ONLY ONE WAY IS RIGHT. "My boy," said Focle Ilirnm once, while giving me advice, "The saw that doesn't wobble is the one that cut the ice. The m tht close npplies itself, within iu narrow groove, Will soon or lute fuluil it work lv keeping, on the move, Vhn half way through, temptation may beet it, like as not, To leave the place that inmeth hard anil seek n thinner apotj Hut shifting aaw will hum at length, when failure they invite: There's muny a way o' iloin' thingn, but only one way' right! "And bear in mind, my liny, through life, If tempted task to shirk, Success is but a second crop, the aftermath of work. A lubricator tried and true ia perseverance oil. And fortune' amile is rarely won except by honest toil, , A safe rroaa-cuf to fame or wealth Iih never yet been found, The men upon the height to-day ure those who've gone around The longest way, inspired by the savin', somewhat trite: Therc'a many a way o' Join' things, but only one way's riht." . I knew my Uncle Ilirnm had achievement' aummil reached; ', . I knew him as an honest man who practiced what he preached And so 1 paid the lexson heed, und rapt attention gave, ' . When, In an added afterthought, he said; "My boy, be travel s Act well your part; tenaciously to one straight course adhere; Though men declare you're in a rut -work on, and never fear; You'll realize, when you, at lencth, have reached achievement's height: There's many a way o' doin' things, but only one way' right!" Hoy I'drrell Green, ia Success. mm mm HE title of Iii8 paper wns ferocious, but not he. Of nil tuo editors that pushed west of the Red River In the "boom" days, he was the mildest nnd most se date iu ap pearance. He sometimes looked tweuty-oue; no one took lilui for twenty-flve, and In truth ho was twenty-eight. Raised and educated in an Iowa printing office, a. "touring" typesetter for a number of years, ho suddenly desired a paper of his own. A clean name with his fellows, joined to the few hundred dollars he had saved, secured for hlui a plant, and he transported this by rail and wagon into the gra33 country, and because where he located the Sioux had once ruled he called his paper the, Toma hawk. It was a pood newspaper. Typographically it could not have been Improved upon; every local doing was to be found In its columns, aud the editorial page was fresh with homely ' BARRICADED and cleanly comments on tho news of the day. He set no moral standard for the commnnlty in which he lived; he indulged in no lengthy dissertations as to what the people should or should not do. He conducted his paper for the news, and if through his retiring disposition he did not make warm friends he nevertheless held the re spect of everybody. That he would fight, resent aa attack, muke trouble If trod upon, no one ever dreamed. He was too quiet. One day in bis search for news he j chanced to learn that tho Washing-1 ton Merchandise Company wua quietly I veiling liquor to the Indian. The knowledge aggravated him. The com pany was the one big trading concern of the region. It had a main store aud twenty or thirty branches scattered over 300 miles of country. It was owned by Eastern speculators aud managed by local agents. The mem bers of tba corporation hud wealth and Intelligence. That they should permit whisky to bo gold to the abo rigines seemed extraordinarily out rageous to tho editor. He thought It over, and then wrote a letter to the President of the com pany briefly reciting what he knew, and suggesting that a stop be put to the sale; that It might precipitate au Indian outbreak, and, anyway, It was a violation of a national law which the corporation ought not to permit. He received in reply a curt letter re questing him In so niauy words to mind his own affairs. The ncrt Issue of bis paper bristled with nn exposure of what tho merchandise company was doing. He Investigated so thoroughly that the Government finally acted, and In the cud tho company ceased the sale, of whisky altogether. It was a Signal victory for tho Tomahawk. But tho same day that the company in-rendered its manager at Hand Bluff wrote to the editor of the Tomahawk: , "1 shall reach your town Monday. 41 'V -..... VP'S CT'j-' If you are still In the country I shall kill you." The editor opened the letter, read It most carefully, laid It down aud said half to himself and half to the press beside him: "It's two days from Monday." Then he picked up another letter, for got the first, and eagerly read: "You wish me to come West aad lake up life with you. I agree with you that we have waited long enough. I am tired working for others, but am ready to work for and with you. By the time this reaches you I shall be on the way. I will reach you Monday noon, If the stage Is on time. I under stand I have to take stage from Sand Bluff, but shall enjoy the experience. It is agreeable to me that we should be married as soon as I arrive." The editor smiled from ear to car. Ho walked to the rear of his shack aud looked at a room he had been pre paring for mouths for this very com ing of his girl. The only rarpet in the town was on tho iloor of this room; her picture was over the dresser; white curtains hid the windows; little knick-knacks had been placed just about as the average man would locate them. HIMSELF. "Well," said the editor. "I may be dead Monday, but she's coming aud this is her room." He was most qujet the rest o the day and the day following. He told no oue of the contents of the two letters be had received. Only he satisfied himself that If the Sand Bluff stage was on time that It would reach his town Monday at 12.30. "No reason, either," said the post master, "why It shouldu't be on time." Sunday without attracting uuyone's particular attention, the editor barri caded his windows und two doors. He constructed something like breastworks back of them. He made also several Ingenious' peepholes. He knew the Hand Bluff store manager, kuew the rage he had felt over the whisky ex posure, knew the wild baud of frontier spirits that usually Journeyed with him wheu he was "out on business." He had no reason to doubt but that the manager would arrive In towu Monday and would Immediately search for him. "I may dio," he muttered, "but she's coming." His last act Suudny before he went to bed was to saw off the barrel of a motgun and load the weapon with a curious mixture of slugs. He was not an expert with firearms; he never car ried a "gun," aud on a test shot he probably would have missed the side of a barn as quickly as the next man, but he kept thinking of the girl, aud the more he thought the more method ical bis preparations. He awoke the next morning to find himself besieged. The store manager from and Bluff hud arrived with half a dozen cowboys prepared for any kind of ruthless sport. Thpy shot the upper half of his shack full of holes without arousing the editor to a reply, and then they announced that they intended to hold him a prisoner thcro until 12.30, at which time they would rush tbe hack, let It ou fir and shoot blin down when he came out, lie heard the declaration, He could see them, could sweep with his eye the entire streets He sat behind a barricade with the eliotguti across his lap. He was most carefully dressed and extraordinarily calm for A man who hnd been under fire for nn hour or more. He drew at tils pipe with great composure, and studied tho time on the face of tho little alarm clock that stood on a table near him. The cowboys left two of their number on guard, and rode up the street after liquor. No one Inter fered with them. The fact that they were from Stiml ltlnff made their word raw in tho lessor communities. Many a grim Jest they passed on the Hunt fate of the editor, and many nn a sma ll lire did the store manager give that no "blasted frleud of the Indian could live here." Still, the editor held the fort through the morning, and the cowboys toyed with hint as n terrier sometimes fools with the mouse It means to kill. Si At noon a big cloud of dust rose on the trail from Sand Bluff. It was the stage coming In. One of the editor's peepholes gave li i m such command of the street that he could see the ap proach of the stage. He noted that as It was traveling It should reach the pcstofilce In about fifteen minutes, real ly ahead of time. He gut up, shook himself, walked to the back room, looked ut "her" picture once, nud theu carefully loosened the fastenings of his frout door. He left the door so that It could be Instantly swung back. Another glance out of the peephole showed him the stage was entering tho towu. It bunged and rattled down the way to the postofflee, halted, and the first passenger out was n tall, lithe young woman of twenty-three or four. The editor saw her nsk questions of bystanders, noticed their curious ges tures toward his place, saw her start for It. The cowboys, headed by the store manager, wore In front of his office, preparing; for their final charge. He swung back his door quickly, stepped out Into the sunshine, swung up his gun, and before his foes realized what he was doing, so . suddenly had he acted, gave the store manager and one of his companions the ehnrges of his weapon. They fell from tho'.r saddles, the others fled with a volley of shots for parting. The editor staggered ft little, than, made for the girl. - She held out her arms to him, he his hands to her. "That's all yours Kate." ho said, with a little gasp in his throat. "I waited f-f-or you, Kate." And then he was dead at her feet. II. I. Cleveland, In the Chicago Record-Herald. A Moving Mountain. Most people forget that geology Is not altogether a history of the past. The forces that made the mountains are still going on. Some mountains are growing, some are wearing down, Because these processes take a long time to accomplish visible results, one is apt to form the erroneous idea that they have ceased, and that the face of the earth is fixed once for nil. A case of geological action so rapid as to be easily observed is the moving mountain In Hunterdon County, New Jersey. This "mountain" Is a knob or mound, which is sliding down the side of a full sized mountain. It has obliterated old turnpikes and roadways, and threatens to slide sud denly and do great damage. The land slide already covers twenty-flve acres of one farm, and has destroyed the boundaries of another. At the polut where the mouud has torn away from the mountain Is n deep gulch, In which have been found many Indian relics. The place Is so danger ous from ledges aud banks which threaten to fall that nobody has dared explore the cleft thoroughly. This geological movement has been so rapid that a new map of the county may be necessary. Heavy rains, says the Detroit Tree Press, stir the entire valley to fear lest the whole hill tum ble and destroy everything In Its path. Thorwaldsen of Aiuerlcau Descent? Tho controversy raging over the Danish West Indies recalls the fact that tho famous Danish sculptor Trior waldseu was desceuded from oue of the earliest of "Amerleaus." Thus Is the smalluess of the world again em phasized. It appears, nccordiug to an Icelandic chronicle, that Thorsteln, son of Eric the Red of Norway, married a young Norwegian woman named Gud rlda, and emigrated with her' to Vin laud, now supposed to have been that portion of Massachusetts In tbe vicinity of Boston. Thorsteln died, and his young widow married a wealthy Nor wegian then living in Iceland. A son was born to them named Snorre,. and this early American became the pro genitor of the great Thorwaldsen. The old chronicles tell bow Snorre's father died, and he aud his sorrowing mother made a pilgrimage to Rome. This was in the eleventh century, when naviga tion of the unknown seas was almost wholly in the hands of the daring and invincible Northmen. Thorwaldsen himself wus born ut sea over seven centuries later. His father was an leelunder, a carver or ships' figure heads, who was sailing for Copen hagen at the time of his son's birth. II Learned Her Kanie. An Instructor In Eiiglisb In the Shef field Scientific School tells tbe follow ing story at the expense of a professor in Yale. The incident happened at a faculty tea, where Professor Blank was adorning the occasion In hi Irre sistible way. The professor, it is claimed, does not realize just how ef fective bis charming tulk and rouiuntlc eye are. Iu the course of the after noon be was Introduced to an espe cially attractive young woman, whose uume, being mumbled in tbe presenta tion. The two repaired to a sofa, where Professor Blank was so thor oughly pleased with his new acquain tance, that he determined to dud out to whom be was talking. "You must forgive me," be began tactfully, "but I am going to ask you a personal question. Please do tell me what your name Is." The young woman looked at him with large, timid eyes a moment, aud then whispered sweetly, "Ethel" New York Tribune. m Having-) l.sro Onion Crop. Onions should go In rich grouud, but the most important work with growing them is to get them planted early, aud to keep the ground clear of weeds at the beginning. It Is the quick start that makes the onion crop large. Reunion of Corn Seed. When planting corn try a few rows with selected seed. No plant Is more easily Improved by selection tliuu corn, and the farmer can improve for himself better Unit) can be done for him by others, us the soil, climate and other local condillons Influence the growth. While the corn is growing Is also un excellent time to make obser vations and select seed. (las In the Cheese Curd. Formation of gnu Iu the cheese rurd gives It n spongy light texture which Is very undesirable. When the par ticles of curd are cut across they are found to be full of mlmile holes. To prevent tho trouble, bent the curd as high as 104 degrees and keep the tem perature from fulling. At the same time favor the escape of gas by fre quent turning aud piling of the curd. This must continue until the formation of gas has ceased. A Hoy's Strawberry Bed. Every spring tbe small boy on the farm has a longing for bis own little plot of ground, that he may raise something he Is not nt nil particular about the crop. A good way to untilizc this bit of ground is In putting out a strawberry lied. It will not bring very quick results, as there will be little or no' fruit until the following summer, but it will pay iu the end. Certaluly It Is worth trying. If the farmer lacks this Important small fruit. The farmer may uot care to put out a strawberry bed himself, but he will plow up tho plot of ground for his son, and instruct him how to go about the work. After the boy has his ground prepared, he can secure thrifty pluiits from some neighbor who will suggest best varieties for eertnll localities, and will also give advice about the setting out of the plants nud their subsequent care. A little work and a good ileal of patient waiting, but the next season will bring good results. If the bed Is largo enough and the boy has done his work well, he may not only supply his own family with strawberries, but may have some for market as well. Suppose the boys, who every summer walk miles In search of a wild strawberry bed, will try raising their own berries. M. Palmer Sweet, In The Epitomist. Homemade Fole Drag. For many uses I have found a pole drag a very serviceable Implement; better than a roller because It will level and pulverize without packing the soil. The one I use is shown In the accompanying illustration. It Is made of three hardwood poles six inches in diameter nud seven nud one-half feet leng. The poles are fastened together about oue foot apart by means of short pieces of chains. For a seat bolt a piece of board to the middle of the first pole and allow It to extend slight- TI7E I OLE DK AO. ly beyond the last oue. On this fasten au old mowing machine seat. Til's arrangement win hold the scut In place and allow the poles to work Inde pendently. The sent can be easily re moved, inaklug it much easier to store the drag wheu not In use. The drag may be drawn by a short chain at tached to the centre of the first pole or the doubletree uuiy be connected with chains from each cud of tho first pole. John Jackson, In New. England Homestead. Concerning Chickens. The spring ana summer eggs are always the cheapest aud easiest te get, aud In a great muny cases they hardly puy for the cost of wintering the lay ers. Eggs sell for two or three times as much lu the lute full and winter as they do from, the llist of April to the first of October. Two or three dozen eggs in the former season are consequently worth from six to nine dozen laid in the spring aud summer. Our profits consequently must lurgely come from the eggs laid out of seasou. I would not give much for the owner of a poultry flock who could not get plenty of eggs lu the spring and sum mer, but I have great respect for those who can get two eggs la the fall aud winter where another inunagcs to get one or oue and a half. This may not be the time of the year to consider fall aud winter laying, but If you will top to think a moment you will find thut it Is just the right time to begiu laying plans for the fall months. It is only by carefully rearing aud select lug a flock of birds which will lay in the fall and winter seasou that we make a success of It. If any one thinks it is an easy matter to let hens go ahead und luy right along, aud then wheu full comes expect them to keep It up, he is bound to disappointment. Tbe first essential for next fall and winter laying Is to select our flock of birds this spring. The best layers last winter aud full should now be selected for next year's work. They should form the breeding stock to rear new layers for the cold season. They should be selected carefully, and theu be kept In pens .or yards by them selves, crossing them with the best males, ou the farm. Half the battle la fougtit orft by selecting from known good layers. Some chickens show a tendency to lay in the cold weather, and others cannot be. induced to do It under any circumstances. It Is pos sible by carrying this method of selec saifS r3&!38:-5 iAraafj- tej iillllPiiii tlon and careful breeding for severa' yean to obtain a flock of winter lay ers which will nearly double the ordl nary number of eggs. All the feedlni methods In the world will fall sbor, unless we have the right birds to be gin with, nud this suiuukv Is thetlmi to select thetn. Annie i Webster, 1 American Cultivator. To Grade DKches and Drains. A device for assisting In getting tin grade while digging drains Is describe by II. W. Smith. I took a piece o! board a, n, eight feet tohg seven Inchel wide, and nailed on two threo-cornerei pieces, b, b, cutting out the sectlou ol the board between them, ns shown It tho illustration. Then I nulled a pleci of lath across tho tops of the three cornered pieces. A piece of clapboard d, three feet loug, was sharpened neat ly to a point on tbe thlu side niiC nailed diagonally to the Hide of th eight-foot board, thlu edge down, sc ATPAIUTUS FOR PROPER GRACE. that the polut of the chipboard would be about twenty inches above tho cen tre of the lath. A plumb line nnd bob Is suspended from the point above the centre of tin lath. If the lower edge of the board Is straight and placed in a level posi tion, the line will hang nt light angles with it. Have the edge of the lath planed. Take a sharp pencil and mark each side of the Hue nnd cut a notch on the lath. To Ulusrrate the use of the device, when the Inutrd is level, if u two-Inch block is put under one end nnd a notch cut behind the line, the plumb line will Indicate the grade and the operator will get a two-inch fall for every eight feet, eight feet being the length of the bonrd. Ameri can Agriculturalist. A Plea For the Plastered Silo. I am afraid that the zeal of the pro fessional silo builder has been allowed to befog the Issue as to the claims of. the plastered silo, nud this, with a failure or two that have been accepted as the rule of conduct of this structure, has caused its general rejection. Still, I nm sure that there Is merit In It, even If It cannot be sold on the market ready made. On the old farm where my boyhood was spent, there Is one of the first silos that was built in that neighbor hood. The barn had beeu moved nnd sot Into the hillside, so that the stables had beeu given room In the basement, and the size of the barn was much Increased. This gave u chance for un inside silo through whnt hud been the horse stable, and In those primitive duys of dairy farming wheu the merits aud structure of the silo were not well understood, the plastered form was chosen. I shall have to odiult that this is the only oue of Its kind that I know of directly, but I have no doubt that it is duo to "professlonullsm" that It Is so generally rejected. It bus done Its work well. This Inst filling has beeu Its seventh, nud It Is as sound and air-tight ns it ever was. keeping the ensilage as few others will. lor plaster is surely more Impervious to air tliau wood. We used lo be told so positively that the ucid developed lu the ensilage would cut up the plus tor thut we had to believe It, and fo tin- cheapest, and nt least In muny cases the best, of till the siloes, wus driven out. There is plaster uud plus tor of course, and It may be a fact that such us Is generally used for house building, made of sand and lime, will yield to the eusllage acid. But this silo was plastered Willi u mortar made of half-and-half Portland cement and sand, nnd If there Is any liquid thut attacks It, such liquid Is certainly not lit for an animal's stomach. Of course this silo is un inside one, which takes up room thut canuot al ways be spared, but wheu It can It is a very convenient arrangement. Let us reflect on tbe euse of building one of this sort. A basement adds to the height so much that It will all go into a b'.tru nicely, nud the hoisting of the ensilage Is then a minor mntter. Choosing a corner of the barn. If pos sible, only two Bides have to be laid out; the work Is all quite possible to auyoue who con lay plaster, und even that can be undertaken safely by a novice. The corners can be rounded out easily by a wood backing or they can be left square, as In the case of this silo. There is no complaint from that source. The base of this silo is right at one side of the feeding floor, and everything is as handy us possible. Add to this arrangement a chute or two from mows above, and the ques tion of concentration is settled. I Und that the hill country farmer In New York state. Is becoming more und more convinced that his best profit comes from the dairy cow and tho silo, but I am somewhat surprised to Hud that ia some cases Improvement of tho luud does not seem to follow this stylo of funning. It Is found thut In such sections the bind Is not always naturally adapted to the rais ing of corn, nud practically all the manure made has to be used to perfect that crop. This unfavorable feature Is now one of the problems of the poor er pin ts of the State, it Is complained that tbe old crops of oats, for In stance, which used to be a feature with us, cannot be raised now as they used to be, which means that artificial fertilization lias not beeu sufficient to make good the exbuustiou from crop plug tbe land so long. I suspect that one cause of this dif ficulty Is a lack of a rotation of crops, such as the soil demands. Oats and then grass nro sure to use up the fer tility lu time, and neither furnishes much humus. I am sure that we owe to the sowing of shallow rooted grasses and grains much of the extra dry. bard soil that prevails iu these later days. Tbe clovers and root crops nro expert crops to a considerable extent; so we cling to shallow farming. John Chamberlain, iu Tbe Country Gentleman. , New York City. Old rose aud block dotted challle is here attractively trimmed with saffron lace. Tbe back of the wrapper is In priu- WRAPPER, WITH CIRCULAR FLOUNCE. cess style, giving long, graceful lines, which are universally becoming. Ex tensions added at each side of the centre back are arranged In underlying pleats, which are flutly pressed. A pointed yoke facing of Inserted tucking Is applied back and front. The full fronts are gathered aud ar ranged at the lower edge of the yoke. A bortha of chnllle, trimmed with luce, Is used to finish the yoke buck nnd frout, extending out over the sleeves in a becoming manner. A bow of black velvet ribbon with long ends Is fastened nt the point where the bertha meets. The full fonts hang loosely from tbe FANCY WAIST WITH YOKE yoke to the floor. A plain lace collar completes the neck. Tbe sleeves are the latest bishop styles, fitted with luslde seams only. They liuve cum fortuble fulness ou the shoulders nud ore gathered at the lower edge, droop ing stylishly over the pointed luce cuffs. The flounce is circular, shallow In frout nud gruduutlng tuwurd the buck. It is trimmed with a bund of lnce and flares gracefully ut tho bottom. The flounce may be omitted If preferred. The berthu may ulso be dispensed with, us shown in the small Illustra tion, leaving a very plalu wrapper, suitable for morning wear. The flounce may be applied or fin ished to form the lower portion of the wrapper. This method is preferable for wash fabrics. Mercerized cottons, gingham, lawn, dimity or percale muy lie made up iu this style, with em broidery or fancy tucking for trim ming. It la also appropriate for cash mere, Henrietta, nun's velllug, ultia tross or French flannel. To make tbe wrapper In the medium size will require seven yards of forty-four-inch material. An Kxqulslto Toilette. The lovely toilette shown In the largo diawlng is made of Laudsdowne in a delclate shade of blue with trim-' iiilng of Luxeull luce. The waist has for its foundation a glovc-Uttlug feather-boned lining which closes lu tho back. ' The front has a deep yoke, uud vest of lace, while the material Is draped softly across the bust und drawn to gether with a large rosette of black chiffon. Tbe back Is arranged in two deep pleats which exteud from sliuulder lo belt in V -shaped outline. A plulu luce collar completes tbe neck, aud the waist is finished with a narrow black velvet belt that fustens with a tur quoise buckle. The faucy sleeve had a fitted luce cup ou the shoulder to which tbe full bishop sleev Is applied. It Is gathered top and bottom nnd finished with a deep luce cuff. The skirt Is shaped with five well proportioned gores that fit smoothly around the waist and over the hips without durts. The fulness In tbe centre baek Is ar ranged in a deep pleut at each side of the closing. The flounce Is quite deep. It flares gracefully at the floor and bss a slight sweep In the back. Lace applique trims the upper edge of the flo.unce. Attractive gowns lu this mode are made of crepe de chine, foulard. I.ouls Ine, liberty satin or veiling with ap plique velvet ribbon, lnce or cblflen ruchtngs for decoration. The style Is especially appropriate for these soft, dinging fabrics. To make the waist in tbe medium size will require two nnd one-quarter yards of twenty-two-inch material, with one yard of all-over lace. To make the skirt In the medium ske will require six und onc-qunrter yards of forty-four-lnch material. The Moire fttock Collar. ( French knots in white or pink nra sprinkled as a border decoration to tbe "bishop front tabs" of a fashionable stock collar. The long pieces start di rectly from the top of the collar and fall straight down, us long again as the neckband. The upper bishop and the neckband are both made of black moire. The French knots mnke a run ning border ou the lower edge of the moire turn - over. There are pretty stock ties in taffeta with stitched turn overs, in crepe de chine, with vertleM or horizontal tucks, nud ulso In chiffon, but tbe moire stock collars are quite the "dernier crl." Chiffon Appllqne. There's nlwuys a pluce for the chiffon appliques, even though we. have seen them before. Quite the latest is nn or chid pattern lu black chiffon, richly embroidered lu rose, turquoise, greens, gold nnd tinsel. Taffeta appliques are In demand, too. Black Velvet Klbbon in Evidence. Black velvet ribbon Is quite ns mush in evidence as ever, uppeariug lu every possible mode of using It, aud espe cially as a decoration ou black net gowns. AND FIVE GORED SKIRT, A Brljcht-Green l'artiaol. One bright-green parasol has a green stick of wood, and dotted on the top two or three small thamrocks In gilt. Misses' Blouso Eton. ' Jaunty jackets In this mode are usu ally accompanied by skirts of the same muteriul, aud are especially attractive when worn over shirt waists of con trasting color. As illustrated, the Eton Is made of dark red cheviot with a rolling collar of Ivory peuu de sole. It Is simply ad justed with shoulder and underarm seams. The back fits smoothly across the shoulders, and has slight fulness at tbe belt. The fronts fasten In the centre with small silver buckles. A plain rolling collar completes the neck uud forms loug narrow revers iu front. The regulation coat sleeves are shuped with upper and lower portions, have slight fulness on the shoulders, and flare In bell effect at the wrists. When the Jacket Is Intended to be worn open to the belt the collar may be omitted and the fronts finished with an inch-wide band of moire placed direct ly on the edge. .Iu this case the belt and sleeve trimming ure also of moire. Stylish blouses In this mode may be made of broud or ladles' cloth, Vene tian, covert,' serge or heavy wash fas lies, such as linen, duck and pique. , A JAUNTI BTON. To make the Eton for H miss of four teen years will require one aud one quarter yards of forty-four-lnch mate rial, with three-eighth yard of contrast ing material fur trimming.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers