GRETXA CREFV. lime Interrstlnii Facta Aboat Scotcb MuTiri in Their Historical, I .real aal Social Relations. So many pormlwr traditions Lava bwn detr.ycd of late tliat it is not sur prising to Ifurn that the legend of the ujarrjiut; blacksmith tf Gretna Greeu must l. (liauiiiKH) with other myths, and along with liltu a number of the picturesque inr iilfiitt associated with that uietiopolM of Scotch uiaxriapes, the Camden of I rent Britain. A writer hi the J'a'l Ma'l ime'U rel.tW"". a Tistt to the famM villac?. wliteb. as every IkxIt kmiwt, bj it m tus tiie lorder, nut uiui.'h uuiii' 1 1. .in K"uliot distance Ifyond t lie im.izuiaiT lu' separating North t'rciru Soutli lliitjiiu. It isalont tive imli-s northwest of t'arli.sle, ami leiha;w three miie ul of Annan anl !utlifii.t of J.cclflVchan. There i lUi a lin-tua ami a i.itlna lirwn station. The visitor aliitLts at the lat ter, a wry ijuiet little Uce, with only a few homely, corufortahle-looking houvt, plain Ntone or whitewasluil. '. a i;ou.s;ih rat'.u number of Amcri ratiH ami other excurmisU liud their way t.i Hie villaiii- in t!i course of the c;ii', :i vii(iTH:irn Iy excited any at tention at all.'" Tl writer called upon e Krili.ir of li:rtti, 1 tilths and rnaui'S who ha rvsitd in the vil If.e for nn.ii v an, and by whom the interviewer 1 .d his iiuestions answered .ih f i-t as lie could ask them, "In Scotch a- 'jod and r:rii as if we w rre seventy miles in-itciiil of le-'s than one iicpw the tinnier. " 'Hut. Mr. Kei."" 1 ."aid after ten ininutes' luisceKaii'-oin soss.p, "you uieiy don't nienn to tell me, profes i.mial r..lry and -ill that kind of thing iiimit. tli.it there iievrr was such a mar ivn i bi.ckniitli a 1 have mentioned?" "No, there inner w.i-." answered the lletMrar. I understand ier- bums tl. ilutu of his ollice tnore for oi rupatioii U hi .i 1 1 L i i . 1 1 cUc, aud is a genial and ciiiiu.e fcotchnian every inch of hint. Hut ti mie, ! n-.ioiiab'e. Why, I h.ne -een tlie hlai KMuitli, the auviland the t;!oinrf fmi;e lots of tirues in pic tut imc place and another, I !osli It he m deM ritK-d in ' haniheM' I'.ni yi !n ) :e In." and t hat's a otch woik,ol know." "Never min i: it's ii!tt what I to'l !. T!io Mai W.Mintli n a:i imajnn atioii. 1 'he notion has ai i.vn from the n.a ! i ti i r alter tl,o-e who inate these iiiii.iay man i.nre-i, the red-hot s)ee,l at w liii ti everythin!; was ihrne und the o'li ni'ij ardor of tiie btil.il pair."' .- r it i bi:i r.t "Now, yon piej.se tell me, Mr. Kei, something about what lias lee dmie here in the way of luarivin'' ! il d it and where it was done?" " Weil, iri'tna linn n, like Cold stream nnl IW ick-oii-Tweed just over tiie bonier, was vcais ao it very con venient place for those who wished to net married without leave. Its near ness to t'ai lisle was also an advantage. 1 he Scotch law made no bother about bans, paiental consent, presence of a leiifyman or the contra tiu? p.iitios leiii under aire; all that was needed was tint the two i liiiaways should in the presence of witnesses take one an other to be husband und w ife, and they w :e proju rh uiarn.ie oti land." olltftl iikuiis and the :d not be U sputed in Kng- That is, ot course, not now the state of the ."scotch law'.'" "No, the act of 137 made residence in scotlaud for tweuty-oue days over three Sundays obligatory on the part either of the man or the woman wish ing to et married, but all the other in cidental matters hold good." "That is, if the protiiective bride groom holidays in Scot al for three weeks and ou the tvveijty-secoud day his sweetheart conies down from Kng latul by the mail they can Lie married without let or hindrance?"' '"tmte so, Years ano the number of niamaires taklmr place here was very hiKh. 1 let ween IMo and 1S50, Murray, of llnll-bar, alone married over 0,UW, nud there were other 'inarners' practic ing at the) same time. lxrd Erskine'a name is still to le seu ou the book up at Sprintttield. t.f course, anybody could 'marry' the fiyioi; couples, but certain uieu were nearly always pat- iomea to the exclusion of outsiders. 1I1K BfslNEsS NOT EXTINCT. "And how about marriages nowadays at tretua'.''' "t Hi yes, there are still some. Willie I.aiiK, the pitet-runner (Anglice, post man) has perhaps married a doen couples these l.ist twelve months. He has a register which goes a hundred years back. There used to lie six or seven 'marriers,'" but Willie gets almost all the woik now. lie a a tirst-iate at- temler to his everyday duties too; my letters are delivered every morning rei: ularly to the minute, and have been for years." 'Who nre his clients, and what do they pay?" "-Mainly servants who come over after . arlis.e lair, but there are of course others. The marriages usually take place at 'term' time. Willie charges variously. Sometimes five suiilltitrs, sometimes seven shillings six pence occasional! he may get two, three or live guineas. The parties just eugage a room at a public house, and after they have signed Willie lams' roll lie gives the brule a ceititlcate. If lier husband deserts her she can bring him to, through the courts, just like an ordin ary w ife, and make bint supiiort lier. The children are. of course, legitimate. l he orelua tireen man uies are. m fact, aimoft the opposite of morgaiuitic alliances. In the government returns they are set down as irTPgular mar riages.' (.hie of their disadvantages is that tLjey preclude the children from being baptized and from other 'church privileges; but these call le remdied by the patties to a marriage here going before the sueritf nud getting an author iation br me to enter it m my re turns. While waiting at the station for the Carlisle train 1 asked the intelligent booking clerk about the "irregular mar riages" of those who "rin ower the merch." She said: "They are not thought respectable; the people who get married here are mainly farm ser vants, I think." A Comfortabla Income. I wonder what th late Mr. Hugh McCalmont regarded as a comfortable income? Having left about three mil lions sterling to a nephew, he lias pro vided for the interest to accumulate during seven years, in order that the nephew may afterwards be in a sound financial position. These three mil lions would give an income of nearly JLTUO.CKX) (SOW, 000) per annum, and one would really suppose that any one, with care and economy, might live decently ou this amount, w ithout even wishing to increase it. A TtEotixAR Financier A "I am in a tight place." B "What is the matter now?" I have got to raise $30 by 3 o'clock tomorrow." hy do yoa require precisely $99? "I have to pay a hundred-dollar note in bank and I've got the other dollar." Wixe (to late husband) ''Where have you been, John?" Husband (con scious that prevarication would be fu tile) "T 'tell truth, m'dear (htc) I sto-'d In s'loon to get glash beer. Wife "John, you never accomplished that load In a saloon. You're beea to brewery." Metboda of . " Teatlmony. Knractiog I Lave space only for a brief refer ence to the many other methods ol ex torting testimony from arrested persons whice are practiced by the gendarmes and the officers of the department ol justice. One of tLe moat cruel of Iheui, it seems to me. Is the custom of terrify ing old and feeble arents into the be lie! that their sons or daughters will inevitably t lianeed unless they con fess, and then sending the poor old peo ple, trembling with tenor and blinded with tears, to make an agonized appeal to their imprisoned children in their cell. The officials know very well that the children will not be hanged that it is extremely doubt Tul whether they will even l brought to trial. They are kept in prison simply because the procureur hopes ultimately to ob tain information from thm. If the tortuie of solitary confinement can be intensified by adding to it the entreaties of half frantic parents, so much the letter. A little fright will benefit the old people and teach them to look after their children more closely, and the children's obstinate determination not to betray tneir friends will perbai lie broken down by a sight of the grief and misery of their parents. It is a plan which, to the official mind, works l-eneficeiitly both ways. The aged mother of an exile whom I met in Trans-ltaikal was made to be lieve that her son would certainly be hancrd unless lie told all that he knew, and theu, upon condition that she should try and persuade him to confess, site was allowed to get to his cell. A terrible scene followed, in which the white haired mother, frenzied with fear and choking with sobs, knelt to tier son, clung about Ins legs and tried to press. her tear w et face to bis feet, as she implored biui. by his love for her, by her gray balm, to promise that he would answer the questions of tlie gen darmes. The strain of such a scene upon the emotions and the resolution of a prboner who is weakened and de pressed by motths of solitary confine ment, who loves and reverences his mother, and who a-es her for the first tune f i nee his arrest, and perhaps for the last time I -e fore he goes to Siberia, i sinip'y heart breaking. The mother tiuaily departs in despair. Lidding her son giv-vdhy as she would bid good by to the dying, while the son lavs up the memories of this bitter hour the cruel deception of his mother, the torture of himself aud the attempt to make the most sailed of human feelings serve the purposes of the police as memories which will steady his nerves and steel his heart wuu tiie time comes for ven geance. This playing upon the deepest and most intense of human emotions as a means of extorting information from unwilling witnessed is practiced more or less in all Kussian prisons where IiticaI offeuders are cotilined. One prisoner, for example, after montiis of jc-utary continement, is promised an in terview with his mother. 1'ilted with glad anticipations, he follows tlie guard out through the long, gloomy corridor into the prison court yard, where the mother is sitting on a rude prison bench forty or lifty feet from the door through which lie emerges. At the sight of the -e!I remembered, loving face, changed and aged by grief since he law it last, Ma heart overflows with pity aud ten derness, and he rushes toward her with the intention of taking her into bus arms, lie Is at once ttopid by the guard, who tells him that the interview is not to take place here, but In the re- et'tioo room of the prison, to which he is thereupon conducted. He waits im patiently ten minutes fifteen minutes halt an hour and at last the door opens. As he springs toward it he is met, not by his mother, but by the pro cureur, who asks him wuetner, alter this further period of relle tion, he has chauged his mind with regard to an swering questions. He replies that he was brought there, a3 he supposed, to se bis mother, not lor examination. The prociueur, however, iuforms him that interviews with relatives are privi leges not granted to obstinate and re fractory prisoners, and that if he has nothing to add to his previous state ments he will l taken t- his cell. Dis appointed and embittered, the young man goes back to s.ilitary continement with a new cause for haired aud an in tensified thirst for vengeance, while the heart broken mother, w hose misery lias only been increased by this brief glimpse of her son under guard ami in prison dress, returns to l.tr distant village home. In another case which came to mv knowledge in Silieria, the prisoner was a young married woman with a baby in her arms. She refused to answer ques tions intended to elicit criminating evidence against her friends, and the gendarme officer who was conducting the exanumation threatened. If she con tinued obstinate, to take her child from her. She inade a pathetic apptal to the procureur, and asked him whether there was any law under which the gendarme offtcer could deprive her of her child if she refused to testify. The procureur. Instead of giving her a direct answer. told her that "the l-rudent course for her to pursue would be not to raise a question as to the legal authority of the examining officer, but to tell him truth fully all she knew; then it was certain mat ne could not take her child from her." In the face of a threat so ter rifying to a young mother she was not more than 2J years of age when I made her acquaintance in S;beria she adher ed to her determination not to betray her friends. Her babe was finally left In her possession, but she suffered weeks of torturing apprehension, the mere re membrance of which bathed her face with tears as she told me the story. I have devoted much stace to these illustrations of the use of prison con finement as a means of torturing politi cal prisoners into making confessiou. partly because my note-books are full of record of such cases which were everywhere forced upon niy attention in nussia, and partly because it seems to me to explain more clearly than any other fact or set of facts the state of mind in which so called "terroristic activity originates. Whatever view one may take of the events in their moral aspect, oue can see that such causes might be adequate to produce such results without the ascription to the Russian revolutionists either of homicidal insanity or inhuman ferocity, The French or Chicago. An other dialogue overheard at the theatre between the acts: Young Lady (to her young man) "lid you attend the ho'?" Young Man "Yoa mean the hop." Yeung Lady "I guess I know what I mean. Ho' is French for hop. Just me Earns as g aio' u t rencn for galop now long have you been in society auynowr" Erie, Pa., intends to utilize the nat oral gas which lies beneath her soil. Gas can be secured along the lake shore. anywhere at from 700 to 1,000 feet, and the supply is so stronff that it fre quently finds Its way up through the gronnd through springs, and in several places along the shore of the lake it comes bubbling np through sixty feet or water. Both . Melaal and F. Bocker assert that the soja bean, which has been but recently Imported into Europe from Japan, is a very valuable fodder, betng exceedingly rien in ratty constituents. Paper gas-pipes are among the new inventions to te Drought into use in we near xaiare, . . Eeartle FARM NOTES.- f-rvs. The 5HOETHOH3I Cow. There does not seem to be any good reason to fear that the noble Shorthorn is to be counted out of the ranks of tlie milkers yet. Formerly this breed w the best Calry cow known, and in these days when Mr. Bates was busy Improv ing them, the original Shorthorn cows were copious and rich milkeis. Forty two quarts of milk and two pounds of butter per da? was the common yield of the first Duchess without the ex cessive feeding now common with "tested" cows. There was no testing aboat the Duchess, her weekly product of butter was made on the pasture and sold by her mistress every week. And the natural proclivity to make mils and butter has not left the Shorthorn race, although breeders for many years have been doing all that might be pos sible to eliminate this valuable charac teristic and make them only fat-prc-d ucing animals. At the recent Enslish Dairy Show a Shorthorn cow proved the champion milker and buttermaker. After 224 days from calving, her milk yield amounted to 45$ pounds daily, and her butter to 4. 4 per cent., equal to 2 pounds per day. The total solids in this milk amounted to 14.2 per cent., which shows that the cow was not only an excellent buttermaker, but exceptionally good for cheese, it there is a really good general-purpose cow lh!s Is surely one. A forehanded husbandman ot Western New York, whose land Is Wei or only slightly rolling, draws manure in winter as fast as made and broadcasts it upon bare ground or not more that six inches of snow in fields intended for boed crops next season. He has persisted In this practice for years, and makes the remarkable state ment in I'arin Life that "one load so applied is equal In effect to three, at least, spread in spring." Moreover, he sets just so much work out of the way during a comparatively slack time. I r.ELirvE the great success of the Danish butter arises solely from the education given in their schools and colleges. Every pupil is taught on the same lines, and It is Impressed upon them that butter, beinz a manufactured article, requires the same care and at tention to details as any other manu facture. This education, we must re member, commencing in 18G5, first be gan to bear fruit in 1S75, and now we find that during the five or six winter months, If it were not for Danish butter, we would, I am afraid, have to turn to buttenne. Dor.5ET horn sheep have been crossed witli but few breeds, but among those that have been tried none have answered so well as that between a horn ewe and a good Djwn ram, producing, as it does, a sheep well adapted for grazing, and much prized by butchers, as it carries a large amount of lean rlesh, with One quality, and weighing, from grass, from twenty to twenty-five pounds per quarter at 13 months old. IIknry Stewart says that when sheep ate kept tor wool and mutton, and the latter last, the Iambs should uot come until May or June, when tlie ewes on fresh grass will have abundant milk, and will raise large lambs at less expense than those that come earlier. So that wmle for market lambs ewes may be coupled in August or September for the flock the ewes and rams should not run together until December or January. Frofessor Sanborn advises farmers to attempt to use chemicals (not includ- ng lime, plaster or salt) only after in telligent buying, a careful study of the soil by comparative tests, and then on horticultural crops mainly, including potatoes. This advice will not apply, however, when wheat approximates $1 per bushel, or when soils are largely deficient iu potash or phosphoric acid . A nci.Lwlth an ugly temper is dan- serous, whether with horns or not. A rolled Angus bull in Minnesota some time since dashed Its owner, an old gentleman named Sherwln, to the ground, and then, falling on its knees, butted him repeatedly, inflictlDg such injuries that its victim died shortly after having been rescued. Dr. Salmon says that considering that tuberculosis is caused by a speciDc germ, and that consequently it does not originate spontaneously, and also that it is not often transmitted from one person to another by contagion.U seems very probable that the disease is largely kept up by affected animals and of all animal food the most dangerous ie the meat and milk of tuberculous cattle. It would be better to kill a few of the young pigs at birth than to compel the sow to suckle too many, as lack of milk and cold will cause the weaker ones to die. Large litters are at no time desirable, and especially in winter. CiiopriNO a bole in the ice to allow the cows to drink is simply a method of chilling them, thereby causing a shrinkage in the yield of milk. Warm- mi the water is easier and much cheaper n the end. A small garden is belter than a large one, if well cultivated. Spread some well-rotted manure that Is free from litter on the garden plot, and use the manure liberally. The crop will more than repay it. Sr-ANisn hog meat and Westphalia hams are said to owe their peculiar ex cellence to the swine being fed on mast, which our limited forests cannot to any extent allow. It is said that a peck of corn a day, with a little bran, will make a hog increase one pound in weight daily foj.wo months together. Cor.it is not a perfect food for a bog. Though rich in those elements that tend to fatten, yet corn is deficient in the bone and musclemaklng elements to a certain extent. A mixed diet is tiest. Tuocon the sheep will consume many kinds of coarse, dry food, yet It is also a dainty animal in some respects, and should not be confined to inferior food. Oats make the best grain food for sheep. As skim milk contains the most nu tritious elements ot the milk, the cream being only fat. It is valuable as food for pigs, calves and poultry, being worth much more as food than the prices at which it is sold. As a rule, more winter diseases occur among poultry from top ventilation in the poultry-bouse than from any other cause. There is nothing more injuri ous to the hens than cold draughts of air at night. As an inducement to the greater util ization of buttermilk in bread-making it is stated that it coutains 4 to 5 per cent of milk of sugar and i per cent, of mineral salts, and that after settling for cheese-making it also contains 1 per cent, of nitrogenous matter and beariy as much butter fat. The Mfdienl Record recommends giv ing the babies water to drink, and says: "Any .one who bas ever noticed the avidity with which a fretful sick infant drinks water, and marks the early abate ment ot febrile and other symptoms, will be convinced that water is a bever age, a quencher of thirst, a physiologi cal necessity, in fact, should not be de nied to the helpless member of society. HOUSIJJOLIJL ; Careful Xcbslng. When a sick person is obliged to lie constantly In one position, as is the case with a brok iii leg, bed sores must be guarded ajainst. The lower part of the back is roost frequently attacked, says Good Housekeeplng.and the nurse should pass her band under it at least twice a day to see that the draw sheet Is free from wrinkles and creases. Morning and night she must bathe it with a small sponge dipped In alcohol or a solution of tannic acid, and- wl en It is dry rub It with corn starch or buckwheat flour. It may eeem impossible to her to get her band underneath, but most beds will yield a little to pressure, and by working in a roll of old linen under the back above the place to be bathed, she will obtain a little space to work in. If in spite of precautions the back be comes sore, an air cushion with a hole hi the middle must be used to prevent tlie sore from coming in contact with any surface, or it cannot heal. Fkicaeseed Rabbits, Ths best way of cooking rabbits is to fricassee them. Cut them np or disjoint them; put them into a stew pan; season them with cayenne pepper, salt and some chopped parsley. Pour in a pint of warm water a veal broth if you have it and stew it over a slow fire until the rabbits are quite tender, adding, when tbey are about half done, some bits of butter rolled In flour. Just be fore you take it f rem the fire enrich the gravy with a gill or more of thick cream, with same nutmeg grated Into it. Mir the gravy well, but take caie not to let it toil after the cream is in, lest It curdle. 1'u t the pieces of rabbit on a hot dish aud pour tlie gravy over them. Gkated UAMSANDWicnES. Urate finely as much well-cooked ham as you are likely to require, flavor it with a little cayeue and some mutmeg; roll out some good pull paste very thin, cut it into two ierfectly even portions, prick it in one or two places to prevent it rising too Iiish, and bake in a quick oven until of a golden brown; then take out nnd let It stand until cool; then spread a little fresh butter lightly over the whole. This should noi be done until the paste is perfectly cooL Jfow spread the grated ham evenly over the paste, lay the second piece of puff paste over it, aud with a very 6harp knife cut into small sized sandwiches. Beei Sandwicuks. Cut some nice bread iu si Ices and butter them with a mixture of two parts of butter and one of l'ipnch murtard mixed well together. P.ace lietween two slices of bread thus prepared a slice of tender roast beef carefully freed from fat. When a num ber of them are doue pile up as many as can be convenleutly cut through, aud trim the edges so as to get rid of all crusts on the slices of bread; theu cut the sandwiches, some In small til aug'es or small squares or round, and others in fiirures that is, pieces four and one-half inches long and one aud one-half inches broad make a plio of the figures, two and two, as logs of wood are put in timber-yards, and around them make a circle of the small ones laid slanting and overlapping each other. In ham sandwiches use Lnglish instead of French mustard. Oyster Fricassee. Bring a quart of oysters to a boil in their own juice. As soon as the liquid boils strain the oysters out In a colander and keep the juice hot. Heat a piece of butter the size of an egg until it bubbles, and stir in a tablespoonful of flour; let it cook a moment, stirring well; then stir in a cupful of the oyster liquid. Take from the fire, add the yolks of two eggs, a little salt, a little cayenne pepper, one tablespoonful of lemon juice and a very little nutmeg. If liked. Beat well and place on the fire just long enough to set the egg without boiling. Put in the oysters and serve. Take a small round stick, about ten inches lour, and wind smoothlv with picot-edzed pale pink or blue ribbon. On either end fasten five or six pieces of the D ime ribbon in varying lengths by a small brass headed tack driven through them into the squared end of the suck. Double each of the ten or twelve ends thus made down so as to form a point sew a tiny gold or silver bell of the closed or aleighbell shape. The small ruler of the household will testify his pleasure at this new sceptre in no unmeasured degree, provided he is a healthy baby and likes the merry tingle of the bells. Monday's Tcdding. Cut the re mains of a good cold plum pudding Into Gnger pieces, soak them in a little brau dy and lay them cross barrel In a mold until full. Make a custard with a pint ot miik aud five eirgs, flavoring with nutmeg or lemon rind, fill up the mold with it, tie it down with a cloth aud boil or steam It for an hour. Serve with a little of the custard poured over, to which has been ad Jed a tablespoon ful or brandy. i illid j)utu. 1'uiiea ureai! is not a common edible on Americau ta bles, but is pronounced tirlicious by iK-ople who have tried it. It is to be ea'.en with cheese. Take a loaf of fresh ly made b:eaJ, and while it is yet warm pull the inside out of It in pieces the size of your band and smaller. Put these into the oven and bake them a delicate brown. When cool they are crisp and as full of flavor as a nut. Fort the dlspeptlc fried oysters are forbidden. When roasted in the shells ovtteis are delicious, aud can be digest ed with ease even by a weak stomach. Xever use a sharp knife in cleaning the nails. Fill under the nails with soap, and then remove it by brushing w itii a nail bruslt. A French remedy for burns is to al low tbe contents of a syphon of seltzer water to flow slowly over the affected parts. It quiets the pain speedily and expedites tbe final cure. Ice for Sick Etomacil When a person is '-sick at the stomach' ice taken into the mouth in small pieces, and allowed to melt berore swallowing, will in very many Instances relieve the discomfort. Jewelry is never so out of place a: upon a baby. Kven tbe necklace and sleeve clasps are an abomination a profanation of sweetest simplicity and could te suppUuted by narrow ribbon with manifestly better taste. A gentleman named his dog Penny because lt was one sent to him. Russian papers are discussing wltli much concern the rapid destruction of the forests. Tbe beautiful oak forests are becoming extinct; only the borders of the celebrated chestnut woods of Vassilgoursk. which date from the time of Peter the Great, now exist; the for ests which once reached from the banks of the Volga and the Dou far Into tbe steppes toward tbe Ural Mountains have been destroyed , and In many cen tral provinces wood has become so ex pensive that large consumers are con sidering the importation of coal or the use of petroleum. A. Frenchman has patented a ma chine for the use ot concentrated solar rays as a general motive power. . "A. dentist wishes to know the form ula tot the white cement nsed for fill ing decayed teeth, which contains neither mercury nor silver la its com position; j There srs several white fill logs in use by dentil surgeons which contain neither mercury nor silver. They are made by mixing oxide of zinc with impalpable glass powder In small proportion, and Just before using, when the cavity of the tooth is prepared, a small quantity of deliquesced chloride of tine is placed on a glass slab, and enough powder added to make thick paste, mixed rapidly. It .'sets' very quickly, and forms a good temporary stopping. . It is slightly irritating to the 'nerve' of a tooth, and should not be insetted directly in a cavity In which caries has far advanced without placing a little solution of gutta-percha in cblorororni over the region of the pulp. But a less irritating tilling, according to the London Xancef, is made by mix ing the same powder or oxide of zinc with pyrophosuhoric acid; this is a more permanent white stopping." Tlie discovery of a new gas Is a rare and Important event to chemists. Such a discovery has been announced in Germany by Dr. Theodore Curtlus. who has succeeded in prearliig the long-sought hydride of nitrogen ami dogen. diamide or hydrazine, as it Is variouslv called. This remarkable body, which has hitherto baffled all attempts at isolation, is now shown to be a gas, perfectly stable up to a very high temperature, of a peculiar odor differing from that of ammonia, ex ceedingly soluble in water, and of basic properties. Iu composition it is nearly identical with ammonia, both being compounds of nitrogen and hyd rogen. J'otcdtral asbestos is used by M. Er Ichsen, of Coinhagen, for making a special enamel or coatiog. It is mixed with soluble salts, such as silicate or potash and mineral or other colors, which combine with the silicic acid so as to form a product which withstands the action of oxygen, beat, and atmos pheric changes. This substance furn ishes a refractory glazing, which pro tects porous materials, aud which can be applied to wood, to gas or water pipes, to brick walls, and to construct ions of stone or cement. When it is employed on masonry or on wooden articles, the surface is first washed with soap and water. In the manu facture of this enamel of paint It is only the refuse of the asbestos which is employed, and this refuse, it is sad. would be worthless for any other pur pose. -la incombustible. paier has been made by Mr. H. Meyer. The basis of the paper is ameanthus. An indelible and incombustible ink is used with the paper. A lithograph made with this paper and Ink, wheu placed between two layers of melted glass, resisted the action of heat perfectly. Toad raising is a profitable Austrian Industry. The creatures 8 re produced for the London market, where tbey are sold for $15 or $20 per hundred, and are bought by garOeners and agricul turists for use in destroying obnoxious insects. At Oakland. Cal the Iron dust created by the Pacific Xail Works, amounting to five tons a day, is now utilized and twenty-five per cent, of it made into steel by the same process that black sand is manufactured into that metal. A Wilminijton (S. C.) mechanic bas built a buggy on the bicycle principle, the spokes and tires being of steel. It works nicely. SEKYOrs DEBILITY. A Sure and Positive Core for This Com mon Complaint. Sufferers from nervous debility complain of physical and nervous weakness and ex haustion; there is prostration of the physi cal strength, a tired feeling with no incli nation for exertion, and the power to work is diminished; the patient wakes mornings tired and mire freshed; there is an extreme nervous and irritable condition, a dull, cloudy sensation often accompanied by dis agreeable feelings in the head and eyes; the thoughts wander easily; there will be grad ual tailing of strength, with weakness and pain in the lck; bad taste in the mouth mornings, the vision becomes dim, tbe memory Impaired, and there is frequent dizzinexs; olten the patient is gloomy aud d spoudut, and the nerves become so weakened after a time that tbe least ex citement or shock will Hush the face, bring a tremor or trembling or palpitation of the heart. For these symptoms Dr. Greene's Ner vura Nerve Tonic, the great strengthening aud invigorating remedy, is a sure aud positive cure. Under the use of this won derful restorative, which is purely vegeta ble and therefore harmleiM, the dull eyes regain their brilliancy, tbe pale look and hollow cheeks show renewed liea.tb and vitality, the weak and exhausted feelings give place to strength and vigor, tbe brain becomes clear, tlie nerves strong aud steady, tbe gloom mud depression are lilted from tbe mind and periectaud permanent health la restored. It is an absolute aud certain specific for nervous debility. Young men with weakened nerves and exhausted vital ity can regain their strength by its nse. It restores lest energy and Invigorates the weakened vital powers In old aud young. No one need despair of a cure. Cm Lt. Oreene's Nervura Nerve Tonic, and an ab solutely certain cure will result Druggist keep it. Price (1 per bottle. Be sure aud get Dr. lire ne's Nervura Nerve Tonic; take no other, lur this remedy has no equal. If your druist does not have it, he will get it tor you. Dr. Greene, 35 Went 14tli St., New York, the great special ist in curing nervous and chroulc diseases can lie consulted by letter free. Write bim about your case. Jt is stated that a prominent anti- vaccination ist has committed suicide as a sequel to tbe death of his wife and of three of his children from smallpox. Frmxer Axle Cireae. Use the FniKer Axle Oreae. 'tis the best in Uie world will wear twice as loug as any other. Ask your dealer for it, and take no otner. About three thousand tons of borax are annually produced in California. If, after a ten day's trial of Taylor's Hos pital Cure for Catarrh, the remedy fails to meet tbe requirements of the case the price will be reiunded. Address, City Hall Pharmacy, 2C4 broad way, New York, for iree pampuiet. Lay in a good stock of blankets for winter use. There is mors experience, tune, anil brain work r presented In the preparation of Roods bara;cuia taan any otner medicine. It Is this wnk nuo.es U JOd's Sanupuilla peculiar in lis curauTe power, and In tlie remarkable cuies it eflecls. CilTe U a trial Don't be afraid to use the curry comb. CnstnuisluB purely Cared. i the tailor Please inform your readers that 1 nave a posiuve remedy tor the aaove linmed disease. By its timely use thousand ot hopt-leas cas have beea perinaneaUy cured. 1 shall oe flail to send two oott.es of my reined r us to any of joor reader who hare consuuib tiun If they wlU send me ir.eir Express aud f. a . J. A. aixicL M. U.C. isi rear! St. N. V. Laziness snd aspiration make a poor teui Tothinj Cures Dropsy, tiravel, Brlght's, Heart. Diabetes, Urinary, Urer Diseases. .Nervousness, c- like Oaan's Kidney Cure. Office, Kii Area Wt Phil. l hAtlL. A ' . .. V . Cures the worst eases. Cure guaranteed, i ry it. . Flippancy is a spurious form of it that is frequently mat'e to be service for the real article in this country. - Botal Gi.ck menl anytnlng! Broken Cm cs.tiJaaa. Wood. Free V law-ax Drugs at (iro. It Is not the ben wtii.-h cackles inoet that lays most eggs. "rMSsssswwaswstaaMsjSjSissBSSsssssssssssissssssssM I eA - I ames For The Nervous The Debilitated The Aged ORES Nervous Prostration.NervoosHead- 1 acbe.Neuralgis, rservousweaJcness, 6tomach and Liver Diseases, sna au affections of ths Kidneys. AS A NERVE TONIC, It Strengthens and Quiets tbe Nerves. . A8 AN ALTERATIVE. It Purine and Enriches tbe Blood. A8 A LAXATIVE, It acts mildly, but surely, on tbe Bowels. A8 A DIURETIC. It Regulates the Kid neys and Cures their Diseases. Recommended by professional snd business men. Price $1.00. Sold by drugcti. Send for circular. WELLS. RICHARDSON A CO.. Proprietors. BURLINGTON. VT. kOnrw tir:i toKl nf iusvta at ouoa: o3 I. nf .if.aa tl M fTttll. hiXi ntsM . t-3-tcvl t7 til juuU Si Areii st.Pr.il. Hoar: V. t 4 t at 7aJ H. PENSIONS 1 K. 11. to SnMIer sort Helm. Send for etr oiilar. No fee- unless stuenful. iTIIil Or 111 a.:i!Htfali.li.u. Miss Selti-U at the Theatre. I'd write a horrid thing, no doubt, did I coiniKJse a sonnet, as to the way I dodged about oue wietched maiden's bonnet. It was. if I lecall aright, the climax of distortion, although jts width kept to its height a horrible proportion. I dodged about, but couldn't find an 0111 space around it, until I heard some one behind cry: "Keep your seat, confound it." "O, ho! ah, lia!" the villain cried. 'Spare! Spare!"' the maiden uttered; and as invisibly she died, some hasty speech I muttered. Now rniiuio tempests roased their rage I heard them, that is certain; but all I saw of play or stage was the descending curtaiu. Low, murmurs ail the house oppress ed at scenic sliiftiims uiatric; and at some wild applause 1 guessed some cli max had been tragic. I also judged from "Ain't she sweet?" and hushed attention centred, arid all the "lovelies" maids rc-iat tlie heroine had entered. "llang! Uuiigl" I heard a pistol shot a dying exclamation so 1 pre sume revenge had wrought its tragic consummation. 1 knew they entered from the wings; heard thrilling bursts of feeling; but all I saw were birds and things lrescoed upon the ceiling. :So wonder not when I indite a blue and bilunis sount t I paid uiy dollar tor a sight of selfishness and bonnet. A Veritable Uiuketi Heart. The important function in the ani mal economy tilled by the heart has al ways been recognized, and as its action is visible aud palp ble, sometimes un duly so, people of whose education physiology formed no part have handed down to us a variety of expressions em bodying tbe idea that reason, memory, the emotions, etc.. were all located within this very useful organ. One of these expressions is that of a "broken heart." the result of grief or shock. How such an expression pouid have come into general use is rattier a puzzle. A broken (ruptured) heart would, of necessity, entail a very speedy demise, nnd joyful tidings would be much more iikeiy to effect such an occurrence by accelerating the circulation and increas ing the blood pressure. It must be ta ken, we suppose, to meau a "broken spirit" the collapse of the body con sequent on extreme depression of mind. ow and again, however we meet with a veritable case of "broken heart," though not associated with any particu lar mental condition. Such a one pre sented itself a short time since at a work lu use in Liverpool. At the post mortem examination of a woman, aged 60, tlie heart was found to bo the seat of a veritable rupture, extending from the apex upwards, due simply and pure ly to natural causes iu the sense that no violence had contributed to the catas trophe. A Seuslbl Man Would use Knuii's 15 ilaiu for the Throat aud Lungs. It is curing more cases ot Coughs, Colds, Astbm:s Bronchitis, Croup and all other Turjat and Lung Troubles, than any other meuicine. Hie proprietor bas authorized any druggist to give you a cuuuple Bottle free to couviuce you of tbe merit of this creat remedy. Large bottles, SO cents and SI. A rORTCNATK EDITOR. "I d n't see how you cau get so much news in your paper," said the villaae clergy man to the village (U t r, "seeing that you have no local reporter." "Onl that's easy explained." replied the edi tor. "My wife belong to three sewing societies and she has au excellent mem ory." A neio mineral, named "richellltt)" by O. Cesaro and G. Despret, has been obtained from llichelle, near Vise, Bel gium. It occurs in large masses, cream yellow in color at first, but afterward changes to an ochre yellow. Steel knives which are not In gen eral use may be kept from rusting if they are dipped In a strong solution of soda, one part of water to four parts ot soda; then wipe dry, roll in flannel and keep in a dry place. Winter Sport la Switzerland. There Is plenty to do in Switzerland during the winter. The skating is excellent, lor nearly all tbe lakes have on their shores Inland "broads." or long, shallow overflows, divided from the more treacherous deeper water by low banks, on which the ice forms quickly, smoothly and safely, affording long, exonerating runs. Earlier in the season there is shooting free untram meled sport, fettered by no restrictions save the formality of a gun license at a ridiculously low cost. Game cer tainly is not very abundant, lt Is ur where preserved, the profession of keeper is unknown, aud the massacre of battues and driving unheard of; but there Is the long, bracing walkthrough the clear air, and the ever changing, ever beautiful scenery; the rests, where magnificent viens ate obtained; the stopping at little rustic Inns for the simple refreshment of bread and cheese, washed down by the white wine of the country and the less bu colic kirschwasser, and then the cap ture of some wild bird or beast that has led you a brisk, long, but not ex hausting . chase through wood and valley. Fecit trees planted last spring should be attended to this spring. A few minutes will only be required to see if they are loose in the ground and need the dirt trod hard around them. If tbey look as though they would die, pinch off all the leaves from tbe tree, for tbe wounds you make at the tree will dry tbe feeble stock; but If you leave a part of the stem of the I w it will not dry out. (Sbound ii w S HOI KIDfJfcHg ' 25 Why Teet Shuddered.--"Is. Mamie." said the fair haired Vrlwah an air of tender melancl.o.y . I AiM never love him again. It Is all ovj r "How can you suy so, Gertie? He la young, rich, loves you devotedly, and has such a beautiful. long, silken, heavy mustache " - , ... "His mustache? O, don't speak or It. I implore you. I saw him once. Ma mie, just after Le had taken a drink or buttermilk!" And the two friends shuddered as they sat close together, looking silently In tbe fire, while their shadows danced mf.,,i,r nn it. wmII and the wirid moan ed dismally through the ghostly trees on the outsiae. He Uas Changed His Mind. "When I die," eaid an East Side physi cian, "I want to be cremated. It will be so nice, my dear, to have my ashes In an urn on the mantel." "Tea, that will be so nice," replied his other half, "and when It's icy and slippery as it was last week I'll scatter the ashes over the door-steps to prevent your worthy successor from falling down. I will use the bones of my dead husband to keep the bones of my living husband from breaking." He does not think so much of crema tion now. Sue Bristled With Pins. "Say, Darriuger, dou't you think the esti mates newspapers make aie exceeding ly silly? Now, here's a fellow who says there's but oue pin a day made for every inhabitant in the country." "It may be true, Bromley, only I met with an exception last evening. I imt my arm around a girl's waist, and I'll swear if 1 diu't think she had the entire contingent." Better Than a Wild Indiax. Manager (to new man who took the patt of an Indian chief in a wild west drama) "Say, them warwboops and general yells of your'n was great. They was the hit of tbe piece. You must hive lived all your life with the Com anches." Xew Man "Xever saw a Comanche or any other Injun." Manager (surprised) "Where d'ye git them yells, then?" Xew Man "I used to drive on a New York milk route." Boston Young Lady "Don't say "vase," l'olly; the wotd'is pronounced vawze." Country Cousin "Certainly, dear. Well, as I was saying, I went down town to buy some lawze to trim my hat, and I walked at such a pawze that peo ple must have thought I was in for a razi, and when I got to the store my fawze was as red as fire. Do correct me when I say anything countrified, won't you, AnastawziaV" Henry Ward Beeiier once chanc ed to ttray iuto a village church where one of his sermons was being delivered. After the congregation bad dispersed be approached the rural divine, to whom he was personally unknown, and remarked: "That was a good sermon you preached." "Oh," was the mod est reply, "only a little thing I threw off in about fifteen minutes." ''In deed! Why it took me several hours to compose it." Then the Identity of his interlocutor dawned upon the plagiariz ing minister. After a few moments of silence his sang-froid returned and in a deSant tore he said, "Well, I'm not ashamed to preach anything Henry Ward Beecher wrote." A Forger "Do you see that man over there?" asked the detective with au air of mystery." "Yes," said tbe citlzeu eagerly. "I see him, what of blm?" "That man," said the detective, in a low tone, "that man is a professional forger." "Good gracious!" exclaimed the clti zn la surprise. "Who would have thought it? Why don't you arrest him t'jen?" "Can't." said the d-jtective wearily. "It isn't ag.itnst the law to make horse shoes, is it?" A Suspicious Circumstance. Father "What's that noise iu the next room?" Mother ""It's Bobby singing "I want to be an angel" dear little fel low." Father "Well, you had better go and see what he's up to." A Libel on Xklraska Girls. Hastings, Neb., giils mean business. They have organized, and hereafter the young fellow who makes himself sel dom when there is a show in town, or marches right by an ice cream sign without even wiukiug, will not be al lowed to hug or kiss a Hastings girl. t'Xoli me tankers unless rnn rin tl square thing,'- is their motto. Miss sfKEEN-'-Wheredld you gradu ate from, Mr. Glli?" Mr. Hill "From the School or I'harmacy." "Miss Skeen (with surprise) "Is lt possible? What a sirange choice for a young man brought up in tbe city! but. if I remember right, your grandfather was a farmer, too." Lank Individual to hotel proprietor Can't you give me employment, sir?" Proprietor "Yes, you're just the sort or a man we want to crawl through lamp chimueys and clean 'em." A Memory of IC&rlj- Uaya. Bane of childhood's tender years. Swallowed oft with groans aud tears. How it made the flesu recoil. Loathsome, greasy castor oil I Search your early memory clos, Till you rind another dose': All the 1-bud.h-riiij; frame revolts At the thought of Epsotn salts I t'nderneath the pill-box lid Was a greater horror hid. Climax of all inward ills. Huge and griping Qij uIue Vlyl j What a contrast to the mild aud gentle action of Ur. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets, sugar-coated, easy to take, cleans ing, recuperating, renovating tbe system ithout wreuchiug it with agony, t-old by druggists. ne that lives limp. lth ciipples learns to 500 Bsnl is offered in good faith, by tbe manufac turers of lr. tiage's Catarrh Remedy for a case of catarrh which they cannot cure. It is mild, soothing and healing in its eflecU. and cures "cold in the bead," catarrhal deafness, throat ailments, and many other complications of this distressing disease. 60 cents, by druggists. It is said that excessive tea drinklnir causes neuralgia. Tbe Oorroet Time. There are very few men who do not pride themselves on always having the correct time; and wonderful and delicate mechan isms are devised to enable them to do so. But the more delicate a chronometer is made, the more subject it becomes to de rangement, and unless it be kept always perfectly clean, it soon loses iui usefulness. What wonder, then, that tbe human ma chine so much more delicate and intricate than any work of Man-sbould require to be kept thoroughly cleansed. The liver is the main-spring of this complex structure and on the impurities left in the blood by a disordered liver, depend most of the ill f , f ho,r consumption (which Is lung-scrofula), i, traceable rn the Imperfect action of 'this oVn? Ki ney diseases, skin diseases, sick headache beart dise, dropsy, and a lOTguaUe of grave maladies have their origin ff ! torpid, or sluggl.k liver. Dr Pierce's Golden Medical Disooverr bv .h a healthy, normal actloTof ."l ver as a cure and preventive of these diseased A crowd is not company, and faces Tlie Record never I compeieiy wriria. tk -,J7 " with hearti ovcrnowliis win t-rs-i i ns,,!? ten to usie l niuf tl.e w.k-:M i:r.nB1 arr;tr:'.!a has ai-coirp i-'ie I f r ' peculiar enralive powers ol Hoo.1 s are s-nccesfnl when every'li-iic i-n fj If yonr blood Is Impure, your n.p....-ion on oj1 der. your kidneys and liver lrs tive, jour tirert and full of ahes and pam. irj iy pe-t .'' medicine. It wl 1 do you good. " " Hood's Sarsnpai ilia Sold by all drairjisu. !; six fr -. p- . ,r . . by C. I. UOOD 1 C )., ApotJiecitr".'. ' - v- u ' .. ihim-h i ilar ITfr AND I OMIITmji lbs BfeaiT "ill Krii... .s I ... If Vnnr heart thilluiart.'riiud.h'U'R.iruk" II lUUl leats or timers, tf you hve Ltsrt dueaso, faint spells, tits or rimsuu. If Ynn feo1 ,nolJn st-r pj ru'V-TiTi. II I UU around the bt-art, or hsvc'brt liv.j- HYm, have Verthro. dizzy attarks. r.ninria lUUears, di.-Mw-d i iktm.iw t,riuni. apojjcxy, ahockor sudden u-tth. if Vnii nsve NVuralpia. Numluif-vf. In arms ot II I UU limbs, darunif i-aiiis lik.j l.lii un.snsm Oouaa-WeeU cures si id ;it'vnl-ir.,i!tr u.h-rt rnsuW l Dl,.i.r.. "61 HIE 111 IIL4L1H " Ml I rn. lllsfc4... V 1 ' 1 1. WEiiS, Ol.S.JL RGUGHonCATARRHsl- iirM cor nic cms. I nAouauexl fur rri j Uir.ft aftertiODS. fvUl arOsVLh. oflblr odora. eor lh-sO. llpititt?rta. ro,d In tr hd f ir " R .rwH j Catarul Me. lruir E. 8- Wnjj, Jtnrj cu.7. ?i J. look routs 5 loT-fjaJWOTl rn .rms tii irria-r,r u t or avk-eic ob laa in br g LEAURELLE OIL temettsaiil l :-vett. riftlf. I a'd rw:gB nssi f t '.mh or artn; ;T-i'rr a yo'jifns Vlurn J. f' "fe foadJLi' of tn features. r ii--eB rip . Cusa.- : urn comp.eiwin, the ;.; iii'iiAur kan. :hl will am at as n. t lBewt MiBSsBl fa. lrt:crtor ti. 2. - "EI !, CnssV J, rti, . 4. PfnLY ?..VJ aill Ikltllll V,V-l LrjM "Ml rS is the lies! renifdr rcir-;,i'4r U RA SWr0; ,: sua. ni.i; tr.in l?a. . A T rri'v HAfflVtR cat a 1:1:11. JdiV'V -T'Ply P:m Into em-h nnsti atrB. B.S. EXHAUSTED VITALITY 4 Great Msdical Work for Toj,i and Midd!e-Aij Man. KNOW THYSELF. 1)1 IM.IsHKT) by the rS-.AIOIT ilFfit. 'AI. I NMiTI'1 No. 4 iiHnliM II nil en t Mm-. 11. I'A It K r It, j.j4 (oiiitt it'iK l'hymktuv Uor than un l it . ft-'itl. It irt-ats upou yroui snJ I'hraJ t Ltte!;:? hrerusvture lvllii. KibsV'istd Ylt itf, Itcpajml Vikot. aud Inipiiriltaa of t!v 14 loo i. ao-i utr uulntd ftjle-ianf ii ratjo..J btivliaui. ft.ll i.il Wrrki,!l turn li!t popular mantras tmuis puHtrd id Vh sLncUsh I laa unit. aiw i i.y ill pastpa.a. avMp.'c Vv if you mo4 sw, Auwk rfat gir AddlUJ ! ttwtl. " ""TREATED FREE. II:v, trttT-l It '.'i"y and It ci:n;.f -!fr. with ftntt 'n!rfiii sui-i ; L -- i-;rU:'i prnitMliB, eivir! v tin rin (; ..- - rrmptoms (if Dm !' lit o JO lav a ,' :rr- p.,- -t. ; Ln)ti'unre1 h' l"' ty t t. t pliy' '.sti-. rr i ilrsl done rtytiiploiu. ra(ll!v di-n-nr, h-,1 U vm day at Itvist two ti:l.l!i of all -i , i.t'ti a r irvvvt. Som may err I Tlmtj ij wiCt-ut fen anything alKJUt It. K-inniterT It (! 1 -u 1 V rea)lz Tli mrlt -f our trtvatiM-u f-.r -:ir W rt constantly curl tig cattea of l-nj tti'il::. c.twa that tiavf l(n tailed a n-mttr .? t (!! i tht pMtint tJei'Iarf! utiett. u live a flill hl-tory of ca-w. u .ni. a,-". fcf lo-j amictKl. tC. SfMid fiT fni i-aiut til -t rttutai- tc-ltinoulala. Ttu day. treat 'it.-.it lumi-titfJ fr by mall. If rou orJr trial ymi M.u-t ft.im th:.' '.rtisWMiicnt t M- wlih 1 ftMi:-. in stamp to l47 Dumiutif. r,l!-n 'v -"-tv i.i-;Mv.'i'cu-j 11. 11. .it f-:n a. -. i.n... Ontral Hon ', c t 1 i 'tM nnnl i.,VT 5tn Trf .' V, 1JP Sk,-- ,4.AATsvn'll'a ti r- -L Hrwch-loaiin donbl ffhoruna t iwJ': ! i'1 barr-al breclukiarir. at ft to fi; hrw liiflrsi from 2 50 to DouMe barrel VI uz, btioUfuna at&.6uto J; Ht-ati i J- 1. I1 tia to 30-Her ol vera from itaJd. bcLi u-ir lliu.tr UJ -atalrsriia. Addrftta, iH.fc.AT WESi lLRN iii:.N VDfKS. !-r,-,jr:JH 8 CURE F8T3! . WW. i amy cora 1 doaot msn ro-rcf to at-p tla loraUiMandtbeo hav tbain r-f'irn bg'.-rt. I radical cora. j ha tnaAm t)i dinetv. t iTS. M'U fcH&V or FAIXlJfa HH:it.NK?.!ialif-.'.n-ttt' varraot tr.y renutxlj to eura tiie wi.m' ca. tbors ha failod M bo raaann ff Dt uu rece.' car. fiend at onno for a trtwtim au4 a r xm of mf tnfallihle) remfvlT. liir Lipn-va and foet orao a Jaww is die vi9 fe'raxi 01. new AXLE GREASE. In Ih World. Ki.lfnnk lT the F'"' frf'1 w. n...... uiw WANTED: ONE AGENT FOR THIS! TifXTT. To take nrders for tnlarennr '- H tOM GICAI-US into LIFE-SIZE CRAYCN PiQTURB The pictures are re...- !.r.:r.:.C l" iroaranteed. Aireuts can (..' t --t orJen -J nuke a lare cuinmisshja. A iui ' International rublihliinx.V TrinllnjC 628 MARKET ST., riilL DKLPBlA. AFFLICTEDyKFORTUNATs Aftene U1 orriora fail m". Dr. IjOBB 2 h. xata 8t, ksict? Car. 0 :i. J; SayeancspeneacelnallHPi'.Ct AI. c DiaDeatly rcroecs those weakened - ' . too.. Ac ( jllorwrru- Advtesfr . SfUnNil Haurs; iia.m. ull u '. - ' -"" ' jowes 1-.. L...r.. Si... Tni Su. ft S-. 1" m - via t" "J7 BI.NUllAJlTti- 1 lauds. ftTlt cj I'MsN. N rr .t. j Blair's Pnis.VCSf Ural Bas, U 4l G OLU I. uu 1 . worm SL.0JU. but 1. . 1J l Orl.KILMER'S IwIa r - FVCSJ f Si tl out; ts5Sll ft V tx WDrt, a Us a Ik':iWJ- I i U f! M C BTTBT. Bons-k-eplns-. P"'' hi? ' 1 win tm metle. br aaau. lar- ineue. baorlluu.il. tc-.lllJ-! dollars frc JSUlANTa cJ ml alaw nL. u.it X. I. L a;;'tT,rrma;