening we got into Thomas Westbrook's tavern after a hard day's lish, and the Judge was wheeling pretty stiff. That night ex-Congressman "Jake" Kleinhans, of Milford, drove out to Blooming Grove that's where we were where he has a $50,000 tan nery. The Congressman is a great joker. He saw the Judge getting right up on his toes reaching after wind, and said, innocently and sympathetic-like: "Why, that's what Joe Beeseley had ; but Joe cured himself." The Congressman couldn't say how Joe had cured himself, but he said that if he was in the Judge's place he'd drive out to Joe 'sin the morning. "It's only twelve miles," said he. The Judge said that was quite a pull, but by-and-by he said, in that nielaa choly way of his: "But if you'll go with me, Cahill, I'll go. I don't mind a jog of twelve miles, and I'd put up with a good deal, any how, to see a mil who has got the best of the asthma." "So next morning I never smelling a rat we borrowed Captain Westbrook's buck-board wagon and his off-mule and started for Joe Beeseley's on the road they pointed out to us. The road went plum into the woods after about a mile, and well, talk about Jordan being a hard road to travel. I'll bet this road could double discount Jordan. It was roots and logs and rocks and gullies and hills, one after another, until Scott said he might as well have stayed at the tav ern and died with the asthma, as to risk breaking his neck lookiug for a remedy. Well, we went on into the woods for about two hours. No sign of a house or a clearing of any kind, and we began to think we'd lost our way. We stopped the mule, and while we were talking as to what was best to do, we say a long, slab-sided backwoodsman coming along the road toward us. The Judge was breathing rather wheezy, so I said 'good-day' to the stranger, and asked him if a family by the name of Beeseley lived anywhere about there. "Y-a-a-s," he said. "Two miles on y'll find 'em." I askei him if he knew the Beeseleys. 'Y-a-a-s. ITster work Tr old Joe." "He used to have the asthma did he not?" inquired the Judge. "Army! At my! Xo canal boss as ever limped never had th' heaves worse 'n old Joe did. Why, he had t bad. he did! I 'member, when I fus' weut t' work for him, I were mowin' in a med der 'bout three-quarters of a mile from th' house. I didn't think 'twere noon yet, but I heard th dinner horn toot, 'n off I started fr th' house. Pooty soon she tooted ag'in. Mebbe they thiuk I'm deef, thinks I. but I hurried up a little. I hadn't gone twenty steps 'fore th' horn give 'nother yoop, this time sic-h an onearthly one th't I thinks mebbe th' house 's on fire, 'n I starts on a run. I got there all in a sweat. The old woman was in the garden pullin' weeds. 'What's the matter?' I sez, 'you blowed the dinner-horn so. 'Dinner- horn '.' she sez. 'I ain't blowd no din ner horn. Jis' then I heerd the yoop (riin 'Wliflt tliA Hurl ! that (Kaii ' f sez. 'Oh, that's the old man,' she said. 'He's out on the front stoop ras'lin' with the azioy.' I tell you, stranger, he had it uncommon tough, old Joe did." "We couldn't well deny that." "Well," said the Judge, "he cured himself, didn't he? Mr. Kleinhans told us so, and sent us out here to get his remedy." I thought the countryman was going to have a fit. His face went through a variety of contortions, and he sat down on a stump and rubbed his sides. After a while he raised up and said : "Jake sent y' out, did he? I might a' knowrd that. Y-a-a-s, stranger, old Joe did cure hisself, but they ain't no use o'you're goiu' t' th' house t' get the receipt, for th' old man ain't home, 'n I kin give y' that perscripti'n to a dot." "We would be greatly obliged to you for it," replied Scott. "Umme see 'twere four years ago las' summer 't Joe got rid o' it fr three 'r four days. Long 'fore daylight one morning I heerd th' old man get up an' go down stairs. I think y' k'd a heerd him a mile off, an' he wa'n't takin' in wind at th' rate o' more'n one breath ev'ry five minutes. I went t' sleep ag'in, an' got up early iu th' mornin' as usual. I went out on th' first stoop. Joe sot in a big arm-cheer 't he bad out there. H'lo! Joseph!' sez I. 'How's the wheezers this fine mornin' in June?' He didn't say nothin,' 'n so I stepped up t' his cheer. Good reason 't was, 't be didn't say nothin.' In one han' was a piece o' paper with writin on it, somethin' like this : "This azmv 's bin a botherin' me fr th' las' twentv-five years, but I've got the best o' th darn thing at last." In t'other han' was his big buck-born huntin' knife. He'd cut bis wizzin-pipe clean off, an' was dead er 'n a stane. Joe had cured hisself o th' azmy, an' stranger " But I had turned the mule towards home, and waited to hear no more I looked back once. The backwoods man lay in the middle of the road, kick ing and rolling, and trying to stuff his old hat in his mouth. The Judge only spoke once on the way in. He didn't speak as if he was mad, but I thiuk you could have heard him a mile : 'I've been inclined to think that there was no such thing as endless punish ment," said he; "the Bible says that "liars shall have their portion in the lake that burneth, etc." I'm of the opinion now that that is literally true. I hope it is, anyhow. If it is. Great Maccabee! What a delegation this county will send !" Making Silver UolUrn. Silver Is sent from the assay office to the Philadelphia mint pure, or 999 fine, which is about as pure as silver can be. It is sent in large bars, and, when received at the mint, is melted and alloyed with copper. Coin silver is 900 fine. After being melted and alloy ed, the metal is cast lnt ingots, which are simply bars of a convenient size for handling. The metal is then assayed to determine whether it is exactly of the standard fineness. Assaying is done by what is known as the dry or humid process. Samples for assay are taken while the silver is in a fused condition, and two assays are made of every speci men. The silver ingots then go to th coiner. They are first rolled into strips and as the rolling process U apt to make the metal brittle, it is annealed to soften it. Silver is annealed simply by heat ing tn an open wood fi remand then being allowed to cool gradually. The silver dollar strips are passed through the rolls nine or ten times before the first anneal ing and four or five times afterward. After the last annealing the strips are run through cutters which divide them into drafts of the proper thickness for the coins; and these, in their turn, are ran through a steam punching machine which cuts plancbeu the proper size for the coin. From 130 to 240 are cut In a minute. As the metal gets greasy during this process, the plancbets are then dipped into a bath of diluted sul phuric acid, which is too weak to act upon the surface, but effectively removes all lorehrn matter. The planchets are then adjusted ; that it to say, they are care fully weighed, and all that are lacking in weight are cast aside; such pieces are called "lights, 'and the "heavies" are the pieces which weigh too much and are filed off. The adjusting is done by women. It Is a process which requires much delicacy, and scales are used which are sensitive to one-sixty fourth f a grain. After the adjusting is fin ished, the next operation is milling which is done with a curious sort of machine. The edges of the coin are thrown up aud grooved by the process. After another cleaning with sulphuric acid the coins are ready for the die, both sides of the coin are stamped stthe same time. The dies are cylindrical blocks of steel upon which are carved the de signs to be transferred by pressure to the coins. Art of a high order as well as fine mechanism is conspicuous in this part of the coining process. The designer. In the case of the new silver dollar, Mr. Morgan, first draws his de sign on paper, from which is made a model in wax, of which a plaster cast is taken, and from this cast an electrotype is taken, upon which careful revision is made with the graver. This electro type, like the model and cast which preceded it, is three or four times larger than the impression which appears on the dollar. The design is transferred to a steel dye by using Hill's reducing machine, constructed on the principle of the pantograph. One arm of this in strument, with a blunt point, follows the lines on the electrotype, while the other arm, to which is a strong and rapidly revolving drill, reproduces the same lines on a smaller scale upon a steel block. By means of a press this impression is transferred to another block in intaglio and thence on another block, which is the parent die. After each transfer the lines are carefully im proved with a graver. Steel of the same quality as that of which the parent die is made is used for the coining dies. They are annealed, and trued on both ends. Two or three blows in the screw press, which is worked with a large wheel, secure a perfect impression, and both the obverse and reverse of a coin are struck at once. Machinery places the planchets between the dies, and afterward drops the completed coin in a box. Two or three pieces of each coin age are reserved for the annual govern ment assay. Gold is always found alloyed with silver, and it is never found with any other alloy. To separate the silver from the gold, the bullion is boiled in sulphuric acid, which removes the alloy the gold is then reboiled and reduced to a coarse powder resembling clay. I ts purity then is 998 or 999. The silver mixed with copper, is run into vats on a lower floor, and is purified and granu lated, when it resembles pipe clay. The granulated gold and silver are pressed nto large cheeses in a hydraulic press, A cheese of gold, 12 inches in diameter and three inches thick is worth $20,000; a silver cheese of the same size is worth $900. The sulphuric, acid after it is used, produces a sediment of blue vitrol, which is much prettier than either the gold or the silver seen in the assay office The vitriol and the weak acid are both sold for as much money as the original acid costs. The substitution of sulphur ic acid for nitric has caused a saving to the New York assav office alone of $100,000 a year. Depositors receive their gold and silver seperately at stand ard purity, 900. Pure metal is also sent to the assay office from the various re fineries to be alloyed. From United States refineries silver is generally sent in large bars or cakes; and a small amount of Mexican metal is received tn thin, irregularly shaped pieces called disks. The fumes from the vats and furnaces in the assay offices are conden sed and sold as weak acid. Only a small amount of the gas escapes into the at mosphere, and although it is slightly offensive it is not injurious. On the contrary, this gas is an excellent disin fectant, and acts upon dead matter rather than living. The same precau tions are taken to prevent loss in the assay office as In the great mints. The ashes, the sweepings from the floor, the crucibles, and all the instruments which come in contact with the precious metals are washed and ground in a machine constructed for the purpose, and the stray particles of silver and gold are gathered together. Japanese Customs. One of the first things that strikes the visitor is the peculiarity of the shoes. These are made of wood and can be easily slipped on and oil the foot, They are always left outside the houses, lest they should spoil the floors, and within doors all people go barefooted. As they come out they step on the shoes and adjust them as they walk on without stopping. The next remarkable feature of Japa nese life is the mode of conveyance. The only sort of carriage used in Japan is a small affair like an overgrown baby carriage. This seats one person and is drawn by a man. The men who make a livelihood by drawing them are pos sessed of wonderful endurance. They will run at top speed a distance of ten or fifteen miles without showing fatigue. The Japanese method of fighting con flagrations, consists in tearingdown all the buildings surrounding the burning portion. The fire engineers are ridicu lously inadequate, the men being des perately excited and there is an utter want of system, but great courage and energy is displayed, and when the buildings are small the plan adopted has advantages. The people are kind to the losers by fires and will go out of their way to buy from them so as to set tnem on their feet again. Mora than 3l1 miloa nf ralleuul were constructed in California during me year 1877. Wtix LckgS and Burnrrra Thkoats am se verely tried by sudden ensures or temnerarnre and those possessing them suould prudently treat (lie very tlret symptoms of a cold. Dr. Jayne'a Expectorant la well adapted to their needs, as a certain remedy for Coughs, besides being- especially useful for Its healing and strengthening effect on the Pulmonary and AGRICULTURE. - UinaiPLOTBD Laborers. The only branch of labor which is not overdone. ana which oners independence and fairly remunerative reward for toil and economy is that of the farm. But it Is not attractive. Those but of work in the cities and towns don't want to re- tarn to the farm. The most of them would rather live on charity, and in miserable squalor than try to make a living by cultivating the earth. They are infatuated by the sights and sounds and dissipations of city life. There is room In the northwest for farmers and farm bands; there are thousands of comfortable homes for men and women, and for families, on the farms of the west, northwest and southwest. It does net require much capital, but it require resolution and willingness to live soberly and honestly ; and men and women who are now living in cities in squalid poverty, dependent on public charity, with families growing up in pauperism, might find happy and plen tiful nomes oeyond the cities, u they could tree themselves from the iascina- tions of city life. How to induce this starving, destitute, surplus labor of the cities to take the healthful, remunera tive employment wnich is offered them on the farms, is a question worthy of the proroundest consideration. Ho re vival of business in our day is likely ever again to furnish work and wages to the vast surplus town population now idle, and to the myriads on the farms of Europe waiting for the signal of re viving times to flock to the cities of America. Flowinq-ix Manure. For root-crops there is no other way to be successful than to plow in the manure deep, as all ammonias evaporate, notwithstanding that there is a great loss of salt, lime, potash, etc., by leaching. But for small grains, grass and clover, experience has taught the most successful farmers that coarse manure applied as a top dressing is preferred to be spread on just belore a neavy rain in the spring, By observing how luxuriantly grass always grows around the edges of boards, old logs, stones, etc., we there fore learn the fact that any soil is con tinually improving as long as it is covered, there Is no doubt but what coarse manure spread on the surface of grass or grains, does more good on the principle of mulching than is lost by evaporation. Grass should be cut early. and by all means leave the after growth to rot and mulch the ground. Tbb successful farmer is he who pro vides conveniences for the care of his property and the performance of his work; be counts time as an important item in the yearly calculation and care of all his various euects as a factor in the annual returns. Wbeu he puts his horse in the stable there is a place for the harness where it will be safe from weather or any other damage; his wasons and tools are provided with coverings to preserve them ; about his premises will be found a little shop or room where he keeps saws, hammers, vis;s, augurs and the various tools that are needed to mend and put in order the differentmachines be uses. These sim ple articles prevent days and weeks of delay, besides adding to the length of time implements will last. It pays to have conveniences, and also to get what you do buy of good quality. Strawberry Beds. In making a plantation or strawberry bed, nearly any soil will answer, if water does not stand upon it too long. Have the ground carefully ploughed or spaded and well enriched. In laying out the land make the rows two feet apart for gardeu plots, and either three or four feet for field planting placing the plants one foot distant in the rows. Keep the grounds well cultivated and free from weeds, and you will be amply repaid by the admiring glances and hearty appro bation of any of your friends whom you may invite to feast upon the delicious and tempting strawberry giants that you will have. Milch Cows. If these be fed upon day bay it cannot be expected of them to give full supplies of milk, for with out succulent food the udder cannot, except upon a limited scale, carry on its milk secreting operations. In view of these facts every farmer should make it a part of his business to raise a sufficient quantity of beets, carrots and parsnips, to give each milch cow on his farm half a bushel daily during the winter and early spring. "Some people say that land which will raise good corn will grow good fruit trees, which is all right; but they should add that, like corn, they require regular and continuous manuring." To which we would add that, like corn, they require thorough cultivation of the soil, especially during their younger years, and many farmers would even regard a clean, mellow soil Instead ot a grass sod In their corn-fields, as more important than manure. The Earliest Suggestion of the Locomotive. As early as 1759, Dr. Robinson, who was at the time a graduate of the University of Glasgow, and an appli cant for an assistant professorship there, and who had mado the acquain tance of the Instrument maker, James Watt, when visiting the workshop, called the attention of the latter, who was probably then more ignorant then of the principles of the steam engine than was the young student, to the possibility of constructing a carriage to be driven by a steam, thus, perhaps setting in operation that train of won derful experiment which finally earned for Watt his splendid fame. Watt, at a very early period, pro posed to apply his engine to locomotion and contemplated using either a non condensing engine or an air-surface condenser. He actually Included the locomotive engine in his patent of 1784, and his assistant, Murdoch, in the same year, made a working-model locomotive which was capable of running at a rapid rate. This model, now deposited in the Patent Museum at South Kensington, London, had a flue boiler and a "grass hopper" engine. Its steam-cylinder was three-quarters of an inch in diam eter, and had two inches stroke of piston. The driving-wheels were nine an d a half inches in diameter. It is re ported to have run six to eight miles an hour, its little driving wheels making fronLtwo hundred to two hundred and seventy-five revolution per minute. Artesian Wells. Artesian wells number 1,000 in Cali fornia. Of these 300 are in Santa Clara valley, fifty miles from San Francisco. Most of them overflow the surface, and the tubes average seven inches in diameter. The local resources of arte sian water are now mapped out. Under the valley runs a broad river, coming from the great lakes of the Sierras, 200 miles off. The pressure from 6,000 feet elevation suffices to throw the water above the surface. The depth of the bore runs from 150 to 250 feet. Outside the boundaries of this subterranean river several miles wide no depth of boring has struck artesian water. There is reason to believe that every valley in the State has an underground river, leading direct from the same lakes, and lying below the superficial currents that have no direct connection with any elevated reservoirs. SCIENTIFIC. Steam Power. According to a state ment in the Polytechnic Seeiev, the aggregate steam motive power at present in use in tfic world is 3,oUU,UUU Horse power employed in stationary engines, and 10,000,000 horse-power in locomo tive engines, making a total of 13 600,000 norse-power, i n is force is maintained without the use of animal food, except by the miners who dig the coal and pro vide the fuel, and the force maintained in the muscles is to that generated by the product labor as about one to 1,000. This steam-power is equal to the work ing force of 25,000,000 horses, and one horse consumes three times as much food as one man; the steam-power, therefore, is equivalent to the saving of rood for 79.000.000human beings. Again three power-looms, attended by one man, produce daily seventy-eight pieces produced by one loom worked by one In lswo, and so the list might be Indefi nitely extended of what is accomplished by the use of steam-power and labor- saving machinery. Mr. Herbert Jfiller, an Englishman, is amusing himself with a bullet-proof shield, which ts thus described: The shield is of bullet-proof steel, swinging on the axletree of two light wheels and containing lour loop-holes. Its entire weight is about 150 pounds. Two front rank men, laying their hands upon the axletree, push it before them, their rifles being placed in rack In the shield, Then two rear rank men follow closely, rifle in hand, being protected as well as the front rank men from direct fire. When the "commence firing" is sounded, the two front rank men take their rifles from the racks, and. In the old kneeling position, fire through two loopholes lu the middle of the shield The rear rank men fire through the upper loopholes, the whole two files being in the position of a double rank tiring with "lront rank kneeling." Glass Printing Type. A new invention has been perfected in Paris that of printing type. This kind of type is made or hardened glass, and is as hard as lead. They lat longer than the metallic; are not liable to be crushed by the printing cylinders they do not suf fer in the least from sudden cooling In stereotyping, and they do not injure the neaitn in naudllng, as lead types do. In this respect they have a great advan tage. The atmosphere In printing ouices Is Impregnated with particles ot lead, and chronic lead poisoning Is one of the complaints of type-setters. All this is obviated by the new invention, which has the merit also of being much cheaper. In districts of the country where the cold is neither long nor intense, a sug gestion of a Danish journal mar be lound useful In obtaining a supply of ice lor summer use. t lien the ice is formed on a suitable stream, pond, or lake, make holes in the ice and insert portable pumps in them. From time to time pump up as much water as will cover the surface of the ice. The thin strata of water soon freeze, and ice a foot thick can be harvested, where otherwise only cakes of about two inches lu thickness could be gathered. Mr. Ooss, the eminent geologist, in a recent paper on the fossil insects of the secondary period, has shown that these are rarely met with in British strata, and that the principal specimens of the Contiuent of Europe have been taken from the Swiss Alps or from the Solen hofen slate of Bavaria. o new forms have been met with differing so much from those of existing insects as to re quire a new order for their classifica tion, such as had to be done in the case of the fossils of vertebrate animals, for example. In a paper an the use of lacs of cosine and fluoresceine for perparation of decorative painting without poison, Mr. Turpin gives the following recipe: A potassic or sodic solution of cosine treated with an acid gives a precipitate of cosic acid insoluble in water; tbis washed until the water begins to take a rose color is insoluble in the hydrate of oxide of zinc, and so forms a very rich lac, the red color of which varies ac cording to the quantity of cosic acid which had been employed. Lightning in ether moves at the rate of 100,000 miles a second, and electricity in free wires moves probably at the same rate. But the nerves transmit their messages at the rate of only seventy feet per second. The Game of Rachre. There is genuine humor in the idea that an Arkansas man finds the most natural expression, even of parting ad vice to his son, in the language of the card tabic, and the manner in which the terms of the game of euchre are fitted to the game, is ingeniuous, "Bob, you areabout leaving home for strange parts. Your'e about to throw me out and go it alone. The odds are against you, Bob; but, remain ber al ways, that industry an perseverance are the winning cards thev are the bowers. Book larniu',and all that sort of thing will do to fill up, like small trumps, but you must have the bowers to back 'em else they ai't worth shucks. If luck runs against you pretty strong don't cave in and look like a sick chick en on a rainy day, but hold your head up and make 'em believe you've got a flush of trumps; they won't play so hard agin you. "I've lived and traveled around some, Bob, and I've found out that as soon as folks thought you held a weak hand, they'd buck again you strong. So when you're sorter weak keep on a bold front, but be cautious; be satisfied with a pint. "Many's the hand I've seeneuchered 'cause they played for too much. Keep your eyes skinned, Bob; don't let 'em 'nig on you ; recollect the gam lies as much with the head as with the hands. "Be temperate; never get drunk, for then no matter how good your hand, you won't know how to play it ; both bowers and the ace wou't save you, for there's sartain to be a miss-deal or some thing wrong. '"Xother thing, Bob, (this was spo ken in a low tone) don't go too much on the women. Queens is rather poor cards ; the more you have of them the worse for you ; you might have three and nary a trump. I don't discard 'em all ; if you get hold of one that's a trump, it's all good, and there is sartin to be one out of four. And above all, Bob, be honest; never take a man's trick wot don't belong to you ; nor slip cards, nor 'nig; for then you can't look your man in the face, and when that's the case, there's no fun in the game; it's a regular cut-throat. "So, now, Bob, farewell, remember what I tell yon, and you'll be sure to win, and if you don't sarves you right to get skunked." A Campaign Slander. When Dr. B. T Pierce was a candidate for State Sens or, hi political opponents pub lished a pretended analysis of bis popular medicines, hoping thereby to prejudice the people against turn. His election by an over whelming majority severely rebuked his tra dueera, who sought to impeach bis business inteiity. No notice would hare been taken of thee campaign lies were it not that some of his enemies (and every successful business man has h full quota of envious rivals) are republishing t .ess bogus analyses. Numerous and most absurd formulas have been pub lished, purporting to come from high author ity: and it is a significant fact that no two have been at all alike conclusively proving the dishonesty of their authors. DOMESTIC. A Ccp or Coru. To make a cap ot ood coffee, an essential art Is requisite, any women who prida themselves, and justly, upon their skill, fail here. For earlv risers and those who require an early breakfast, there is a mode of making coffee so generally practiced as to be almost universal In this country, and that is simply to boil the ground coffee for a few minutes and than either settle the grounds with cold water or give them time to settle gradually. This mode can be greatly improved by cork ing the spout with a cork, cloth or paper, thus preventing the escape of the steam, which arises- from the boiling coffee. By the escape of the steam we lose much of the aromatic flavor that render coffee so palatable. Let those who cook coffee alter this method try our plan, and they will And a vast im provement. An eminentchemist recom mends the following as a favorite way of making this now universal beverage: Three fourths of the coffee should be boiled and the remaining fourth Infused, after which the whole should be mixed. By this means both the strength and flavor are increased. To preserve the flavor of ground coffee it should be wet with the syrup of sugar and then covered with powdered sugar; in this way the volatile parts of the coffee are pre vented from escaping. As heretofore said, coffee, after being roasted, should be kept excluded from the air and kept in a dry place if not used at once, as it absorbs from the atmosphere and grad ually loses Its flavor. To Ckmknt Glass and Tin, so as to hold oil without leaking: 1. Soak isin glass in water till it Is quite sort; then dissolve it In the smallest possible quantity of proof spiritover a hot water bath ; iu two ounces of this dissolve ten grains of gum ainmoniacum, and while still liquid add half a drachm of mastic dissolved in three drachms of rectified sDirit: stir well together and use warm. 2. Add softened gelatine to about one- hair Its weight or hot glycerine, 4. Gum shellac dissolved in a concentrated, hot aqueous solution of borax ; concen trated by evaporation. 4 Slack caustic lime with a little boiling water, beat it into a paste with white of egg or blood, and use immediately. Paper pulp may be added to the first three cements. CoLOaino Cottox Blc. Take two pounds of copperas, one-half pound of prussiate of potash, one-half pound oil of vitriol. Dissolve the copperas in enough hot water to cover the goods. Scald two hours. Take out the goods and rinse In cold water; then empty the kettle and put In fresh, soft water, sufficient to cover the goods well ; add the prussiate of potash, put in the goods and boil twenty minutes; then take out the goods and to the liquor add oil of vitriol and stir well. Put in the goods again aud let them remain until the color is as dark as desired. Rinse in cold water. Braxdy Sauce. Put over the fire In a clean copper or a well-tinned sauce pan two tablespoon fula each of brandy and white sugar and stir them until they are deep brown ; then add half a pint of boiling water, the whole thin yellow rind of one lemon, one Inch stick cinnamon, and four cloves, and boil up. Meantime dissolve one teaspoonful of corn starch iu half a gill of cold water, stir it into the sauce, and boil it fifteen minutes; strain it into a sauce-tureen upon the juice of half a lemon and one gill of brandy, and serve it with the plum pudding. Coffer Cask. One cup brown sugar, cup molasses, half cup butter, cup strong coffee, one eg;, or yolks of two, four even cups flour, heaping teaspoon soda in the flour, tablespoon cinnamon, teaspoon cloves, two pounds raisins, fourth pound citron. Soften the butter, beat with the sugar, add the egg, spices, molasses and coffee, then the flour, and lastly the fruit, dredged with a little flour. Bake one hour in a moderate oven, or make In two small loaves, which will bake in a short lime. Smoet Stoves There is a very sim ple way of avoiding the disagreeable smoke and gas which always pour into the room when the Are is lit in a stove, heater, or fire on a damp day. Put in the wood and coal as usual ; but before lighting them, ignite a handful of paper or shavings, placed on the top of the coal. This produces a current of hot air in the chimney which draws up gas and smoke at once. Not one out of every tilty persons ever thinks of this. Chinese Dkpilatort. Quick-lime, on ounce; pearl-ash, two ounces ; sul pnuret potassium, twoounces; charcoal powder, one dram; triturate together and sieve and place the fine powder in a well-stopped bottle. Ct'RE for Croup. A piece of lard as large as a butternut, rubbed up with sugar, and divided into three equal parts and given at intervals of twenty min utes, will often work well. Cure for Hoarseness. The juice aud pulp of lemons, stirred thick with white sugar, will relieve hoarseness besides being an agreeable remedy. uiscrrr. i wo quarts oi nour, one tablespoonful lard, one teaspoonful soda, half teaspoonful salt; mix with cold water and beat well. Mining Fish Out of tha lev. In the general freeze which has con verted the lake into a sea of ice, Eman uel Bay Xevada has been frozen solid. It is one vast ledge of ice from the sur face of its transparent waters to the bottom. More than ever is that beauti ful bay a "gem of purest ray serene," crystalized as it is and firm set within its rock-bound shores. From some cause best known to themselves, the fish, es pecially the trout, have fairly swarmed there. When the great and sudden freezing came it imprisoned them by hundreds of tons all over the bay. There they are fixed like a bee in drop of amber. Of course the fisher men of the Rubicon and its neighbor hood are reaping a rich and novel harvest. The present abundance of fish in the Carson market is due to this remarkable occurrence. Monk says that the bay presents a wonderful ap pearance. He says that in all truth fulness Sailor Jack and some asso ciates have actually sunk a winze in the ice between the boat landing and Captain Dick's Island, and that by dint of tunneling and stopping in the solid ice they are actually mining out the imprisoned trout by the cartload. The present state of the weather seems to guarantee a continuance of this strange specie of mining for some days yet to come, if not, indeed for the remainder of the winter. This class of phenomena occurs only at long intervals. In 1845, Back Cove, an arm of Casco Bay, was a scene of such freezing as this. All sorts of salt water fish, such as frequent the more shallow bays and estuaries. smelt, tom-cods, eels and flounders were frozen in and captured by the million. The torn-cod, when thus frozen may be thawed ont in cool water and restored to life. For this reason this small member of the finny tribe Is known as the "frost fish," - - HUMOROUS. A Pilgrim. George Green appeared at a house at midnigat, and instead of knocking on the door he pounded on the side of the house until the pro prietor raised an upper window and shouted : "Who in Halifax, Xova Scotia, are you, and wbat in Halifax, Xova Scotia, do you want?" "I want to be an angel !" was the thick reply. The householder poked about fourteen feet of the barrel of an old shot-gun out of the window, and backed it up with such bloov.-cnrdling threats, that Green walked off. He was absent about fifteen minutes, giving the citizen time to get nicely settled in bed, when be returned, and pounding on the house, again called out: "Fire! Fire!" "Whoa what where is the fire?" shouted the citizen, as he leaped out of bed and threw up the window. "In the Infernal regions!" was the sober reply. "See here, you old flat-headed hyena, I'll shoot the'top of your skull off if you don't scatter out of this !" shrieked the Indignant citizen. "I will scatter!" was the soft reply, and Green, took a walk around the block. The citizen was beginning to dream when he heard that same old podnding on the side of the house, and a voice cried out : "Awake! Awake!" "I'll kill that man as sure's I'm a sinner!" howled the good man as he left his bed once more, but as he raised the sash a thick voice asked : "Didn't you say you'd shoot the top of my skull off?" "Yes, I did, and I hope to be sawed In two if I don't do it!" "Hadn't you just as lief poison roe !" tenderly asked the Intruder as he looked up at the gun. All this was known to the court, and when Green walked out he was asked : "What is your business?" "I'm pilgrim, sir," was the meek answer. "Good ! They want you at the House of Correction to put the soft, tender tints on verandah chairs. You will please step up there for three months." Wouldn't it be advisable for me to ride?" slowly asked the pris oner as he backed away. Time for Economy. A man from the lower walks of life entered a drug store recently, and inquired the price of an ounce of arsenic. Being informed, he drew a paper from his pocket, consulted some figures, and said : "Thai's two cents more than they asked me in Chicago." "Well, those are my lowest figures," replied the druggist. The man took out a stub of a pencil, figured for three or four minutes, and sagely observed : "It's time to practice economy, and I might as well begin here. Two cents on art ounce is thirty-twe cents on a pound. Thirty-two cents on a pound is $32 on a hundred weight, or $6,400 on a ton. Great heavens I but do you think 1 would recklessly throw away $6,400?" The druggist could make no reply, and the man looked terribly indignant as he went out. Tbe kllephone is the reverse of the telephone; by using it you can avoid hearing a chatterbox not a foot distant, and cats may howl all night on your ridgepole without your knowing it Even your neighbor's cornet becomes innoxious, and the band organ loses its sting. "This goods is twill," said a lady to a clerk in a dry goods store, "it wont wash." "Yes, twill," said the clerk affirming her remark. She said she would never let any man contradict her, and indignantly swept out of the store. Old Deacon Pileins said to himself : "Falstaff asks, 'What's honor?' as though it was hard to tell. But let my wife sit behind another woman in church, and she'll tell what's on her in less than two minutes." Slight Change. When the officials of a banking institution commence to use the funds for their own benefit, they say, "LeH speculate." fretty soon this suggestion is slightly changed to "Let a peculate and they "pec. "Can that horse run fast?" asked a boy of a milkman the other morning, "Xo, sonny," replied the purveyor of acqueous lacteal fluid. lie ran t run very fast, but he can stand the fastest of any norse ever you saw." A Wisconsin editor illustrates the prevailing extravagance of people now- a-days by calling attention to tbe costly baby carriages in use, while, when he was a baby, they hauled him by the hair or bis head. A clumst man with big feet is the biggest train wrecker a lady knows of. Does a piano prayer display good ex ecution when be murders the piece. War is an angry man like a camel? Cause he's got his back up. The most truthful man ends the day by lying at night. TeU-Tale Tomatoes. 'Where did you get them tomatoes !" asked an old Long Island farmer, last autumn, of a neighbor whose real estate yields a product of nil and on which there was not a torn to vine. His basket was full of very fine, ripe speci mens, which he thought he recognized. It was not the first time suspicion of his impecunious neighbor's honesty that had arisen in his mnd. "Where did you get 'em !" he asked again. "Bought 'em." "Ah ! Let's look at your hands." With his basket on his arm he held out both bands for examination : "What do you want to look at my hands for? There ain't nothin' on to em." The old farmer was washing his own hands at the same time in a tin basin of rain water, with a wooden bowl of soft brown soap before him. "Xo, there ain't nothing on 'era that you can see : but, look a'here ! Set down your basket, and wash 'em. It's werry cool in and your face and hands look hot." So saying, he emptied the basin, and filled it with cold water, pointed to the soap-dish, and relieved the bearer of his basket. The first immersion and friction of. the hands in the water let the cat out of the bag. The fluid at once turned green and grew greener every second, and at length turned an intense dark green. "Here, Jim," said the farmer, to his tow-headed son. "take in this basket, and empty it, and bring it out ag'in." Then, turning to his honest neighbor, he said : "You hooked them tomatoes from my patch not half-an-hour ago. Three or four of the top ones I knew in a minute. Here's your basket!" If any country reader of the foregoing, would test this dis covery of a theft, let him pick one or two tomatoes next season, separating the vines with his naked hand, and then wash It. There is a mysterious something about the plant, perfectly colorless, that remains on the hands until water removes it. Tha first rape Collar. There is a good story told on Jefferson, who year, ago kept the American House, at Madison, Ind. and who now tha omnibus line there. When paper collar were first worn in the East, a traveling man stopped at the American House, and sent his washing to the laundry of the bouse anu awuug the other things he put in half a dozen paper collars. Xo person had ever heard of paper collars ont West, and the man put them In for a joke. The old aunty who superintended the wash ing, was astonished to see the six collars iiianivi aacomnletelv as would so much sugar or salt, and leave in the bottom of the tub a pint or white puip. one looked at that part of the washing prayerfully, and crossed herself de votedly. The phenomenon waa beyond her comprehension, and she look the pulp in a washdish and carried it to Mr. Jefferson, with tears in her eyes, and told him the circumstances. He was as much astonished as the old lady, and was convinced thai some deleterious matter had been smuggled into the soap, which had dissolved the cloth. An investigating committee was ordered but no clue could be found, and it was decided that it was the work of an in cendiary. Xot wishing to offend a good customer, Mr. Jefferson went and bought half a dozen new linen collars and returned them to the traveler with his washing, and he went away satis fied, and the landlord congratulated himself that he had got out of a disa greeable scrape. About six months afterward, paper collars became gen erally in use, and one day it came to Jefferson that he had been sold on those collars. This occurred eighteen years ago, and yet Jefferson may be seen look ing at the hotel register every day, in tently. He is lookirg for the man who played it on him eighteen years ago, and if he ever finds him there will be a murder committed. He is a bad man, Mr. Jefferson is, and it is dangerous to trifle with him. Death from the TL'es of CTnloroforni. The almost instantaneous death of a young woman under the hands of a dentist in Annadale, State n Island, shows a danger in the use of chloro form which has not previously been mentioned., Her teeth were so bad that she had to get them all extracted, and the dentist took out five while she was under the influence of chloroform. He then allowed her to awake in order to get rid of the blood which had accumu lated in the mouth. She said she had felt the operation, and tbe second dose was increased, the first having been but half the usual dose. Five more teeth were taken out, when she sudden ly straitened out in a spasm, and in a few minutes was a corpse. The spasm was accompanied by a gurgling sound, which showed that the blood instead of running down the throat, as usual in such operations, into the stomach, had got into the windpipe, and on account of the muscles of the throat being par alyzed by the chloroform could not be coughed up. The coroner's jury very properly condemned the use of anaes thetics in operations on tha mouth. The leading Jewish pastors in Xew York receive the following salaries: Dr. Gottheil, $10,000; Dr. Einhorn, $8,000; Dr. Uuebsh, $6,000; Dr. Jacobs, $5,000. A Soccntiua to tho Traveling Public Tourists, emigrants and mariners find that II 04 tetter s btuniach Bitters is a medicinal safeguard against unhealihf ul influences, upon which they can implicitly reiy. since it pre veuts tbe effects that an unhealthy climate, vitiated atmosphere, unaocustomeJ or un wholesome diet, bad water, or other conditions unfavorable to health wou.d otherwise pro duce. On long voyages, or journeys by land in latitudes aujacent to the equator, it is es pecially useful as a preventive of the febrile complaints and uisorilera of the stomach, liver and bowels, which are apt to attack natives of tbe temperate zones sojourning or traveling in such regions, and it u an excellent protec tion aga nst the influence or extreme cold. sudden changes of temperature, exposure to damp or extreme fatigue. It not only pre vents intermittent and remittent fever, an-j other diseases of a maianal type, but eradi cates them, a fact which has been notorious for tears past in North and South America, Mexico, the West Indies, Australia and other countries. Tbi Comtox Syottoxs of Liver Complaint are sallow skin, coat d tongue, eosuvenes, offensive breath, drowsiness, headache. Per sons thus affected may be speedily cure! by a few doses of Scbenck Mandrake Puis. They are applicable in all diseases wuere mercury is usually prescribed, while they possess this ad vantas over mercury : they are purely vege ' able and perfectly harmless. Ail Diuggiats sell them. Summer Fashions. One of (he great novelties of tbe season is tbe new and beautiful Hummer fabric known as "Bunting. " or ' Sea-Side Ck th." It is all wool, and will not damage from dampness or sa t water, drapes easily, does not crease, is light, cool, durable, inexpensive, and very fashionable. Price 31 cents. The same shades are made, two thirds w, oU at 25 cents, 8am p es of these goods in all desirable shades, or of dry goods of any kind, sent free on appli cation lo U.F. Dewees. ?25 Chestnut street, Philadelphia. Hotnera, Metaer. Mothers. Dent fail to procure MRS. WINSLOWS SOOriilSO 8YRL P for all diseases of teeth ing in children. It relieves the child from pain, cures wind colic, regulate the bowels, and by giving relief and health to the child, give rest to tbe mother. Rheumatism Quickly Cored. "Durang's Rheumatic Remedy," the great Internal Medicine, will p sitivelvcure any cane of rheumatism on the face of the earth. Price tl a bottle, six bottles 5, So d by all Drug-gi-ts. Send for circular to Helpenstino & Ben) ley. Druggists. Washington, It. C All ttoss troubleavoM scaly, itching, pteplv, blotchy, humid eruptions of the akin, a nom inated Tetter. Xrynpttas, Acne. sfaL. that are so unsightly and annoying, ere qnickiy and effectually cored by the suapla application of Muukrli'M Tetter Ointment, a remedy that has proved Itself to pons wis wonderful healing Dowara. eunns- hniwlivria nf t,. i. - . sisted all other treatment, even that of the wa pivisasioiiaj taient or the country. It ml - . 1 ... . ., . . I - ' u Hfwn its VOTnes. Bold 99 cents per box ; sent bv mad for 60 eta. JoaasToa, Hoixowai t Col, Gu2 Arab at, Phfla. WTh V Will Taa SnSftra the tortures of Rheumatism, when the great tn- l. , uu lciuruj vi 'I - lingwil, me t.jpHy Ulll, lately Inlroduct d In Philadelphia, Baltimore and ....... , . lu, ,,u i in- uiuimj. unves that malady promptly from the system and re establishes cuiuplt le heaito T One bottle suffi cient. Send ti r a circular lo J. 1. Oi IncLUL Pro- Two Cnaoaos Fxra. A pair of beautiful 6x8 Chronica, worthy to adorn any home, and a Three Months' suUcriDtion to Lriturt Himrm a handsome 16-age li erary paper, filled with we cnowrs atones saetcbea. pottrv. etc, rent frea to ail., nding Fiftren crn st-Umcstakeni t pay postage. The publishers, I. L. Patten & io., itu wuiiam street. . i.. gnaran e every one double vsine of ir.oney i-.nL. tlouo in prizes and b.g pay give., to agents. nW.r.W. HKXMeSI. C ELfBT CM A WO 7'!,.,'l", ar.-prl.pcwlr to euro ir UadctM, ft-rvooa BaadaelM, Draaeatic Hwlachr J-nrJi, NarvonMima and SleptMaoea ana wil nreiiT B. Prt W , aoittn Irw. tt.1.1 by ! vHiM,a mw a aaiav sc.. isauuaor Thosa answering aa AH.ptlum.nt wit. confer a favor upon tha Advertiser and tha riDiuaer ay statu that they saw tha ad ver- i uua Journal i naming the paper) O " PTTEE COD IIVEH . ATT A TTTt TTW VI. o o -lit? TO THK rOSrMPTTVT-Wlw. a at arrsMl Lives- Ott aaa Ltmit hrtfure wi. la vn.li.Wf t tbe S.-bkT;?'! s.,ublr eelcafloua. JUarktl twtimoa,,!, "J'?' .ffl.irT t th-a wno oeair- to tea uWa, s.jj l A. B. WlLBOa. Cheauat. Bmuw. - LANDIIETH'S GAItDKX SEEDS AKK GROW OX OUR VRMS lv PtNVqn VA.NIA, SKW JKRSKY. VIKUISIA ISM ACRES, owned, occupied anfl ciltltal k. oaraaltee, bnu-l'S aa many BHras v rtnrt-r contract. THKT SPSA: THKIR OW.N PRAIgg WBl, KVkB FLA.Vl'Eb. """ Toar liplona. Four MUU. ana Tare Sawi.1 priaws awant-H nr exhibition alLk (tSUMMAL. Laortreth'aTtnral Register and Almanac Biaoi,! trices aaa Bisca tulaable iiifurtuauoa.aui to all applicants. Wbalejata trad prices to uaalern oa applkatloa, DAT ID LA3DKETH t SOXS, Soa. SI and S3 South SIXTH tr . 1U I LA DCL.ru IV fEl ABLISHED 1849. S. M. PEHENGILL & CO. ADVERTISING AGENTS, 37 PirV Row, New York. 701 Chestnut St Phiiadeipnia, and 10 Stats Street Bostoa. Becflive Advertisements for vofcheation Is all the Newspapers and PTlndteaa in anr prt of tbe (lube, at the riaueskas low- ESTIMATES r.7rj.5 ti"ri.ot in mij naiutmr of paper lunrrdtMl ua tp- ATTp NEWSPAPER lMRKPTORT. conut. J I ) IV th nm- tvtwl Jcriptii wl ii..r tbsVD .0O N'-W-paVp-T Afl PvhodlCAia. Will b f f- warried (re. ot chr t all oar cum-hiht. on -.nivii-cauBv mud to all other oa rocvipt ul to pnea, i ja. ATTp Br3INESSlerBdactvjlBpon a tr-t-. ) II, Uuivil n aa tp-ni.-- of mr tbav ODiuartr ol a century , cui'iniiiK th no t.i abl aivai.ii'aa witti ibe hmmpI cuuumtcal lara Compound Oxygen Treatment What is Compound Oxygen 1 It la a combtnation of Oxywin and Nitrnirt-n, a smet profMWtn a la maim it rvAar tn i A ma. How does it cure? ZESfStiZl TBtfra th xcm ot carbon whii h hi a?cMwUL4 at CONHEQCECB OT IMPUrriT BlTIUTIU!t. In Consumption, iZSSSSLr&gSZ tnarkahiy racomf ia. If used in tlia earijr aufa of th. ijiitraWrf. cr it almt avrfafai. Catarrh and Bronchitis JZLT often radically currt TlTTCT.-aTiCT'l T Treatamt j opepoi An iniprmrd afiftit and an tatd pwMr irtwuiTia..osl always follows iu m. Nervous Headaches, h-ir be 71 pii wain m f wW by Lb: a De-w trvaLuieiit, Are You Asthmatic? trSPLZ It ii rnm In rinriili h have 6nfini alt oUuw rmdm Business and Professional Men who. from overwork or any other can, find tbro 'l v-f) mjfrig frm frratn an'4 sh v.cuia, find m ih:a new TreaUu -it th help they nfd. All Nervous Disorders IrZl thtt rwtiaJiMf jnff" of Conxpound Oxytren, Don't go to Florida or Colorado! btvjr at lvui0. and one Compcirad Oiven. and ru w-'f aw riant aaaa ary. and raQ larvr benrht. 7ho have been cured ? JtZTtiC-I V. S. S'lprvme. 'Hirt: Ju l-ra M.tyncL hmith. r York:U-n. MoxTumiEKT Blair. Iv-m-ov. Bouixaa, W. Vav; xln. Wat. D.Kklut; and TS. Artul a. - a . a i a a, if. Ii ..,,,.,1.. now is it Aonunisierea i at nnr office, or mi thm peuUnC - Awwtt. Home Treatment Prir for iwi tnantbiw applv wtA tA-i..p r-iM'-n frmtt t'utl Jt'lirit tfireettams, $l.'t.'MK X -sin. ktkt s to wiilt h arf appv-ndtstf nre ntuiilHfr "f -timoaia!t to tjuxt ivmiaHt euruat Will bw oua 7 aw Ktt auaiJlaa avll la flit wr.tf fill lL. 1112 Girard Street, Philadelphia, Pa - Til nnn lnresred In Wall Street 9 1 1 II II I Stocks, makes fortune t tDlULIll every month. Book vai fr" exDlalnlnlr everv- thtoir. Address BAXTBU CO BAokers, II Wail Street. New York 47 The foTTevrfnr is a Mt of the 4i reit rrerf-e f eat f"- d. with prices aiiaeiHf. whirs have t o c-.iie Di.-ta.hrts the market a nuriiber nf rears, and bv their nnif.imi ecell:K-e. aecare.1 f'.r oea wl 1el increasiug aatronsre and c.tistr . testim..nials of aierit. f-.liritina a -hare of y-nr la..rs, with a roaranta f Brat-clsee simhI in ever rr"-t. we rfr-s-.i. V"nrstrolr. HI KV I'HKIsT. Bole Proarieiurs, 121 N .t;ti 4i St., rai.eat.pbia BAILEY'S PCBI f. TK.. I s - IX I w 3 X XX. vx KT. -OPPKR IiISTlT.HI WHtKSY 1 " I OPPKK lISTll.:.Kl HI-iK EI ... l S t I w I'R. sTiKVER'S TUNIC HF.KII MTTKR. A r ise Ltmt of A7fra f-'ia tmjtirttd OefMf. If yos leire Samples of anr of tbe eVre. we shsll take pleasur ia seadioa tbaas. All goods b..ii al desired. I.lll. diphtheria! Johnson Anodrna Liniment will posit!!1? ar vat thia tembla dfoeaaa, and will yjaidvaly ear In caaaa In tarn. Intcraatioa) that will vany livaa aent traa by -nalL Doat Vla a ammeot. Prawentloa la hotter than enra. I S. JOB SOS CO.. Ra-aar-. Xsia. LADIES' FASHIONS. SOMETHING VEW-BCTIXRlrK LATEST ILLUSTRATED FASHION PAPER. Containfnt latest styles and InfonnatioB ia matter sf drees. Bulled oa receipt ot stamp. A'Mree J. at. atHUVUL, 1113 Cheatuat St., Phlla. IMPROVED PROLIFIC WHITE SEED CORN ! ('rfed, rafaH and Raver! Ytr 9ffr. Wm. O. R. Me rill tha QA-Cwwiii. Mnt.rm-r ti-uutt t.iru.r. nitril u o"T ! ran aa o. ata.lt., , ySrara. IM H(UKLS to 1 M K At b. t. oa vr land. Th Meat prwIIH YaHetj It ratal vnr.bica uiiriDat-ii in I rat- Per bui. i, I.; hf mail. !. r-rqrjrt; 73-. r r p"-t. Cir-fuuai-afre. Usixeaa HM KIT A 1KI I It. Sfi rOWl SIT lid iMe-sleT, Bo. 714 C -Main at u. Piuiali(l.ia. P AGENTS WAITED FOR THE ICTORIAL 1 HISTORYoftieWORLD It ennttna flne hist.irlMf Mmiisft Srvi ' Is-R-etlouMe column pages, an.1 t tbemoet cnipltfte Hi. ,.rr of the Workl ever p.ibllhl. ft sel.s at ht. Send for apecimea re-Res and etra term to Ait nts. nn-t ee why it se.l faster thaa aaf wtbrf kuuk. A.Hr-ee. II 4Tiuael, rrmx,Tsms Co.. rniladeipn-a. re. PIANOS R-tail prir- exe ,.nl WI. V..prir.;I.V..nK Bl. PP res. Daaerl t . Brmttj. eenius loll.. J. d. s. ewino, n?r rursTM'T sr.. piula U HoLM.Ll .11 ttTI L ft.!." II J rnr wn.i.rox niitits-NFw ai thmati"; r ii r. 1. 1 bit im; ma lll.Nai ;i'Lw mmm r..l the eweweewj ViBaB- uas . .i.u-r CTITI'H). THE BI--1 slelM, MAI II IN E OF IT ' T.'VI mwwj ale MMK. KEMORIST'S KFT.f ABLE FAsHlU-'' PATTERNS. e?i4 for ll.utrt.d t'atmlorne. I. 8. KWl.NU, 1127 CUaTSlT. ST. PHfLA Gold Mines and Lands foal GOLD JUNES AND LANDS COA SILVER SOLD. H! LEAD COMPAN'lESOKOANfZED, "'J" IKON MININU AliKSfY, CUrTKK MAKBLB K. J.BVENTU L LIMfc i'OAL rHn.riu.niiA. "l. MARL A. U. WYJIA A CO. Girta wva TO GET A FARM. SEND FOR OUR CATALOGUE. A. II. WYMAN & CO. aoe H. S-ee-ventrt Htreot. PHILADELPHIA. a "TAT'Tl",T? aatothesMst judiciooa tw jVl ' V IU IJ lmn, the salne ut a,lertini mediniBM, th- best uannr ani tiase ot doing- u, uj as to -verrthins- that will prwowta the anccwas ul ta, advert tear -a,va boj MARK PATtTW
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers