PETS OF A PECULIAR KIN'D. Queer Fan;i or More or Prominent People Ixu Iii a walfc Uiroush Tenth street not long ago 1 witnessed a novel sigut, which attracted ine aiienuon 01 mure than one passer-by. A handsome irtnte hound, whose Bleek coat was so well cared for that it shone like silver, walked digniGedly on the sidewalk, while on his back was perched a cocka too, of white plumage, with head and wings tipped with red and yellow. Near by stood a handsome man, dressed in good taste, a little dudish, perhaps, who evidently took great pleasure in watching his two jts, so straneely mated. The gentleman was Mr. Wil Uam Chase, the celebrated artist, whose studio is in the building devoted to Artists on Tenth street. In this build ing was also the still unoccupied studio ot poor Frank Silva, who died last jpnng, prominent as a fine marine painter, and a brave soldier during our Civil War. His wife now teaches paintius, ai d is, I believe, doing fairly well. Every Sunday Mr. Chase is seen an Fifth avenue with his handsome white do?, whose silver collar is deco rated with a large white satin bow. Week days yellow or red ribbons are worn, but the white bow always worn the first day of the week seems to make the dor carry his head in a different way, just as if he wisue! to look more like a coinmuuicaut. He serves as quite an advertisement for his famous master, every one asking to whom the handsome animal belongs, for while the name of William Chase Is familiar to every one he himself is not. Mr. James Barton Key, who has left the stage and is now a stock broker, has a huge mastiff, besides which a Shetland pony would appear decidedly diminutive. Master and dog apparently entertain the greatest affection for each othsr. The latter would certainly prove a formidable foe to any one who misht attack Mr. Key. It is not un usual to see a lady trudging along one of the principal thoroughfares leading ! and two parts dry earth, and then pour by a chain a dog almost as large as her- m? au e urjne he can obtain upon it, self. The small dog is quite out of jjiowinir the waste water therefrom to stvla iust now. It seems somewuat i . . 1 oAAma a.-kmatsrhnf. ludicrous to see the chains which se cure (?) these immense animals to a dainty hand, for if the dog were so dis posed be could run off with chain, mis tress, and all. A lady on Washington Square has a marmoset, the funiest lit tle creature alive, with a very human expression and a peculiar little cry, its eyes reailv tilling with tears at times. It is almost always chattering with the cold, and has to be snuggled up la blankoU or placed iu a basket near the fire most of the time. It is a great pet, fond of its mistress, and runs about her head and shou'.ders. It is, how ever, somewhat of a nuisance, all en deavors towards neatness being time thrown awav. Miss May McClellan, daughter of the late Gen. McClellan, had very peculiar pets, two white mice, which at times she would take to the opera. They ran around the box at the Academy, often perched on her bare shoulders, and kept the audience quite amused or the reverse. They were only jrmitted to run about during the intermissions, but one night, just as the prima donna was in the midst of a pathetic solo, the mice came out as if to hear, too, and the eyes of the audience followed them. Miss McClellan tried to secure them. but they became excited and ran away over the cushioned rail of the balcony until caught by an usher and returned to their mistress. Probably the prima donna to this day does not understand why her solo received so little applause that particular night. Young alliga tors are great pets, and several fashion able young ladies own whole families of them. There is a goat living near me that is a great favorite of its owner. It is named "Stephen Dorsey," but is called "Dorsey" for short. We never speak as we pass by. I have good reasons for being thus unfriendly. Dorsey" himself and a slippery side walk last winter have much to do with It. There is a dog that lives next door to me. He only understands French. He is forever running away, and his master stands at the front door shout ing "Plon-rioa" (the dog's name). venez ;lcl,?' till sometimes I wis.1 Plon-l'lon was off somewhere with his more or less, usually less, distinguished namesake. But the latest fashionable pets are tables. Yes, babies and small children, who have heretofore been consigned to the nursery, are low decorated, I will not say clothed, in the most artistic costumes, and serve to enhance the picture of a pretty and gay mamma. The human pets are no longer con sidered nuisances, but are on dress parade whenever occasion requires. They are not allowed to converse at all, but simply to iosc It is said of Mrs. Frances UoJgson Burnett, who has two handsome boys, usually dressed like the Princes in old pictures, that whenever the door bell rings they quietly strike an attitude, so that to the guest tbey make complete the pic ture of the charming Washington home of their gifted mother. He Might Have) Washed. Reference to the Vanderbilt pictures recalls a good story told of the dead mlllluuaire, who was more famous fur , good nature than caustic wit. une day when his gallery was open for Vis itors, along came a man with a glib tongue, lots of enthusiasm, and dirty hands, lie posed critically bef Dre pic ture after picture, and his soiled liands azain and again came in contact with the rich frames and even the canvasses. Mr. Vanderbilt looked on askance; he did not like to say anything harsh, and yet he feared for his pictures. Finally the visitor turned to Mr. Vanderbilt, who near by was convers ing wiih personal friends, while he furtively watched the spotted hands and draped finger nails. "You have a wonderful gallery," the man ejaculated, "a wonderful gal lery. sir: wbv, when I stood before , that picture" he pointed to a sad- faced Madonna '-when I stood before that picture, sir, I was so touched that : the tears came rushing into tny eyes like a flood like a flood, sir; I wept so ' freely lie went on "I wept so freely that I conld have washed my hand 3 in my tears, sir; wash" 1 uy uiuu i juui oiiu lire milium- 'aire calmly. The talkative man glanced at himself in 3pots, subsiJed and fled. Allwling to the Yucca palm, which grows spontaneously in the desolate lands of Arizona nd New Mexico, the Boston Journ'il nf Commerce says: "Of all the trees in the world you would im agine this to be the most outcast and worthless, so meagre a living does it obtain from the waste of sand and gravel in which it grows. And yet this Ala' VA AAA n iilwU lb i,lVn iAUU 3 tlili) ttnhii.. . M. bin. mnM. fw I and utilized in one of the world's great-1 CT ei? rou? and, middlings estindustries,anmdustrythateffMUthe,ff.?"cdl a consistency with daily needs of civilization. This plant j 8k,m mdk is a good mess. of the desert for a long time was con-1 ' " ' sidered valueless. But not long ago it ' " Henry Tliompson thinks that was discovered that the fibre of the Yucca conld be made into an excellent paper. And now one of the great Ea glif h dailies, the London Teleyraph, is printed upon paper made lrom this goblin tree. Indeed, the Telegraph has purchased a large plantation in Arizona merely for the purposes of cultivating this tree and manufacturing paper from it." The perfectly contented man is also perfectly useless, FARM NOTES. Fertilizehs From Waste Ma teeials. A large amount ot mauur mttr ran la aavixl And l. II IJ Ot 1 the farm by a little extra care, -ml m chemical agents are necessary to reduce any kind of substances used loauie condition. To make bones serviceable they should be broken into small pieces and placed in a box or hogshead with ashes and manure. This is done by placing a layer of ashes on the bottom of the box, and then a layer ot bones, with an occasional layer of manure, which causes the mass to decompose more quickly, the whole being moisten ed and I epi damp with urine or soap suds. What should be desired is to make a complete manure o fertilizer on the faim, and bones might be bought with advantage for that pur pose. Ashes will liberate the ammonia if mixed with manure, but when a mixture is made and kept damp the loss is prevented. The bones are softened and disintegrated by the potash of the ashes, the bones being changed from phosphate of lime into phosphate of potash, and in that condition are as sol uble and available as superphosphate, Ttie nitrogen of the urine also under goes several changes, and if salt be add sd to the mass there will be a formation or liberation, or chlorine gas, which will unite with the ammonia. A great many salts are formed and all the orig inal materials are entirely changed In character. While the majority of farmers possess large manure heaps tbey may not attempt to manufacture fertilizers in this manner, but as fertil izers rich in nitrogen, potash and phos phoric acid sell at prices varying from 40 to 75 per ton the matter of manu facturing such on the farm is an im portant one. As stated, the leaching of bones, ashes and a small quantity of manure, as is done when lye is made, will give a more valuable substance than the farmer can find in the market, and he may also preserve a large amount of nitrogen by simply filling a box with a mixture of one part kainlt ' . . v . i . i . - 1 , ie coiieciea in vessels ana rciurueu to the mass. These two mixtures, if united, will give the farmer the phos phates and potash of the first box. with the nitrogen and potash salts of the second, and when chemical change has entirely ceased he can pi ue the mixture aside under cover, and it will retain its quality as well as the commercial fer tilizers. By a careful saving of all the waste materials that may serve such a purpose the amount of fertilizer that can be made on a small farm will be very large and be ready for the plants as soon as it is needed. Many farmers annually pay out large sums for fertil izers when they could save a portion, if not all, of the expense by providing a place where the materials could be composted as described, and thereby made to render good service. When" some stock-raiser sees a neigh boring beekeer have tons of honey gathered from his meadows he thinks he has been robbed, and his clover is less sweet for his cattle. He ponders over it until he c includes he is a much abused individual, and must have re dress in some way. He does not see what he has gained, forgetting that "crops will flourish all the more, when flowers mate by rifled store." Bees j have a big job on their hands fertilizing the crops of the farmers. Clover would become extinct if it were not for their 'abors, and corn, buckwheat and other plants are benelited by their presence. Many flowers have their own fertilizing inserts, and cannot propogate without Jiefr agency. Dicentras Spectabilis perfects no seed in this country because its fertilizing moth has not been im ported. Professor Webster, of the school jf Agriculture, Perdue University, In diana, recommends liquid prepara tions for killing the larvse of the stalk borer In young corn. These consist of in ounce of powdered pyrethUm dis solved id two gallons of water, or, as a substitute, a mixture of one part crude :arbolic acid to 100 parts of water. These solutions should be applied to the p'ants in such a manner as to run down among the young unfolding leaves. One farmer reports quite satisfactory results from dusting the young com wish the powdered pyrethrum immed iately after a shower, or during morn ings after a heavy dew, when more or water had collected among the central leaves. While the liquid remedy could hardly be applied, economically to large Selds, it may be so applied to the crop :ultivated In the garden for the pro duction of green corn. It is the young geese that should le marketed this fall, as they bring a bet- j ter price than old ote?, aad more In de mand. In fact, the old geese are not salable at all, unless by deception, as they are tough and not easily cooked. Keep the old ones for breeders. What we wish to state is that before you send geese to market get them as fat as they can be, for they will be more attract ive, but a very fat goose, is not as nice as one in moderate condition. One of the reasons why orchards should not be cropped is Lx-cai se they require cultivation during the summer season, When roots are destroyed by deep working the ground it often re sults in permanent Injury to the trees, especially if cone late in the season. Since the clearing of woodlands has given winds a free sweep the soil dries out much faster than formerly, and this makes trees more liable to injury from mutilation of their roots. TnE guinea fowl is a great forager, and destroys many insects that the hens will not touclu They do not scratch the garden, and though not easily kept wear the bouse they make known the places where they lay by a peculiar noise which enables one accustomed to t,,em t "id all the eggs they lay. They y cost notniug to raise, and when roosting near the house create an alaim auouid intruders make their appearance. Farmers who have sown gypsum, on strawberry plants t promote their vigor, have met with some disappointing icsults. The gypsum produced so large a frrowth of rlnvpr that If tmrama . j most impossible to keep the rows clean, and in some instances the bed had to be abandoned. Ventilation is absolutely necessary anu essential to neaim. unless a poul- , try house be well and properly venti! ated fowls cannot be kept healthy for any length of time. Do not feed a sow that has suckin? pigs on too much dry food. She should have plenty of slop but it should be . . . - . . ricu aud nutritious, A mixture of more man nair me aiseases which em bitter life are due to errors iu diet, and that the mischief done in the form of shortened life is greater from indiscrim inate eating than from the use of alco holic drink. An over supply of nutri tion which must go somewhere produces liver disease, gout, rbeamatism and various other disorders. To eat too much is a blunder, and to wash down nutritious food with nutritious drink is one of the greatest dietary indiscretions that can be Indulged in especially for persons ot bedeaUry tattits. HOUSKHOLDa Breast of Mutton. Choosea toler ably lean breast, cut the mutton into pieces about two inches square, put it into a stewpan with a little dripping, fry to a nice brown color, then dredge with flour; slice two onions and put with a small bunch of herbs in a stew pan. Pour In sufficient water just to cover the meat; simmer the whole gent ly until the mutton is tender. Take out the meat, strain, and skim off all the fat, and put both meat and gravy back Into the stewpan; add about a quart of young peas, let them boil gently until done. Two or three slices of bam or bacon stewed with the mutton will give it an additional flavor. To ensure that the peas shall be a good color, it is better to boil them separately, and add them to the stew iust before serving. Lamb stewed in the same way is more delicate and costs not much more as there is not so much fat. Whole Tomatoes. Tour boiling water ever four pecks of large, Arm to matoes; skin and drain them, but do not cut them up. Have ready two quarts of cold vinegar, dip each toma to in as it is skinned, but do not allow them to soak. Put a tablespoonf ul of salt in the bottom ot a stone jar, half a teaspoonfnl ot mustard, as much cay enne pepper as will lie on the point of penknife, and a few slices of onions. Pack tomatoes in alternate layers with this dressing (repeated), pressing them In as tightly as possible without mash ing. Cover first with brown paper and seal over with rosin and beeswax. If you leave it late before choosing your tomatoes they will be watery. This is a good time. French ArrLE Fritters. Teel three ia-ge apples, core them with an spple-corer, and cut them across in slices rather less than half an inch Ihick; put them in a flat dish with tialf a tumbler of strong cider and strew them plentifully with powdered loaf sugar; let them remain covered a couple of hours, then take each piece separately, dip it into batter so that it is well covered with it, and fry a golden color in plenty of hot lard. Lay the fritters in front of the fire, and when all are done pile them up on a napkin. shake plenty of powdered loaf sugar over them, and serve. So,rizzLED Otsters. Drain the oysters in a colander and let a little cold water run over them. Mem. This in sures you a clean oyster and should al ways oa aone except for stewing oy-J Biers, x ub uiem in a ciean aisa-cioin to dry. Put them in a hot frying-pan, with pepper and salt. Steam two oun ces of butter in a bowl over a tea-kettle top, and when the oysters are puffed pour them into the melted butter and sene in that bowL Another way is to add a little cream in the pan after the oysters are puffed and have them served on toast, Instead of using the butter. Bride Cake. Ten eggs beaten sepa rately, one pound of butter, one of white sugar, two of almonds, blanched and chopped fine, one of seeded raisins, half pound of citron, shaved fine; beat butter to a cream, add sugar gradually, then the well-beaten yolks, stir all till very light, and add the chopped al monds; beat the whites stiff, and add gently with the flour; take a little more flour and sprinkle over the raisins and citron; then put in the cake-pan first a layer ot cake batter, then a layer of raisins and citron, then cake, and so on till all Is used, finishing off with a layer of cake. Bake In, a moderate oven two hous. Totato Fritters. Boll eight or nine large potatoes,mash them through a colander, beat five eggs light, and mix with the potatoes, adding a' tablespoon f ul of wheat flour; butter the size of a walnut, and a quart of milk, with odo teaspoonfnl of salt. Heat well, and drop in large tablespoonf uls into boiling lard, deep enough to float them. They are done as soon as they rise to the top and are a light brown. Gossamer Bread. One pound of butter, two tablespoonfuls of yeast.one egg. Mix all together, roll the paste to a thin sheet, fold it and beat it for fifteen minutes with a rolling pin, roll out as thin as possible on a greased baking sheet, cut in four-inch squares, wnicu win spring apart and bake. Lemon- Cream. Peel three lem ons and squeeze out the juice into one quart of milk. Add the peel, cut in pieces and cover the mixture for a few hours; then add six eggs, well beaten, and one pint of water, well sweetened. Strain and simmer over a gentle fire till it thickens. Serve very cold. Amrrosia. Pare and cut (or pull) a ripe pineapple into small pieces. Put a layer in a dish; sugar wei:; cover with grated cocoanut; lay In more sugared pineapple, and so ou until the materials are used up, covering the top thicklj with cocoanut. Pass spoige or othet light cake with it. Delicate Puffs. stir into hair pint of sifted flour, to which a salt spoonful of salt has been added; one gill of milk. Beat U:e white of an egz to a stiff froth. Mix the well-beat en yelks with a gill of milk and stir in to the batter; add the white of the egg and bake in muffin pans in a quick oven. Baked Cucumbers. Pare the cu cumbers; chop tjiem fine with a small onion; put them on with very little wa ter and stew for ten minutes. Prepare a rich dressing as for poultry of bread crumbs with herbs and yelk of egg; pour off all the water from the cucum bers; add the dressing and one table spoonful of butter, and bake in a deep dish. Clam Broth. Mince twenty-four hard-shell clams and simmer them fot half an hour in a saucepan with a Bint ' of hot water or clam juice, a piece of butter half the size of an einr and a few grams of cayenne pepper. At the end of this time add half a pint of scalded milk and strain before serving. Ginger Nuts. Half-pound butter, six ounces brown sugar, one Dint mo. lasses, half-teaspoonful salt, two table- spoonfuls each allspice and cloves, one ' teaspoonf al caraway seeds and one pound and a half flour. The use of asphaltum in buildintr i. said to be largely increasing, principally as a prevention against daurn cellar walls and underground mason work. coating for cisterns, etc The usual method of applying it is to reduce to a semi-liquid state in a large iron pot. over a good fire, sufficient asphalt to about two-thirds fill it ram vt. t.u. . that the flame does not rise over the top and ignite the asphalt. The wall is made as nearly dry as possible, and the joints somewhat rough, to admit of the asphalt penetrating the pores and se curing a hold; the wall is then covered with asphalt, applied with a long-handled brush, while the material is hot and brushed in well a coating one half inch thick being as perfect a pro tective as a thicker one. . A barrel of asphalt as found in the market, heated and applied to vertical walls of brick, will ordinarily cover about 230 square feet of surface, and produce most last ing results. 1ARM NOTES. Enterprise ox the Farms. As little as neonle think of it the farm of fers great room for a display of enter prise and thrill, in iact, ine rarmer needs to be far more business like than the average businessman of the towns. Take, for example, the affairs of an im proved farm where advanced agricul ture is a reality. Real business tact is shown on every hand. There is some prejudice against "advanced agricul ture," but let us see what that sort of farming really is. In the first place advanced agricul ture means small farms well managed, improved machinery, close neighbors, and more advantages every way. When a country is new, land plentiful and DODulatlon scattered, there Is not so much fault to be found with the man who lives leisurely, letting the future take care of itself, and even taking lit tle thought for the present. Bnt when population has come, railroads traverse the country, and markets are created for the products of the farm, it is a careless man who lets opportunities slip through bis fingers. A farmer should make every e Ige cut, and should strive to make his borne increase in comforts and value every year. It is a bad policy that does not Improve the land each season. Georgia is peculiarly blessdL Her climate is not surpassed on the face ot the earth, and her soil is susceptible of the highest culture. Thomas county land under high culture has produced 119 bushels of corn per acre, at a profit of 177. In the same county (443 has been cleared on au acre of cane. In Brooks county over 12200 w is cleared in one year on a two-horse farm. A single acre of Georgia land has pro duced four bales of cotton. These oases taken at random show what Geor gia soil can do. Very few states can show such varied and abundant crops as are yearly produced by the farmers of that state. When they get fully down to living at home, get their big farms divided up, turn their attention to making one acre produce what two or three now yield, buy only what they cannot raise, and, above all, pay spot cash, their State will blossom as the rose, and their farmers will be the most Independent people in the land. There is do overestimating the value of so managing that a few hundred dollars will remain in the pockets when the year's work is wound up. It makes a man proud and it makes him two-fole more industrious to end the year with silver jingling in his pocket. Makd up your mind to try it. A tainted meat barrel may be best sweetened by charring It- It may be cured by slaking some lime in it and then well washing it, but it is easier to char it. Put a snail quantity ot dried shavings in the barrel and set them oa fire and set them burn out. The bar rel may then be swept out or washed and used again at once. If lime is used put a peck of it freshly burned into the barrel and pour a pailful of warm wat er on to It. When It is slaked down add boiling water until It is thin enough to stir around with a broom and thor oughly rinse the barrel several times during two days. Tnen wash it clean with fresh water. TnE Colswold, or open-wool sheep, are best adapted to hot climates, and the Southdown, or close wool, are best adapted to a cold climate. As the cli mate of Virginia and the Western States is temperate in its normal con dition, but subject to changes from this to hot by southwest winds, and to coH by northwest and northeast winds, al tcey alternate according to ths dens I or rarcflcation of the air, experieni has demonstrated that a crade of ee about half close and half open, or be tween the Cotswold and Sjuthdown is the best. They are large, hardy, have one long wool, excellent mutton, and the wool is sufficiently c pen to with stand the heat in spring and fall and sufficiently close to resist the cold in winter. Kcsslll, in the London Post, says: Sparrows seldom eat Insects after tly can feed themselves. I have not found one in a sparrow between September and March, and the nestlings are often fed with wheat, dry as well as green. from the age of a few days. These birds do no perceptible good by destroy ing wild seed?, for they rarely eat any except a few grass seeds when they can eat grain. 1 roughly estimate that 95 per cent of a sparrow's food during its life is corn. Fifty two sparrows were killed one summer about my buildings anp garden with food In their crops; some were young birds lately flown. Only two small iusects were found in the whole number. They are fast ex terminating far more useful birds. When rye is cut off the greatest por tion of its value Is gone. It has little root and that Is not rich in fertilizing properties. Xot so clover. Its root is its most important part as a manure, reaching down into the subsoil and abounding in nitrogen. But this does not imply that rye is worthlass as a fertilizer. It will succeed on lands too poor to get a good clover catch. By growing a few crops of rye and plowing them in, enough vegetable matter may put into the soil to get a good clover catch. 1 hen after Improvement will not he difficult. Ax experienced horticultruist thus describes his mode of planting frmt trees: He makes holes eighteen inches deep and three feet in diameter fills In four inches of strong short horse ma nure, then two or three inches of street dirt, sets the tree and fills in with earth. Permanent pasture lands are the , main anchor of agriculture, and the I farmers of this country will find this I ut after a while as they already have n England, and will commence seeding their land with permanent grasses. The cherry is about the only fruit tree which can be recommended, fr shade In pasture along roadsides, as the f TJ" . f roaas,ae3. " tb ar.dy. Tarle.l.ies ?r cherries are not af vv l wa aj vud va aaaj yi ug ui )l passing of vehicles, which would prove injurious to most other fruit trees. If one takes a little pains and time he can rpariilv raioA nparlv all tha t-rraa and shrubs he nim hv rrsn.mlai.tw tn a nursery patch from the forest when small, or bv buvlnir from the nnrwriM where they are grown from seed very cheaply. Many nurserymen advise transplant ing evergreens in late summer rather than spring, as the pleasant moisture of the autumn causes tbem to root well before winter, and tbey are not at first taxed to endure the scorching heat of earlv summer earl' Bummer- M. Colladon, in a paper to the Acad emic des Sciences, suggests that the electricity so vividly illustrated bv thunderstorms is generated priuti pally by faction of air and wa ter vapor. Dmiug a thunderstorm the ni l d-ops formed in a storm-cloud descend vertically to the earth, causing a partial vacuum, which is replaced by i if drawn in laterally and from upper layers. The fiirim camel by this movement is the prim ial came of the general i n of electi Li;y. In wasbinr bedsteads use strong brine or hot alum water. a KMHuunl method of mating win dow glass by rolling instead of blowing has been described recently In the Pitts burg papers ana commentea uihju i m..m lcrnrth Thnnirh the description nt iha nnww iii not verv clear, it would teem as if the intention of the inventor u ia mn HiA mnltnn class as it comes from the pot, between two hollow rever sible rolls beatea witn natural g niu. .ill nf norfnrftt lnns nlaced on 1 inside of the rolls. As the rolled glass passes through the rolls It Is received on the opposite siae on an uu iiaie, also beatea, irom wnicu u u into the annealing furnace. It oiofmMi that hv this Drocess a glass uniform thickness and polished ready for the sash can be maue. An Englishman bas introduced abroad a small power gas engine iinumn onmtiinnii which has been and de- .......ui tn nuKt thn TpnnirementS of OIUVU w mm.y,w 1 small business where It will drive light machinery during tne oajume a light up the premises by electricity nioht. Thn unirinn la a vertical one and at of ... mnn nAiF.r nl tn thin in at tached IITTT-T" " VHVI " " by a pivot a small shunt-wound dynamo capable or running about eigui memj candle-power incandescent lamps. This rftrrlM s. leather friction pulley. ki.h nrVi asalnat a flv-wheel on n.inii anil thorn Ualsoahiffh-gneed Ifly wheel to insure regularity of running The irictionai anving arranKcuioui. Anntrnliatila bv a sortnir. and can is lie thrown In or out of gear as the engi ne fa romi irAii fnr elpctric driviniT or for Thn whole nlant is UMl . fru. uwh. . nor nmnoitlv nrranuftd OCCUDVlni? a space of not more than four feet square by four reel eight incnes in ueigui- A method by which the immense de pouts of Iron sand wnicn aoounu vi the coast of New Zealaud can be sue r"wfnllv utilized has lately beendiscov rnd bv an Auckland man. The feature nf h. naw TtrfVAM rnrMt.ii in Ufii in? quantity of scoria with the sand when put In the blast run nas tne enect 01 preventing the iron from oxill7i:ig. an obstacle that has heretofore never been successfully overcome in smelt ia? iron sand A hotel whrt! a traveler can regulate his expanse to thesis of his pocket-book and at the same time have every comfort and convenience drswrves to be patronized. At the Grand Union Hotel, opposite tho Grand Central Depot, Nw York, hand mma rooms can be obtained for SLOO per aay anu npwsnuu ina -u a . cellent ana tne prices are rooueraie. im hotel is first-class ia every respect. Visitor "You look very much like vour Da." Johnny "Do you think ro?" "You take after him very much. You have zot bis halr.' Tain't me what takes after pa and gets his hair. It's ma who does that." ST. BERNARD VEGETABLE PILLS. Tb best car for LTr and BiIkmui OompLaunU, OwtiTtromo, aiMdsveb, muiop uu irjsprinHa, j- si klaAd Pnritiar and I-iTr RMnlator. th7 hav da aqual. No Funily should rx witDOQt a 00 of utttt. rtn-TAiNl WarrtaiiA Pills in th boose Pric 35 twnta at DruffinaU, err by matL Ksunnln Mnt FHIX Ailflrwi. P. INLLSTAEDTiva. A CO., JMerc flu. w York, (DAVID TRCMBALL. ) How A Farmer's Life Was Saved. Hob. S. C. Huntington, Ei-t'onnlr Jadce; Bob. N. B. Smith, District Attorney, s4 Sworn Statement of Others. All of Falaskl, Osweeo Co., IT. V. Seven years sco my itruirzle for life brfan. with a burning inflammation, (almost as much to be dreaded at Ore). At first attacking me with pain and aching In the back. The least cold or over work would aggravate my troub les. My stomach and liver becamo deranged. tongue coated, appetite poor, nerves unstrung and my sleep troubled. I mado a desperate effort to keep about, but in spite of all my reso lutions and the help of physicians, found my self growing worse month by month, and my once powerful constitution completely break ing down. I suffered from chronic inflammation of the kidneys, rheumatism and catarrh of the bladder. Blood would rush to my head, I would feel faint and weak, and found It difficult to breathe at times as my heart would throb and skip beats. In the spring of 1880 still more criUcal symptoms set in. My terrible agony no one could tell. My weight was reduced nearly seventy pounds. A sense of soreness and rawness was followed by attacks of inward fever. Wm. II. Filkin's affidavit is herewith given: I ofttnmv tlu urinrmsurd if Tktrid Trum boll. II looked ttrriUe, a (wuyft it was hit very lye owoa, iSigiud) WM.H.FILKIXS, Sworn o before me I J. W. FEXTOX Jus thisth day of Nov., tice, Pulaski, Oswego 13. Co, N. V. At time my back and limbs were so weak. I could hardly stand or walk. The of tener the effort to void urine, the more frequent the call and severer the distress. On November 21st, ISM, I began taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-rtoot Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure, and applying his V A O Anointment. To-day lam 62 years old, and I am enjoying excellent health. I am free from pains in my back and kidneys, can sleep well nights, have an excellent appetite and indeed I am enjoying life as wcU as I did eight year ago. ' Dear Doctor, Imagine you saw mo last hay Ing time working In the Acids sweating to carry along 550 lbs. (Which Is my present weignt good ncsh and solid), and this too after not being able to get up from my bed JUAout Help bg tptU f.ir more than a year. Mow I can Jump as quick as a boy. It seem. ID much like a miracle. I can not And suitable language to express my thanks. I am in receipt of letters almost every week, and sometimes twice a week, asking me about my first testimony published In Dr. Kilmer's Invalid!' Guide to Health, Inquiring If It was trne that "I was cured after suffering so much." Jfow 1 repeat the testimony with sworn proof and If this will be the means of inducing some other sufferer to try yourinvaluabie Remedies It will pay me a hundred fold. I am interviewed almost every day and I hear of a great many who have tried your Remedies and peak of them in great praise. This testimony is truo as to my recovery but a to my suffering the one-half ho not been told. - .uimiiwi. i. i-itjrr um luo vui Day of Aovember, 18&1, by David TrumbaU. flwnn. anit inhMiil 1 . ,. ... Justlceof the Peace Pul j&ki. Oswego Co-Tn. X. David Tram hall whose name Is attached to the above testimony is a well-known and honorable ciUarn ot Pulaski, Oswego Co.. N. Y. Ex County Judge. District Attorney and ex Member ot Assembly. THE above testimony Is only a fan nhutnaoa of letter, reerlved dally showing the wonderful i salts atteadlns tneoMotDB. KILMER'S SWAMP- ROOT, Kidney, Liver and Bladder Care. Sjld by Druggists, Price. tl.OO Bottles, S3. If roar Draggitt does not seU it sendto Dr. Klhner A Caw fill 'rift von believe In mesmerism?" shyly asked a sweet young maid, who who will graduate rrom ine aomervuie high school next summer, of a young Harvard sophomore whom she had met at Mount Insert, 'Certainly, I do," replied the young man promptly. "I can mesmerize peo ple myself." "Oh, 1 don't believe It," said the shy girl, incredulously. You couldn't mesmerize me, now, could you?" "Well, I could try." said the young man confidently, leaning toward her in the moonlight. And she acknowledged to her dear est friend the next day that she did ex perience a sort of queer tingling sensa tion about her lips something like a mesmeric shock. "SissT. does your sister bathe?" he asked a little ten-year-old girl, who was paddling In the surf. "No, sir, she doesn't." "Water too cold?" No. sir." "Afraid of being drowned?" "Ob, no. I think it is her natural reserve, sir." "Why, there she is now with a bath ing suit on. She is certainly going to bathe." "Yes, sir, I guess she is, sir. I guess her natural reserve has been lost, sir." Wnen you visit or esve New Vort city, save baggage exprpsuge ami P carriage Hire, so I v? aiUie Grand Uuloa Motel, eppusU liraad Ceo. Ual Depot. ODalegant rooms. Btted sp at s root it on SSUJIoa UolU.'i, SI sad upwards per day. European Plan. Elevator. Uestaaraot supplied wuh lae be. Ilura cars, stage al e.evuet raUroad to ail depots; Karaite can are better lor less money at the Uraad l uloo U'JUi Uuuiatanx otaer anurias soul la Umcusj TnE young man had taken her hand aud was pleading in impassioned tones as tbey sat together on the sofa. "Irene," said he, 'Ihough I am not the possessor of great wealth, I can of fer you the devotion of a heart that Is yours alone a love that is as boundless as the ocean and as enduring as the everlasting hills. The aim of my life shall he to minister to your happiness and to shiold you from every stormy blast. Your smile shall be my heaven. Oft In my fancy's wanderings" At this moment the silvery tone of a little gong was heard. The young man paused, turned pale, and said in an agonized voice: "Oh, Irene! At such a moment as this, when my life's happiness la trem bling in the balance.can you be so cruel and so heartless as to pull a chestnut gong on me?" "Look herel' exclaimed Brown, en tering the office of hU architect, "you've made a nice mesa of my house, haven't you?" "Why what's the matter," replied thft rchttgct, "Matter?" returned Brown, "why, the staircase Is so crooked that I cant get my furniture upstairs, and there isnt a window In the parlor that you can look out of without using a step ladder." "Well, what of that? Doesn't your house look well from the street?" 'It looks well euough, but, confound It, what does that amount to?" "Everything, my dear sir, everything. I understand my business, I believe; I am an architect. If you wanted a bouse that was only comfortable and convenient, why in thunder didn't you get a carpenter to draw the plans?" "You've no idea what a vixen my wife was, and I suffered her for twenty years. But heaven does not always chasten. Last week she began to let me have peace." "Ah! reformed?" "No. Died.' "Well, I can sympathize with you, but not through personal experience. I am very tappy at home. My wife is a model." "A model wife, eh? That is rare." "Oh! not so rare as you think. She is all day posing In artists' studios.aud, as I am a nlcht watchman, we see very little of each other." Col. Blood (of Kentucky) "I'eo tIe do me an iniustim when thov tw. cuse me of being a bard drinker." Mrs. Blood (indignantly) "Who has accused you of being a hard drinker?" colonel "A great many people hut I am not a bard drinker." Mrs. Blood "No imlpml mv ilnnr you are an easy drinker." A -Wisconsin farmer says that if thistles are cut oS evei with the ground and salt placed on them as fart as they appear, they can be destroyed. out tuai warcuiuiness and industry must be exercised in keeping them silted. Tb secret of Life. SCOVILL'3 SAR3APAKILLA. OR BLOOD AND L1VEE STECP. is the remedy for the cure of Scrofulous Taints, Hheumatism, White Swelllns, Gout, Goi tre. Consumption, Bronchitis, Nervous De bility, Malaria, and all diseases arising from an impure condition of the blood. Certificates can be presented from many leading x-hysicians. Ministers, and b! of families throughout the land endorsing siuviLL'B BLOOD AND LIVEB SV- UL F in the highest terms. Wa ra stantly in receipt of certificates of cure. irom the most reliable sources, and we re commend it as the best remedv for W. diseases. Virtue Danishes the sandal tree perfumes the axe that strikes It. FITS: An Fits Hopped rree. Treatise and $J trial t-uitieof lr. Kline's Great Serve Restorer, free t " evuuwisr.&iine.Kii Area at., I'alia.Pa. SDrinklesalt nnnn thn liaMr r.f a ik to inauce a sneep to own it. "It's kind of rniifrh tn la tr,M.i.!r o - "i.un v. n uu suticuDna or tiiA anoin lonf itvn said a sympathetic Pittsburelier to a ri .j . , . . . menu uoi, ioujr since, "lea," was the .Kcunic repiy, "dandruff, but Carboline Will Clean It out nilinlrpr than 9 ..(.,1 A - - H IMMULW gas explosion." live bread for non.es in ueigium and Germany. rrazer Axle Oreaaa. The Trazar 1,1. I .- j ia lour times as long as any other. Use it, and save your horses and wagons A trial will prove ihtt we are right. The best butter ia mari pasture. FlVKllnlllFt mn T. a.Hl . - - - - " every year in boots and Shoes by using Lyon's Heel Stlff eners, cost only 23c. A little Cartlnllo nnll glue or paste pot will keep the contents sweet for a long time. Kl. . "OB or r eontainin.- as tTirZZZL apti;" 2Si POhnoaar, N vir iXTI Hssard A Co, pronriMara. - Dwiwiiinimia - Cavenna mniwr hinm ants congregate drives them away. Cstarrtl Is a verv Dreralem nut . sirreesble disease : ii&hi ,t -.. TT''. ' w UCTCtOO into KriOOS AflnfenmnMtn n. - r-". i oaisapariua, ctlnithrooearaahtnnL . - mm iitt. v.eij part or the system, effeetlajt a radical and perutinent . . u. .uvuoaessi. . Wssh frralnoil wAm . .. . D nuwi wim cnia tea. wige dry and rub with linseed ofl. , He Lad been the girl's devoted ad mirer for a long time, and finally pro posed with eminent success. "But.IIarry," she said, afler His pre liminary paroxysms of Llis were over, you mast ask papa." "Darling," he murmured,! love you fondly more than I can tell you, but don't ask me to do that?" "Why, Harry," she said, "what is wrong In that?" "Nothing, love," he replied, very, very tenderly'ncthing wrong, darling, but I'm so unlucky, don't you know. I have asked at least a half dozen papas In the last three years, and not a man of them gave his consent, and I was sent forth a disappointed and broken hearted wanderer and I can't bear the thought ot taking such a risk again." He wandered after that, without un dergoing the humiliation of a paternal refusal. Gray or sandy beards are colored brown or black by Buckingham's Dye for the Whis kers. One tottle of A yer's Ague Cure will erad icate malarial poisons from the gytt;ai. Thet were engaged digging u; the pavement on Chelsea street, when one, wlulnz the perspiration f ro:i. U.s brow, observed: "Begorra. an Itslu t, then. Wouldn't it be a foino thine. Jeminie, if we had the warruai weather in the w inter when we need it so much, and then the cowld weather in the summer when we're roastin'?" "Ay, it wud that," replied Jeuum'.e, solemny,"but mebbe, Mike, it's all fur the best as it is." OH! MY BACK hirj tnm cr rold atUrk that weak bart aaa srarij pro: rates jts. THE BEST TQHIC ftareoffthena the Maarlra, Meartlra the rrra Enrlrhr the Blood, 4. ivm New Visor. Haa &liza Jkm.se .fiHVml. at., AJeuny, Pa., mt: " k'-tr mnl er 1 hv fmUVr with Btxk-tcM ia4 VVsaineW. 1 ru T a riot rvzuiUi I VMd ffrtJl bat litti rU;f. Xuna butt ul ttfra'l lra Bittrs cured m. Mb. Altud BaiiKM. Fr-.hr-r?. Vs.. uyi: "I htvv fur tu-9 ten am inienw w;frrr fTjra pjtin m m bttcc. lirt. Livtofys ! 1'ul.uIt, h&9 u4 tnoumtsraU'l prMH.-npU"aa and pr-paruvns wn.rMui bwLt. Two ttl of brxxsn Lra bittrs ca Unalj carwd bm. and I tTitefuiij racjuiMiod it. Gflaair ha mlMTm Trsui Xrk and rmmed rd . .r -a oo wTmttper. 'I .ke aa etarr )dMi umji Lj BICOtt Jt lllFMU ALCOu ULTlMtfliK. M I -'L- Catarrh S Colnl if Ely't Crtam it rim. I Tup I catarrh f-r 3 IKart. 3tj n i icuU bUtd. I Uuiwjte V tares mntl-l nrrer Iwtl. E.y't Cream Btdrn has cured mc. -Mrt. .V. .t. Jafic. si a it. i-Mtn,.iif'. rP4?CliBreC0U- SC.o'.'TAf.. x.ir. HAY-SEVER A panirlfU v ? nrii an I H-a--rv U.r - . Priii' jj t- mi 1 o- at ir-njv-t!-. -rvA f r crcuUa 1X& XiUlTU LitS. JjruU, Oiw, X. Y. NO LADYJ3 flALLYBE AUTIFUL Without a Clear, Whlta Conopleiioa ;Scr)Tf:Si'V,Ii''' "r C-rnpiexton VtiLLlS' C ik) lleaUt.a ut Met To s la- g txtnt ecu til m evuetics ot ire. A lew applli-aUona Jti.l mskr the skin beau r:(n 1; ft:. nio,tn, :i.l mte. I: is not s paint ir prwlrr tnat w.l: 0.1 ip tne p-rr of The tun, ad br pn Ooidk crra'.e lueise of the s.m,uc!i ia Fim,k-.eta.. but 19 s jxrrfecilv near l q-anr. s valuable lls--overr that f A V caue tar ciieeK lo g!w ivuti nea-in. so'i rrt le ll!v in wtuteaes It iB-iSf''rnJ' OlXNl ImpoMible to abject to:" ;- !,!! -- I a the besatj It confer It core Oiiv l:la, Kiro- ple. rreck:, Kir lirut. Bin s Head.sW'Xcbes. Saabara, ttijpiel llanli aii'l Faoe, Birbefs IV ti. etr. It frrr the ixns. e-1 sUntls. sn-1 tnr or tne k n from the isJuriois eSecla of pow lers aol coametie ws-brs cDt'nmi srdunent, while It beantlse t ie s.la. g T.rnc It that braltar. B tionil anl jootl-.r il appear n;e mn.cn a is impoosible t obtain bj snr ot:if r mr.in It I- cncelel br con- noiaxenrs in ine an be ine best sou saieat oeao. Sflertne world erer pro '.ui.l. For Mile br Druirr ts and Finry 0-xl Des'en Senl for Ctrcalr. w.tn TesiuaouU aaa Ucaiv nrai Picture, free. V. SI. St OTT V CO., I tlll.AUELt UU. PA. r- m mm w sj au mvsiiurr Wavuia .too. IX J- 1 vv jni vaTtj l ir.J H. .Havrr. tMratiort ar1'v4 liv4a . ao.. . ... K.n ot ciirrj. i th f, Ul n-ti L.l'h'.a. Hn rxtu A.M. to 4 P. C at ilil V Slhal al.l l l 3r - . , i , . .. RUPTURE:' tllH lal.T fl'RED br KllV. Tnl.n.llnn .n,l rt- al A 1T! Manufa.-t;ir;nr Himm-nil'l c:ryal Mn-lle UI.a-k: aiuiply m-lt-n Moos aol anty to aru. K KtntH an I otb.T artlr ftiaaniple bl'X-k an I rarticu ar. Uh-, .- caiital rtiiunj. A. U. 11 AMM j.N u. Wmluiu. M WANTED A 70MA:i of rtvrTxy tor ba.inrn In hr lontirT. arv $30 Hefarcacca. . J. Jotuuoa. Xojutirwr. u Barvutj it-. VI. $3 ELECTRIC BELT for KIDNEYS, Pain. Nervous Sl weak. Book free. FLETCHER it CO., Cleveland, 0, STOPPED FREE JafjP-XsJvaJ imCCtSt. Inana Ptnons Rtrp(l Dr.KLlNE SGKEAT Nerve Restorer rsis7BKAnf &NTKVB Litsr,SK. Vn.y twtt trm fir Arrrr A ?.-r.fc--. -is. ffisPtv. rfe. I Tf FALL IB LB U tiit(" d.re.-r&.L A US a.'f fi'ittUy't mrr. Tc:ise ar-l ti trial Iottle Uc tr Fitpitirm.IrrpsiTin-j rt-har, oo t ot wbrn r-nvr 1. n.m t. . t. cT'- ai'.ta of ff.K-te.ltoIsR.Kl.lN'L.i! Arch it..P-!vT!-r:,h a.P. ft Q 1 1 1 II Habit Cured. Treatment witon trial. Ul IUm UcaiANERcwKiTC(X,taFaretta,lnl. i a -Mr ivTllTTl WOOERS PASTILLES, hwii-ia. Akua 38 91 S5 J a dav. Sample worth run BiT"'.uJ,l'r th bora-. ft Andrai BatwjTtK'a s.rm mn Hou., Holiy.iik-a. PENSIONS il li v tijlr 1 nt i up frwOiKiiira o r. l mn THDRSTOFS PEmWOTHPOWDER Keeln Teeth Prrfrrt d Umm Healifcy. Rla.r'C li.Wf English Gout And Uldll 5riIiS; Rheumatic Remeifi tttal M.a. H.tn, r.nia, 30 rra. UOfJSUrMPTILU, " r l aal X ,r K,Mi ttat I lll arad TWO BOTTLt-S rasa, VMh.r VUsTvAL MMaaaSr.aaaan. DK. T a. Mi a. ,., SX? FALL, IIA.NbS, FE?T, "T J Dr. JOHN M. WOODIURV, "rasrlSt.a.,.ll. Ia .-4Wl aiaa.a-aak 7 ttn iiffili iji 11 i-i i-j -- lW-l 11 1 1 Br- ev i r TS ifirlf lwljai, lla. Jl ManZ Mtract ot tUe Ic.t TCT'r Tv ti . i. '"naTr. Junior Ecrrl. M l t entv by Iu reiuli. th. jtorlon. ra B., , i ly .. . Apotheerle.Lowea.:;,', 'L ? m jr v ! - "-wwn. -aL. IOO Desep. a.lU,UUUHSCRT3SB. we wast naI7aT,rr TO INTRODUCE tllliB 'iuj'KXst ' SADIES' liOiiiaJoiirpj aArr. ap u ltt. aJJ? . r.re.n.r.r. .. " Eiizobeth Stuart Ph8hT JosiahAHon'sWifa"3 Marion Karlar.d, ' Roso Terry Cocks, Harriet PrescottEpoffort Mary IMtt ril B, PBACTiCAL KClTsYxW? Christine Terlutne Uenid. juza iu rurt.cr, a.d Ir..l.ci AariJi; MOTHERS CORKER A pafd0Tiwd c:-:t:v- j to iba cara of ina-.; tj vounc cm .1 ren H i wiia fotarMtiug i-:t?r fr.jiu u-. acnoar xcQai.ging :t Bad motb'xiaof tL.ar.aesor, -; and urttftna. artir m f ir , bt wtitra H pfu;. i t gastiTa and worxa dju -'a-n- UDMnptin prlr of tn patar W Trj JWlaXg b.iu- r. HINTS CM ETIQUETTE; l.r awawaWaWaWaWaWaWaWaTJBWaWaWaWaWaWaWaWaWSA I . , r..r U,J' I.ti ad M J. L'Laasi-,.'.. iitcj.arJi,.!,'' LECTURES TOY3UKBW0Ma.1T ( lu.n,IUa "A tomii H " ".rrj7.'nt' c"4 'lau.a, fc.mSL rld.f :c. InMract T .-tlcl l -H w to !-!.' tat ViJaI ta'iai:" ' AST1ST1C MEESLEWGHX -3s W-b rc?l rw , k -.t, . tar -fir. i , t.saxrt. Frlaw a,, f r o.r.tr.ui!;-, r. b.c: ar.4 ltlh"Ci33 . r.--. tiMi iitit f..tr. - '1 ta-:a a&J erat i. that s novle win tut cu ui, ia DRESS AND MATERIAL. 275 .t. 4Xfxwxa4ea ua k asiian, lj iia. J.'lUuic H0MEC03KIS3. a. and lr.d mmmmmmMmMmMmmmm rr- cut Irtoatad br lubvnsrs. 'it t hpMsU r eatura wito na. acd is vn- -tivrvQ ice Dn an-i mit ra!'i. c. i aTStmsnt terpiibinftM In ary U'Us- ana ronir.DuiM.ru. n -w to prf t 1 rare lcaci- u;i:. f r af:p't.ar-a tm on i-rnai'. 1 H rj O- .-g ?(. -mi us dp mn n:r.-. n li..a;a3. U, FLORAL DEPASTifiES"; ISZ'&g; sWsWwaw.wawwwjBwswi tmm iiS . iXiTJd Lattarafmm ubcr nr t 8"e- tc a r CCt on ail b-uFi '1 . it .j IS ft -- b-id papar ar?r pu t i : . 3- ! p-. .3 r tsiia thn tn-Aa y?.-, t flJ r-t a cr.i-a I 1-aaji ti' iiuuL ioMsL. ratia,ra ILllL at .ijfiimai nmla. Oa 4 ireular. . 4. WMn CA, 17 . Hub st rbUa,la. noou r:r.Ts itwteo for PLATFORM ECHOES UVI.0 TKrTB FUU HEAD AnatJa tn a noaUk aiad. C-.''u:'J A. B. srKIal M to, MartftH. R8 Hop to Cut O t HjrsfS" SHioft V oi.r t r.v i.ii'-.v:- ni.rEit and BttlOI.K I ombmrj. "n b a;l..l lT an' I. r-. rlaltr to aay pa-t ir i rr-nveli-toft ,il hlisil i -II u-1 ware an 1 Ham- I v-ii -r Spe,lal d:.nnt to t.i -rl.1 svnj l-ri.-- i.i t j. r. I. li. ii r;n; e. Kw k.-.'.T, v v. IT! AXLE BEST IS T f" G-t the t;-i.t::n. s. .d LTyrrwaaa. WEBSTEE. TA lth or without rltit lai-x. AnthoritTinthaOort Pr.otirg the l". S.'S'iprme r.n-.rt. a-i-i ir--B a- thetataSup'w of jh-;iov1 m ."'i - ' , .j In addition to rnri ti" n-ful U-. bue of this work com: ro V a iii A GAZETTEER CF THEW3R13. , Ti:;-. ' iri A BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIO.W nearly 1 N-.nvr.aJ, ll! li CE BCSX. S3 u It Is an inra:!!i:e comiri."n ln tJr-' and at every r irr.--- . . t ai m .LnniAa m wv., . - BUFFALO n mm m aifa a ra AWARDED FIRST PRIHJJJO AT THE WKI.U UW"'; (Four Cold Medals. fVal..u-. 1-aarta.at'J'r.inJ EST HUE for tOC3 MCIET. W rfj v IDFFA10 SCAIE COMPArrJAlOJl coiuuocina,. 1 ra. a .-rtal" vmt ""' r. TUs Best mUtlm Bswvf IwUtattoD-v Sop "JT UlaMrmMd Catlecw r &8 mm IT Xa mm 1 V Y$ -Z &4 "1 - Jit John 1. dough. Ei 1M lad fn--T; :: U . ' tt"3iJ at. aaam tn pat.-.- Bf .--t. l-wsHff.S kulnillM. ; '' IS- BUTT. 1M Jrn.'j.-' rSt-.it V a! Mm ntfwiAaRcctii u- auJ - mm AT JtCrmlm A tf f TO J DaTS.1 M gQawrmWt ac aVJ aaaafSvMtara I I irrSaalrkftba I llrui as-'-il :j.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers