J ao bu& > k aEtift&WtvS oitbsday can b^djU £> SfciftAfl^ ■.tpf!** mWf B#flourrihuig Sua |guorajEomt p*pep#'t*-«j*i»ll 'tjytrp the earth before the now light of a better liny. Lr .iforfoiriti^lhU oh.'-%pwai* ► obtained onlv by chesting the author of ..KSXijt Sfcist: gaiBbythk W}V"^ f4#?lTl,t literature ' TWetify y«wtr* ago'WO hugh «d to acorn the hisfoyifiL. UupyjC the sarcastic Sydij^ ,>1111^ "Who ever read* an American book?'' ami pointed to an array of American ' an Chora who hold their' own In popularity ■ and permanent authority with any in the world. To-day, thank* to the QOCftpulftiuU uf jnluU-d EugiteL publications, American riou the decline, American ttlaSafufe' u Wpldly beepmii^ a^hifig of Urn >***(, and Up* discovery that ta fcnrated . b^ok nn ta Hold for the scat bt pcaeawork and White paper, aa is done in the caso of Farrar'.s Lin or Cubist, in Ukcly to w$k# an American author as rare a* a dodo or a phnfltix. 1 ' The lMkbM' liberty of pilfering which was allowed by the abac nee of an intematiom^- copyright <ioua not taut'fil oven the. pUfercra. When a publisher has to pay no higher price for an author'*
production than merely stealing it, quo would think that he would be in the po aition of the fortunate brpqfn-maker, who was confident that no one could undersell .him, bc tapsr fye stofrt thqb room and ' stole the handles and cheated his workmen oat of their wages. The discovery, howeye^jjaat it is as «Mor fonrcme publisher it H fcr another Imp brought competition into the business, so that the publishers do not seem to make as much out of their pirated pub- » i^tcrsaoiits former times, if an American publisher had stolen the works of some unusually ]>opuler English author, housed U> give «* »*:, r I r-r.e,-« • <1 1 the tor ; ne would really allow the victim ofnis theft a «mallJj>orti<m of the value of hi* own property, acting like that tenderhearted thief who, after stealing a pocket- book with $60 in it, wrote to the -•ill you HCT; if n law's rtofSjpIIn TWjJJ send you some md$e." Fori:. 1 y the iiterary*WbW journal*, dependent for their existence on the good will of the prominent publishing houses, used to contain enthusiastic laudation* of the generosity of an occuriuAftl publish •; who would voluntarily pay Dickens or ! < reorge Eliot $200 or $300 for a novel ' which, under a copyright law, they would gladly have paid $10,000 for, but in proportion as piracy has been gradafly reduced to a wnenoe that* payments htfvi cegse^f. artd We hafe not recently heard of any publisher whose conscience gnawed him to any amount expressible in doLlars and cents. It does not help the buri-iesa of the pyhlishcrr and^it ,hop«'hrs*ly ruins the vutimr. Whyt should lffl A m4t$e*+ W* ' f f/% ■..« 'inv T*"
— "r expecv w gei an* /n*.. work Irou. - riublin»r>r wum the publisher can get the best brain-work of all the rest of the world merely for the stealing, and when every publisher is almost oompfotaLto steal by the circum- «*» fhfl* MryfSM) ulJFVr.twM Affflnt la not alone in light literature, it is not merely the popular novels of George Eliot and William Black a:id f>uhL|^ud Z"ja piruttti, but the -fondnrii hi*wwi|- * orks,\' b#J of | travel, of poetry, of science ; Hi fact, as soon as any author's work becomes ira- | portant enough to steal it is stolen. Anil | if any work is not pirat'*! it is simply , because it is not worth while taking as a gift- This is the condition of the American publishing business today ; it is a business in which the snthor is omitted from OOlkRfiMflwi. He dqe»not enter as an element in the business, nobody takev any account of him ; small wnitfW if tfie result sb-siJdfw that he wotrid Hfoippeat. and if thefl «noif1i Ve no such thing as authorship and no such thing as literature in this country. In fart, we iwre no authors: excitt those wha survive from Writer' timed. In poetry wc have Longfellow and Whittier and Lnwrfrand Holmes, and others who made t Urtr rrngfatiflg tldrty I years agn; but wiser** 'tfyflivir ^ ^iicce^s. ort? Has America any historian younger than th« pr-hbtnrie Bancroft ; any novelist, anv popular author, who dates | from (ha last twenty year* ? BVefi farts [ is gla*l to take a wmall < 'onsufship abroad ; Howells would starve if he did not get a salary as an editor. Pvrton says f thai the first re*fui*ite to a literary career in this country is to have a private for-r-iae and his pmfesanrship ; Hawthorne afrffTIenfy abfbfgffor copy, right sake. There is not a new name in the past ten year*, and nn promise of a new name in the next twenty, in A msriesm Liter* tare, and the low# of a national literature it a serious question.
1 '■ 1 ' it would be bettor to sacritice the latfor ^ if u ware noct*su*y ; it would be better jo r^l^rktare Hiviivii at horned ud j ugt abroad thail\o|fhave thfo U |tiou ni INI tie i.rintef 6f other Mtfous wrillngt. But U is not nec«>ssary to sacrifice either. Th» ,»lWi«h.*N wfci We Ww|g| .tmngling all American author hip arc the i-ap«) whoM most daei'ly *nterrat»-<l in i.i.d$U»lJkicw of A authorship, and it could be wished that thfy 1 lu^ghttUM^U oqi by, some less costly means than tlie insane competition or a l^P^j^^T^^ucid" 1 8r^oci> [I . The Sfbol at Quincy, | J (awackusetts. If ^8(3. (^grioT Francis Ailaii*#, Jr.. ana hu colleagues of the ijuindy t school committee, found tliat the pupils uaHhir Uteir supervision, afror ten year* tauehing. Mt*ould neither write with \ facility, nor read ftuentlv." The school *y«b*n> has fallen in*4 a rut. A multi|>lii ny o(ktuih^s liMibeeii taught, but llttto had been leaTneU. In Mr. Adam1* fopctblu but exaggerated phrase, "it wua %H smatter, vemAjiring und cram." The tow a* money was wastyd, and the schools were only half doing tlieir work, or not doing it all. Thin must be changed, of course, and the first tiling was to employ a superinlbndaiit of the town schools, who could give time, and deVote special training to the working out of a new method. A Mr. Turkor was found, whom Mr. Adams describes an "a self-educated und self-made man, with all the defects, as well as the vir- •
lues, of men of that class,'* and he has now been for nearly five years reforming the Quincy schools. His specialty was primary instruction ; he introduced a method of learning to road by sounds and object-lesson*, without acquiring vb-t A, B, C| by name ; i»o that, a* Mr, kdamssaya, not a child m tip Hchnoty though reading fluently, 4*could repeat its letters, or even know tlieir names, unless, perchance, to the teacher'* increased, trouble, r hey bad becu taught 90 hoine." This, rrf i:-elf. is common enough in American schools, and so. no doubt, are the other methods of object-teaching anil practice in reading uai|ht aud^Titingolfliianil, which Mr. Parker empKp. mfthe sertrfs to likvo combined novelty ami variety with common sense, in his system , to a very uncommon extent. Under the old system the seven studies which we considered eleincutury had .been* thug lit w,Tw"lt'^T- VJibAI.I iWa are reduced to i4ihe three »'»M — read- 1 inft writing, and arithmetic — and, in teaching these the teacher includes, to a considerable degree, all the others. "The rid reader having disnpj>cared. the teacher was at liberty to put in th<^ 1 hands of the class geographies, or hisI tories, or magazine articles, and, having read them first, the scholars might write of them afterward, to show that they understood them. Their attention was thu" secured, mid, the pen being con ' rtnualH rn the baud, they wrote- as readily as they »]x)ke, and spelling . came with practice." Mr Adam* says of the results in Geography : "Go, to-day, into the Quincy schools, «a in % fav.\ momenta two . or ttw 1 V
board and handling a little heap of moistened clay, will shape out for you a continent, with its mountains, rivers, depressions, and coast indentations, designating upon it the principle cities, and L'inuga general i<ieaofita$cogr»pb (iea$ proihifrrirs. The secret of Mr. Parker's success — for he has la-en very successful — is, per hnpij not the details of his method, but the «# 11 whiob it is applied. 3Ir. 1 Adam* says, "jfie essence of the new j system was, that there was no system about it, it wa* marked throughout by intense hrUviduaJity." This individuality has made iCau-lf felt in all the operations of the Quincy schools, and has attracted the attention of educators ail over the country. In order to t«at it> value, the Qtthtcy experiment has lately l»een subjected to a strict coinl»r»ri«w»n with the school systems of the other tjri ntv;two towns Jn Norfolk ^fouAtjr, MgHartclliA«t4f by an uxnminef ^ent out by the Board of Education in I that State. The result appears in the report of Uiat Board for 187(J, jqst issued fmtrl tiiu puis* in Ikaitan. Tho average* • >f tlie Quincy school, marked upon a simple -e *1* of so much percentage of all tin* ijueKtioD* Mifgsred correctlv, are I found to h«i aousldswilily letter thitn thosoof any other town in the county. It is said one of the largest towns in . Norfolk, having a population now of tinkriy ffM >00, while the whole county falls short of 100,000. The experiment has not been made on a large scale, ihw&fore ; but it has found its way, a* we have said, into the Boston Primary schools, where children are taught by myriad and is justify ing, itself there. ThJfi method ha* beat) long prantleed. in some of its details, in the schools of •St. Louis, and doubtless elsewhere. It is worth rcmarkjug. p^hwp*, that the eQpt Of oris fy 4em in the Quincy school* iaon^flfth (oa# than tH*t of mo old taxi bcK'k plam '.Si.atnvKi > Monthly.
Shortly after the occupation of Peaaaooia and the jx pulsion of the Spanish authorities from Florida, by Genual Jackson, Mr. Edward Palfruv, lUiliv. *l/.< 11 of Now Orleans, now dead, was wont ». that whilst standing behind the cov... of the National Batik, his summon Wu. ^moted to a group of military otticem Hi. ntered the bank and inquired for theeeaui-Y. The chief of tlie psiOy was a man gaunt, stern-featured, spare and wasted of but qreqt and firm of carriage. The cashier having appeared, lluvqjnef intruduced himself: "I am Anaiew Jack *ut i, uf tjie Uwl ' States Army commanding the /qrces no w occupying Pensacola. My soldier* ' sge xuiiWmg greatly for want of provih a/us, clothing and medicines- immediate 1 relief, ia reqpured, and I must hav$J(\0U> tq purohaee than supplicf. Here is my draft on Qte governmeut. 1 <le*b*e to have it cashed. " The cashier WW appalled by tlib damkml. There wa* tirl * Authority t«» honor this check. The courteous but firm manner and the prestige of the chieftan, however, restrained any such intimation from the cashier. Requesting the General and his staif to be seated, t 7 he retired to tlie rear office of the President, and communicated the appalling demand , of the conqueror of .Florida. The President was equally alarmed and dispatched a messenger to, convoke the Directory. They quickly assamblad, j and the subject was referred to them. It should las borne in .mind that at that titpe General Jackson was regarded
with a great deal of bitterness . an distrust by a largo political party in the country. He was looked upon as a dangerous and assuring niilitary-ohieitun who menaced tho integrity , and freedom ofoorHVi! institution*, and especially of sudrinstiUUions as' the great National Bank. The director* of the branch bank here were doubtless somewhat pervaded with this sentiment. Still the rules of tlie bank justified them in declining to advance the fund required by General Jackson, and the President was instructs 1 to communicate this conclusion of the Board. iie did so with all the suavity usual on such occasion*. Then rising from his seat and advancing to the counter, behind which the polite President stood, the old chief asked : "Do I understand .you, to say that this bank, having tlie money of the United Suites in it* vaults, declines to advance a cum sufficient tusupply the immediate need* of two thousand patriot soldiers whom 1 have left in the swamp** of Florida exposed to fever and starvation ?M. With, profound regret the- rub* must be observed. Whdfeupon, with flashing . eye and tlmi terrible aspect nevfr iorgottrn by any one who every behold Old Hickory in a rage, the General, raising high his gnufitlrted hand, brought* it (lafvn with greartbrcd upon the dbuntcr, exclaiming, "By tfie Eternal ! ! 'will live to serve your rascally bank as I have the Spaniards in Florida, as equal enemies of the) people and of liberty." With this fearful menace and vow hestrode with his Stall" oul of the bank, the Geritoral encountered ~Y**b Irish born ut ***■ id *■ -r v^»* Orlpuiw i>. h.Hi.
and had hastened to* jdir the (b-nenil. with offers to cash his dr ft and furnish nil .that he jiqgded for his urniy. — 1 a 1 HOUSBHOH& ■ I Jk Broil steak without salting. Salt draws the juices in cooking; it is desirable to keep thoafc* iq, if' possible. Cook over a hot fire, ttflrn Vfefpiently, searing on both sides. Place, on a platter, salt arfd pepper to taste. Bkef that ha* a tendency to l»e tough can be mode very palatable by stewing gently for vwo \fcnqm vu^v pepper and •alt, taking out nl*oul a pint of the liquid when half don«\ and lotting thernst boil into the meat. Brown the meat in tho |>Ot. After-taking up, make a gravy of the pint of liquor saved. Meat Salai^. — Cut some cold moat infc*n#%t slices, broth tl/chi ovs r wWi oil, I seaapn with salt and p«qi|.er to fcute, a little Vinegnf oter, afldf dispose tlio^rou a dislt, upoii a foundation | of lettuce drass«sl wqb ^fayemnaise, and ornamented With hard-fioilndeggs, lieets, and little pick lea. A nice Milad for i luncheon. Hock fcwti a 1 cupfnl of rice in new uiilk until tender; sHfleteti it with white sugar Sncl heap on k dish ; lay over it small pieces of currant jelly, or any kind of proyft'M fruit. Bf«t ui> the whites of 5 eggs fo a stifT froth with a little white sugar, and flavor with vanilla; add to this 1 toblespoouful of rich cream, and lay over the rioe with a tablespoon, giving it the form of a ro6k of snow. Till* will bo found both delicious and ornamental. Coitit Pi.astkr,— The Scientific Amor ican gives the following directions for making tliis useful article t Hosk isingiasM in a little warm water for seventy four
• 1 Uiwin the whole tK rough- epfo e of Open linen. The sleaiii- t mat* should bv a .tiff jelly «hen odd. N<wr .U«tch n piece of silk or sarsenet on a Iroodeti I rame, and fix it tight with tifoks or pack thread. Melt the jolly, and apply it to the silk thinly and evenly with a badger hair brush. A nooond coatiug must be »«Muiied wbt-n the first has dried. When bou, - dry, apply over the wfoole surt'Mwto. 'Hreo coating. of balsam of Peru. Plasiv %vus made is very pliable, and never breaks. A Ntcr V^olht Boar ca>. "^vnadc by melting k pound of whitb' soap with a pound of nalm oil t»0Ap and1 a' thfrd of a pound'of ^five oil sOa]i, Mtrrrnig well ill to it fi'tefy little vidlet watcfi.1 While a vdry soft and sweet rose1 soap mxy be made by melting together a jxmnd of white curd ifoap and a pound and tf iialf of olive oil soap with half a gUT of water, and stirring 4n, while cooling, a mixture consist >"2 J^one <ln^m of ntW of foees, threequarar* of a dram of oil of bergamot, half as much each of thq oils of clovas and cinnamon, und one-quarter of a drain of that of rose geranium, either pouring the Koap, to which, this has been added, into bright metal mold*, or else cutting it iuto any shape desired before it is quite btittbued — Boston Hkrald. > Hotfiebody has 'collected several very curious facts about the cost of books in tiarly times, and in the light of them who shall say that books nowadays are not cheap? The King of Notthumberlund, in'lfiyf), gave for a .history of tho 1 - I C" - W«^ ,W. IMW
world eight hundred sores of land; and a Conntesp of Aqjou, date not stated, once gave two hundred slieep and a large parcel of furs for a volume of homilies und one hundred and twenty crowns for a single book of Livyl In 1720 a Latin bible was valued at $150, and this was a time when two arches of London Bridge were built for less than $150. A laborer in those days had wages so small that the earnings of fifteen years had been'' necessary to buy the bible, and tlie bible being in latin be oot,tki not read it after all. HOW TO fAKE CAKE OF FURS. . Ladies, it/ has been remarked, as a general ruls imagine that oare in putting awuy furs is all that is required; they thinlc they can wear them when and bow (hey please, provided they ex]>end a few pence for camphor when they lay them aside. This should be corrooiad. Mor* barm in done to flirs by wearing them a week after the weather has become warm than during a whole cold season. When tliev are j put jbdde they should be brushed the j rigfyt way with a soft brush, an old linen I m $1 1 ktM chief folded smooth ly over them, and a piece of gum camphor kept in the Ifox all the time, to scare intruders in the shape of inoth*. T11E MERCIFUL JUDGE. There is a venerable and benevolent judge in Paris; who, at the moment of passing sentence on a prisoner, consults his a*.ie*Hor* on each side of him as to the penalty proper to be inflicted. "What ought we to give thin rascal, borther ?" he says, bending over to the assessor on All right "I should say three years " t u I';n{' " I. C ^ "T- |.
j assessor 011 the left aI should give him about four years.* The judge, with benevolence : *' Prisoner, not desiring to give you a long and severe term of imprison mention 1 should have done if left to myself, I have cou«ulted my learned brothers and shall take their advice. Seven years." A sick person wanting nourishment and having lost appetite, can often be stts. tained by the following when nothing else con hi be taken: Make a strong cup of cofl'ee, adding tailing milk a* usual, only Hweotning rstlifr ftrnra; takenn egg beat yolk kfid white together thoroughly; hoi) the coffee, milk and sugar together, and jxiur it over the beaten egg in the cup you are going to serve it in. This simple recipe w used frequently in hospital practice. t No woman can afford to grow up in ignorance of household management. The comfort of soine home in the future is endangered whenever instruction iti withheld which would enable a woman to plan wisuly all arrangement* necessary for the well-ordering of the spot which is to be her home, krhMher that home be one of Wealth or the reverse — and tlie reverse may come even after prospective wealth makes such knowledge seem un* necem ary. "There I* something ataii t your daughter, " Mr. Waughop said, reflect ively, '^here's something about yotfr daught«r—" "Yes," said old Mr. Thistle pod, "there is, 1 had noticed it myself. It cornea every evening about 8 o'clock, and it doesen't get away usually till ataut 2 ofolock. And some of these nights I am going to lift it all the way from the front parlor to the side gate and see what there is hi It." Oddly enough, Dennis Kearney ia one of the first victims of the l>oomerang new Constitution of California. . - \
(/ /I 41 /. n j .T \J | • the advertising columns. j Afo pedple Ware gating In wonder on th«f first gusligiit. To-day they are dludng In wonder on their last gas bill. / V *4 ill. i#". .1 • J* • \tV. • ^Adpg which w op* t run .from an elephafltwill break Ids back to got wway from an oyster-cop. Seventy *l5t towgs in Connecticut [ataut one-half the Sthtej have voted against licensing the sale of liquor The cifyr of Boston reoeived one day last week three, contributions U its oonscience fqfl4,.nfriouuVufl 10 $2A200. . 1 VSend tu 00,000 Women at once," isthe cry from Arizona- The men out there have evidently grown tired of splitting wood and knocking down tramps. A ran down in Virginia says that the Democrat party i* tinder obligation to Mr. Tilden, and that Tildon owes much t6 the Democrat party. If this isso, why not cry quits and call it even? Mr. Gladstone writes:— "I am placed in constant difficulty by calls |to deny unproved charges which have been denied over and again." He ought not Mo contain. Arribrican statesmen are I continually being called upon to doily charger that have been pfoven. Ho fickle have been the prices of old rails for a few months post that part it* having old rails to sell write the offioials of rolling-mills: — "What will you give «
for a few thousand ton* of old rail*, providing they are not sold before your answer is received?" The rolling-mill official answers; — I will give $48 per ton if I don't change my mind before I hear from you." There is an apprehension that the fashionable luncheon parties in Ixmdon prove entirely too much for some of the ladies who attend them. A brougham was lately seen to drive up to a mansion in a fashionable street, but no one emerged from it. At length the coachman descended, and with considerable difficulty aroused the slumbering occupant. She. hud como from a luncheon party. , A Bridgeport attorney recently took strong exception to the ruling of the ( Vflirt that certain evidenoe wa* inadmissible. I know, your Honor," said lie, warmly, that it is proper evidence. Here I have been practicing at the tar for forty years, and now I want to know if I am a fool?" That," replied the Court, "ia a question of fact and not of law, and so I shall not (lass upon it, but let the jury decide." The puzzle "Fifteen" was invented by a Hartford deaf mute who distributed a4 few taxes Among his friends. D. F. Mnguire, a Boston newspaper man, got hold of one and there being no patem, went to work manufacturing them. lie made enough to live on oomfortably for the rest of his life. It is said, however, he haa lost ataut $30,000 by not having taken out a patent in time. K. P. HKIGOf. J. A. BOI.AKD. DRS. BRIGGS & BOLARD,
^YvVWvYU, Y. o Wo beg leave to announce to the citizens of Cape May County that we have lately refitted our office, and furnished it wiOi the latest improved Dental Chair, Dental Engine, the Electric Mallet for mnking fine Gold Fillings, and a complete set of New Instruments fordoing all kinds of Dental work. We make Artificial Teeth which are life-like, durable, and waranted to tit. We profess to do as good work, in all the branches of modern dentistry, a* cAn be done in any office in tlie country. Our prices are rensonuble, and we defy competition in quality and rates, mohfitf Somers L. Irwin, OP MlhLVILhR. would call the attention of the people of CAPE MAY COUNTY to, the fact that ho is prepared to do all kinds of Blacksmithing at the lowest prices, and on short notice. I constantly have in stock a large and varied assortment of AXES, which I can recommend as of the best quality. I am also prepared to manufacture all kinds of Fine Tools. Give iuo a call and teat my work, MP Oder* hy mail will receive immediate attention. S. L. Irtvi n, Bwhftlyr. mil^viele. 4
. r K| nth! 1 I III ra y u iiiHij.1 u yy 1 y 1 TV IN Tt"' CAPE MAY h ' f i\ f t '•.•««* t . it • A" ■'MPf 1 ^ r i f i \ 1 /\ 1 i ' ^ Three very valuable Building Lots, 60 feet front by 180 feet deep, situate on Lafayette Street, Cape May city, FOR SALE On Easy Terms. f or particulars enquire (it the office of the "GAZETTE."
mchCtf 1 ' 1 * « . . . . 1 1 am happy to announce that 1. If the nerve of tke tooth is alive, it can be suved by projier 'medication, and tlie tooth preserved permanently. The procoss is simple and painless. 2. Tooth-ache from an exposed nerve can ta cured immediately. 3. The most extreme sensitiveness in the teeth may generally be overcome before work is done upon them. 4. Those who thifik their teeth are too iutlch broken down to be repaired, will be much astonished to see the advance Dchtatry lias mode in this direction. 5. If it i* really necessary to have Artifcial Ttfeth, they muy be made very lif -like ,«id useful ^ * Teeth may be extracted without pai 1 — often With pleasure — under Gas, T. B.WELCf Dentist, n\Wl By. V1N. A XD, 'X. J. — -- or hot \oxg MacDar, ^"-hISIOsEu o lot "SrvKoiw.-T > Catiukb^H^MI^|^B99 I* Ukln% llr *Eul£*fc by oil Dr*fX*U m*4 XrtUAm. Doolorr mrrwlSTS If JovrArvFKiii hoa Oot M It cb«1om »1a» i 5? TwpV* Stvbwtoxt. Millrin., CMmborU.4 i Oomuiy. W J . o m& yuu wilt mem* fiU b j For sale by Johnson, Holloway, A Co. Phils, july78ly ' (jr. J7. L"n<Jley $• Co. healers in "Wow*, Ac«.Y\, uwA Qs*o.x\ — — 1 — - ---- - — . - .
a\VY WywA* . MILLViLLE, NEW JERSEY. junTFtf IVEWBKPARTIRE * IN TIIE Shoe Trade. I have added to my stock a frill line of Yvm ftYvoc.% YY\\(Y ftVv\k.\k.e*o, FOR LADIES' AXD MISSES' WEAK. TRey are the wmo cla** of good* that are sold by dealers in fine shoe* on Eighth Street, Phila., being made by the same firm that supply them, [Messrs Wevlman A Wobdmsti.j For quality, style, end taaut? of finish, they can not ta excelled; EVERY PAIR BEING FULLY WARRANTED. I HAVE ALSO IN STOCK A FULL ASSORTMENT OF OTHER GOOD MAKE OF SHOES FOR Ladies' Misses' AND Children's Wear, from the cheapest to the medium price. Tn short I propose to keep a regular Family Boot and Hhoe Store where all, children and grown people will reeeira prompt and jxrlite attention. Please call and look through my stock whether vou wiali to purchase or not, as I am inre an examination of the same will insure your patronage. Respectfully Tours , Dm. F. Moore, Millvillr, l\rw Jersry. t mohSnio.

