umm No Sear ak 4 " AN ASCENT OF MOUNT ARARAT. Whe View From the Snmmit of the Mous tain of the Ark. At last we stood upon the semmit of Ararat, bot the san po longer pierced the white vapor; a Heres gala drive morose the forbidden region and whipped the eye, straining to distingaish the “limits of snow aud elond. Vagoe forms | Burried past on the winds of the whirl wind; in plaee of the landscspe of the . Jand of promise we searched dense banka of fog. : : We were standing on the spot where the ark of gopher rested, where first the patriarch alighted on the fare of zn earth renewed. Before him lay the vai Joys of 600 years of sorrow. Tha airiest pinnacle supported him a boundiess hope filled bis eyes. The puise of life beat strong sud fresh around him; the busy swarms thrilled with sweet free. dom, elect of all living thing In the ~ gettling exhalations stood the bow of | many eolors, eternal tokens of God's covenant with man. Although the summit of Great Ararat, which has an elevation of 17,916 feet, yields in height to the peaks of the Can | easns in the porth snd to Demavend (19,400 feet) in the east, nearly 500 miles away, yet, as Bryce in his admira- | few other places in the world where a mountain so lofty rises from a plaiu fo ow. The summit of Great Ararat hus | the form of a dome and is covered with | perpetual snow; this dome Crowns an oval figure, the length of which is from marthwest 10 southeast, and it is thers fore the Jong side of this dome which | yom see from the valley of the Araxes | {On the southeast, as yon follow the out | line farther, the slope falls atu more rapid gradient of from 10 to 85 degrees and ends in the saddle between the two mountains at a height of pearly 9.000 “From that point it is the shape of the Little Ararat, which continues the cut- line towsrd the east It rises in the ; o of a graceful pyramid to the height | of 19,840 feet, and its summit ia distant from that of Great Ararst s space of pearly seven miles. The sontheastern slope of the lesser Ararat corresponds to | the northwesten slope of the grester mountain and descends to the floor of the river valley in a Jong and regular grain. The unity of the hole fabric the intimate correspondegne of the parts between themselves, in 8 word the ar ehitectural qualities of this natural work ii ) a8 anos impress the eye and continue to | " le an inexhaustible fund of study} however long may be the period of yoar stay, —Ecritner's ’ THE CRACKED COIN GAME. ANA or Sew the Shrewd Man Wins Hets With o Two blithe and confident young men entered the subtressury ove day last ek, nnd one of them dropped a silver Balf dollar, cr something which looked | like it, on the desk before ome of Untia Sam's money sharps. It fell with a dali | *Good or bad?’ asked the first blithe young man, The clerk investigated. “Good, said he “Good enough," sid the first blithe . yodng man. ‘‘Five dollars, please.” The second young moun, not quite #0 blithe, passed over a bill, apparantly a amount of a bet, and together they Jeft the place of gold and silver. The subtreasury clerk smiled and closed tne oe | Mts a geod ove," be said. “I have heard of it before. (ious some of the Surp ‘una’ sre waking a good thivg vot “You see, if yon take a silver coin mayil say, you cau take ail the ring out of it without in any way spoiling the oaks of the coin. Then ail you have to do 18 to get a confederate and work the saloons and cafes for sockers. Bang r coin bard on the mabogany. The geper looks at it with suspicion. on hastily substitute another coin for 48 that rings like Old Trinity's chimes, but graumblingly mormar your belief that the first coin is allright. Yonr con: _ Joderate offers to bet that it jsn't. You do a little verbal fencing back and forth. The sucker comes forward, as always does, for they are born every The confederate backs him up slap on the back and a confident on that the coin is Jead. A bet is de. The money is putop. All adjourn a bank in the vicinity to test the mat The coin is pronouunced O. K., and the sucker pockets his loss.’ Now York World. A sand hill is pot 'made’’ so much ax planted. Wherever a patch of ‘“marruis graan’’ takes root, there the sand blown from the great bank gathers round it h it, until the hard dry blades form the nuclens of thousands of tons of | : “hills.” Near Holkham bay there lay not 40 years ago a wet '‘lake’’ inxide the high sand. There the ‘‘gupnpers’ mmed to hide for corlew, digging holes and filling them with *‘marrum grass’® to make them dry and comfortable. This grass took root, the sand gathered ~ yound, and where the “lake lay is now ‘ising 20 foet above high water level— built by the ‘‘marrum grass’ from the 8 driftings of the mighty sand, = in Spectator. ~ Mother--You'vn been into that jai Truthful Son—No'm, 1 haven't. I'l] at the thonght that accnsed him of pnt: | 3. «New York Her- A man who gets m say should retarr oe rp ui observed, there ran be bat | and erack it wome way or other, on an | by on friend who was wdrth having: : ea 1 by : BK 2 | armor, wis a favorite subject of the cid the sand spreads, the grass grows. | both eyes open and barks when a needle at what the hil times daily for what they WMistniorn {dea of Yeaserii Tt bas bees seseried by sone ore That | 5 Ferra Boas get to r of ne VEE ty $2 iy pioew. If mire it swightiiy— py. A peed , hayes is oor (on is podeseried © thers I we oi we wind inf Hp gem vines end for way. When we Bnd gy drrisstos Bp ethers ix BE CRT red one of cnr friends in Rip r po hay Wy ERT foros pein da $00 mE wEsEe tant wpsre. This we seis, we prides that there's nt aboot trifles. And what are We that we omld ser cmreeivex wp A% HERNOTE 50 temch anybody asuything! ler thew learn their own Jessops from diffs is n better teacher than we eunia poss bly be, He Half the nnbappiness that crames in'9 children’s lives—nay, three fimrihs, we uy Raf ——8rikes frome the tiring teas ing and frritation of those oi een their adult relatives. VOh, Mary: © preas !T' they say, and then tir pac srk to make her casey if jemsibhi pop wYerY petty aggravation they can think of This shold be classed ander the b of eynelty to children, we thilik — Feil adelphin Call Critien and Munageri. Mr Charles Wondham has explained that his ecnitempt fig the prises 1s not, tike Mr. Penley's, posilute, but refers only to Christmastide critiisms, Ha hedide, in short, that the eritins are * bot sd per’ onor west. When the wind is southerly, they know 8 bagi fromm heromsbiaw.’. The truth poder managers ste gnperdtitions mm their reveroncs for the press ang nx it prophecies snsaah things for thom. A critic the other Guy got Into corre spondence With a manager wie thomght | bie bad slighted one of his prodactions, | By way of conclusive testimony 10 je merits the manager wot him a jars graph emenating frien sn olifoure jiress sgency, to the effort that td thers i% one thing in the world the lessee of ; this theater nnderstunds it iy the histei- onle tastes of the English peuple” This was of cores mist gratifyiog, bat the boanty of it was that the writer tl the puragraph evidently had nip and did tot profess to have sen the play, and had sent the paragraph to tse manager with & demand for a conpie (f seats” #0 as to give further partionlars in cor pext Hoch is the Sattering noetion which sone managis lay to thelr souls domes World, sti Ao HE = a Woo watt to teach him nese Bh petiingr #0 cross pa HE up ® i IAs w Keven Miles of Clothedline. One of the ruost (xtmeive laundries in the world is sitnatied in a siuibhern sub | meh of London, and was recently visited by one of (ur OWnD ERIESEGLItives. The principal boiling, he writes, is ppward of 400 feet Jong and fonr stories { high. Over 200 bands art employed, and the machinery oust alvmt £18,000, Thers are ten scinl ironing machines 8 feet long, and esch capable of Snishing : 1,500 serviettes per hour. The vast extent of this bopsiness may be realized vn learning that 15,600 antl clog a week ars roseived from Obe great west end club, spd 35.000 in the same jod from each of severul mammoth hotels. A hotel like the Mestropode or the Grand, by the way, oes upward of 4,000 towels every day. - Noarly 8.000,- 000 pisces of lines of all Kinds pass through this lanudry Jo the course ofa week, aod seven 1oidbes of drying Tiree can be ron ous at onos —FPearaon’s Week iy. i kd Rh WS SARA A Mode] Citizen, If anybody wants to moddid for a citi gen of the highest cles, be may find 8 tn this enlogy of 1 Dston man, Written “Martin Brimuwr, {reed from private care, dedicated bimsadf to the common weal: he took his pert in legislation, in! charities, in edueaton, in cultivation of art. Ha mingled in sil pablic affairs —not only mingled bot Jed. Natore bad made him prepomesing. nity, bis deliberation, bis reserve were fnposiog, his gentle courtmy was win- ping, and when at last be tttered » tow preguant words in a judigial tape the majority of bis bearers fapeied that be wis but expressing thelr ai while the minority decided] thal oppo tion was vain, Th lossin was ome plete.’ His dig- | a Waris, He Had His Orders. “Have you any children?’ janitor. #1 bare,’ tenant. faked the replied the prospective Tm the janitor decisively. : “Rat you don't understund, *’ protest. ; od the prospective tenant. "My youn- | lives in New York, and fhe other two are in Bt. Louis.” i “That makes no difference,’ returned : the japitcr. ‘Orders arg orders, and 1 have orders not to rent this flat to any | ane with children. ''—Chicago Post. = | The Burgiar's Bugbears. A reformed burglar, wlio bas no for- | ther use for the koow ledge himself, says thers are three things n night thief dreads. One is a tmby, the second is a little whiffet dog that can sleep with falls, and the third is a niwspaper. Al most always the paper rattles or crackles when a foot touches it. Unless a burglar is so desperate that he will risk his own life, he will leave ths moment he strikes a house strewn with newspapers. On Amither Lay Now. had the world you wi at my feet." ve “Oh, did 11" asked Mr. Wickwire. “Yes, you did And pow 1 have io 1 gladly lay 1b adn pesmi at Ss CAR PRE REE s ¥ery per 44 shamed a tn 3 $5 that sone CCrridd era gia of ireposeibie to wwii Bim ese in jest pow 1 put the jabes way ‘ dewens. bat be didn't get abel of me 80 ‘prech a% be thought be vss ging to. 1 were swords of wise 3 | ail rementer {yom fromm omt too | Capsar's pond was called Crocos Mors, part “Then yoo can't have the flat,’ said gost child is 20 yeurs old, married and i “I remember,’’ said Mrs Wickwire | | impressively, *‘yon once said that if you nag at yon for three days to pot you © i Pow Tom Sout Becanie Birk An interesting story pe oid be © Curt of Lowe oe, : : afrmet Toon moony 4 Far gerry a ey (Toe Far pena. ¥ : Niel ry PY Ee : or TA ing the ioesns of missing tip § prwitiom where he Seemene Deter, thw sent of neve af the grees dry pods firms in the great me iis Roar vesrs sforward Mr. Cortis vis ited New Yiok, wheres ba wan joromely sreeived snd rovslly entertained by tos rrinoe whom be had or foot "7 me he himself exymessed I, wud pee iE Spek . u for years before. Tom B fhe hig wig oF 8 Aeris Tha? he roma won bd hare 2 Ry in redder to tain o mew stoek, (mrs, rethambering hiv New 2 bist pote with Beats end ob Pha pant TERS #4} a ®t of store at “the Rap dowd York friend pd tee ded Rewke af thin | ied | hined serstebing | THE BREAD 0 What This Jovgertnst Food fe Made of In £ Thee "Cf gane Mr Coitie wns | Racks y starter tm Dif Ces Milwas- RE TE The Poteher sof Fis Cortomers oss sack. tering The buten. ers shop od Cleaves {inves What re logs mera me ilng for hooks abomt him ouotionsly | biepars, “We're axing 4, Have i for IR SET gl a er om aE end x deg 624 % 4 3 Torthoe Cleaves gov srdle perniios ned for sun hy agian a 10 cvatr—~if 1 had any deft’ Nomen it off and 1 kn sheen that this did lpmves— Yoni rh pn sharp opal, $US These's ne getting yor. And podody wants to {onsticioe. I don't Let me pil y Acad truth stout it, Driddieriek. bier 8 dom 4 anid 1 aid se a fellow ging to de? a confimnded) £58 oy if carpe off the sare ure Rab AF the satne Critior, $d, mt what's tabbape is such pleated bith on the weipht—apa? Grriddisrack—-(h, that so? All right then : 177i take that beg — Baton Tran. soriph Bo ir i RAEN El THE GOODLY SWORD. The Kgyptinss fave "n ihe Name Fifty Centaries Ago Half a hondred oeftoriel ago the Bayptians gave to the paced 1s nate - Birws those oid days the bistry of the trenchant binds, stained with biced and defaced by the soars of batts thongh 3 is. hokds pinch of the glory, the poetry and the chivalry of the cruel geome of War. : A frioed whose deine neviy wavered and whose power pever faibedl 11 Is not sorpriving that men sndicwed the word met only with human stir bs | with ths might and mwajesty of 1 theTipeives % Ctnles of Ga mapiel powers C divine arrnorirs stron comitbnasliy to exon] some rival in the furgiog of a Cbiade of a ten Cpright ont a thread with the same ene The : i How the # wv wn delleats that I saw pom whim yom oot y lowe buyer, i178 next fo Se when ba yom euch mowtoon wk eid te Ritbage fr | 1) % AWAY, 4 wk brian ie a * rg BL i printrss it ie made sTier 8, YH In drenry Eamehaii | birah Lark by fell, well prov ed snd bake nonstiintes 108 E Fahes mative Lire Firamd ard Detter ja represented] by adongh of pine hark spread with wu) far In serials parts of Giberia the peiple not only grind the | pine bark, bat out off the tender Kbooty, which procedurt most give Lhe Vrewd wn Cpnpemesntly rofisonss Savor, In Jesiand the Hiehen fa soraped off the | rock, made int) bresd puddings and pot foto soup. In Basia and China boek | wheat ix pros] isl servion It makes a yaiatabie tired, thoagh of & dark ¥io tinge In aly sued Nemine ed, gromnd fut meal aod teed Tor Proms) aud sous th ikem ing. Mile farms a | white bread im Arabia, Eovpt and nia This graces is oedioed with being the very Fret need lm bremhnaiti og Rice brew] 5 st the Oliiness, Jipaness aod Indiana In the India pret pelags the narchy pith df the mgoipalon 1 made foto how acid in parte of Alries 150 natives Tee a certain yoo for the saose parce bow ERT, SRETILER BTR COOKS As Kditar mid Fis Saas Seb which it strock a bes from the © body, ur hewsd throngh hepvy yoetal Tentonts and viking tales. Thess legendary bisdes bupe chores teristic names, hy which thy veo variably known: Grayster r | Through Serow and Mol Lite Lk EH om Art Table tock © Hxealibor, the sword that be bomoms of the Jaks’ Chae io magni i Joyensn pigred po small ah ema | relentipns hand of Ave 1034 : | The Japanese, whos civil zation was | old before ours beg, haw produced | beantital exstaples of the swordmaker’s art The Japanese nobleman carried bis - gwords aa the insignia of bis rank. He wore one on tach aide, thrast into the folds of his sash. These swords have been hinded down | 28 heirlooms from father to som, and it, was not sonsual for families of ancient lineage to hava as many es 1,500 of them—marvels of oomtly snd artistic | workmanship—in their possmion. The scabbards are richly lacimered and boend about with a silkea cord ina carions pattern. The biads is curved, and the round guard is pierced to car- ry o small dagger. a soba. is decorsted with curions de- | great fn the ingenuity of the Japanese metal workers that among | This gaurd, called signs, and so the thousands of swords thyy have pro- duced it is impossitis to fm two guards exactly alike, They are prized so highly by collectors that large sons of money have been paid frequently for sn an- | tique sword, omly that it might be ruth- lessly torn apart to sicure the guard. — Mary Stuart McKinney in fe Nicholas All our progress is an wifolding like the je bad. You have first an in stinct, then an opinion, then a knowl edge, as the plant has rot, bad and fruit. Trost the oi by th «1 ton Round | in the setting np of the great Praok- | Many a bold captain went | | down before Bl Tizova, wielded by the though you can render 10 TeRSON. | Emerson. i a Buin agian Soak eA vo eternal Bas ; 1 saul the angel ther went Delow and skys CRB Sowk trae Faroand hades for Wn fi s | fomnd Rims itt by a fornace fanning ab pdt Fok - hime if Pood pepe * with rapture 8p 8 in the fire, Thess wos a quent Folsoribers be going.” “Yea goon,’ sd the editor, * pot conning. This is heaven esongh for roe. : Now in the time to sshsevile Io And sow is the time to seitle your sil | scriptions East Avrora Citizen a a Si a The Welsh Servant Girl. Sle came into the drawing room { there worst viRidors Present) and suid “Hf vom pleas, William Haogbos bas eccmne. He suvs be boa po bead and bas pold bis tiogue This extraprdisary information starniad me for a mosunt ‘mntil I resenibered that 1 had ordered a calf's hesd and an ox tongoe of Hoghes, the local butcher Another Welsh maiden in South § singular pesmage one evening Tr my mglish paid She brosght Xm Griffith's love, and she hoped my strange people were well after the journey.'* Mm Griffith, a pear neigh. ibor, bad ealinl in the morning and been told by me that 1expocted rela tives, whom she had met, from Wands worth that afternoon, 80 she had sent polite ipgniries, and ss visitors are, in i the Welsh langmage. designated stran. ii the staple food of > Macedonia pei : | planed to storm the aity on 8 osrtan | cloedy might let befits his arrange i At thot tim the : i i UF amet ado sign on the don which said, “Dela propriated Slcane. said the sngel, “we must Tin ne Fast Avrora (Uised-—cash in advances Wales sent ina fit of the English ome, translated if into || / LAE So HAAS ASAIN FOS I i Compre Maliey's Torreon Crm rvwsrann Fo sd 7 ey Torpa ras ne faney (Lotee 2% thos seeded tt rise wihied vegies A PE dress ow Tha rue prearilang dress f Sapir, We are sen Yhap 538 srietiensts whem oe | sim rams of pieiany Tewmree be dress TR the § weiiom. If grin Imes. Spin. ThT WH some Tha ETE thet anybody ropld wess whstersr 0a Ack te av Wag me be oon {rwpnmd to Shes nw of th si So far ae 1 oan oonwertedd, ww tend snd word FONE A or watever tos rine Tow thee SEY fife DePls my wile Sample, Peorstagis. In Avgio Sse te wird “taped,” dwmited 8 pout ow vr of wood or stone. lin Beal natn : varions signifestiais. Book posts cfftam ereitedl $0 mORTK ror held, or € bi ae » Fo os ‘ERaoel Ix SEDER TO LRT WTR whre Arshraets Where 0 boy webs Prupetsr in Redfor Po ie yi sa NS P ROATISURT 32 ¥ joe hs dr ge mayors FSonS wit wm pane of thoy bn they aie probably : wis margdd be a POE, ; sien in Domes. Pith om feed. BS of The yo nae ton, v fords woarked CH we ere due haip i Tre i Keén way & White pillar, ereote 4 puarket cr jm on guards Bo £ tow Barbar, ar B05 sedieh le mrcesl Phapieharst rams have Been oa wend 7 e Noten and Quiries The Crescent of Ue Midowmmedans, The crescent srmbod fhe Mobi wovians has Drbipg Widows prokiedk IT Wis Bed 0 Lora Brat 4 toy tive Byaiotines parts of Tarkry a ad tips when (iastantisgiie wis ns By Eo soba of erm insivaly The IT Wa od 3 8 noni WE the crsaosnt MEpRArS, PrOVINR md ink thane Chaaged ta ostantinop ie i The story of ermal Ye ae Salboms: Yithen Phils wed By tanta, be | gud of | pefita Were Ras visted (he moun shane cast apd dierveted bis npprosh Th Ue bewieged tay meeordiugly | searehad cot iid repshid his foes | pomething witch wosd have bees Dn- posaibih In bo darko Afwr that pent all Briastine ootis bors (he sym rc A dy Ee RY A sitiaens, Wik bod of the crest sooo, which was alo dail to =e the “Huvior of By | , | manta. : | After means years thie Bordes under | Mohammed JI capt ared Constantivopb, erywhere and upon cesrything. Suspect ing that thers wnst Iw) musgical power Lin the embivi the Mibmpweduns ape i1, and hav sions seed it a their only symbole Loais Repable. da ir ARR SO VR WA Wr Henry Clay. | tion with the editor of The Gamtie a few days ayo. related this Interesting | ennvass of 1544 from Mey home in Har | podsburg, with the Clay club of Meron | go, ‘We Are Few, but Jiro’ to noite is goisbed oratios addressed the maltitade —among thm Tom Corwin, Judge Ew- pessee. Buf gn avait ord le dxpesed for Lahore on [market om the chasis #8 Foiww the Ns bs pared by a or like Huekwih 8 wood whers | stamioe or posts were Ht standing — theds pecuitar religions opines and osre. | | of the Solomon of Mohamed at ail bat | | pands of coin have bens found in ail : late hawk to the known snd im eieh of these the | Lin spemeent had oveneiing Kae weed ov | A Lexington merchint, in conversa. comity, on Whose basse was the mot the celebration held tiiat year in Lex-| ington. The: barbecne \wan given at the There a shember of distin. ing. provably James ( Jones of Tes. was t hat Mr. Cluy did not go ont | to the grounds. He cimsidersd it be | Britheh peath the dignity of a presidential can- | didate to elecitoneer. | How well I ree be member seeing him, sg the procession | tn in which 1 walked jesied his offices | (then with. his son, Jumes B. Clay, on | Short street, near thy esgine house), OF THE Albans Froowitim. “Hise smd Sh wie Low, Sweet Uhaerbot” and AN the LE Favorises (vives by a Negrs heron : Afvion ut The 11 wisn provented fhe pevtie Who are Bok ¥d 2 wae the we the proewedings of the :ly characterized srbt aod onitone oyeutitabie to the we pomiral Same tues was rade op of Those PrINTITE Ble gra ror Tew i whirh fear The samp of tha pegys Taagination and wiich Xe preniiarly enited to the expression of the pre fou 3 the Trews sores sre Africas in their ord and mold They were written by ne grees gowt mpe Heong (yes 2A Shee ToD al lteracare of the propia Ac pach 12 00 ~~ p i a TET 2 a CrP rh HE ERTENTE ae WIRE TY YES Bouts AST gu of FE by Aivarted the sos apreciated them The wrngiog of the pps was a foatave of Tue 1p griwsive oolored shoo The aie sre tha panier chord aire of the megriemethe rane generally ot poten The city chmrrbes da ped nee Flere a0 pemeh, but throughoot the south fiuey are sung by U The mere polished a of the megrows gry Tar ws seipnise wi the race. Clagett Steal Way, Rie sed Blias Pregher, Im Acrniang, “He Booms From the Dead” and others are $9 pi iar ty naar ly SrerT RROWS up membes of th raw. The rendition of theses xmge proved to bes striking festors of the EEE vawing Lew, Sweet Li oe of the most pemaiar of all the song drift: cw iet share, : for do BRETY Se Blane Swpy ww Pere ohariad, Combo for So CEPTy Me he, Foor Ya ORIPY We Dime wd 8 seeds soning #flor oe, stag Sor 1h ARTY Te DOS 3 Eom fy SRELY BK DENS, 05 vw Solemn Um voming BN ng Dor le ary mee home cise Bor Bs CETTE oe eons, HA vey mead Seale heavenly nonad, Cem for Re ome gee Bosse Stan} Avar’ ie searcely Jess POPE. lar A few samples verses: Bron suray, Sond SWNT, Bread aww bo Senge’ Brew weeny, ant AWRY hone Tom Ror Lard onlin me, : Wao mnie see Bor the thanler We Proved wonsedy FAN WY wie 1 Bain 20% Gg 9 Pay Bere Girvon Seovs are bewvling, Pons winpens steed Try ms temmonet petunia 18 In SF ABI I hadn't gol omg Bo Atay Lets Sy Le Poor warwres mre tevap tiling oe Spsuiviaaed Neale TE a ney sami { Rude d B51 ag to May howe, “I's A Relling” is mother of the he lhe RE 83 EG that region was MIRE overthrown | O Yretloerp, wan't you hel vee, i widens, wou E You help me Th pray, © povichers won’ ¥ou edn me By font, Tams yous help qe 8 Ling we reion of The Roar dX $ . The soog that sth an the religions : senivizies of the reciancre than any oth- {or perhaps i “Rive and Shine.” Bis | sung waiversally. It rons: | © brenows ries wad shine and give God the i ghioe lary: | Pee aud sateen gad ghee God Be glory, Soe | Berme aad whine sod give Ged the glory for the © year of Subiten LC Puentt pom want So ba os sebdier, seller wel : Eonr. widliony {Doge yon wast Se be» mobilen, wider de | Deptt wou want fa be a soldier, soldier for he : yore of jabilee? ES Ro id _ Por the pear of Jubileet | Yew, I think you wii make ad | Por the your of Jeliben. A aT A » great sport; but, like al} 3 AA gs | alse The raid is pare The wags Swing Low, Swess 23 3 3 ¥.2 p: on J 1 i ems iniscenc of Henry (ay: ~ Lremem- ENGLAND S FINANCIAL RAID. ber when a youth sod sn eathuiiastio mp Clay Whig of coming bete during the | S halt the ¥ a tpAkag omar ae, ZZ : true Joy. it is Seeting — Boston Heraigy,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers