. r. MR. AND MRS. BOWSER. Sad Trials of the Faithful Snousa Over Mr. B.'a Wardroba. When I got home from mother's the ether afternoon. II r. ISowaer was walk ing up and down like a raged lion. As lie was an hour ahead of his usual time I was naturally astonished, and a-i lie looked so strrn and dignified, 1 was fearful that some misfortune bad oc curred. "Anything wrong. Mr. BowserV" I managed to ask. lie halted, folded his hands under Lis coat-tail, and balancing himself ou his lietls and toes alternately, he re plied: "Mrs. liower, this Is the last straw the ery last!"' Why, hat have I doner" "I hal an invitation to attend a ban quet of the 11. G. Club, and was dowu to deliver an address. I came home to get ready, and, lot what do I llnd?" lUbbers la the house?" ".Not much! No robber with any sense in lus head would come to this house! It would take hlui a week to tiud anythiug! I go up stairs to get a clean shirt, collar, etc., but nothing of the sort can be found. I come down and ask the cook to see if my Sunday clothes are in the Hour barrel, but she looks iu vain. I go to the telephone and auk the coal man If he saw them in the basement when he put In that last ton. but he cau't remember. You, of course, have no knowledge of them. You can't say whether they are in the oat-bin in the tarn, or packed away in the garret for a rat's nest." "Mr. Bowser, have you been drink ing?" " "Have I been drinking! That's just like a woman! When she gets corn ered she throws out just such insults to hide her own shortcomings. It's a wonder I haven't been drinking! It's a wonder I didn't come home drunk and wipe out this family. Airs. Bow ser, I demand to know hat you have done with my clothes." "They are upstairs, unless you have sold or giveu them away." No more insults, please. Come up stairs and show me, for instance, where my shirts are." "Very well. We shall And them in the second drawer of your bureau, where they have been kept for the last two veara." "I'll bet you a million dollars to a cent." "Come on." We went upstairs to the buraau and I pulled out the drawer and there lay tive cleau shirts just where 1 had placed them as they came from the lauuJry two days before. But they were not there an hour ago," protested ilr. Bowser. "But they were. How could they be au where else. In this other drawer are your socks, neckties, cuffs and col lars. See?' "I see. but that drawer was empty half an hour ago." "And in this close is your Suud iy .suit. See? Co it. vest and pants. Are you growing bliud, Mr. Bowser?" "There is some dark mystery con nected with all this, Mrs. Bowser, and 1 will not rest until I unravel it I spent a good half hour looking for my thimrs, but not oue single article cou d 1 end." "Because you rushed upstairs and went mto the spare room, just like lots vt other husbands. Of course you did! .S?! Every drawer in the spare room bureau has been pulled out, and the clothes iress door is wide open!" Mrs. Bowser, don't try to get out of it in this way! My eyesight is still good, and wt.ea I see an empty drawer I know it ii not full of shirts. 1 have lost an hour looking for my things, and now I cannot go the banquet." He went down stairs and called up some one by telephone and said: 1 can't be there this evenlug. My shirts, collars and clothes had leen mis- ' laid by my w'fe, and I only found them a moment ago. Very sorry, but give my regrets to tiie boys aud tell tUeui bow it was. Some wives are like that, ' and cau't help it, you know. Good- . bye." J The next evenlug Mr. Bowser brought a friend up with him ti e same oue he had telephoned to. After ! a bit he took him upstairs for a smoke, 1 and as they reached the bead of the stairs they found the following notice ou the bedroo.u door: ! INSIDE TUIS BOOM 1 will be found MK. BOWSER'S SIURT3,COLLAU3,CUrF3 ANDSCNDAT SUIT. Don't make the mistake of looking iu the alley. On the bureau 1 Lad tacked a second sign, reading: "First drawer Your hair dye, etc. "Second drawer Collars, cuffs and neckties. "Third drawer Your shirts." On the door of the clothes closet I had a third ign, reading: "Your Sunday suit is in this closet first hook to the left as you enter." On each garment was marked the name, "coat," 'vest," and "pants," and on the wall a set of Instructions, reading: "1. Fling your hat under the bed. "i Kick your pants over behind the lounge. "i Throw your vest behind the washstand and your coat on the floor. "4. In removing the buttons troiu your shirt, jerk and twist them fioui left to right and back again. This will eularge the buttonholes. "5. If you drop one of the buttons, jump up aud down and cuss and de clare that you have been one button short all the week. "d. If the button holes in your col lar are too large, kick over a chair and declare your desire to murder some oue. If too small, kick over two chairs and lay it to me. "7. In changing your clothes, get your suspenders twisted, leave your shirt bunclied up at the shoulders, and snap oil as many buttons as possible." I had intended those signs tor Mr. Bowser's eyes alone, and 1 fully ex pected a national calamity when he came down and bade his friend good night. I was disappointed, however. He looked at me benignly, walked op and down tor awhile and then ob served: "Mrs. Bowser, before we were mar ried 1 had a long talk with your mother." "Yes." "She told me that yon had never been called upon to exercise judgment or responsibility, and that I would find you a very great burden." "Thanks, Mr. Bowser." "But I agreed to bear with you and be patient, and so 1 shall. Twenty years hence you may know something about housekeeping and a wife's duty toward her husband's wardrobe. It's a long time to wait, but 1 will be pa tient. Perhaps this is nay mission on earth, and is what the Lord wills me to do. Go ahead, Mrs. Bowser, and be just as mean as you can, and do every thing to hurt my feelings. I shall do my duty and never let the world know how 1 suffer." Capt. Doiujlas Gallon has shown the aJ Taut age of cast-iron pipes for drains of houses to bis countrymen in Eng land, who will persist In using stone- ware drain-pipes. Cast iron Dines, if cast sound, prevent leakage into the subsoil benaath the house; they are almost as cheap as earthenware; they are truer in bore. and. what is of even greater value, they are not liable t breakage of fracture. RIGHT TO THE POINT. Traditions and Technlaue of the Pln-The Head That Used to Come Off. Not the modern pin, but its Ies deli cate predecessor wo hear of in old rll tales! The Kpyptiaus themselves u.sod something of the kind, and among the Romans, so the records say, there were pins of bronze, with ornamented lu a 1, from one to eiht inches Inr.p, and, also thev were made of ivory, bone or wwkL In llngland, np to t; middle of the six teenth century, j-vl'le made use of skewers of woodftAispnrpse,though there were pins of gold, silver anil brass. Bat k was not until tdont 1C25 that pin manufacture iu Ilnlitud bocame a settled thinp. In 1KI, itint rnrh an in dustry might l-t bo fostered, the ira Hrtution of pins as iri'iiitiiteJ by fublic ulut n to. But the law Iwtnme verr much of a dead letter, and as late s 1j4' thero i-s evideiso tii fei lcat one of the royal family was in tke linbit of receiving her pins from France. For at that time a very large proportion of those of Fnglish nuinnfaetnre were made of iron wire, blanched or whiten ed, and pa-ssanl oft" as the proud qnality brass pin. Throe years later this net was declared. No person sliull put tosaleanypinn.es but only such as hull lie double-headed, and have the heads soldered fast to the shank of the pinnes, well smoothed, the shank well shait n, the points well and round filed, ranted and sharpened. To-day England is the preatest pin making country in the world. Its pro duct is something like fifty million pins a vear, and Birmingham is the centre, with an ontturn of HT.OOO.IHH). There are made the pins of the old trade marks and the great reputations, and it mat ters not that America is able to prodnoe exactly as cood; very many papers of tliesie are always salable here. In this country the first attempt at pin manufacturing was made soon after the war of If 12. Then, with war-time prices, a paper of pins sold for Slt and they were of inferior quality to pins bringing now but sii cents. The rirst place of manufacturing was iu the. old State's prison in that part of New York known as ireetiwich V illage. The en terprise was Rotu abandoned, but the plant as used elsewhere. In ISol the first solid headed pin mac's'nery was in vented, but it was several years later before it was actually put into ojiera- tion. Beyond mechanical improvements in execution and huisU the difference be tween the old and the present pin is thus iu the heads. The spun" head was of a liner w ire thnn the shank. It was wound around a lathe into a spiral. Three turns of the spiral cut off fur nished the head for one pin. The heads, then annealed, were slmed by a ham mer. Kach, taken up ujon a pin wire this introduced, point downwards, in a hole, the centre of a die was secured by a hammer's blow. Nowadays the pin machine, the bit of wire having been sharpened and riled, bv a carrier takes it to the first heading die. Here a Meel punch forces one cud of it into a recess, where the head is partially formed, and another heading die a l:tt!e further on completes the work. Thus the making of the head of the solid-headed pit. Bros is now, as ever, the most ap oroTed material. Iron ami steed have ! Iwen tried, but iron and steel will rust. I After the tiling and the heading the braes pins c luto a bath or sulution of tin, from which they come of silvery appearance. Many of the mourning pins one sees, however, are of iron wire, japanned. And thereby is all their temper, or "spring," as a pin man puts it, gone. And no wonder, for the ja panning process in its latter stages is that of baking in au oven. Quito re cently, however, a new method has been devised. A brass pin is coated over with a black nicL.il wath. No qnality of temper is destroyed, and the neces sary lustre is obtuined. Bat the pin trade isn't growing. Ap preciably, it has no gTeater volume than in If?). The calculation was then made that every man, wi man and child in America ued 111 pins a year. Why no more are used now is explained by the fact of there Wing so very many safety pins to t ike their place." These latter, in fact, form a seperute business, and since their invention eighteen years ago have popularized rapidly. TV test recently ma le of ti e Widdi- field aud Bown.an Electric Brake on the l,ehigh Valley llaUroad, near , Mauch Chunk, is recorded as follows in ! the KUrtrical i.Vri.v: "The brake was ; shown in actual operation ou a train of ! twelve or tifteeti freight cars with the " epecwl car of the excursion attached. A run o" eleven miles was made down , the grade from 1'ackertou, with stops every mile or two. With a speed of ' some thirty or thirty-live miles an hour an emergency stop was made, and it ; took just f cventi en seconds after the , turning of the electric sw.tch in the engine to bring the entire tram to a j standstill, and that with hardly an I unpleasant jar. The value of the f-ys-i tern in ca-e of the train breaking spart was also illustrated, the sections ( being each brought to a standstill im . mediately, aud service stops and slow ing up showed the adaptability of the system for all kinds of work. Coming back the visitors were given au oppor . tuuity to see the operation of the i wheels aud levers themselves, a section of flooring in oue of the cars being re- moved for the purpose. An emergency stop was then made on set rails in thirty seconds." TTriimgon the Kaimuks, M. Deni ker does not consider the obi que open ing of the eyes as cf great scientific value from an ethic point of view, be cause it is not of specially frequent occurence among pure Mongols such as the Kaimuks. He recognizes, however, that such an ethnological characteristic is to ba foun 1 In the peculiar intro version of the upper eyelid, which in young Kalmuk children has often the effect of obliterating the eyelashes, while the general narrowness of the opening imparts a triangular form to the eye. Black, scantily developed hair, dark brown eyes, slightly yellow : sfciu, and a stature tome what below the mean (the adult Kalmuk presenting the proportions of European children of thirteen to fourteen years of age), constitute the chief physical character istics of the Mongol race. j Hit following mixture has been used with the greatest possible success for the cementing of iron tailing tops, iron gratings to stoves, etc: in fact, with such i licet as to resist the blows of a sledge hammer. This mixture is com posed of equal parts of sulphur and white lead, with about one-sixth pro portion of borax, the three being thor oughly incorporated together, so as to form oue homogeneous mass. When the application is to be made of this com position, it is wet with strong sulphuric acid, and a thin later of it is placed between the two pieces of iron, these being at once pressed together. In five days it will be perfectly dry, all traces of the cement having vanished, and the work having every appearance of welding. L)rt. llcncque and Fredel, in a com munication made to the Biological Society or Paris, stale that the extrac tion of a tooth may be rendered pain less by spraying the neighborhood of the external ear with ether. The anaes thesia of the trigeminus so produced extends to the dental nerves, and thus renders the production of the general anxsiiiesia neeuiess. When a servant main finds nine green peas in one pod she lays it ou the win dow sill, and the first man who eaters will be her beau." FARM yOTES. I'rcmko Bosks. It is an astonish ing thing to tee how, year after year, the chances of obtaining the most beautif ul rose blooms are frittered away through unintelligent pruning of the plants, even in gardens of great reputa tion. There are thousands of lose birdies all over the country which, in spite of being found in Spring to have made tine growth during the previous season, never produce good flowers, and the explanation is generally to be found in the fact that no reasonable plan is followed in pruning. The commonest mistake is the leaving of the older brandling spray wood that has already flowered. Dwarf rose buslies at the be ginning of the year generally consist of several much-branched stems which cairied bloom in the previous Summer, and several ttrong, straight sbovts springing from the Uise of the plant, lu tlie case of hybrid jierjictuals. these older branching stein should be cut completely out, leaving only the new shoots from the base which themselves should I then considerably shortened. If the old spiav wood lie left in it pro duces no flowers worth having, while the weak and crowded growths with which it Incomes covered afford a lerfect harVor.igeto every known roso pest. roi.AXD-CjiixA Hoes. Mr. John M. Staid, of Illinois, a practical far mer who writes much aud well on rural topics, says that for the West he con siders the I'oIand.China the best all around hog. Its merits are so well known that they need not be discussed. Its weak point is the small size of its litter. The average I'oland-China litter is scarcely above six pigs brought out two months of age. Hence, the great value of the cross got by using a l'oland-China male on Duroc-Jerscy sows. Bp doing this we get l)u roc Jersey litter of pigs a little smoother and rounder than their dam, and letter grazers and rustlers than the 1'oland China. For feeding, the produce of this cross is better than either the pure bred l'oland-Chiua or the Duroc-Jerscy; but it has no proper place in breeding. Only the Dist cross is a desirable ani mal. Hence we must have Poland China males and Duroc-Jersey sows, both pure-bred, for breeding purposes. liEPAinixa Tins. Farmers who live remote from any place'where t,ere is a tinsmith are often troubled by leaks in tiu roofs, or eave troughs. Any far mer can re; air them and make them stronger than before. Find the leak, and apply a good coat of rather t hick paint; put on a piece of old bagging or coarse muslin, then a second coat of I aiut, rubbing it well in and smoothly. Then cover with a piece f tin, nailing it do a n tightly close to the edge, us.ng large headed tacks; those known as 24 i r 30-oz. Swede's iron tacks are be t. Then give another coat of paint, and the leak is not only repaired, but that part will last much longer than the rest. Old fruit cans are just the tiling for the purpose; set theui on top of a hot stove tiil the solder is melted, and then flatten them out. The Bakherry as a Hedge. Here is an item which will interest those who some time ago inquired if the barberry would make a good hedge. The common barberry makes a very elegant screen. The long racemes of yellow blossoms, followed by crimson fruit, are very ornamental. " "For an effective hedge to turn stock, the buslies should be planted in a double row, with an interval of twenty inches. The plants are leadily proagated from seeds, cut tings "or suckers. The culdivation is very simple, requiring only fairly rich soil, kept fiee from weeds for the Erst few years. IT a thick prrowth is de sin d cut the back severely the second Spring after planting, and thereafter prune the hedge into sliape yearly." Silaoe ix India. And now it is ptiuted that silage is cumin; into use tor stock fettling in far-away India. Not as a winter Iced, for at that season the pastures are fresh and luxurient, but the silos are filled in winter to be fed out during Summer, when the pas tures are brown and sere from the ef fect of the heat and drought. Not only is the feeding season thus reversed from ours, but, instead ot grain, the cattle are fed cocoanut jouiace, which is sail lo be very fattening and makes the best of beef. IIoo r-ASTi-KEs. Ohio swine feeders recommend coal cinders as excellent for filling low places iu pig lots to prevent muddy wallows. Sows enjoy eating coal or ashes. F.ven anthiacite coal is not pas ed by them. A sow with young pigs should not run in clover fields or high grass, l'igs become chilled, and are uncomfortable much of the day. Then, short blue grass pastures are besit. Sows and pigs should have access to grass lots at all times, unless, just as the frost comes out, the soa is injure 1 by the tramping. To prevent rooting the sod, two or three rings will cure the ol lest rooter. Wheu pigs are live or six weeks old they should be taught to eat soaked corn and milk or sweet slop, kept where toe sows cannot reach it. Moisture axd Manure A scien tific writer tells us that, however rich land may be in available plant food, crops can never get it except through moisture hence failures that come through drought. Farmers complain because they cannot get enough ma nure, but water is even more Important and they employ no means to save the abundance that, if properly stored for use, as it easily might be, would make droughts impossible. "Wood ashes, where available, are : ine cueapesb icruiizer lor iruit trees, j In their absence, bone manure three i iarts, and muriate of potash (German j salts) of higli grade, one part, have the strong indorsement of the Massachusetts I Agricultural College. ! A Georgia farmer prevents cows from jumping a fei.ee by cutting off their lower eye lashes make them think the fence is three times as high as it really is. If you cut the upper . lashes a reverse delusion will result, he i says. To treservk butter any length of time work out first the buttermilk; sec ond, use rock salt; third, pack in air tight cans or jars; fourth, keep iu a cool place. With this treatment butter can be kept sweet several months. To test the water pour coal oil iu the cess pool. If there is a contamina tion of the drinking water of the well by the cess pool the odor of the oil will in a short time become perceptible when the water is used. Sunflower seeds have been known for years, by those who have used this article aright, as a most excellent thing to mix with poultry feed. The proper ties of this seed are peculiar, and a small quantity fed at the proper time will essentially aid in imparting beatKy to tlie plumage. Never try to save seed if you have several varieties of one kind of vege table, as they may mix and their purity be destroyed. ; CbZtf winters are not certain destroy ers of caterpillars. The eminent lady entomologist of England, Miss E. A. Ormerod, states that many oaterpllars can resist very low temperature when in their winter quarters, and may ba frozen hard witheu s offering aajreart toanent injury. HOUSEHOLD Currant Jell v. Weigh the cur rants without removing the stems; do not wash them, but carefully remove leaves and whatever may adhere to them. To each pound of fruit allow half the weight of granulated sugar. lut a few currants into a porcelain lined kettle, and press them with a po tato masher in order to secure sufficient liquid to prevent burning; then add the remainder of the fruit, and boil freely for twenty minutes, stirring occasion ally to prevent burning. Take out and strain carefully through a three-cornered bag of canton flannel, putting the liquid into either earthen or wooden vessels, never in tin. When strained, return the liquid to the kettle, without the trouble ( measuring, and let it boil thoroughly for a moment or m, and t hen add the sugar. The moment the sugar is entirely dbsolved, the jelly is done, and must be immediately dished or placed in glasses. It will jelly upon the side of the cup its it is taken up, leaving no doubt as to the result Gather the fruit early, as soon as fully ripe,since the pulp softens and the juice is less rich if allowed to remain long after ripening. Peach Fritters are delicious, and are a welcome morsel to those deluded people who prefer fruit cooked. Make a nice smooth batter of flour and sweet milk, add eggs and salt to your taste. I'eel and cut the peaches in halves, re moving the stones, of course; dip the pieces of peach in the batter, aud fry in hot lard. It will take about ten min utes to fry them properly. Pram them by placing them oil a very hot plate, scatter powdered sugar over them, and send to the table hot. Frosted Pears. Take half a dozen largo pears which have been stewed whole in syrup, dry them well, then cover them smoothly with a white icing made as follows: Beat the white of an egg to a firm froth, add a quarter or a pound of powdered and sifted sugar, a tublespooijf ul of lemon juice and a few drops of cold water, and beat the mix ture thoroughly until it forms a thick, smooth liquid. When the iars are covered with this, set them in a warm place or in a cool oven to stiffen the icing. Preserved Tomatoes. To seven pounds of tomatoes add one pint of vin egar, three and a half pounds of sugar, one ounce each of cloves, allspice and cinnamon. Scald and peel the tomatoes (very ripe ones are best); drain them. I-et the vinegar, sugar and spices boil for livo minutes, then put the tomatoes into the kettle; these should boil for at least half an hour; if they are not suc cessfully drained, three-quarters of an hour is none too long. Keep them lu jars closely covered. SroNGE Pudding. One quart of milk, sweetened to taste, one-quarter of a pound of flour, six eggs. Boil the miik, stir iu the Hour and sugar; let boil one minute, remove, and let stand two or three hours. About one-half hour before it is ready to serve add the eggs beaten to a froth; pour into a greased pan; set in another pan filled with boiling water, and bake forty-five minutes. White Cake. One cup of sugar, one-half cup of butter, one-half cup of sweet milk, two eggs, one and one-half cups of flour, ouedialf cup of corn starch, one and one-half teaspoonf uls of baking powder; bake in layers and spread with icing made as follows: two cups of sugar, one-halt cup of cold wa ter; boil till thick as boi.ey, iour over beaten whites of four eggs, flavor aiid beat till cold. Prune Pudding. Scald one jound of prunes; let theui swell in the hot water till soft, drain, and extract the stones; spread ou a dish, aud dredge with flour; take a gill of milk from a quart, stir into it gradually eight table spoonfuls sifted flour; beat six eggs very light, and stir by degrees into the re mainder of the quart of milk, alternat ing with the batter; add prunes one at a time, stir all very bard, boU about two hours, and serve with sauce or cream. Preserved Quinces. Use the orange quinces. Wiie, pare, quarter and remove all the core and the hard part under the core. Take au equal weight of sugar. Cover the quinces with cold water. Let them come slow ly to a boil. ."Skim, and when nearly soft put one-quarter of the sugar on top but do not stir. When this boils add another part of the sugar, and continue until all the sugar is in the kettle. I At them boil slowly until the color you like either light or dark. Crumb Pudding. One quart of sweet milk, one pint of bread crumbs, three-quarters of a cup of sugar, yolks of four eggs, butter size of an egg, flav or with lemon; bake in a slow oven; when done spread over a layer of jelly, whip the whites of the eggs to a froth, add one cup of iKuvdered sugar, pour it over the jelly and bake a light brown. Serve cold. Smothered Quail. Pick, split down the back, remove all inside and wash thoroughly with salt and warm water; drain well, rub with flour and place iu a baking pan, breast down; sprinkle with salt and peptier, and on each bird lay a piece of butter; keep plenty of water iu the pan to keep from scorching. Bake a deep brown. To make red-cabbage salad choose a small, liim head; take off the outer leaves and cut the rest into very thin slices; if you can shave it line it will be all the nicer; mix with it two teaspoon Tuls of salt, three teaspoonf uls of salad oil,or of clarified butter, a little cayenne pepper, a little curry powder if you like. This salad is nice for two or three days after it is prepared if It is kept where it is cool; if you prefer a sweet salad, add sugar. Blackberry Jam. Crush a quart of fully ripe blackberries with a quart of the best loaf sugar, put It over a gen tle fire aud cook till thick; then put in a gill of the best fouith-proof brandy; mix thoroughly and put in pots. This is an excellent medicine in summer mm. plaints or dysentery. Peach Tapioca. Soak some tapi ' oca over night, and in the morning boil it until it is perfectly clear.adding more I water, from time to time, as needed. I Take some very fine peaches, cut them fine with a silver knife, sprinkle liber ally with sugar, and, when you take the tapioca from the stove, stir the peaches into it. Eat cold with sugar and cream. Green Tomatoes fried are prefer red by some people to the egg-plant,and they may well take its place. Cut the outer slices off, and then cut the inner part in slices about a half inch thick, roll them in flour and fry in butter; sprinkle pepper and salt on them. This may be used as an entree or a garnish with meat of any kind. A ziozao rail fence is supposed to be one of the cheapest that can be built, but unless the corners are kept free of weeds it is the most expensive fence that can be used, as it increases the labor of weed killing. Remove stains from cups and saucers by scouring with fine, noaf-aVr HUMOROUS. Another Kind of License An amusiug incident, as well as an embar rassing one to tue persons coucciucu, occurred in the county clerk's office in Indianapolis recently. About 3 o'clock a young lady, probobly 21 years of ase, walked up to the marriage license desk, accompanied by an elderly lady, pre sumably her mother. I want a license," she said to Depu ty Daniels. "This is the place, isn't it?" "Yes," replied the deputy, "the name please." Tlie young lady gave her name, aud then the clerk asked: "Do you reside in this county?" "Yes, I live here." And after a few more such intenogatorie?, Daniels was in the act of laying down his pen when the lady ventured the question: "Do 1 have to put the license on the dog's col lar?" A Conspiracy. Mrs. Du Ille "John, my dressmaker arrived to-day, and I must have the materials to-morrow." Mr. Du Ille "Eh? What? You said you had written to her not to come un til next month." Mrs. Du Ille "Yes, I did, but she never got the letter. " Mr. Du Ille, clasping his hand to his breast jweket "Woman, this is a plot, a vilo plot! If you had really wanted her to stay you would have handed that letter to the postinan yourself; you wouldn't have given it to me lo mail." He Couldn't Defy Science. "Madam, I must decline to saw this wood," said the tramp, throwing down the saw and moving away. "You have had your dinner. Why do you refuse to saw the wood?" "When I promised to saw the wood I did not observe the location of your woodpile and saw buck. Doctors tell us we must not work unless the gas or sunlight falls over our left shoulder. Of course you would not exiect me to set medical science at defiance. Good day." "So you have got a little sister at your house," said a 'maid of 8 or 10 years to another of about her own age. "Yes, and she's twins," was the re ply. "What are you going to name them?' "I'd like to name one of them Isa bella, after mamma." "Why don't you name them Arabel la?" "Xanie them Arabella?" "Yes; ain't Arabella the plural of Isabella?" Natural History. Frog, to ele phant "How far can you jump, you big lummix?" Elephant "1 cau't jump at all, frog-gy-woggy." Frog, hoisting bis shoulders "You are unlucky. When I see an enemy approaching, with a few jumps I'm out of dancer." "When I see an enemy approaching I don't have to jump. " Mrs. De Fury, with her company smile ou "Can it be possible! Aud so the Jinksons have quarrelled!" Mrs. Gadabout "Ves, iudeed; regu lar separation." "Well, really! I cannot imagine how married people can act so. Why, my husband and I are just as devoted to each other a-i we ever were never have a word." Poll parrot, In next room "Brute! brute! brute! I'll go right home to mother." Manaoino a Boy. Anxious moth er "I am so worried si bout my boy. He is on tha street the whole time, rain or shine. I should think he might sit down and read occasionally, as his sis ters do." Old friend "Tell him reading is bad for bis health." His Experience. Douglas Mac tervish "Sandy, remember this, lnon; honesty is aye tlie best jtolicy." Sandy "How do you kuow, Douglas Mactervish?" "I hae tried baith." Just the Thing. "We are look ing for a clock for a present to our bat ter," said a member of a base ball club to a jeweler. "This will suit you, then," said the jeweler, indicating a timepiece; "It strikes every quarter of an hour." Unkind. Miss Ixuigoul "My dear how do you like my toilet?" Miss Sprightly "It is lovely, of course, darling; but don't you think that tulle and rosebuds are a that is, should le worn only by those who are less " "I fee; you think the costume too youthful for a girl in her seventh sea son." "Oh, no, dear; I was only going to suggest that moire antique would be to becoming to you." Just So. Boston heiress "I am afraid it is not for me, but for my money that you come here so often." Ardent wooer "You are cruel to say so. How can I get your money without getting you?" "When will that train go to Boston? asked a waiting passenger of a helper at an out-of-town station as he pointed to a receding freight train. "In three hours, sur." "How long will the next train be?" "About six cars, sur." Well Qualified. McCorkle "It's queer that none of these railway robbers are women." Mrs. McCorkle, indignantly "In deed! And why?" "Because they know so well how to hold up a train." A Scandal at Eono Branch. Romantic spinster "Excuse me, sir, but is not this tlie spot where the beau tiful girl fell into the water last sum mer, and was so gallantly rescued by the gentleman who afterward married her?" Practical bachelor, giving her a pene trating glance "Yes, ma'am; but I cau't swim." Mibs Segreex "I don't see how the ocean steamers can afford to trans port people such a long distance, and board them, too, at such a low price." Mr. Pegreen, who has been across "Board doesn't cost much." Before and After. Evening caller "I have been wondering who those companion framed portraits are, one a beautiful young girl, the other a wrinkled, sad-faced old woman." Pretty Hostess "Ob, that's ma, be fore and after marriage." Malicious. Mrs. Youngwife "I am so happy. My dear husband never goes out. He always stays at home with me in the evenings." Female friend "Yes, I have heard that be never cared for pleasure of any kind." A Difference. Miss A. "What do you think Miss Elderly says?" M las B. "I have no idea. " "She says she is approaching her thir tieth year.' "Approaching it? Why, she lias been getting away from It'for the last ten ears." Same, Oxly Different. Ltwy r "Now. Mr. Costello, will you have the goodness to answer me, directly and categorical!, a few plain questions?" Witness "Certainly, sir." "Xow. Mr. Costello, is there a female at present living with you who is known iu tlie neighborhood as Mrs. Costello?" "There is." "Is she under your protectiou?" "She is." "Xow, on your oath,do you maintain her?" "I do." "nave you been married to her?" "I have not." fllere several severe jurors scowled gloomily at Mr. Costello. ) "That is all, Mr. Costello; you may go down." Opposing Counsel "Stop oue mo ment, Mr. Costello. Is the female in question your grandmother?" "Yes, she is." How to See Serpents. Hardy Mariner "I've lived on the water all my life and I've not seed no sea sar pints yet." Dissipated tramp "Xo wonder you didn't see 'em if you lived on water; you live on beer aud whisky a few years like me, and you'll see lots of 'em 'most every day." Made It Plain. "Say!" he began as he baited a pedestrian, "I'm stuck on a point in history. Why did Wash ington cross the Delaware?" "He never did." Didn't he? Why, history says he did." "Xo, it don't. It speaks of Eord Cornwallis crossing the Hudson." "Ah! So it does so it does. I was all mixed up. That makes it plain to me now. Curious how a man will get a little off on these things now and then. I'll try and rememlier that much obliged." A Xeighbor Sent Him. He "I'm the piano tuner, ninm." Mie "i haven't sent for any piano tuner." "Yes, mum, I know, mum; it were the gentleman next door sent me here, mum." A Great Traveler. Mr. Plain talk "Have you traveled much, Miss Elderly?" Miss" Elderly "Indeed, I have. Every summer since my sixteenth year dear papa has taken me off for a trip abroad." "Is that so? Well, I don't suppose that there is any country that you have not visited." Force of IIajsit. Mrs. J., who has just removed to a ten-story flat T wish, John, that you'd go down aud see if the front door is locked." Mr. J. "I wilt if you'll promise not to wake me up at, dead of night saying there's a man in the cellar!" Xorody There. Dudy, insinuat ing himself into a railroad scat along side of a prettv Mjss "Nobody occu pying the seat witli you, Miss?" -miss, looting at him disdainfully "Xobody yet!" Pedestrianisji. Hotel clerk "Do you wish to walk to the railroad sta tion, or shall I call a-hack? It is only a block distant." Fat man "G-t me a carriage. If Providence had intended me to walk I would have boen provided with more legs." In anstcer to the question as to the best means of bluing steel 77.tf -Iiri-can Machinist says: "The best process win depend upon the nature of the piece to be blued vnd the object of the bluing. It is usually done by heat, and if the pieces are small enough toadxUt of it they can be put in an iron vessel containing sand heated, while at the same time the vessel is kept in .motion in order to have the heat evenly dis tributed throughout. If tlie pieces are too large for this they may be heated uniformly by Bunseii burners or ujkmi u heated plate, until the desired color is produced. T6e higher the finish the brighter the color will be." A lucky man is one who saves what be earns. Save That Street iirl ! Ton"t let that txantiful Kinl fadeaniliirop into invalidism or sink into an early grave for want l timely care at the most riiilical stae of her life. Dr. Pierre's Favorite l"resoriilion ill aid in regulating lier health ami establishing it on :i firm basis ami may save her years of chronic buttering ami consequent unlKippiness. A more pleasant physic on never will n nil Than Pierce's small Pellets, The Purgative kind. Rules for long life are boards to a deserted city. like guidc- If you have made up your mind to buy Hood's Sarsaparilla do not be induced to take any other. Hood's Sarsaparilla is a peculiar medicine, pos sessing, by virtue ot its peculiar combination, proportion and preparation, curative power su perior to any other article of the kind. There is no beast so savage but sports w ith its mate. Taking it altogether there never was a time when our country wxs cnjoviug creater pros perity than at the present" moment, and vet tliere are thousands of people in the land who are fussing and fuming about haxd times. No doubt but what tnauv of them are honest in their complaints, aud it is often because they have not found the right kind of work or the light way to do it. Now if business is not moving along with you satisfactorily, take our advice aud w rite to 1. F, Johnson & Co., Rich mond, Va. It is more than likely that thev can help you. at any rate, it would cost vou nothing but a postage stamp to apply to theiii. Peter Coojier bui.'t the first locomo tive in the United States. All who use Dobbins' Electric Soap praise it as the oexc.chea nest aud mox.rnnoi,i&,r r.nv soap made ; but if you will try it uik-e it wiil tell a still stronger tal of its merits itself. j-ietue try u. our grocer w HI supply you. Man's necessities wants are endless. are few, but his Krazer AiltGrwM. Don't work your liorses to death jrith poor axle grease; the Frazer is the only re liable make. Use it once, and you -will have no other. God hands. reaches us good things by our ICupiure I'ureeuaranterd ly Dr. J. B. ilayer, bl Arch St., Phll'a, Pa. Ease at onee, no operation or de lay from business, attested by thou sands of cures after others fall, advice free, send for circular. Poverty is the step-mother ot genius. Xotainf Cures uropsy, uraveu Brleht's, Heart, DiabateK, tnnary, ijier Disease. Net voasnesa. Ac.ike Conn's kidaef Cure, office. Ur Arc7i bu, Piu.s. 1 a bo: lie. lor si At DruKtuui. Cures toe worst cases cure guaraoieel. rrj it. One is never soiled but by filth. FITS : All Fits sioppea rree'oy Dr. Kline's Ureas lere Restorer. No Viuafier ilrst day's use. Mar velous cures. Treatise and $iOu trial oollle tree to u cases. snd io!r.Kliue.a Area Si. Piuia..ra. Boasters are cousins to liars. If afflicted with tore eyes use Dr. IsaaoTbomp. on sEy e-water. irurcista soil at :5c por botUa Silk shoes and stockings of the taine color as the gown accompany ball and evening toilets. Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. By druggists. SOc Do a man more than one favor, and he w ill expect it as a regular thing. Old smokers prefer -TansuTa Punch" 5c. C i(ar to must 10 centers. A man with tlie bust Lead will prom. 1st) himaalf a.nyHir)g One of the most interesting of the many uses to which p;iper has been pi.t Is the manufacture of paper bottles. We have long had pajier boxes, barrels and car wheels, and more recently puptr pails, wah basins, and other ves.-eis; but now comes a further revolution of paper in the shape of paper bottles, which are already quite extensively used for containing such substances as iDk, bluing, shoe dressing, glue, etc.. and they would seem to be equally well adapted for containing a large variety of articles. They are made by rolling glued sheets of paper into long cylin ders, 'which are then cut into suitable lengths, tops and bottoms are fitted in. the inside coated witn a watei proof compound, and all this Is done by ma chinery almost as quickly as one can count. Tlie7 are cheaper and lighter than gas, unbreakable and consequently very popular with consumers, while the fact that they require no packing ma terial, and are clean, handy an 1 eco nomical, commends them to manufac turers. Unlike tlass they can be manufactured at ail seasons. The strength of paper is wonderful. As an illustration of this, a note of the Bank of England, twisled into a kind of a rope, can suspend as much as '23'.i lounds upon one end of it, aud not be injured iu the least. There is an arti cle made of paper, in the shape of a small kitchen or house truck on wheels, used for wheeling loads around the hou.-e. Tlie sides and bottoms of this are made f finely con.pressed paper, and it i3 capable of bearing a welgiit of five tons. There are bath-tubs and lots made in the same ni inner, by com pressing the purer made out cf liuiu fibres, which is painted over with a composition which Incomes part of the pair and is fireproof. The tubs never leak, and they may be put cn the hie and not burn. It is impossible to break them, as you can beat on them with a hammer and not injure them i:i the least. " liVicn a forest fire occurs in 'he pineries of Michigan," said a lumber oierator from tl.al State, " the pii.e trees on the binned tracts must be cut within a year if the owner wants to iie! marketable luinlx r out of theui. Tin heat of a spent foiest fire is not yet out of the air before millions upon mil. ions of large, brownish white mollis appiar. One hour theie may not bea moth any where about; the luxt hour the nir w 11 be filled witli them. They lay eggs that produce a worm that Lores into the pme frees, bone;. com' iug tl em with tiiui.e'.s that ruin theui in a few vveel.. I have s-ten tl.esa millers covering an area of 1 ', ;reics of buracu wools. When the Rebellion broke out, f ni si land could be bought in Michigan for It ss than ?2 an acie. 1 purchased ."ilK.0 acres in ISoO lor j'JiJJO. I-ast month 1 sold the tract for ?.i,(jtO. I think the biggest p lie In e in Michigan js on that property. It is 11 feet through at the butt, and must be l."0 feet h:gl. A X w Voik man once offered iiie;');i for 15 feet of the tiunk from the giound up. lie wanted to xhitil it during the Centennial exhibi ion in Philadelphia. 1 refus.-d tl.e oiler. Michigan now pioduces one-quart- r of the pine used in the counti v. Her $10 i,0A),im) a year is received by the operators for the product of her fous's. In ten years from now however, time will be very little if anv, piue left in the Stale." Miss Uordun Lummiwj has drawn attention to tlie cleansing effect of pi -tro euni on soiled clothes. The best way to employ it is to fill an average Loiler, say of fonit en gallons, wbli water, adding half a oundof soft snip, and when all is bjil i;g thoroughly pout in one and a half table.' pjensl uls of petroleum. Then put in the clothes and boil them for half an hour before luting them out aiid rinsing them in several waters. A littla more soap, water aud paraliin should le added to make up for lo.-s as successive lots of the clothes are boiled. Heirs Wanted Information is wan ted of the whereabouts of .loliami i Wilson, daughter of Mark Sweeney, w ile of Thomas Wilson, born in lameriek t o , Ireland. Mie is. if living, heir to ail estate. If dead, her children or neM of kill are wanted. Address, W. J. C'OVIL, Web ster t ity, Iowa. The railways or this country employ more than a million ieop!e. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH -? J 1mA C'rosx liutiircl J:r.t...:. TH iJ Thorjl- rf!rlt yti fr-r .. - I m I.sdlns. sv-U Irnjrv4i !! I rl Btosd Krttsitl, re-d n...- , V", tr t.iuribUoB, TaleuH,,.r. - . !, iL ttrop.i f,.r iirucu.r I (;.-::. ,' . I Ladles" n ''Ht. bv mail, A i ... ChUk tcr Chemical C., Matilon frtj.. ! '.i fcfi CURES WfUKl All ELSE f AitS. muM BSt .tiu'h ttyrun. Tiuitt good. U and WMsfceT r7aS Ita cured t borne Willi out p&lo. Book of par. tlenlsn sent FREE. Afl II im 8S a tlar, Siunples worth 9-2.15 Free. L4no not un!r hordes' fet. T t strrSjifrlr ICein l(ller( o vtrite Brew. IIolly.Mirli. S25 M H0Ua ?- VEbV MEDICAL. CO., Rlrhm.nJ n. I pi ntIP Do yon want to ba r or sell f r rKM If o ad dtamp for tre'l'r u UArtWa I nillllU CurtU Buffett, 333 Broadway, N. y. MAKRIAIiErAfEKM. W Ladles and Gents want correspondents. The Iobe, York. Fa. AS Itxiitu want I, f ! a-i hour vt n-isr arti 4'It'i.u .lid vpimpw: inn. i r,. Alari:iAll. L-v ii rt i. PEERLESS DTES Are fhf REST. O H ft H ETi C9 shoes without W. I.. DOT'fJI.AS can do not be deceived UjerAby, but siud dlroci to the postage paid. DaaJera make more iruftt oa. uiikuowo ri V. t1,.Au4 a I.. - ...aa. ..UI . .. ...... name and pries stamp"! on the NjUoui aud yon are sure to gel full vahm f-ir ynr mn- v. Tlwtfraat t dollan are SsTod antuiallr lh this fiounurj by th wearern of IV. L. DIM'tJlAS' Slill. 1,1 r?l Inn by mall stnto whether yon want Conrr(-M. Button or Lace. L"U'!n cp t-w;. p!uln Kr. nrn . row cap toe, and be sure to ! sis and width you wear. I can Ot any f.t t!u,t I u t H'nnl m shoes are made la a great variety of wijlds, sizes and lnw iHuiorum or money reim runded uuoa return Uaw-irjaa, Mas. , Si.wfts) will be mla t any nersaa t lio The ITollatrina I.WesI i wiH Lm too pa t. Ia 1 tJ7VJ CJLXyJIU slKa toat Cost frr.ai Si sssHsMT IITO. -f-fs, i rti'' "L ' fcj4 Aft 1T.'P,, tT- OUIOI.VAt, AKI !T(Y IIAMI-6EWI &rXMjJ CIXvXj hHII. SmmIM euatr,in-RiaA IUm e.-MKtln fr.-.m Stl U. g-". Krt fiUnP fOIt FOMCF.MFV. Railroad Xf a and tetter arrlnrs all ' POiOU Xl V-4y fo.iUiljrssnadaeweAa.NoTacaaorWaiTiira1CohtnHtnw 62.50 SHOE I?.r!ESfXCE,-r,:D loa UKAVY WEAE' I,st ilf &n CK 0,Tflf? WOttKINCSJAVM. CaWs t ijLXt IZi ought to svr-ar a kan a &C Ot? 0TTr WOBKI'ilVS. $2.00 SHOE u nTAr. Tn air Will wear lor, AO SHOE 11 B0'' u $175 SHOE J2Sll?JOOI au maae IB (-ougress, mnoa and iace. W. L DOUGLAS $3 AND $2 SHOES FOR LADIES. Both lifttles' etfoes are made la sKes frra 1 ta ht Uoludhg batf stses. and D, C, I. r f E ' OF "Tie French Opera," "tM 9vl Opera' "The American CornKsa - f "ThB-eiljuioCoaiKian Sehso,7 All masts ia Rnttas ta iie Latest Styles. Also t OMraia Ftb l.acea. an $3 feba1: .in tfc -(S! rMnemfttist VJU.AtQl.X3 is Va Unrest "'r .Jil'SXr, Weakn ' "is t..-.',.. IS quickly (,;,.,, l b'.no.i p,. tl. s'..i parilia. 'fai. i-'i f'-elimr an. I serofula. ami a! Howl's sarsju.ii "-My health was ,, lieadaeh.-s. e.m;, i'ti ess '"- '1 ! Ill- , l wen a at ci imieli api.-tite. aii'l . oae lasen kss ;, , a ,,,. ..-..IT- I r . . . . '"c .,,iu ii-.'i ,iKe a I A.TriiNr.is, .t llano lison.' San. Mm. Uss. Hood's Sarsaoariiu SoMlivall.iru.-i.Nts s-, . ., , T .'"'3 byci.iHK.iKvr.K.AI;.(.1;,(.;;rnred ioi r.,. ;A?J ae llar LEMO YOUREAR '!- M ll vr WE HAVE TO SAY. BEST LOW-PRiCFn GERMAN DIGTIOHARY LOW Milci-;oK ABLT Only $1.00. Postpaid, 650 Pan. Or only $!.50? Postpaid. 1224 Page ThU r'Kk contain-: f.Yj I'mi-vv oi L.iear l p on xc. iVnt i t-omelv J ft crvi-ca Icnts anl imti!im.'ia: with English -,!n:t it If V i know i man word ami l:r r I'!)klih, yon ,r tit i ti while it' th KiiiriK'i w. want to tr.tn-laK it :u .. another irt ol th-- :,'. It is ;iivalti:tt-:e ! ( thoroujfh'y famiii.T win n", Hie i . ... 11 ? l'.i;.-. run wli wish to ! am . r: . easily you can ina-ti Mi- v.w.n this Iiieticnary if a h.i'.i J.,.(i vote-! to MU'iy, hruv itM.-ii df-rivo! from the ;r.ow.. i.;. fr-nJ for this first-i : i i, ri'trrei it. V;.,b-, '-lii lb.; wf l"'r : ,"-iit can i. l tin: -a u Cn bo tin 1 at any 1 of t hi p.t;T, at t!i 1 . JIORIVITZ & CO., 614 Chestnut Street, ' rilll.ADKI.lIIIA. WANTED: om: a;i: t km: inisnii tt UFE-sYzECRAYON PICTURES. 'lao piefires are ret.., hi:-.t. Us.m! piantiiteel. Aea;i cia us. f& oriiri u iLia..e .uio et.a.a.s- u. A i 1: Ii.li i iialional I'lifiiivinn.v lrtulin;l.'aa 528 ilAlitilil" SI', I". IIH : ..I'll:!. DR. J. B.HUBEf iSACK. 206 N. SECOND STREET, 1 HILAliEU'illA, !'.. 1 he :e.i liii2 sneel t'.w m V . ,w, tmp-aieat, Vo'in inea c .ti!emi.:..:ln.' m.irr.i- send for valuahlo Medical Book. at uur, . olio. l.t!li;. Co :e, I.'. I tl : ir- - V a. L.. J 1. M., Torn i i'. ,L Ull'.u 'J 1'. M. - 1 MiQU.4. STgPPEOJREE Trtane Pt-ei RoftorW. Pr. KUNK-rt GREAT tfr mB Plat sii'i ii-iA'r .J m re fr Anf Affeetfj.. fi t. nt. ml lf!I.iL tl Uk'K airs-:. J As) F;U trM tim ssv 1 ti.il . t-is 'im.a ttm a. f. I INK 1CI A -eh . ri.1 .J. rks. fa. (.tl DtJ LATEST IMPROVED Wnrltiiiwi frir Tf I H rniN(. I.FAM0 C-raiiu -viaro .tlBfUitiiK fvrsAWINd UU'Jli 7T1 Wi: C'lrrolnr m.z,i i rmm or ) m m vh-, n Easy craft, dufasilitt t CoHmih of m ZE8!2 fi.VV. GRAY'S SDKS, tizsiti3 inn Soijt siwi-ncmm, :uii;Li.ijSbi'iiuiiaIT uortherh Pacific. .1 LOW PillCE RAILROAD LANDS I FREE Government LAND9. illi.l-IONK of A'l;i Scf 1 h :n V. .nn---i, Nrw Mo ,tHav. iaz:; k and T'.Bft- t.-r F.audfi aowopa i"St;. i KJiillrt . Hit I )--. AiJdnfl Lil iVi!ini.M-. D-4 DUTCHER'S FLY KILLER MoJtra a :-au 'Orp. Ey hhort witt kii: a quart ol 2m. bilt.lUK JaFOUHd dlTliig it fvos, Ut-alti.f 5i m-e tk!) ) M"1 Fur4i sUsf m ur s p-fl. aHMSain; ri.'-t-b-B'J 'J1 r-itt.f- 5 i'. L'l Tv. J:r iC, Ihan. t F.est In the World. M.wt tur Co. at Chicago. N. v SuulcirrvitUTL lnr- Blc ii a ti. oo f rr!fl'" Tur in" cria.ncui f.f th! d "y-f. G.U.I"HAHAM.M P.. V bar ..1J P'C C 8f Tj::;t yrnrn. t:d :t t't.if-af" 1X KIDDER S PASTILLES.' ti.s.l. on the bottom of all mux h.i-.r:iji rr Mm apunn r ts lfe1 as FRAZER AXLE GREASE. t W JT l TO DAYS.j i J&nrMWd mo Mjj ! C3 Vrtwaly by fb : l'AlTaiCfcesl2alCQ. : Clad m a1 .BtJ I '.'. not w piyiDor.mi ,.. im and prie stamped An Uiefn. and sayn Ih.-y an- a r reel to the Focu.rj, fur yftn can (tt what ymi want ."tun J; Factory, for yoo can t shoes that ara not warranted II - . 1 . . un. hr an i.-It ixm" V. L.. Hlll half sizes. I iraarantce a fit. i-r-.mit tt and of the shoes In good condition. V. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE FOR I a One seamleas adt shr. with i..n-'ls vau T w. .. r..... I. In CViIUTHW. Button aod Lae on Lond.m Can 1 loe and 1'laln I ron, h Toe I.as. la siat rreaj " 11, lnoliUn half !. and in all nultr.. " 7J have oeeu payuu; from 3 to $0 t r -b.--s quality do not do no loto r. line pmr wia "'"H lona as two pairs of oonini'-.n h'- n,aJW UmJ are not wsrrontl by the miu.uty tar Our clalat for this shou over til ...thcr "Mr vettlsd are: Isa. Jt eonai na better pjaterisl ,vta ill nk ssore strlteh, b. to flrttrc snil darawa ML ft frrc bettor general asaiifarn' ti. 4th. Ifreosts nonre mouev rn rnMf. 6lh. It- ihor money f.r tl.o eoaeoffr. , Sto. ft 1 sdld by more .l. alors throliWot too b . TWl rtc great soecus Is iloc to raortk j. Hi. t eaanot be dtrplhrctcd bf any "-lr IBa f Securer ,4 uta. If Is tie best In tbc wrM, tn l hs a 'nc, demand man any other c ghn ?' ill prow re shore statrmentfc to bf BBtrne. the paoir auaiiiy a. exceiic which takes tho viari- of aivm lo t3. WEI T $ hllbastl. tli wuridtorrowS i';- ts ear. miiipci TtriT iiikt from i3 TO than ati" soe ev,T sold at iht' iirice. fcMt hool Shoe lo the world. eWa the "man a ctic;o ,0 wear tic p-- rlJthl- LADI' 811 OES au ffciawuuruwi a V' . , . to.. V r - (
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers