TWENTY FATHOMS DEEP. UNCANNY THINGS BEEN ST ▲ DIVER IN A GREAT LA KE. Difference In the Waters of the Lakes —Sunken Vessels—Recovering the Bodies of the Drowned. •'Foundering vessels on the lakes, especially sailing vessels, frequently sink so squarely," said a Toledo man who be longs to the precarious and perilous pro fession of lake diving, "that we find them resting on the bottom as trim and neat as «112 their keels were still plowing the sur face. This is particularly the case in Lake Huron, whose waters are unlike those of any of the other lakes in the greßt chain, although nil its water comes from Lake Superior. What the scientific explanation of the fact is I don't know, but a diver can work on the bottom of Lake Huron at a depth of at least twenty feet greater than he can in Lake Superi or, and much deeper than he can in any of the other lakes. In Superior a diver can't sec further than ten feet into the water surrounding him, but in Huron he can distinctly distinguish objects fifty feet away. At a depth of 100 feet in l<nke Superior a diver can only work an hour at a time, the fceliug of oppression becoming unbearably painful, but I have worked five hours at a stretch in Lake Huron 115 feet below the surface with out suffering to any great extent from the pressure of the water. A man drowned in Lake Superior never appears on the surface, while the dead lloat on the waters of Lake Huron. "It is a weird and startling sight to come suddenly upon a full-rigged vessel far down in the solemn depths of the lake, standing erect on her keel as if she were dashing away before the breeze on the gleaming surface. It is uncanny and ghostlike. There arc no waves down there, but a mysterious swelling and swaying of the waters that give a see sawing, tossing motion to the spectre craft, which is all the more spectral be cause there is no creak of timber, no sound cf straining ropes or grind ins; keel. You may climb the rigging, walk the deck, go down into the sunken cabin, as readily and easily as if you were a sailor and the vessel were suiling along with only the sky above her, but you can't help thinking constantly of death and the tomb. There Is no sound down there but the intermitting wail and moan, wail and moan of the swaying waters, all around and above you, and yet seeming far away. I "would much rather find a sunken wreck a wreck indeed. You naturally expect to find a broken ruin on the bottom of the lake, not the ghost of a perfect ship. I can work and search with better cheer among splintered beams and shattered spars and broken keel, where I have to pry and chop and batter down to uncover the object of mv quest, whether it is merchandise, treasure, or human corpses, than I can on a suuken craft that gives me free and easy access to her sunken stores and watery sepul chres. "The only time that I evar undertook to do a piece of work on the lake bottom reluctantly, and was badly broken up by ■ the result of it, although I had antici- 1 pated and thought I was prepared for a ' startling sight, was the time I went down 1 twenty fathoms in Lake Erie to find the bodies of a womau and her two children who had gone down with a propeller. The propeller sank in a heavy storm at night, foundering suddenly as craft usually do on Lake Erie, and the woman and her children were in their stateroom. The husband and father of the lost family offered me a big price togo down and recover the bodies, but the touching appeals of the heart-broken man alone induced me to undertake the work. I found the vessel in easy shape for work ing, and reached the door of the fatal stateroom without difficulty. The door was locked. The fact that I must break it down before the imprisoned dead could be released increased the dread that pos sessed me, and I stood irresolute at the awful threshold. If the money I was to receive for the work had been my only impelling motive, I would havo hurried from the wreck that moment; but I was haunted by the memory of that stricken soul above, awaiting in agonized suspense the poor consolation of seeing his cold and lifeless loved ones, and I put aside my foolish-fear and with a few blows of my crowbar battered down the stateroom door. I had pictured in my mind how the three corpses would in all probability look, floating with staring eyes about the room, and I think if I had come upon them in that way I would have accepted the contact with complacency. But the re ality of their appearance was far differ ent from the one I had imagined. The vessel gave a hard lurch as I broke the door loose, and the water rushed out of the stateroom. With the rush came the dead inmates of the room. The three were in a group, and such a group 1 One child, a golden-haired little thing of three years old, the mother clasped to her breast with one arm. The little one's chee't was pressed against its mother's, and its chubby arms were around her neck. The second child, older than the first, held its mother's other hand. They were all in their night clothes, and the mother floated from the room standing upright, clasping her one child to her breast and leading the other by the hand. Her long yellow hair was loose, and trailed far behind her in the water. Her eyes were wide open, as I had pictured them, but I had imagined no such depth of horror in them as they expressed. Her face was frightfully distorted, showing the intense agony of her death. The faces of both children were peaceful, and the eyes of the one in its mother's armn were closed as if in sleep. The sight was more than I could stand, and I retreated to another part of the wreck. It was a long time before I could summon courage enough to fasten a line to the dead bodies and signal for them to be raised. I sent them to the surface just as they had died, and M I found them, and quit the wreck myself as soon as the work was done. In spiuj of the fact that no lake diver ever goes below without feeling that the chance is by no means remote that he has looked for the last time on the sky and the earth and all he loves, there is a fascination about the life that few men hare ever been able voluntarily to resist after becoming familiar -with it. This seems the more singular because no di ver, shut up in armor and held in the depths by a hundred pounds or more of weights, can ever banish the feeling that a little stoppage of the air pump, a leak in his hose, some slight carelessness on the part of his tender in the boat above, is sufficient to bring down upon him the weight of a mighty mountain and crush the life out of him in the twinkling of an eye. There is always danger, too, of the diver fouling his life line himself by catching it on some projecting splinter or around asharp-edgod timber, and in his haste to release it precipitate the catastrophe of which he stands the most in dread. The fouling of a line fre quently occurs, and never to me but what I turn cold, in my effort to release it, at the thought of what a slender thing holds back the clutch of death down in those moaning depths. "Lake divers get big pay for their work, but, as there are a good many in the business and jobs sometimes far be tween, they do well if they average more than ordinary wages year by year. I have made SIOOO in a month, but there have been many months in succession when I have not made a dollar. Full of peril as the life of a diver is, it is safety itself in comparison with the life of a lake sailor. I'd rather work in a nitro glycerine factory than sail before the mast on the great lakes."—JV«u> York Sun. WISE WORDS. Few suffer uninvited Insult. Truth is a merciless iconoclast. Alas! For those advanced in years only. Generosity serves others better than itself. People who are purse-proud set the ex act mark of their intrinsic value. Some persons have plenty of genuine diamond •rnaments, but only glass-bead principles. While the unhappy have still hope, the prosperous tremble with fear. Such is compensation. Children and plants turn instinctively toward the light. Let us emulate their incipient wisdom! Those who go hunting for trouble are very poor sportsmen, though they gener ally bag the game. You may suspect those persons who boast of some special virtue of having secretly the opposite vice. By all that we circumscribe anticipa tion. we exalt fruition, the measure of which was never yet quite filled. Grand thoughts, like orchard trees, amount to nothing unless they blossom and bear fruit. The fruit of thought is action. Tlie Ordeal by Chewing Rice. The East Indian method of discover ing a thief by the ordeal of chewing dry pounded rice has almost disappeared of late. A case of its successful appli cation many years ago, to discover who had stolen a gold watch that was miss ing, is described in Ckumbers't Journal. A native official who was employed by the government for detecting thieves by the rice ordeal, was called into conduct the process. The loser of the watch was one of four Englishmen who occupied a house together. All the servants of the establishment, some forty odd in num ber, were seated in two niws on the ground in one of the long verandas of the house. A small piece of green plan tain-leaf was first placed in each man's band. The thief detector then went round with a bowl of pounded rice, like flour, and with a wooden spoon poured a quantity into the mouth of each ser vant. The order was given that each man was, within five minutes, to chew the rice-flour to a pasty mass and eject it onto his plantain-leaf, the most of the men set to work with a will, though a few were rather frightened at first; but long before the five minutes had elapsed almost every one had got through with the operation and held the evidence of his innocence in his hands. But why are so many eyes turned toward one man, who sits back as if anxious to avoid ob servation? We also look, nnd thero is the favorite servant of the loser of the watch, with his face almost convulsed, and trying in vain to get the rice flour out of his mouth. His lips are dry, and his glands refuse to produce the saliva which is needed to moisten the rice flour. At last the detector's eyes r}are upon him, and pointing at him wi«6 his long, bony finger, he says solemnly, "There is the thief!" The victim quails and grovels on the floor before him; he faintly appeals to his master for forgive ness, and promises that he will restote the watch. The convicted thief slowly rises, and requesting the master to fol low him, goes to the well in the garden, and produces the gold watch from under a loose brick. This operation savors of magic, but it has a psycho-phisiological explanation. It is one of the instances of the influenco of mind over body; the anxiety of the culprit evidently arresting the flow from the salivary glands. The Human Arm as a Razor Strop. Few persons know how excellent a razor strop is the human hand or arm. If a razor is in fairly good condition and not in need of the oil stone it may soon be whetted to a fine edge on the palm of the hand or the inner side of the fore arm. The latter is best if it is tree of hair, as it frequently is for it presents a whetting surface quite as long as the or dinary razor strop. The fat portion of the palm, between the little fingerand the wrist, however, makes an excellent strop. The process of stropping a razor qn the forearm appears a bit alarming to the look-on though there is little danger t&iit a skilful man will do himself harm. —Nex Fork Sun. The next annual B'nai B'rith Conven tion will be held ia Cincinnati in 1895, A RANCH IN THE CLOUDS THB LOFTY HOKE OF AM ADVEN TtTHOUS PIOinCEB. Raisins Crops at an Altitude of 10 000 Feet in New Mexico—Titna portation by Burros. At the head water* of the north braicl of the Rio Gallinas, eighteen or twmt; miles above the Las Vegas Hot Sprugs Mr. E. H. Harvey, a former Bator merchant, several years ago located hi ranch at an elevation the most ambiioui perhaps of any farm on the contiunt Coming to New Mexico originally foi his health, Mr. Harvey, after the conditions of the cattle and sfee] business on the open plains, and thoq oi agriculture in the lower valleys<-it which an elaborate system of irrigation is required—decided to make his h>m< in the mountains. In a high vllej near the massive precipitous mouitair known as Hermit Rock he laid thesilli of his cabin amid the evergreen andiop lar trees, took up under the hometead law a tract of Qovernment land, anc get to work to improve it. This ranch is peculiarly isolated, the only other houses in a wide region aout being one or two deserted prospecsrn' cabins and the works of an abandaed mica mine. Near the foot of the mont ains the wagon trail leading fromtheet tlcments comes to an end, and beynd that point a bridle trail is the only ith to the home of this adventurous pioecr from Boston. Here, literally amonpthe clouds, he has made tho wihlernes to blossom as the rose. Part of his tiljt>le and hay lands was open jjrassy pari at the time of his coming, aud the remin der he has cleared by cutting downind burning the trees. The range of paaire for his stock includes all accessible raz ing spaces up and down the valley. At this high altitude of 10,000 set, only 800 feet below "timber line,'the climate differs widely from that othe plains. Through the summer, diing times, it may be, when the plains bow are parched with drought, there arefre qucnt showers and often long contiied rains in tho mountains, and after ear nights the vegetation at sunrise is 'ip ping with heavy dew. Undc • thesfa vorable conditions no artificial irrigion is required, and with the abumnt moisture the grass grows thick nd high, spangled with innumerable >w ers of great beauty and variety, and fere are found many specimens of tree mi plant life usually associated witlfar more northerly latitudes. The altido of the ranch is too great for the sucss ful raising of corn,but nearly every her agricultural product of the Norern States flourishes. Orain and vegetfles, including potatoes.grow abund.inthnd rapidly, are of fine quality, and tain great size. Timothy grass four feetnd oat stalks six feet high are not unm mon specimens of the productive oa city of this rauch. The luxuriant growth of forage.nd the circumstances attending the tns portation of farm products to majet, have tended to make the dairy the Hcf feature of this upland ranch, Mr./ar vey's herd of cows give a profitabli re turn for his care and labor. The rift current of a mountain rill turns a ver wheel connected with the revolvingid dledashcrs of a cylindrical chui in which is made the butter that on jted days goes on the backs of pack auals to the market at Las Vegas. There is but one way by which tons port freight between the ranch amhe town, by "packing," which is effectby means of trains of burros (doult). With the garden and dairy producto be carriod to Las Vegas, or of"re goods to take to his home, packein hampers, the owner starts the proce*i of pack animals in single file alonge mountain path, and himself bringp the rear on his sure-footed ponjj quicken the pace of the stragglers } watch that none of the burdenß t awry. Bulky articles, at trunks, fu ture, or farming implements, are lod upon a frame like a litter, suspended tween two burros placed tandem, ani this fashion are carried by the stef docile little animals over the winding the mountain trails, up and down si hill-sides, and across rushing torrenU their destination. The house is a rude but comfort* structure, with a wide open fireplace, which the fire of hickory wood or pit pine crackles cheerfully in the wiu time, and on summer evenings as w for at these mountain heights the ni| air is at all times cool, and oj chilly. Rich milk, vegetables fresh i crisp, the tenderest and juiciest beef and mutton—all raised upon place—arc features of the r»nch fare i with the hunger that the mountain imparts, the appetizing effect of the past is enhanced by its plain and hom service. The larder is helped accordingly, as the season and hunt luck may favor, by venison, bear mi wild turkey, mountain grouse and qv and by the delicious black-spotted ti of the Rio Gallinas. Owing to the limited range of pas age, sheep-raising on the large s practised ib the wider parks and pi is impracticable, and in places like Harvey's sheep and goats are usu kept only in sufficient number to si as a source of food supply for the ran the moist, sweet, tender grass gives flesh of these animals a peculiarly quality, comparable to that of Engl sheep on their native sod. The grass good at all seasons, but becomes accea ble only as the heavy snows of wini recede on the mountain sides with t| . approach of summer. In these ranches in the uplands an interestiij element of danger and uncertainty at tends the raising and keeping of domesti animals, from the necessity of guardin( them against the ravages of wild beast* Colts, calves and lambs are liable alwayt to fall the victims of a prowling mount* ain lion or a hungry bear; and when 4 predatory animal so formidable has onca acquired the habit of depending upon flocks and herds for his food supply, thei only way to save the loss of much young stock is to take tha aggressive, hunt him down and kill him.— Harper't Weekly. HOUSEHOLD AFFAf&fik A HOUREKBKFBR'B DON'TS. Don't allow the broom to stand on UM brush end when not in use; hang it on a nail by means of a ring in the top of the handle. Don't forget that a broom will last much longer, if, after using, it is dipped in boiling water for a few minutes. Don't fill the best windows in the family liviug-room with plants. Don't neglect to air the house thorough ly every morning. Open opposite doors and windows for five or ten minutes, even if it is stormy. » Don't undertake extra work to (rfve pleasure when you know that you have neither time nor strength for it, and that, as a result, some ono will be sure to be overtired and cross. Don't forget, if you are a tall woman, to have your work-table nnd ironing board a few inches higher than they aro usually made. This little precaution will prevent many a backache. Don't neglect to have your name plainly painted on all jugs or bottles that are sent to the store for vinegar, molasses, etc. Then you will be sure to get back your own. Don't think when you sit down to rest that it is necessary to pick up that un finished mending. Ten minutes' abso lute rest is worth much to tho tired muscles. Don't allow soiled clothes to remain In the bed-rooms. They taint the air and make it impure. Don't keep for company tho best room, the best dishes, and especially the pleasantest smile and most entertaining conversation.— American Agrkulluritt, THE RAVAGES OP THE BUFFALO-BUG. It is found that few of tho usual pre ventives are of any use against the at tacks of this beetle, and for this reason it is a difficult pest to eradicate. In some places it has proved so destructive that carpets have to be dispensed with, and in their place rugs are used, as being more conveniently examined. Tallow or tallowed paper placed around the edges of tho carpet, which are often the parts first attacked, is said to bo ef fectual. In many cases the carpets aro cut, as if with a scissors, following tho line of the seams in tho floor, and as a remedy for this it has been recommended that the scama be filled during tho win to with cotton saturated with benzine. Kerosene, naphtha or gasoline are offen sive to the beetlo as well as benzine, but benzine is perhaps the simplest and safest preventive in use. Ie can be poured from a tin caa having a very small spout, it being necessary to use but little. Before tacking down a carpet it should be thoroughly examined, and if possible steamed. If in spite of precautions a carpet is found infested, a wet cloth can t e spread down ulong the edges, and a hot iron passed over it, the steam thus generated not only killing the beetles ind larvre, but destroying any eggs that may have been laid. Clothing is some times attacked as well as objects of natural history—such as stuffed birds and mammals. It was believed that the beetle must feed on some plant, for in a number of cases it was captured out of doors, and it was finally discovered feeding on the pollen of the flowers of spirsas, the bee tle living on the plant for a while and then returning to the house to lay its eggs. When this was proved, it was iuggested that spiraeas should be planted wound houses infested by the beetle; by doing this the plants could be often ex imined and the beetles destroyed.—Pop ular Science Month/y. 11KCIPKS. Sardine Salad Use a cupful of ohopped sardines, free from bones, to a pint bowl of lettuce or sliced cucumbers; teason with salt, pepper, a little mustard and vinegar, and serve the salad as soon as it is made, because the lettuce begins to wilt directly it is dressed with salt and vinearar. Lyonnaise Potatoes— Slice coia-Douea potatoes into neat rounds; cut a medium sized onion into thin slices, aud put it with a good tablespoonful of butter or bacon dripping into the fryiug-pan; when the onion is colored, add the potatoes, about two cupfuls, and stir them about until they are a light brown. Strew with chopped parsley, and serve. Cold Chicken Wings—The wings, drumsticks, necks, livers, hearts, and gizzards of a pair of chickens, with any good portions remaining from the first service, make an excellent dish for cold use. The pieces are first to be boiled in enough water to cover them,with a pala table seasoning of salt and pepper, until tender; then each piece is to be rolled in cracker meal, dipped in beaten egg, again rolled in cracker dust, and fried in olenty of hot fat like doughnuts. Summer Weakness Loss of Appetite, Sick Headache, Quickly Cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla I Best CoJR. Dm Psl J in time. Sold b* druggists, U ravtt. cerulncaro 1 BSnSSrtMM 1 O.H.INUKAHAM.M. D_ I . '■ vmstprdam, N. Y * VTb bar© sold Big G fot " "** I Y<»*rjr *D.'SL»TCBS *OO. t 1 *CiV i.m. No soap In the world baa ever bean Imitated an much aa Dubbins'* Electric Soap. Tie mar ket la full of Imitations. Be careful that von are not deceived. "J. B. Bobbing*. Philadel phia and New York," la stamped on every bar. A genuine cowboy baa been added to the New York police force. E. A. Rood. Toledo. Ohio, says; "Hall's Ca tarrh dure cured my wife of catarrh fifteen yearn ago and she ha* had no return of It. It's a sure cure." Sold by Druggist*. 78c. A CHILD wan born In St. Louis recently with out 112 cballs. Confirmed. The favorable Impression pwtaced on the first appearance of the agreeable liquid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs a few years ago has been more than confirmed by the pleasant experi ence of all who have nsed It, and the suocess of the proprietors and manufacturers, the Cal ifornia Fig Syrup Company. FITS stopped free by Dit. KLINE'S GREAT NEBVE KESTOHBK. No Fits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and 12 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. For a disordered liver try Beecham's Pills. Don't read I Don't think! Don't believe ! Now. are you better ? You women who think that patent medicines are a hum bug, and Dr. Pierce's Favor ite Prescription the biggest humbug of the whole (because it's best known of all) —does your lack-of-faith cure come? It's very easy to " don't" in this world. Suspicion always comes more easily than con fidence. But doubt little faith never made a sick woman well and the "Fa vorite Prescription " has cured thousands of delicate, weak women, which makes us think that our " Prescription" is better than your don't believe. We're both honest. Let us come together. You try Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. If it doesn't do as represented, you get your money again. Where proof's so easy, can you afford to doubt ? Little but active—are Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. Best Liver Pills made ; gen tle, yet thorough. They regu late and invigorate the liver, stomach and bowels. /A ITERH & **TERn* V Instantly- Stop Pain A representation ot the engraving on our wrappers.—KADW AY A CO. NEW YORK* nruoinuo ol ' W CLAIMS SETTLKIT rtNaIUNH UNDER NEW LAW. I UIIUIUIIU soldiers. Widow,, Parent* send for blank applications ami information. PATRICK O FABBICU, Pension Agent, Washington, I>. C. Wives firow J-aar in t+ie light-of rteir works. eapecieJlv ij* Key use S"A PGLI ©: "is a.solid c&.ke of-scouring oa.p used foro.ll cleaning- i p urposes. All grocers keep ill 1 / ni/C' © / ADHD' O / /)OT b y man » ■ ""Oman who strives L.UWL, O LHDUn O 1.1/0/ to please hor household and works herself to death in the effort. It the house does not IOOK as bright as a pin, she gets the blame—lf things are upturned while house-cleaning goes on—why blame her again. One remedy Is within her reach. II she uses S A POLIO everything will look : clean, and the reign of house-cleaning disorder will be quickly over. w WATERPROOF —————| THAT CAN BE RELIED ON BE UP wot to grout; THE MARK Not tO DISOOIOr 2 BEARS THIS MARK. # trade ELLULOID MARK NEEDS No LAUNDKNINO. OAN BB WIPED CLEAN IN A MOMENT. THE ONLY LINEN-LINED WATERPROOF COLLAR IN THE MARKET. PainwScfieS PROMPTLY CURED BY f' dT>, May wood, Kans., Tm/fAhd Aug. 10., 1888. if I |/fl.ll]hr I Buffered two yeara l\l(l\lU|)at with pain In my tide; /•I »r doctors failed to help ' M a W|| me; St. Jacobs Oil curea \ #ll me; no return of pain. P. lemmon. p. m. Carlisle, Pa., February 11,1888. I was hurt in the left hip and tried sev eral physicians without obtaining relief. Less than a half-bottle of St. Jacobs Oil cured me. . JOHN U. BHKAFKB. WHAT EVERYBODY SAYS. That Dr. Tobias' Venetian Liniment is the neatest pain reliever in the world, while for stints of insects and mosouito bites it is infallible. Troth, and nothing bat ths truth. All druggist*. Price *8 and 60 cents. Depot, «0 M array at.. S. Y. tfITHK WOHPCWFUL I±BURG\CHAI \T. tcteil Uth» low,a tchoUtale factory yric.-.f/ (• Kh r £&& p ,ffd2&s* paid for on delivery. ir]III/7i\7A. t<l mint Brad stamp lot Oata- ® SPECIAL Fftßß lOfae. Name quods dcrirca. bXLITEBI, IPBPBQ MFG. CO., 145 N. Bth Pa. VICIIDIAIIO $40,000,000 to ho paid AJfiMXIIINX out this year under the new rklllllUllv Disability Pension Act. Ev ery soldier Included wno served 90 days snd In now disabled, no mnUer what th#« ODW; or In case of his death his widow and minor children. Dependent parents also benefited. Write at ouce for blank# and advice to GEO. D. MITCHELL, Kofwlter of Pen sions and Patents, Box 253. Washington..D. C., Clerk Committee on Pensions of the U. & flewe lor tt*e laat seven years. , WNI. FITCH & CO., 10'2 Corcoran Building, Washington, D. C. PENSION ATTORNEYS of over "Zfi years' experience. Successfully proso* cute pensions and claims of all kinds in shortest possible time. PfNo *EE uklkw succksbful. OLMCinMCi Greut PtNSIUM Bill PhWsl UNb is passed ~:: titled to sl3 n mo.# FeeW when you fret your money. Blanks free. JOHKPH H. 11l TtTKII. AUj, W«t»lilngl—» U. 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Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. 3yrs iu last war, 15 abjudicating claims, atty sine o- PFNSMNR FOR ALL wtSo^UT^Do ■ LliUlvllU charge. New Law. Application blanks sent free. 11. C. TAN NElt, Patent ami Claim Attorney, 13 17 F St.. Wawhiugton, D. C. DCiICinMC-s^«»- ■ ■ BWaal lleved. Bucce»» or no fee. ■ ■■ ■ yn. •xporiencs. A. W. McCormlck A Sons.Washington, D. C , dc Cincinnati, 0. tffcfllllU IIA HIT. Only Csrtala and IIHIIIM Knsy CU HE in the World. Or. 11l IVIII J. l„ STEPHEN-, Lebanon, u. ERAZERgffhf BEST IU Til 15 WORLD URLMOt IF" Got the Oenulno. Sold Everywhere. XjEJNTID YOUR. XTV Beet Low-Prired IMC TION ilt\ /J|Pk \ published, at the remarkably low price of only fI.UO, postpaid This Book con- IK' rHQk B\ tains B*J4 Anely printed (Mures of clear ISf typo on excellent paper ami is hand- If soinHly yet serviceaoly bound in cloth. It gives Kngllflh words with the Gorman \ equivaleuta and pronunciation, and 1 Oerman word* with English detinitions. \ ' It in in valuable to Germans who are not * V C thoroughl3' familiar with English, or to \ 4 American* who wish to learn Gerinau V .Jf AddreM, with 11.00, HOOkPI R. HOI'S, 134 Unn.nl St., .few York tily.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers