The Fairfield news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1881-1900, June 28, 1882, Image 4
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POPULAR SCIENCE. ! FARM, GARDEN AM) HOU>
' I
T-, , ? t, A Good Way to l>e Bra*
JS?*1". E,?na H- Wr S i Many often bu.n all their br
contrary to the genera. bel.ef a thick , (hs t ircIni f otchard k
covering of snow does jot protect the ; en(J ^ ^ 8 B ^
6oU as effectually as does tnrf from the , d ^ 6htnbs and tr
severest oold and frost. . . j add ranidly to their no*th as
PnHnnorr *>rtn?nmnnfi? fcP?>ms fcn bA nr_ ^ .1 - > ? 1
?? ?c---- -- we pat some imcsiy Deneai
a frequent cause of death among tele- trees oa a saTjdvJ goil a u
graph operators. The cau>e assigned j ago, and although they tad be,
is the peculiarly strained posit*on the stopped in their growth, as soo
operator is obliged to assume in receiv- | brQsh b(?gan t0 dec theJ 8ta
,ing message. fresh, and have grown as fast
! Anta have becn known Jo build mud : trees on the sarue kind of s
stables, where aphides are kept as milch I done, under which we spreai
cows. Being fond of a milky fluid | same time a moderate coating (
which exudes from two tubes on the manure. It is much better t<
bodies of the aphidep, they rub the brush in this way than burn it
tubes with their antennoe to produce yardists in Europe have long tt
the flow of milk. ; the cuttings of their grape 1
j Recent experiments show that the mulch and fertilize them.
tensile strength of glass is between
\2,000 and 9,0l>0 pounds per square inch, Hoof Parinz* Bonem
and the crushing strength between An English writer says:?"Ec
6,000 and 10,000 pounds per sqrare inch, parings make a most excellent
Mr. Traulionie finds that flooring-glass, for potting pines, vines, pelarj
one inch square and one foot between : &c., and cn3 can easily make
the end supports, breaks under a load ments with the nearest blacki
of 170 pounds. j save them. Bones are most
Mr. May bridge has been exhibiting i a garden; they decompose bi
some remarkably rawid process photo- [ keep the ground open anc
graphs in Paris, one of which is said to valuable in vine border makin
have been taken in one-hundredth of a j champion bunch of grape3 e]
second. He has obtained a series of Edinburgh some year3 ago, ^
six photographs during the leap of a twenty-sixjpounds, did th
clown, which, when projected onascreen j ??uu gxcw iu ftJCau uc
by a zeotrope, exhibit the clown as in i ^ should also be known ths
motion, with all his changes of position, were heaps of bones in the
-Numerous oases of fire from the spou- j ^oVTt^TaseT^he
recorded 'S After consSerablo^eiperi^ TO!lls' tw0 good plants ?< Tom
menting," Mr. W." W. Williams baa Sn- ! were planted v
eluded that spontaneous combustion ! aM " ,the ?' Septemb
tafces place in some degree in all oases , 3SS2lTs?JiS ??
when coal is exposed to the atmosphere, , .
although the oombnstion may proceed j P*enl7 01 waler*
so slowly that the rise of temperature ?
will amount to only a few degrees. Pruning le 00 v ines"
Experiments upon the action of the ^ Poetical gardener savs: ?L
eleotrio Ik-ht on plants, at the Palace of ! 48 * teet of,a Practlc(
Industrie, hLeresulted less favor- j g?? l t\r?heT
ably than was expected. The naked ^7 " . , ,
rajs from the eleclric arc were fonnd i eh,, ote of the melons, sqashes
to be injurious; after passing through : cam f?' an~ 80?e to run
glass they ceie to have any hurthl j >??" The squa?h plant se,
action upin plants, but their efficacy i fu?!l? ?te,m- read,mg more th.
was not great. Illumination at night ii i?t but did not bear any fruit..
not fatal to plants, but no proof has P"?nt pinched until it ft
been obtained that it is really beneS- j <*?$ ?* .m?e, ?f ""ernungta
c^j : shoots, eight feet square, and
sixteen Fanasfces. The present
1 They are going to try a strange ex- mTiskmelon plant, thus pincl
penment in Pans. _ The idea is to com- covers the ce allctted (0 ii
bine amusement with scientific instruc- has set twenty-three specimens
tion by producing at one of the theaters the mcst of w'hieh have been
a series of scientific dramas. Already off< The pitching causes man<i
three plays have been provided for this braEche3, which latter produc'<
bold scheme, and their titles indicate j maie or fertile blossoms, while tl
plainly in what direction the audience ; vines ODjj produce the male bli
, ^ is to be instructed. The first is called :.The difference in favor of the Denis
Papin; or, the Invention of Steam ^ acre oi me2ons treated by this
as a ?otor; the second, 'Kepler; or jng process maj easily amount
Astronomy and the Astrologer, and the barrels."
third is *Gutenberg; or, the Inyention i
Of Piinting.'n Care 01" Trees after Transplant
??^? | -VT L 1 iV.i
TUP MHP i inuiBpuuiwu ? "??
TILh H U .a fc DOv/IjK. b tart in g properly should rec9iv
T>*i L - i tion. The first suggestion is al'
Chokkg.?Bit? of meat or oonfr?par- |potlrwater on thfsurface. ?
hcuiarly iish-bone become Jixed in if ar,T 0f this moisture ever reac
the thr .at, and, scccraing to size, pw-- root" whfre jt COT,a be beI
duce either suffocation (chokin? , or ; ElperjeIlce 0f iste ye?? has tan
troublesome tickling cough. lreat- : ^pl^ters toat when the soil
ment: If thepeison be choking give a iy ^ 80 as to ccme tot0 j,
smart slap with the open hand between with all the roots,
ohe shoulders. In nine cases out of ten course stop all air passages amon
the sadden compression of the air in ; but brtle water afier Ranting i
the chest will shoot tht.substance out , ^ Dui m eIcefEwl7 |rj
*u t mout h; hnt if not, look into the howe ?veIal deep hSles
throat and se.if there be anything yen i ^ the u . of
can reach with your nnger and thumb , fcat ma Kater ;a in several
or a large blunt-pointed pair of scis- | b t ^ 0rainaT7^.?0Ils a libere;
sois, and pull it out. If you do not 0ver the surfai will answer. 1
succeed in this, take a silver or pewter r(.8torative for a weakly tree afte
tablespoon, tend it a Utile, and push it I planting is to shade the bark,:
K?P 4Mt9?'? 0,8 maybe done by wrapping tt
back of the tnroat, and tou will do no j
noncrmntrs ftllntcin
harm. If there be a doctor near, send i "*
. rr -d : ":rv, to extend even to the mam brae
to him. Bat this is a case which ad-, j Moisture OTer the tops
nuts no delay, and tne life hangs upongg helpful as at the roots, so
K^.'SlfSZS TZ i ^orongh syringing among the b
till u . ! every evening tin til aotive gro\
throat, and the person can swallow, give i OT,OTrrJi OT,
i /_ ,, jr ,, , , ? . m will answer an excellent purp
plenty of bread or potato and a dnnk of r e
water after it. If this is not sufficient, How to Shear sheep.
gives teaspoonMof mustard and *srm j . b
water, or anv other emetic you have at , ^ vJ hand;
and, after the person has vomited, ; ^ ^
yon will generally^ find^itafl right. If ^of Sfh aboJt Set
yon do not succeed, send for a surgeon. , ^dtackthe sides doTO m a
Eatables fob the Sick.?A writer in ; Joose enough to permit a st
Land and Water caution3 nurses and amount of cut hay, or even sti
attendants against the too-common be staffed under it, to make a (
n-Ku>fiVft of lAavinc- milk, blancmanges, i !,?
^"7 _ '' ? _ 1. 1 , _ . O WDU UUO J.V/UXWU D*UU uvnw
jellies, and otner delicacies and foods makes a nice, clean, soft place t
uncovered in the sick-room. He re- on. Provide yourself with a
minds the reader that nnlk in the larder bright, highly-polishad pair ol
will keep meat from spoiling by absorb- gheaTSj that is> a shear that tiie
ing the bacteria and atmospheric im- set <jown hom the hand hold,
purities which would otherwise affect i ggt the sheep tip with his
the meat. This caution is much need- i toward yon, then commence at tl
ed. The emanations from the bodies of top and shear down around th
sick people are often vitiating if not aD(j neck, and strip one shoulde
infectuous. The sick room can hardly j txirn and shear down the other si
have as pure air as apartments occupied side and belly and one hind
by people in health, and the latter are ajong to the backbone ; then tu
too often confined and poorly venti- j an(j shear down the other side, i
lated. Leaving food of any description the sheep in a sitting position :
in a sle^ping-rocm of occupants sick j the time. In turning the sheep
or well, unless securely covered, is a bad i head hang over one knee, and L
practice. If it be intended for an in- ! other, in easv position for she*
valid it may convey the seeds of disease shearer. Wnen you want the h
rather than the elements of nutrition, straightened out, do not take I
8nd if transferred to the table may in- the leg with your hand, but pn
junou>ly affect the whole family. As a thumb on the stifle joint, as it is
rule, articles which nave been standing ; horses, and press back ; the 1
in the sick-room should be thrown to straighten out smooth, and the
the waste. In cases of contagious dis- will Lold 6tm . but if you take t
eases it is advised to burn the clothing ! w ftTld ntdartake to null
which has been worn bj the sufferer or straight, the sheep will kick and
used for bedding. When this is not j gle# Keep the gteep in such a {
. done, thorough disinfection is recom- that the ^ill be tight all th
mended. As food disinfection is hardly where Ton are shearing ; do n<
. be thought of let all such articles as j the wo*ol doWD, as that pulls th
have been exposed at the bedside of the np> and you Wlll cnt bafc ?t
suk be dumped mthe garbage or swill, gkin up tlght and bend the sh
barrel.?[Dr. Foote's Health Monthly. ; STirface you are shearing over wi]
~ " ; smooth as possible. Never tie a
United States Coin'. ; and do not ut^e any violence
Gold colas of all denominations are j them. When you catch a she<
legal tender for any amount. So are hold around the body, do nol
silver dollars, except the trade dollar, j hold of the wool on the back ai
which, thongh seven and a faalf g?a ns ' them to the place of shearic
heavier than the standard dollar, is not course this way will be new to
lesal tender for any amount. Halves, and you will think at first that
quarters aid dimes, are legal tender to be almost impoissible to shear th
tne amount of ten dollars Twenty- i but Btick to the directions give
cent pieces, half-dimes and silver three- j and in a thort time you will bee
cent pieces, are legal tender for amounts expert if you can ever learn,
not ex eeding five d >Ilars. Nickel and men can never learn to be fast si
copper coin from one cent up to five are 1 can shear a pound of wool a
legal tender only to the amount of off a good sheep.? [Correspon<
twenty-five cents. A gold dollar weighs the Rural World.
twenty-five and eight-tenths grains, i
and it will trite about 223 gold dollars J M i Toon* Piw.
to weigh a pound. When a gold coin j LCe nrs^ tnree momus 01 a p
is reduced in weight by use or other- i i <tenco is the most critical, and
wise more than one and one-half per owner, important period of its 1:
cent., or is in any way mutilated, it is it i8 during this time that its c
no longer legal tender and will only be *ion is either established, weake
w received at the mi&t for its value in destroyed. Every impediment to
bullion. "When gold coin is presented land strergtb of the ^iaj tells U]
for payment at the sub treasury it is fnturehog. Chid, damp, uncom
carefully inspected, and if found" below quarters at any time is a detrime
the requited weight it is stamped with j is especially so while the pig is
the wcrd " light," and returned to the sative as it necessarily must be
depositor. If he has been careful to ! of xarrowiijg. Clean, comfortsb
note of whom he received is he may ding should replace that which
recover the amount for which he ac- damp and hard. It is the prai
ceoted it. or he may send it to the mint, I good breeders to clean out t
Which will return him whatever it is | about the second day or so a)
worth for recoinaee. j sow has farrowed, and put in r
The standard dollars wei?h each 412 clean bedding, increasing the q
5-10 grains, which is ajout seventy-one i for the pigs evidently eDjoy si
and a half oounds for the weight of a up in the fresh litter. At no f
- ? 1 -i
thousand dollars. The weight of a tHe 01 trie animai, as sou
thousand dollars in gold is only about I mated, will good care yield
foar and a half pounds. One hundred returns. That perfect comforl
dollars in gold weighs the game as one " highest profit, is well undersi
hundred and fifty new greenbacks, j every successful raiser of swj
Greenbacks of a larger denomination straw is nsed for bedding (and
are a little heavier. : is much better), it is best to
Silver is about fifteen and a half through a cutting-box; it is the
times as heavy as gold, and about better than leaves, or anything t
twenty-eight and a third times as bulky we know of. If used the natura
in proportion to its value ; or in other there is some risk that the p:
words, a dollar's worth of silver is a j get entangled, and be laid upor
little more than twenty-eight times 1 mother. If the sow has a war
laraer than a dollar's worth of gold. fortable bed, she will lie quiet i
Oar gold coins contain 900 parts of gets hungry. She should hav
pure gold aad 100 parts alio; ; the food she wants, right along, so
silver coin 900 parts silver and 100 can supply her pigs with an ab
Th? an<3 t'nr^ cent i of milk. As during th'e first fe
nickel coins are one-fourth nickel and j of the life of her offspring her
three-fourths copper and five parts tin j their only food, it is of course ir
and zinc. that she shall supply it in amp
It is estimated that the gold dolTa? is tity and of a quality suitab;e
itsed by eighty millions cf people, the digestion. She should have j
British sovereign b/ thirty-five millions, Iced not le^s than three times
the French franc b/ stveitys^ven Slops of ground feed, gra>s e
millions, the silver dollar tf all conn- as well as corn, together wi
tries by about fi?e hundred and fifty- sufficient to ke*p her digesti
two millions.?[8o*fcon Traveler. plete, will enable her to suj
^ ! young with sufficient food;
A bee flying into the mouth of a point should be emphasized,
H Colorado man, stang him in the throat, repeat, that she mu>t be well
jfc.. swelling choked him to death. j cared for, if she is expected to
sEKOLD. abundance of milk and keep np her own FOR TffE i'AIR SEX
condition. It is far easier to do thi.?
b- than build her up, after being run down BonDet9 for Royal BrMes.
wn tre? b-' th<ti" ?r her' When n0t "ell'fed' ! When Qaeen Victoria entered Lord
wn trees m 6UCklmg her younj?. , , hhe _Q.G a white bonn
ees V ill Art,er,tbiDg: " a87 T7iU 6St conformed with the Parisian etj
ft rot ' MJ ?' *>op ? ??? i el the day. To every new danghter>
i.l? rOL9* nnmhnltiCrtm^ rmr cnn AonnAr /?r*nt*r?Tne. I. r J _ ....
" | ja^ the has presented a fac-simiie
;h a few gUch {ood End supply pure, wholesome this wLite bounet ana the piece
jw years On this point an intelligent headges.r has been worn by every o
in nearly writer and swine breeder says: "'In 0| ^em npon their entrance oft
n as this seasons when millers are grinding poor metropoUs. The grotesquenees of st]
rted out an(j sprouted wheat we do not bnd mill i maT be fanned, ^ it is said that i
a?, ?tner feed safe or profitable. Mill feed at all daughters-in-law have looked
i season8? and ?specially such seasons, is miserable as widows riding in funei
1 at the nn uncertain quantity, and we prefer to proce6Sion8 when obliged to don t
8^- know what we feed if we expect to se- unbecoming bonnet.
> utilize cure good results. Consequently, we
' Vine have fousd onr best results Ironx mixing Wild Fjower? at a Weddinc.
'us used clean, sound corn two parts, clean, ^ bride who was married at h
pines to sound oats three parts, and having father's farm-house in Hartford conn I
them ground very fine, and adding wore wild flowers at the thrc
cjVioof Vvran arid niKcaVo medl u/^ordiTisr ? -l - - -? *
mmvm* w ? v? ? ??o ] ifcuu xu tjau hall . -l. uu yai iui wuoio i#
to the season. If we have no grass or j ceremony was performed, was decorate
>rse hoof roots, we supply more bran and oil-cake ! with wild flowers only?arbntas, violel
manure meal. They are our regulators. Slop j dog-tooth violets and spring beauti<
joniums, thus made and fed sweet has proven in contrast was a certain welding r
arrange- most satisfactory to us. After the pigs ; ception in New York whereat w
smith to get to be three cr four weeks old we ar- ' flowers only were used. The Mail ai
valuable range trough and feed for them, where Express of that city regrets that t!
at slow- they may eat and not be disturbed by . flowers were melted by the heated a
I are in- the sow, and so that they will nct_ be mosphere of the room and ths.t sever
g. The teasing the mother for supplies, which, handsome toilets were ruined. In Ne
aown^ at she cannot always afford, be .she never York yellow cowslips, with pansies at
weighing go willing. The little fellows enjoy ; Russian violets were used at a ^eddin
a clever such a side table, and, if they have a i iQ Oswego, N. Y., some lovely brid
dit, but trough of milk, the. better they like it. I bunches were of Nephetos buds ai
it there Milk for pigs, after four or five weeks lilies, and at another wedding me
border, old until they are as many months old. tioned in an exchange four bridesmaii
into the will make a oound of pork for every carried hand bunches o! lil;ics ar
terrace gallon consumed; and then to this Duchess de Brabant roses.
Thumb value we may add the ucsnown but
i them, immense gain in the improved condition some stranco Mnrriaee Annooucement*
er tney of the pigs. IM3 not uncommon to find the brit
cnes in | The sow should have grass, if pos- described in the old magazinea as ?
>nes and sible, and, while she is enclosed, cut mosfc amiable young lady," and tl
and feed it to her. In a few days, if she amount of her dowry is frequent
can have the run of a good pasture, ifc stated. Thus a banker's daughter
will be what she needs, in addition to said to have "brought a fo/tune <
astyear, jher other fare. Thus cared for, your ?83,333." The Edinburgh Week
) among sow will keep in good condition herself, Magazine of August 12, 1773, announci
ishes, I and meet your wishes^ and reasonable j t^e marriage of a minister to "Lac
ig main expectations in rearing^ a thrifty, Bagraw, a young widow lady with
and cu- vigorous litter of pigs. [Prairie handsome fortune, and entirely ..aitab
at their Farmer. to the character of a clergyman."
at out a The New Ladies' Magazine (17S<
an forty Recipes. thus announces a runaway match : "i
Another Rice Fritters.?Boil three table- Gretna Green, Benjamin Rudclell, s
jrmed a spoonfuls of rice until it has fully emiaent grncer and tallow-chandler <
ig side swelled, then drain it quite dry, and Eiton, to Miss Fortesque, only daugl
it bore mir TrifV> if-, frmr wfill-hAAtATi pocs. ft I tar nf Mr. TYirhAsnna an acreftabl
year, a quarter of a pound of currants and a ; young lady with a handsome fortune,
tied in, little grated lemon peel; nutmeg and Another marriage is recorded in tt
fc, and it sugar to taste. S:ir in as much flour as same magazine as having taken plac
of fruit, will thicken it, and fry in hot lard. "afcer a courtship of twenty-seve
pinched Scalloped Potatoes?Two cups of years." Of the seventeen marriag*
r lateral mashed potatoes, two tablespoonfuls of announced in the Yoikshireraan <
3 the fe- cyggjQ 0r milk and one of melted butter; April 8, 1837, one is said to havo take
tie main aI1<j p6pper to taste. Stir the pota- place "after a tedious courtship <
osyoms. toes, butter and cream together, adding thirty minutes," and of another th
pield of qq0 ezg. If the potatoes 800m to bride, who is 3tated to be a gree
s pinch- moist, beat in a few fine brea -o.'atcb". procer, "has withstood the blasts <
to 100 gake in a hot oven for tec minutes, fifty winters." fUood Words.
taking care to have the top a rich brown. . ~ ~
0 ' . A Kentucky Romance.
- Wtot singular marriages thej have i
104 cue large or two Jmall onions, simmer ! Kentucky. The latest and most; h
>atten- in tte 6fat. sil ^t2toes sliced; cover markable twk piece recenUj in Mad
"??i'? with water, boil till the potatoes are son^le, and its particulars are thne r
A! ?e <Jo?e; then add sail, pepped and crack- cltf? b?Jhe Henderson Exporter: .
:b?s?L.e ers to suit; add one quart of milk and About five years ago E. L. Hendnck
m corn from eight pood sized ears; boil then a euizen of this place, was secret,
f"ont ten minutes. The above may be made S* 1* m New Albany to Miss Mar
18 from canned corn, but it must not be i B' M?rton- * "ell known belle of Mad
allowed to boil; allow merely to get woville and o< southwest Kentuck
and of ? Hendricks took the first train west ar
gthem, thoroughly heated. Miss Mojton w 0>
is need Coddled Apples. Take green apples, friend onlv knew of the marriage, ar
r spell, P? them to boil nearly covered with he held the marriage certificate locks
maybe water; when they are perfectly tender opin his safe. Thi plan was for Ha
an iron P?01 away part of the water, mash j flecks to make sufficient to support
times; through a colander or sieve if you wish : wi; and then to have preparatioi
I mulch 'hcm oo:b; me'a '""P ot,but: made for a grand weddimr; and the off
he best terln them; add a liberal supply of ciating minister, instead of beginnin
t trans- 9ns? a?d flfut fittmeg; ptit them th marria*e ceremony, should produ.
indthis on the ice to get very cold, then eat (he and announce to tl
te body them with rich cream. amazement of parents, friends, and a
ig them ? . tbe ccmpany, that the couple had bet
J* ? .. Household Hints. -if J mu- ,
-che\lf Ink stains can be removed from cot- earned for years. This plan was n<
"J"46 ton or linen by washing in salt and earned out At the end of three year
thf a water, before putting into soap-suds, as for 8? e refon kn,own onl? to ?e P"
ranches ' .? fi . e ^ * ties themselves, a divorce was obtainei
vthseta soap sets the stains. This, of course, made the matter publi
ose. Measures for housekeepers: One XJp to this time not even the paren
quart of wheat ^fiour, of broken loaf themselves dreamed that their daught
sugar, or of soi; butter, makes one ^a3 married. And now, two years aft
) shear P?und. Ten eggi? one pound. the divorce, Mr. Hendricks and Mi
d sheep An occasional feed of hard boiled eggs Morton are married over again. T1
Take a made fine and mixed with cracker reconciliation was accomplished by le
- - - - - - v ' 1 rm 3 p I.-L -il
- square crumbs is good for canary Dirds. r eea cer, ana on xnnrsaay ox iasi< weea. w
te floor a couple of thimblefuls at a time. groom went on from St. Louis. T1
ifficienfc To wash striped table-cloths, soak meeting and the new marriage we:
aw, to in dear water for half *an hqur; j graphic, and can better be imagin<
cushion wring ont and put in -warm, clear suds; tllan described. Miss Morton havii
This wash quickly, wring as dry as possible; recently been confirmed into the Epi
0 shear put in clean cold water, adding a hand- copal church, the marriage was accor
good, fui 0f gait; let them soak in thi3 for to tiie ancient and solemn rites
1 offset fifteen minutes; wring and starch with thafc church, and wis performed by tl
blades very thin starch; hing up as soon as Rev. R- 8. Barrett of Henderson. Th
done, and when dry roll in a damp cloth time the happy groom bore his fa
1 belly aEd iron. I have washed colored bride away to his western home.
le fore- clothes in this way for years, and they
e head look as well as new. Fashion Xotea.
r; tj^eE ?? ? Renaissance cloth is a new dre
Teg all 3fot a Drum >Yas Heard- fabric'
rn over A young society swell recently 1;ook ?kot and changeable silks are on
:eeping advantage of a sunny afternoon to call more 111 high favor.
most ot on one of Chicago's belles for the pur- Stockings have become marvels
*-j. li? nf ;?mrina hoi- thd a<j lace and open work.
1O0 |?Ut KVO? WA WW ?. -W VMV?>^W. ?.
ben the the yonng lady in question was not in, I The capote of medium 3ize is ti
jp and her Bister undertook to entertain the I bonnet of full dress.,
ind leg young gentleman. After the usual "Jumbo" ornaments and charms a
told of limited rounds of society topics had worn by the million.
1 T* Grenadines in Spanish lacs desig,
.called the Wy to task for ier Jreqnent ad- lre novel and elegant.
leg wdl jectival appellation of ' dear and .
sheep " darling" in speaking of her, averring Drawers are not gathered in at tl
lold of that in his opinion it was affected. The knees for summer wear.
it out joung lady laughingly defied thip. At Flowers are extravagantly used f
strug- this moment the absent sister was seen hat and bonnet trimmings.
>osition returning, and the incredulous young Underskirts are short, and trimm
e time man proposed to put the matter to a with heavy lace or embroideiy.
pnll test by concealing himself behind the Naw mown hay and puttf are t,
e skrn cnrtains and thas overhear the* con- new shades lately bronght ot't.
ill the versation unhampered by society rei
u/A^f/vnn IiaHiaqo on/1 r> am^ra o
eep so strictio'.s. The younf; lady assented 10 I lw-',,so ~LI
be as this plan with evident 'willingness, and "^ch worn by young girls abroad,
sheep, the doubter was effectually concealed Straw and chip hats and bonnets
toward in the lace mazes of the curtain. myrtle green, m.ihogany red, maroo
>p take "Why, my dear, bow long you have terra, cotta and navy, sapphire, em*
; catch been absent," said she to the returning and gray hound blue will be mu<
id draa sister, as she entered the parlor. "You worn.
Lg ; of dear darling, why did you not come large single flower patterns, in ri<
many, sooner?'* natural colors, fine as hand painting
it will "Well," responded the matter-of-fact grounds delicately tinted or pure whit
is way, belie, "what in the world is the matter are the features of new transpare
n here with you? Are you crazy ?" j muslins.
ome an The young man grinned in triumph j A j lo { g i{J mc
Some behind the curtains; but now came the | fa8h:0fla?ble for the bottom of dre
learers. wily young lady s turn. j than pleated or shirred flounc*
minute "My dear, sudshe, you don t know i One very narrow pleating is used, ho
lent in what you have missed, was here ; t0J t ? ?
to invite you tu the theatre. - u i j
' D m'tl'!" was the response. "Iam Imitation pink pearls. Mmd out
glad I was aW. He is the silliest le,
'ig's ei- jonng man in Chic?o.-' j he rll Saris
1 to it* There was a smothered groan, like able .from tns real pearls, except una
ife, for the cry of Pjlonius behind the curtains: I ? loseinsp c ion o an exper. ?_
onstitu- ?.Xjt adnim was5 heard, j Tomtoms are mad* of ^epoox
ned, or Not a funeral note, covered with muslin flounces edg.
growth As forth from the ramparts he hurried." i with lace, or they are made of whil
- j black or gray horse hair. They are n
i/vu VUW
fortable A Wonderful Cuild Artist. j worn by any but tall ana siena
>nt, and Once in a thousand years or so there j women.
as sen- appears on earth a child phenomenon j Parasols intended for full dress are
at time seemingly produced by nature as a ; white, black or colored silk, satin
Je bed- sample of what she expects to do con- j moire, trimmed with several rows
may be stantly a few. million years hence, j lace applique on the satin; the handl*
;tice ot Sach an one is a boy painter by the top and bottom, are decorated with ri
he pen name of DeWitt LocfcmaD, ten years boos and flowers, and the knobs a
Eter the old in age and one hundred in knowl- workei of art.
tew ana edge. He was kept a year on black and ^ ]ate fancy in decorating sleev
uantity, white by his teacher, at which he , places one bow of ribbon just below t
anggine fretted and fumed in his anxiety to elbow, and another on the upper ai
stage in grasp color. "When once he placed a ab0nt two and a half inches below t
ve inti- palette on his thumb he began to show shou:der and arm-hole seam. T1
better what was in him. Within a few days he device breaks the long trying line ol
a Wsa a st.udv from life. Wwapti fViA arm-Tinlfi n
. iO - ? , . n5JJU
:ood by with a precision of touch and absolute the elbow
"V " S.n? 0f f?101"' t boldness and freedom ( M h ", a a f th
nothing that wonld excite admiration if it were | se250I1 , in Mggi,? pnffs-that is
pass it proved to be the work of an old anct i th is a t|?ae5cj. t0 snperimpt
m mnch experienced artist. Beard, on first see- shjrred ,nlne5ses on ^red sl?t ?
;!sethat ing it, was strnck speechless with snr- ! tt lower rf lett f in an
1 length, prise. He says there are not three men hanging sagging pnff,falling OTer t
V maj in the country who can paint snch a ! pieatea floiices o- rnch.es at the bott(
l by tne picture of a horse. The boy is a hand- ^
m, com- some, curly-pated little piece of mis- I _ *
intil she chief, with black eves luminous with ! .^3WI18 aD dotted muslins are ma
> all the the fire of genius. In fact, he is tho j Wlttl *ny narrow, _gathered flount
that she only real genius of my acquaintance. : arfV3 above this a s]
undance Hif. parents are not educating him phy- j r04 Mother Hubbard basque, or
w weeks sienllv as they should. He rides to and ; waist, with fcJpaniers
milk is from the stu'io, and is the object of as ! tach?d to,the *l*f\ .tbl* P?inJ
aportant much watchful care a? if he were a deli- j wflsV8 P?f.ce(? Mane AQ.oineite ficl
le quau- cste Par.au statuette that mi^ht fail j e^ged lace, crossed over t
hncnm anrl fisterififl with a Wide O
to their i from its pedestal and bieak to pieces. ? ~? -?
;enerons j What he netds is to rough it in the ends of watered nbbon matchi
i a day. j streets with the hardiest b-jys and come i ? shade of the dfess.,
r clover, j h tie with a blaes. eye at l^ust once a . Besides the ' casement" or squi
th roots wewk. Under such a scholastic train- j op^nin^ in tue nec&of the dress bodi
on com- ing there is a ciiaoce ot h;s purhng | &i-d the lyre-abay? o;ienin< and 1
>ply her through, although it did not ^ave San- ; bodice en cceur, or heart- tape, theie
bnt this that boy phenomenon, to ^h<-m ; yet an^ *her variety of bodice that
and we the Differential Caieu!u- was ABU,' call el ceil an roi, which is faster
fed and and Latin and Greet were fairy storief. j toge hjr at the throat, but opens wid
give an ?Jl^uisville Courier Journal " j just below it ip a triangular shape.
\
r every instance, h .aver, the opening, RELIGIOrS READING.
j whatever its shiipe, is now invariably
Veiled With soft folds Of lace or tnlle. Religious Notr? and 5otra.
on \ fashionable but inexpens: ve walk- The Bethel (Baptist) Mission
efc? ing costnmo is made of black cashmere, in St. Louis ? as resulted in the c
The dreas is co t in ehort princesse | sion of over 3,000.
i style, with deep-kilted flounces edged ^ census of churchgoers in Au
of j with black moire. Above this is draped Me., showed that about half the
o I a wide sash of black watered ribbon, lotion are attendants,
?! c? a ',0'hG back and tied in TheEev. c. w. Allen ?a Dr
, a UOW, W1UI 1UI.K euusiaiuiiguver -p , . ho _ n
'1? the skirt. Over the shoulders is placed - pflium
?I1 a shonlder cape oi moire, lined with ??
qq i j - . i .. * r 1. j j ul0d CD. tQ8 S&H16 QiYj SDQ. WGT^
a* snrah, and fastened with a cord and th d 5 ' f
ral tassel of chenille and jet elsewhere
6 Some of the prettiest dressea for the There ^twenty-three vacant C
amnmor season are those made with a tlonal charchesin the state of C
foundation skirtof plain satin, either g t 1 y for a good ministe
er lr ITk' 8lj'h r' hlac> about twice that number of good
or pale corn-color. These shirts are ters readv to serve them the Con
>at covered with gathered rnffles of Oriental ti0nalist savs, if an amicable ar
he lace. Over them are worn basque bodi- ment could *b' b M abont.
ces of plain or watered silk which match ,
l in hue the color of t>he skirt, faintly _-^r* e7? the present D
' seen underneath its lace covering. Westminster, is one of a fan
' ' Above these skirts are worn fichus or twenty-two children. His fathe
Mother Hubbard capes made of lace noted evangelical preacher of Cla
and tieci with wateied ribbons. wa3 twice married, and had t
__________ family by each wife. Seven of hi
were for a time on the foundati
t- ni.rnrc -cat* <rnr> fT'T>TArc at..* i: ..11
XAUJia xuifc luu vtivtvus- uieir respective colleges.
)W * A census of church attendance
1(j Pittsburg, Pa., produces more than Louis shows that the total on a
r, half the glass made in the United Sanday of church-goers was 11
a{ States. Of these 85,171 were Catholics,
id Nearly all birds that nest in holes, Presbyterians, 7.42:) Methodists,
n- either in the ground or in troes, lay Lutherans, and 4 51-. Baptists.
3s white eggs. Sanday schools there was an atter
id Archeiy is said to have bee:i intro- ?* *3,102.
dnccd into England by the Normans of
William the Conquers. >earcr'?od-t0Thee"
According to D Israeli, the custom of a hundred persons, noted fo
, dotting the letter i was not piacticed ana. religions feeiing, were
A until the eleventh century. ? mention their favorite hymns
le nx.- -iv onnnnnn t i theui, probablv would include "?
lr k 0luo,' '"^?Ter 3.000,000 o! people my God, to Th.e," among the at
0B kas only 3h 000 panpers, who coits the ^ohjmnie s0 freqMDtly snog
8 something over $500,000 yearly. nerals as this lyrical aspiration a[
[y A complete set of papier-mache fur- lowship with the Lord. Its aut
j ?m. . ??? , , ,, x1 -
es mture uaiaiu wxlu iuu:iuoi-ui'j)onn n?s scarcely Known to ine tnouBanci
ly made a few years ago for the qt.een of sing it, and, therefore, we publiai
a Spain. acconnt of her life given by a <
Le Whales have been recently ssen on pondent of the Chicago Tribune :
the Georgia coast, and have become so "Sarah Flower was born in Camt
5) bold that they even enter inland England, February 22, 18a5. Sh
^ streams. the younger of two daughters.
Some antiquarians assert that cards tetber, Benjamin Flower, was the
originated from the mo re ancient game an<^ proprietor of the Cambridge I
of chess, and that both games came geQCer.
16 from India. "By the death of her mother,
Suppression of gladiatorial shoira was oconrr.e<| whe" eh*. was
? not effected in Borne till neatly ninety of her edncation was devolve.
n years after Christianity had became a ? displayed a tas
in Qf0?a literature. Her elder sister, Ehz:
>a State religion. ^
if There are no fewer than sixty-tbreo *" she was married to W
,n varieties of the common bramble sla&si- Bridges Adams, a distinguished
if tied and named by botanists as being n6er> wa-? a contnbator to sc
,e found in England. fading newspapers and xe
n Belgian miners can perform a large She died in 1849.
jf amount of work almost without food, "She is described as a 'pers
their strength being maintainei by strong sense and great religious
their habitual use of coffee. estness,' and as one who 'prodt
Dr. Lawrenco "Washington the grand- deep impression on those who me
in nephew and nearest living relative of Her contribafions to periodicals
V" George Washington, is a farmer and numerous, both in prose and ia j
fruit-grower near Denison, Texas, "She prepared a catechism fo
e' Of hammers it may be said c-f the Jen which was entitled 'The F1
different forms and sizes that the jeweler L"e Fountain. She was also a
i' has the lightest, the iron-wor&er the po*%T ?* m^cJ
heaviest, the shoemaker the broadest, _S?me_of her works were col
the upholsterer the longest, and the pubnthed under the title of
l' file-cutter the oddest. a'10n> Aspiration and Belief.' Ir
? - . she published a dramatic poem 3
,a la the southern part of Delaware is a ^ m the mwdom J .Vira
... cwamn frr\m xrhmh fnr manv tpsm naat
^ j j pex.ua. aau which ene ueuicawju
id cypress logs have been taken cut by gister
d shingle-makers at a depth of fifteen feet account is given of the ci
> below the present surface, which is stances under which she compose
a covered by a thrifty forest. hymn by which she is b?st known
is A village shoemaker in Italy has been health, it is said, failed graa
i- taken in hand by Patti, she finding a 'almost her last breath barstinj
ig phenomenal teaor pouring from his unconscious song.' The place <
je throat as he was pegging away in his b irial is near Harlow, Essex."?[Y
ie stall as she passed. She will pay the Companion.
11 expense of edacating the melodious m
in chord wainer. Elephants Minding the Baby
31 Here is the record of a recont day's m, . ,
8> work by Mr. Gladstone: In the early There is nothing by any mean
morning there was the usual business C0 !?0J1 or mcredzble in the i
with his private secretaries?business of which have been reported, says
? itself sufficient to exhaust the energies land, about the children of amaho
of most men?then followed a journey for ^7 the mahout s ele
01 to Windsor, the council, the private in- 18 al^ys expedient to employ s
Br terview with the queen and the return nei mahout if you can, with a
83 to London. Immediately after came working wife and two or three chi
16 the great gathering in Downing street, ^e whole family become, as it
lfc- and the speech from the prime minister; parasites to the elephant by whon
10 then followed the sitting of the house If
16 of commons, where questions had to be ?
"J answered and two speeches made; ^
id _u:i_ j v,tt seen a baby placed by its mothe:
WJLU1U tuo uaj woo rruuuu up uj uuo .. , ,,
'8 long and remarkable address on the tematicaUy nnder the elephant s
?" main question of the procedure of the and within reach of its trnnk, whi.
d- lor^g * mother went to felch water, or
of ' wood or materials to cook the i
26 ttrlherv in Tcrkev dinner. No jackal or wolf won
[ig JJrloery in Jiurkey. Hkely tQ pick up &nd off a
ir _ Admitting the necessity of being who was thns confided to the car<
liberal in the matteir of "tips" when elephant; but most people who
requiring information in foreign conn- lived a life in the jungles kno^
tries, nowhere is one so plundered as in very possible it is for a jackal or ?
.gg the East. It is not too much to say to carry off a baby, even when lyii
that the actual ruler of Turkey is Prince hut, when the mother's back is tu
Backsheesh. The following will give The children thus brought up :
ce some idea cl the torments he puts you companionship of an elephant b
to. A traveler recently related -his ex- ridiculously familiar without, anc
of periences ?s a candidate for a conces- all kinds of liberties with it, whi(
sion from the Porte for an important elephant seems to endure on the ]
i .o fn nriTtck o frr\c\A wIa kof if /^noo r^af V>Tl*f. l)or. tul
LIU WU1VU TTUD IV jjug W g V/ yv* yxg uuau X U UUVd MVV m?*a w mv?j * .
slice of revenue to th? Turkish govern- amuses the child. You see a little
re ment, at the tame time proving highly black imp about two feet high sta
profitable to the company concerned, on the elephant's bare back, and
la his numerous ^sits to the Porte he it down to the water to bathe, voc
had to give backsheesh all ronnd to ing all the time in the most unbee
door-keepera, hangers-on, mutes, mili- terms of native abus-ive language
tary officers in full uniform, to the arriving at the water, the elej
"veki"?an official whose dnty it was to ostensibly in obedience to the
or introduce him on the several occasions command, lies down and enjoys
to the pasha or minister?and not for- just leaving a part of its body,
getting around sum to the tune of three small island, above-water, on whi<
or four thotu-and pounds to the pasba small imp stands and shouts, and i
himself. Then, after all this tal been all the more if so be that he has *
done, his Echeme must go before the companions of his own a#e
Council of S:aie. Tliey had to be charge of their elephants 8i|.war
19 "squared." The whole proceeding be- in the water around him- I' tn?
ing Turkish, a delay, of course, slips off his island, the elephant s^
r?f A ffr>T 1 firintr RnAnt soiafi nrnm-ntlv renlaces hio: in safety.^
n, thousands of pouud.3, lie was told that little urchins as tbey grow up b<
lit if he really expected to Jo any gocd at first mates to mabcats, and even
2h all, he mnsfc go in^ for palace intrigue, arrive at the dignity of being m&h
and bribe the chieLf eunuch or coffee- Tbe wife of a cab out is almost s
;h bearer or both, or whoever bad the car a great favorite with her elephant,
>s, of the Saltan. He d id all this as remember a case in which the wit
;e, ecommendod ; got tbe greedy pasha mahout who was killed by his ele
nt fche only objtasle to his e;chem*) ap- (I believe more by accident than
pointed to high office, anci the Sultan actual malice] succeeded in quieti;
TQ immediately parsed his iiaie. Tne beast, which seemed to understar
l8s company vas floated forthwith. The poor woman's anguish at the de
;8t total amount of backsheesh levied was her husband, and endeavored
Wm the trifling sum of seventy-five thousand elephantine way to make amends
dollars, and the negotiator was compli- offense. It is nothing new to ea
mented by every one in Constantinople tbe elephant is the most sagaci*
an *0r k.av*D? ca-ried the affair through animals, and those who have had
; so quickly and so economically! to do with them cannot helD likii
* The only ;a I Harpers' Week.
empire is' to be found in tbe single
word #<reform." Tbie alone v ill prevent _
- - - ? ??-j _ The Paris 'Bus.
>3, it crumbling to pieces?ay, aaa rapju y
ed too. Will the Turk ever reform ? So- "The 'bus system in Paris is th
:e? c'ally no leal improvement will ever in the world.'' So says the guide
ofc take place nntil oorrnption aad bribery The 'bnses are long carriages wit!
er are trampled on, and the condition and on the top, but no "knife-board,
status of the women considered. Ttat as the London 'buses have, whi
of if to say, reform mracs annihilating commodates two persons on eat\
or "backsheesh" aad the ha:ems. Abolish of the drirer, the very best plact
of slavery, and there is no longer any which to see London. I learned
?s, rnison d'etre for a harem. The mis- deal about the Paris 'buses by i
b- tresses cannot live a secluded life if the ence says a correspondent. I sto
je subordinates are free, for in that case the sidewalk and hailed a 'bus thi
the privacy of the h*rem will have van- "Bastile" on it. They didn't p
-ftR ished. Politically speaking, suiely slightest attention to me, but 1
be some clever and enterprising Turaisn i sereneiy oy. JL iittlieu, cuc jivAu c*
m patriot, like Faad or Ali Pasha, will next with the same result, and
jje rise up and regenerate his country, 'buses were not full I began to j
lis With snch a soil and cliira'e as Turkey 'ended about it. I shouted at tb
j a possesses?with such illimitable re- one and waved my umbrella, bu
Q(j sources?what could not be done 1 But driver and guard looked at me
the root of all the evil in the govern- sort of mild curiosity as they c
)n? ment of Turkey is bribery. Once passed on. As my gestures 1
?0 depose Prince Backsheesh and raise the more emphatio, and my shouts t
standard of their women, we shall see more audible, a white aproned
the Turks fairly on the road pointing to approached from the cafe in f:
er_ reform and a sound administration, which I stood and said:
k Ant not until then. "Parley voo Fransay, mossu?"
?v0"
)EQ II J,u*
"You 3peak de English, den?"
Wealth of the Ancients. "Yes."
Ninus inherited from his father, "Well, my mastair, le pro}
Nimrod, a farm as big ai a good-sized would be oblige if you not repea
western state, with 120,000 cattle, wave la paraplue?le?umbrel.
14,000 slaves and about $600,000 000 as move away."
a wording capital, all of which he "Then, does your master, tl
doubled before his death. Cjrus, the prietor, imagine I am doing this
, ' kin< of Persia, had at one time 30,000 amusement of your master, the j
Q horses, 40,0'J0 cattle, 200,01)0 sheep, tor, and hi3 guests? I want to ?
13 0(10 a?*es and 25.000 slaves, and of these idiotio'buses if I cao."
?5,0j0j000,0C0 spare cash besides. "You vont to get onze'but-?"
___ the waiter, icr astonishment. ' Z
lTe you not go to ze stasKei?le si
ce In Norway, where fish is prepared aud he pointed down tn uouiev
:he w:th mnch. incenuitv in many Wdjs. Italieop, to where a'bns was 8
i i- t ey make flour of the fleih of the tish and pe< nl* were crowding on boi
i-< ground to powder. It is rued instead of "Ttien 'buses stop only at s
ied rico bnd potatoes, and the biscuits ma-;e life#* railway train.-?"
e y from. it are said to be ex'r-melv nutri- "Cairta'omarg, mossti. Zi 'b
In cious.?[Dr. Foote's Healt h Monthly. taim de Faree ez ze best in za *
s >
i
t
. i
i
A LONG LOST SON. a v., "KaJoy Yonr Life
Is good philosophy, du: to do ac ;
Return Home oi a Yonng Han after Twenty orlff^e Df4Kere??^
lear.Am.nstlHe In.flan.. ?V0 peJleta;? which ar0 mi!d>
_____ The history of a singular case, one their operation. OfalldrngKiatt
onver- which might, if the phrase were not too . , .
a? -ja j l ^ i-u l. A 'wood dea:er aavisea larmi
heekneyed, be said to demonstrate that lit article with the bark np.
gnata, ''truth is stranger than fiction," has tne bark adheres to the wood am
popu- teen disclosed at Winona, Minn. In item of some importance whe
the quiet little village of St. Charles, in cords it up for the market.
. E. B. the western end of this country, there Tf ?n eTrflrIence bad tagte ^ r
pastor resides a lady named Mrs. Ruth A. nea4or yellow calor of skin. fe
N. K., Barber. She has been married twice, drowsy. appetite unsteady, freq
buried Her first husband named Camp was ?r dizziness, you are " bilious,"
service killed at the battle of Pittsburgh Land- mlrotlM ?onr ,lveF *> 2
kg. His relict then lived, with several JUS SET}? B
ongre- children, on the Big Wolf river, Wanpa- ?
onnec ca coanty> Wisconsin. In 1864 one of lT is estimated that the annu
,r# anj her children, named Orton Morell ?'e**8 *Frince ie 1,500,000, v,
minis- Camp, about four years of age at that 00?'UJ0*
ereca- ^me? mysteriously disappeared. He .... ABonanraMine
range. was last seen by Ms mother playing on ?FaJ^p^pSS," to "i;
the river bank, and his little cap being which as & remedy for female
ean of floating in the stream, it was kindred affections thonaanda test
lilv of generally supposed he had drowned. A Last Year the American tract
t thp persistent search and dragging of the liehed abont 300,000 volumes, a:
pham r^ver failed to discover his body 5,500,000 tracts
Fw* or any further trace of him. His mother waraer'.safe Kf J?.y and l
did not for a time fully accept the ~ . .T IT
- - '"> drowning theory, a hone clinging to I fnr* fSiu1orwaj' 13 6 D
QJ1Q Q| w > - *. w v v vmw Tl
her, as it only will to a mother, that at
. ? some time the missing darling "would ? . ? . Kidu?v DUe&M.
reofr' to?/P' 104110 nei8bb?t.??i'.-l ,ho' aSSSJSjcSby'?
receu residence were camped a roving band of *i.send for pamphlet to E. 8.'
A nn * Pottawatomie Indians, the chief of City, N. J.
, 6,9-t) -^hom, Na*sana. had often tried to bar??51
ter with her for the boy he having
in in.. taken a great liking to him. Mrs. Camp, Absolutely pure and aweet. Pati
idancs believed her boy Lad been spirited once taken it prefer it to all other
away, but no evidence could be pro declare it np^riorto all other oil
cured to fasten the evidence on the In- Chapped hands, race, pimples i
dians. The band was traced and their ^fd?by^?^i^!iv?S4p'
r cul camp searched, and the whole country we ^ " -?-??
asked adjacent vainly scoured in the hopes of Science of Life, or S?lf-P
all o: discovering some tracd of the boy. At ^ S5SuS5e pn
Jearer, last even the mother's patience and
imber. hopes died, and she settled down to henry's carbolic i
at f 11- the belief that her boy was dead. She is the best salve for Cuts, braise*
terfel- married again, and with her husband re- Salt shewn, Tetter, Chapped Hai
^ * ttt _ tt ? Corns and all kinds of 8kin Eruption
nor l? movea to winona. xier oiner cuuuren Gei HEXEY'S CARBOLIC
i who gT6W Hp about llGT, b6C&m0 ni8H and others are counterfeits. Price 25 ceza
h thi, women and settled down in terne, of DR - oxygenate
jorres- their own One of these, James W. athebcstbemedyfor dyapeprfa, b
Csmp, located at x? >y&i ton, WIS. Xle laria. Indigestion and Diseases of t]
>ridge, ^a-i at work in one of the mills there a neys, Liver, Skin. etc. *
e was short time since when a roving bind of Denton's balsam cures Coughi
Ecr Indians CSmp6d in tu0 Vicinity, and matisn. Kidney Troubles, etc, riAT)
editor among the nnmber Mr. Camp noticed naUy as a piaster.
ntelli one whose white skin clearly betokened Use ^ ?0bse powder for h?
that he did not belong to the tribe, al- ??
which thongh his gub was of the Indian
g, the fashion, Air. Camp became interested to every owner of horses. Postage
Inpon in him, foand he conld speak English Sent postpaid by new yore news]
te for clearly, and learned in conversation 150 Worth street. New York.
i. was with him that he was aware he had been allevs Bram Food-cares Nen
' , , , , . , _v Weakness of Generative Organs, SI
stolen from white parents when small. SendforCircu'.ar. Allen's Pharmacy,31
rilliam He had, of his own impulse, made fre- :
engi- qnent inquiries concerning the where- THE MAllKLl'S*
ime of abouts of his parents, but all efforts in
,views. that respeot had been fruitless. He sew yobk.
could remember but very few incidents Beef Cattle?Prime, liv? weight
ion of of his youth previous to being so_ nr.- Com ri to Choice
earn- ceremoniously adopted by the Indians, **"**"!.*!!!*!*!*"!
iced a but he could recollect that his parents Hogs?Live.*. *.*.*.
t her.' called him Morell. Such was the name Dressed, city
were of Mr. Camp's lost brother, and the Flour?Ex. State, good to fancy 5
>oetry' conviction flashed upon him that at last wheat-^N^^e^ 1
rchil- the lost had been fonnd. Two soars on Ko." 1 White I!.*.'.'.*.".*.*.* 1
ock at the person of the newly-found brother Rye?State
com- established a chain of evidence which Barley?Two-rowed State..... 1
put the question of his idenity entirely
lected beyond donbt. His mother was at once Oats?White State
'Ador- notified, and, as might be expected, Mixed Western
i 1841 ^sped to him by the next train. The Hay?Prime Timothy
n five * young man found it hard to break away Jill' VwV " "
k Per- from the life which he ha3 led so long n^iort^okZlS
to her and the habits which he had-formed, Lara?City Steam 11
but the better promptings of his heart ^ ^ Refined 11
ircnm- and the yearnings of Jove tor the beiDg
id the who boie him weighed greater in the Butter-State' Creamery', 'due
. Her balance, and he now begins a new exist- Dairy
lually, ence among the eurronndings of civil- Western Im. Creamery
I into ized life-tfae stay and support of a fond ~ :"
of her mother in whose heart dnring all these Skima
onth's eighteen years there has ever been a WesteraV.V/.V
niche Eacred to his name and memory. Eggs?State and Penn
Potatoes?Early Eose, state, bbl 3
1 BUFFALO.
Making: the Most or a Horse. Stoere-Good to choice 7
= Lambs?Wtsteni <
s, n.n~ In France, when a horse has reached Sheep?We terh.v........... 6
the age of twenty or thirty, it is des.m- 9
t h e(^ *?r S c^em^ca^ factory; it is first Wheat?No. 1. HardDuiuui 1
' relieved of its hair, which serves to Corn?No. 2 Mixed
phant. stuff cushions and saddles; then it is Oata?No. 2 Mix.
^ slaughtered and skinned; the hoofs BarleJ?Tw?-rowe B03T0^*"*
ldr 8er7Q 10 ma^e com^3< Next the carcass Beef?Extra plate and family..16
laren. ^ placed in a cylinder and cooked by Hogs-Live
^?re' steam at a pressure of thr^A ?tmo? Hogs?City Dressed..........
1 ^ey nheres: a cock is ooened which allows
>T5ha ^ th? steam to ran off; then the remains ck>rn?Hfg^Mixed""V. ~.
jpnant are cut np?the leg banes are sold to Oata?Extra White
ve make knife handles, etc., and the ^ye?State
coarser, the ribs, the head, etc., are ^ool_wa^d^mb&Delme ;
I t]f' converted into animal black and glue. wateetow.-,- (auss.) cattle j
ie sue The first are calcined in cylinders, and Beef?Extra quality 8'
P the vapors when condensed from the Sheep?Live weight
chief source of carbonate of ammonia, Lambs
babv which constitutes the base of nearly all og* *or
i " * ammoniacal salts. There is an animal Floor?Penn. Ex. Family, 6 (
1 9 an oil yielded which makes a capital in- Wheat-No. 2 lied 2 '
T*76 secticide and a vermifuge. To make State........ - >
7 PIue bjnes are disolved in muriatic oats-v?ed^ oIff
in a SCld' Which 13163 aWay the PhosPhate Batter^e^ySfS^eai 1]
& ? of lime, the soft residue, retaining the Chee^um__CrudQ . <
shape of the bone, is dissolved in boil- '
m 6 ing water, cast into sq ares, *nd dried, ?? "
ecome on aetg> The phosphate of lime, ac'^ ALWAYS KEEP GOC
u *i fpoD b7 sulphuric acid and ca] _ To si
Drinci- ?ith caihon>P duee8 phosp^v fl * * Tbt)
Inciter matches. The remaj Lra\? lent
noW is disLilled to obtain the *fuyaauj wnetc
.ndin* ammof,a; thelt8nJitin^ed1Swithnold
tnbino nP Wlth potash. ther^.e. )!ua ?la VfgTEZ^- 1^3 fforaiiy
*k*n.e rails aid iron of p*"^ description; th LHH g eve J
whole is calcine" ana ^ielf8 J"* * ^ /SI 081 S
omi?g cent yellow-j:al3-Prn8s,ate of P0,av5h> / troth
> Oa with wb* ** tissues are dyed a Prussian / (gl KSi Hglggi^thcre
jhant, j)jtle iron transferred into steel; it / tfjj
imp's ^ forms the basis of cjanide of polas- / I|? \ W when
itself, .am aod prussic acid, the two most ter- / 8fj| | y mui?
like^a rible poisons known in chemistry. -^slll '
ivera^ The Cur e of Chloral. rv _ ^^^Ve^iiidui^
so in Under the head of " The Curse of Lent'
awing Chloral," the Lancet observes: A sad [flA g, tap?.
> imp glimpse into the life of the late Dante \ wl ?\f?gCm
trunk Rossetti, over whose newly closed grave \ Sjl ^
These the lovers of two arts are mourniDg, is \ ??, H*' iWloij
A?A l??? *1>A Uriaf mftmnir of Theo- X^WSSJ'' VR?1 be.^U'
iconse auuiucu uj vuo
tuallv dore Watte. Tbe curse of chloral npon /'I*! Ii^in i
outs." any life is disastrous enough, but its &>hS*ryLJi% I vhen
ilways features are brought into terrible sa- casi<
and I lience when it falls upon the gifts of \ ^
e of a genius. No man ever lived who was so wo
iphant generous as he in sympathizing with . SJlW ^p1!
from other men's work, save only when the 13 pa a bo
gthe cruel fumes of chloral turned him l|jil Spy
id "the against everything. The dependence Remedy for this as well as other pair
ath of on its inflaence which chloral, habit- vrri.L X.;4ITS COLORS T01
in its Bally laken inevitably causes; the T^llV^[--\^aeK^
for its nervoiis prostration winch it gradually quiry of an old shipmate of Wilila:
V that induces; the irritability which follows an, one of Farrajmi* war-worn y
r - n",, .? known in the southern section of t
OUS of Chloral sleep, and follows equally the ra^ic limpinj into the American off
most sleepless nights of abstinence; the "I thoughtI would po under the
ig and slowly sapping of the nervous energy Th2l*tho rh
|v. ?all these are only too familiar, and so bad that I could not set off the b
ST JS! ?Jf ha^in 5Urin,R t?eiaSt if a Wend h^rio?^omUidcn-!cd I
ten years we have pointed out their tome. I hesitated some time be!
moral. bottle, thinking it was another one c
. , , tiscd nostrums, but was finally indi
? Des^ a trial, and a lucky day it was ft
i book. A Tellin^ Law- bless mystars! after bathing the lin
l. , T _ . withtheOillfcltrelief.anamyfeil
a sea18 Mr. Charles Law, Jr.. in conversation to St. Jacob and his Oil alter that.
' such with c:>e of our repn s<nitativ<8, recently thatif it had livt been forSr. Jacobs
ichac- ?id: "I have beena offerer from rheuma ScfwelfinShie
a Side tn?n and neuralgia for ifac past ten Tears, a way. It boats anything of the kii
3 from an J tried all kinds or remedies. Having ]lcaM oftAn<l any porsoii who doubt
_ i j t i . o. y i /% i t . i to mc at lvJ-t boutliTenth bt.~?1 hiLu
a good heard so ranch about St. Jacobs Oil, I tried v ??
- (n?nA 5r trnlv wonderful.? * . -
ex peri- :i ? j
,0d OD Pottstown (Pa.) I/^gpr. *
av ttie Arfenio poisoning is not always to be CtHZiATlO .
J 1 , traced to green coloring. Oae case was fona,
nd the dne to red wallpaper, and the snbstanee-. ' fortI
,, is fonnd abnndanUy in white, gray, bine, ownl
jet of mauve an<* brown wall papers. Jfr Host!
,e ^nth Mr. Ed. Trickett, the celebrate oars.7v
man, Kingston,. Canada, says: UI have rjo ^
W- tl* *ound fct. Jacobs Oil a sure and certain
quickly cure for rheum: ti-tin, etc.''?New York j
became Clipper.
O stop Senwaiter
A petrified fish, perfect in form and moet
ront of nearly five feet in length, and several I? i ?
petrified snakes were recent'y taken ont "MB &> Deal,
of a coal bank at Marion, Penn. --^r- rs- g
_ _ Poultry Cholera. ^ TTHiB0S>S C03EP0TJ3
Its Cause, Mature. Prevention and Cnre. By
A. II. Diceie, M. D., and W. II. Mekey, 51. "DTTX?"!? T
meta'r D., editor Southern Poultry Journal, Louis- ] 3C v i??t VvJ/ JJ
,t vor.r vilie, Ky. A valuable book for every farmer I
tri or raiser of poultry. Price 25 eta., postpaid. L ATT J& TT
but t0 New York Newspaper Union, 143 and 150 j^V?ll i?X? iJ JLli
Worth Street, New York. ^ ,'ij ^ 16
pro- j^,. 2cr /lX|6 urease. _J* ^ up1 ?
for the One tjreasing la?ts two week-; all others two */.'C-pwiimptiry.?vviih?'
>roprie- fr three d?y^ D > not be imposed on by tlie Vf.r. uanKoatjBj; flavor oMhVTirtiS
re,f nnfl hambug stuffs offt-red. Ask your dealer for Fra- used, is r>n'lowe?l by the Phoss bate
1 v-i-V with laiiel on. It 8 ives vour horse lalx^r, healing rropertr which renders th* <
> "-ions. Kemarfcab.e tc.-timonial? of
and von too. It received lirst medal at tlieCe.i- be *hown. Sold by A. b. Wilbob. c
a3Ke?J tennialaud Paris ExiKi-iiious. Sold everywhere, all arupcM*.
an why "jjs'CcntiTWIlJ Buy C70 A WEEK. *12aday *t uoiwea.'
L^ion ' a Treatise npon the Horse and Lis Diseases. *' * Outrit fre*. Add* Tuce k <?..
, ,' D-ok of lOOpapce. Valuable to every ownor
3r -7es of horse-. Poxtagfi stamps taken. Sent postfanaing
paid by New York Newspaper Union, 150 Worth 0 m |
itd. Street, New York. 0 a
tations, _ To mane new hair xr >\v us-s (Jarboline, a de- g Bay Sac |
odorizedextract of petroleum. Tuis natural
nq ct*o petnleum iiair renewer, as rec-ntly improved, _ _ . _ _
oruld ? if rh" ?,nl-v t!,ine th%t 71'1 re.alI-v produce neT Sf^iacw^-. B
ulum* hajx. It laa delightful dressing. - - XCo"62 VeseySfc.Sewloik. Factory
p' POULTRY 4
Sis CHOLERA.
noath, sallow- Its Cause, Nature. Prevemvov ,
el stupid &i;d 3nd Our?, by A* M? DICKIE^
Qtst bciduhi M. D.? &nd W. H. MERRY? M?
&e4 nothing D., Editor of Southern Poul*
ind Strengthen try Journal, Louisville. Ky. A
ce'a "Golden valuable book for every farm*
St. er or raiser of Poultry. Price, -v _j
M 25 CENTS/ 9
? POSTPAID.
B. V. Pierce's POSTAGE STAMPS AOCEPTED.-?
JS8-** Hew York Newspaper Union
society pub- 148 & 150 Worth St. N. Y. M X J
ad more than ^
(r?i> i'. am.
lost northerly RSMOVAL^H
?233& Tie filsonia Magnetic Clollim Coipi
Weuj, ?ers?y be^ tQ announce tcf the publie
? .that in order to accommodate the
cted livers, on greatly increased demand fortfjelr
i & Co., N. Y. Magnetic Carments they have reeatu
who have moved their principal salesrooms
b. Physicians and offices from 465 Fulton St.,
a- Brooklyn, to 23 East 84th St., New
ind rou^hririn York City, where all communiet*
madebyCaa- tions should be addressed, and ~VJi
all checks, drafts and P. O. orders
rcMrr*?on, * be made payable.
iscnpuoaa. WILSONIA m
Ss MAGNETIC CLOTH 01,
is. Freckles and
r" 25 EAST 14tb STREET, \
New York City.
be Blood, Kid_
CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED!.
tun i 'o ;
IMJlnLL 0 \m
Wi ilBALSAM ^
Cures Consumption, Cold*, I'neuaieni*, ! ?
'Ota Debility at iiaenza, Bronchial Difficulties, Bronchitis*
-all druggists. Hoarseness, Aw lima, Croup, Whosptag i
.3 Ftretav.Vii.y. Cough, and all Disease* of the Bre*t*in?f j
________ Organs. It soothes and heals the Mensbras* '\|
?f the Lungs, iniiazncd and poisoned by the
disease, ana prevents the night sweats sm
tightness across the chest which Mcaawjn
3 it. Consumption is not an incarahle mslssTW
HALL'S BALSAM wjll cure Too, cr?m
12 ffh IS though professional aid fails.
5 <& 8 ,-Vs.
41/fa C1/. tn LmgiyiiLm^g
7 ? w A09XXIA' 0 -m
4*1. $ UNABRIDGED.s
45 @ 9 50 . *
If f Kew Edition, 118,000Vorf^
43 <q 146 (3000 more than any other English Dictionary.). SBS
29 ? 141 Four Pages Colored Plates, 3000;
jl i no Engravings, (nearly three times the number
CO ?103 in any other Dicfy,) alsocontains aBiogr*pk? 72
@ 82 ical Dictionary giving brief important acts -r^
el ? f? concerning or^r 9700 noted persons*
63 ? 67 Recommended by State Sapfa of Education in
53 @ 62 36 States, and by 50 College Presidents.
(5 @ G.AC.HERS1AMiCO-Pnb'rs,Springfield,Mm. ,?
is ? 23 AGENTS WANTED FOR THE j
ll iifil Pictorial
Wl * HISTORY? mWORLD!
ona, ok Embracing full and authentic accounts of every a?^
i\y (gi to tion of ancient and modem times, and including ft
15 @ 17 history of the rise and fall of tie Greek andEomaa.
17 (A 22 empires, the middle ages, the crusades, the feudal
in /a it *r*tem, the reformation, the discovery and settieIU
(ffl 1/ ment of the New World, etc., etc. It contains 67%
6 0 11 fine historical engravings, and is the most complete
o gj s History of the World ever published. Send for spedn
/a ini, men pages and extra terms to AgenW. Address
/ ? iu/, National Publishing Co.. Philadelphia. Pa.
24 _ ~ ? mm**:
" ? 387 ran CENTS
on ^ If M for ths three first numbers of - JSfl
00 @ 7 50 evw K jag the new volume of Dixohzst'# '
25 @ 6 75 ng9Bgfl Mokthxt. Ten large jpietow i
75 @ 8 15 gMg ?Steel engravings and OIL
00 @9 50 ^SgSP ^g9P best Portrait of the Jate Preai- ;-,J
68 fa 1 68 dcot Jsaies A. Garfield. Two pieces of music.
79 dt 79 Three cat dress patterns. Two nundrsa limn- >
kj fa r71/ tions. o Two bandred and lorty pages C? chodco
on % It/* !i?ratnre, size 8^xli3i, or IX pounds of depmt ^
au O au printing, on tinted rapevpost free, for fifty cent* jfl
in postage stamps. W. JSJTNIXGS DSM02EST.
50 @18 00 Publisher, 17 East 14th. Street, Sew York. V J
imsfWmd
ao ? 69 Pi^T"0^'L1Pareativ*' Pm* 2ke ??!??* I
98 @ 1 00 ??5j??1.C0 Pletel5' change the Wood In th? "\pB
46 O 4S three months. Any person wW>?
<>a oa ^?*a^?oneP1lleachnirfjtfromltol2week?<-^?r *.
28 @ 30 ^s,tfre<ltosonndhealt?,lf8nchathj?^^^5?t /S
IAEEZT. eyervwhere or sent by - " i.TP
7r f> 9 7f Cor'pi'^'r 1 ypgo"SOJuDrERg?
o <0 6# ftr>i?^I'Owidow*,fathers,aottezs ?C
6 @ 8 JM_-ESL Thousands retentitled. PeniiowgiT*
10 jflS?3jJ?rlo?*of4aKer,io?.e7?orrDpnirt.Tarico*eT?iaa
wTSnar r.?Tix?A?m> Thooiaad* of pen*ion-rf ?aA
1 *?'di?r? entitled to DiCKKASEand BOU>*
JO @ 6J2" U PATENTS procured lor Inventor*. Soldiaa
M & 07 Rn B laad vjrru t* i>rocur??.bonglit and *old. Soldi**#
\n szC *!*. , H M*ad beir* apply fi-ryonrrlichta at onee. S*nd0
69^ H? .f.uiijj for "The Ciu?n-Soldier." and Pea?i??
*>4 Trmr and Bonntr law* blank* and imtmetios*. . W?
n- wll eaareferto thousand* of Pensioners and Ciiori*.
> ? 2o 1J 1 Addn.? N.W. Fitzgerald ACo.Pw?ok*
\-%@ 12 d^gp Patixt Att'7*. LocIcTioxv>8.Wa*liiiigta?L.D.tt
) @ 7 8VAAP Oariilmtrated Urwof the jy>
^(S 72* Sli^Vli Brother* ;s enlarged to SOOPac*
/4 X* JLvwL *ith tO liloatratloaa. aod acoaautla
- indudiag the DcithasdBunai
II AND Weu?itiusnicuKuiu.(,
i L< . _ ^ ? ? m m m J'ssc Janes after death, his wife, tm
if -i , . - , 7Q 1 tklgr twocfuldrea bornia outlawry. the Ford*
.lcktoyoct > K fl Kj ? Who made the capture.etc.alsoa full-f?t? d
Ct and tll6 a 1 6 M1 V B a enslaving of Gov. Crittenden. AfiMw
a an excel- _ _ _ _ _ _ Wasted. Circulars free. Outfits
Dlftll and B A ftflrSl This is the only true history. ?ewar??f s
> o? iAMES^jfi
10nS Of j? ?? ? Rft- Lar*g?t and Chcapf t
J or fishing, rrxmyiTT rnt. co? So. ITS West *& St.. Cincmn?d, <X
tf MAKE HENS LAY.
i Is a cer- An English Veterinary Surgeon and Chemist, now ;
raveiing in this country, says that most of the Hoi*? JgM
nargin si- and Cattle Powders aold bere are worthless tr&ah. Ha
a lor lying, *ays that Sheridan's Condition Powders are absolutej
t comes to 17 pure and immensely valuable. Nothing on earth - j
'that is per- will make hens lay like Sheridan's Condition Pow? . i-yf
I in no other ders. Doee. one teaspooclnlto one pint of food. 80UI 'Ct
and no verrwhere, or sent bv mail for 8 letter stamps. LS.
our friends >OHXSQy & CO.. Boston.Ma.?o.. formerly Bangor.Ma.
! picture aro T P11TU 15 ??=* r**. martoe.
jhig in that W\
Lai employ- *?<i ?e&d 4 cojuuxt no I ?i I ^m
?? TL'E.2 / tnt fatnr* biased or wif?. *leh uw. tim*\|
mS;MS <bb
iliC 6WC?.r- Milnmtut.L.??rtlrnt. 10Umt'jPI .Bimim, Mm. TaBj^^*
Theirbodies iianf^l IMPROVED ROOT BEER. -"-':vf3
tempers are BJ | * p25c. package makes 5 Ballon* of ?
nd the air is MBilfcaV delicious,wboles<>me,sparkliiwT???
sthev should 11 psiauce beverage. Asi your drupont, or ?ent by
iarenot.)and 1 mail ;or 25c. C. E. Bin*. 48 y. ficla.avc..Phll?.
ire apparent- ^n|i|R r & MOBPHIXE CflTIMf*
.he condition ;|VI |!8UI A Treatise on their LA I I till' J
it is much y | I U If 1?P^>* cure SENT FREE. D*. /-?
;r to catch HorrxA>r,P.O.BoxBmtofogB.
n which caso SUPERFLUOUS IIAIR?MadameWambold**
?ij v. ,, OSpefcific permanently removes Superfluous hair
~_*vV. without injuring the akin, bend lor a circular.
em tbattDey Madame Wambold. 34 Sawyer street. Boston, Ma?.
Ml; THRESHERS? ^
,t German TH?AULTJiAJiATAYLOaCO..M*Mfield.a
iful AilmenU. ?
rrr irjcT OR COLORADO MINE'* *?. SPETI>lWr?
li JS .rAi. l?r 82.00. Writ* for descriptive circular to
ible? Oh, h. H. Tammzs 4 Co.. P. O. Box, iooi. Denver, oolo.
cf* trp in* - ?
- / ; Tienmv CQfl per Week can be made in any locality,
JPOWSomethJM entirely new tor agents. *3
etcrans, well outfit free. G W.I njfrmmm&C ?.. Boston, Maaa.
.cerC?&? Aftjf flg 33 SSSd^E "S^ucJJUl *
: hatch's this 5^3 B vJ ieS !>** J - ssTairHiNs.Lebanon Ohio.
ever sneered ? ? fe
cumatSc gout ?00!?*?Gm-?eEflTSWANTEO-90b??? iod
or put my ^//V^\el!iBtan<cles^tbewor:d:l?ampic/v?*
een there yet * rV^a" Address Jay Broaion. Detroit. Mlcfe.
r. Jacobs Oil YflllNfi MFN Kj?u want to learnTelegraphy!*
'ore KCttincr a 1 UUI,H ?"? !? a few months, and be certain of
if thnscadvcr- ?Hnation. nd<)'p?=s Valentine Bros.. JaseavilIe^Wta.
:ecd to irive it CCC * week in your own town, xemis ana wjonna
>r me Whv freo. Add'sH. HAixgrr&Co..PortIand.w?<~s
Si ONE MILLION C0PIE?r 1
i Oil, I shoula, ^
nlwTpS E7ERTB03X-T7A'STS IT!
EYEBTBODY SEEDS ITt
.... . 11IIWII !> ? m m ,
>odily and menomfort.
to try THE SCIENCE OF LIFE: OR, SELF5
iter's Stomach PRESERVATION, 1
rc- Wte of Is a medical treatise on Exhausted Vitality, Karroo* *4m
itutton testify and PJlyRical Debility, Premature Decline in Kia;
i Tiarmleas and 13 511 in dispensable treatise for every man. irbetlMt ^l|
atorative prop- young, middle aged or old. jmB
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE? OR, SELF- Mk
-.hthl'id?: PRESERVATION, H
liquors of com- Is beyond all comparison the moct extraordinary
e, prMcrlbe It work on Ph vg'.olopy ever published. There la notidjag M
21 e^?*t and whatever that tho married or single can either
reliable of all guire or wl?h to know but what is fully explained.?
ncUca. For sale Toronto Globe.
2^S!fSnttd THE SCIENCE OF LIFE; OH, SELFrrn
g?taerajy. PRESERVATION,
9 Instructs th ose in health how to remain so, and Ibe
S3* invalid how to become well. Contains one hundred
/ra xi | and twenty-five in valuable prescriptions for all forms
11/ W ~ of acute and chronic diseases, for each of which &
I first-class physician would chaise from $3 to $10.?
TT7T?TJ i I-onetori Lancet.
" " * * 1 -*?" ar? r rrr. nv bvi .
A V MM ' xnr. it.ivr, ur un) usuc. _
PRESERVATION,
'WTi i Contains 300 pace*, fine steel engravings. Is superbly
Hi r?. A bound in Frown muslin, embossed, full gilt. It is*
y?i marvel of art and beauty, warranted to be a better
?. W^~ medical book in ever/ sense than can be obtained
;y y elsewhere for double the price, or the money will be
, fomD..OIIrf refunded in every instance.?A tithor.
t poS^stnR the THE SCIENCE OF I.I i-F,i OR, SELF,
e a* heretofore j PRESERVATION,
! 18 so mr'ch superior to all other treatise! on medical J
I objects that comparisonuaosolutely impo?aible<Lc^trBoston!
I BoMn Herald. . |gg
| TilE SsCIEXCE OP LIFE; OR, SELF
cog.ay > 1'KESEK.V ATION, -->>?
Av;KUst*.'MAine. Is sent by mail, securely sealed, postpaid, on receipt ^
J I of pr.ee, only f 1.25 (cew edition). Small illustrated J
samj-les, 6c. Send now.
RThe author can be consulted on all ze*
(juirlnit skill and experience. Address 1 -PEABODY
MEDICAL INSTITUTE,
or W. n. PARKER, 91. D.,
. .. 4 Bnlfinch Street, Bo?toa, Matt. '
a acd *11 other ? MR
^nchert IT'-n ! ac>. ?Oft per day at home. Samples worth SB fi?%
r, Syracuaa, K.Y. j ?010 VfcW Andrew Sna*?:. AOo^faitlBTid Vai<B
-