HOUSEHOLD. What It there the average American woman in March of bodily comfort or rett like* better than the rocking-chair ? No home to humble but hat this article of furniture, and if temporarily occupied by a male Till tor or a member of the family, it it a matter of oourte instantly . surrendered on the entrance of the wife, mother, Idangbler, titter or sweetheart. Hocking chairs must have been an American Invention, for In the hundreds of hotels and houses I hare visited in Europe, I have not- seen a dozen all told. 1 scarcely think I would have noticed Ibis, aa men in America are regarded as having no rights so for as rocking-chairs arc concerned, but for the fact that every woma i 1 meet is lamenting and compiaining^about it. In ths hotel at Milan where I stopped there were two rocking-chairs, and there was a perpetual squabble aa to who should be in them. Chicken Salad.— Cook a rftieken until tender, then chop tine a head of cabbage and five cold, bard boiled eggs ; season with salt, pepper and mustard ; warm one pint of vinegar, add half teacup of butter, stirring until mcltedipour hot over the mixture, stir all thoroughly and set away to cool. Mush Batter Cakes.— Two cupfuls of cornmesl mush, one of flour, two eggs, • pinch, of salt! use sufficient sweet milk to make batter, and bake on hot, greased griddle. Geneva Griddle Cakes.— Two pints of flour, Ave tablespoons of sugar, half a teaspoon of salt, two of baking' powder, two tablespoons of butte^ four eggs and half a plot of mint. Bake on a hot griddle, and sift over with powdered sugar. Bice Cakes.— Two cups of cold, boiled rice, one'plnt of flour, one teaspoon of sugar, half a teasi>oon of aalt, two i teaspoons of baking powder, one egg and half a pint of milk. Bake on a greased griddle ,- serve with boney. Egg Corn Cakes.— One quart of new milk, one quart of sifted meal, one beapinglsaapson of baking powder, two tablespoons of butter, the whites of six egg, besten stiff. Bskc on a hot griddle and serve immediately. A Pretty Work Bag.— Make it of small figured satlne, add it will be decorative as well as useful. Cut two circular pieces of card-board four inches in diameter, and cover wl.h the satine -, line each with another circle covered with cambrie, the edges being overhauled together as nearly aa possible. Mow cut a strip of sateen thirty inches wide, to form a puff. Hem each etld gather the entire length each tide. Overhand each aide of this puff to one of tho circular placet, and it will make a round bag. Run a ribbon into the hems, listening it to each side securely, and make a 3ti-ton-hole In the middle of the hema to draw the ribbon through to hang It up by. This la a revival of a very old fash-
ion, and a bag made of black satin woold be a counterpart of those carried by our grand-mothers. Never go to bed with cold or damp feet. Never lsau with the back upon anything that It cold. After exercise of any kind never ride in an open carriage or near the window of a car for a moment ; it la dangerous to health and even life. Never omit regular bathing, for, unless the akin la in regular condition the cold will close tiie#orrssnd favor congestion or other When hoato^TlyW as little aa possible until the hArseness is recovered from, else tbe voice may be permanently lost or difficulties of tbe throat produced. When going from a warm atmosphere into a cooler one keep the mouth aiwty dosed, so that, the air may be warmed by iu passage through 'be nose ere It sarobes tbe lungs. Keep tbe back, especially between the •boulder blades, well covered ; also the cheat well protected. In sleeping in a cold room eatsblish.the habit of breathing through the nose, and never with __!he open month. 1 How To Build Up a Town. { A good many rules for building up a i town have been given by different pa- 1 pets, and tbe Rlpon (Wis.) ftssm- ' lUslll tries its baud in tbe following | Talk about it. ' Write about 1L Speak well of it. J Help to improve it. t Beautify the streets. _ ' Patronize Its merchants. Advertise In Its newspapers. j JBS. well of its nntcrpriring, public 1 1 If you arc rich invest in son.ethin^r f employ somebody: b: a rustler. 1 If you don't think of any good word J to say, don't s«J anything bad about it , Remember that every dollar you in- a vest In a permanent improvement Is that f much on interest. t Be courteous to strangers that come ' amon^ut, so ^ that they go away with a » Always cheer up the men that go ia J for improvements. Your portion of the { ooat wfil be only what is JusL \ Doul wok about any neoeasary public - improvement because it is not at your t own door, or for fear that your taxes would, be raited 18 cents. t now Is the time to take Hood's Sarwiiie- J rills, a medicine peculiarly adapted for , %sp [ bom the Mood, and also gives it vitality , mgr- i vine* everybody that It is peculiarly the 1 best Mood purifier tad- spring medicine. , B'wbo bad or- f space looks a J k Ma cane). J r to there. « ears wmjul t Mr well, and tl my farm. I t
0 It is my impression that a farm withJ out a boy would soon coma to grief. * What a boy does ia the life of the farm. - He is (he factotum, always in demand, and always expected to do the thousand and one things that nobody else will do. Upon him fisll tbe odds and ends, the most difficult things. After everybody tlse is through, he is to finish up. His ' work is like a woman's perpetually wait. log on others. Everybody knows how ie much easier It is to cook a good dinner F than to wash tbe dishes afterward. ConV- aider what a boy on a farm ia required to-do, things that mnst be done, or life r" would actually stop. It Is understood. '' In the first place, that he is to do all the |" errands, to go ta the store, to the posL ^ office and to carry all sorts of messages. If lie had as many legs as ;ihe centipede 8 they would tire before night. * He is tbe one who spreads the grass J as tbe men cut it ; he stows it away in 1 the barn ; he rides the horse to cultivate 1 tho corn up and down the hot, weary 1 rows ; he picks up tbe potatoes when " they are dug : he brings wood and water ' and splits the kindling: he gets up the horse and turns him out. Whether be is in the house or out of tbe house, there * is always something to do. Just before ' school in the winter he shovels paths; In ' summer be turns the grindstone. And 't yet, with his mind full of schemes of what he would like to do, and bis hands full of occupation, be is an idle boy who j has nothing tc busy himself with but school and chores. He would jladly do | all the work if somebody else would do , ail the chores, he thinks; and yet, I doubt if any boy ever amounted to anyj thing in the world, or was of much use as a man, who did not enjoy the advantages of a liberal education in the way j of chorea.— Ex. Some level headed lover of equincs pertinently remarks that the man who | drags the life out of his team while ' plowing with an old-fashioned, dilapidated plow, when a plow of some improved pattern would do better work, : more of It, and with much less labor, certainly docs not deserve to be the r owner of a horse. If the road-cart rides juat as easy as tbe four wheeled vehicles that have been used for many years, answers every purpose, and can be driven „ with one-half the labor, then tbe proper thing to do is to use the cart Instead of I tbe heavier vehicle and save your lioraes flesh. Horses that are willing to work r as best they can, at whatever tbey are put, are certainly entitled to every coni venience that can be afforded them. Mice In Orchards.— A writer of experience gives a preventive for mice to orchards, which he affirms is a sure one. > late to the seasons, -before the ground j is frozen, cut out all grass nesr the j trunks of your trees with a sharp hoe, r then ahovel up to them clean soil, hilling up somewhat and to extend a fool [ or more around the trees, and pack with shovel or trample solid with feet. Mice j will then find no harbor next the trees- ( nor will they Injure them to any way. Worn-out soils can be made fertile if
| Aral manured and green crops grown I thereon and plowed under. It may require two or three years to bring such s soil to a fertile condition; but it can ' be done. Many mineral elements, such can easily be supplied by tbe use of ordinary artificial fertilizers. ' Keeping tosds out of wells Is a difficult matter with some. The surface 1 around the well should bo cemented for a apace equal to a circumference of fifty > feet. This would compel the toads to I enter at a distance too great to reach the well. It seems almost impossible to keep them out by closing the entrance only, is they And their way in 'lower i Common pine tar Is excellent for colds . in poultry. Put a tallies poonful of tar in a quart bottle, add twenty drops of carbolic add and one teaapoonful of crude petroleum. Then add hot water. ' and shake well before using, giving a . teaapoonful of the tar water to any fowl , that may have hoarse breathing or that seems dehlliisted from colds. It may 1 be kept constantly on band, and is a very cheap and excellent mixture. "THE PINK OF THE ROAD." A Now Yorker's Impressions of the Penneylvanla's New York £ Chicago Limited. [Rsn Praadtco oorresooodeoce of ta* Hew Tort Usui, February isoi, ims ) When it cornea to long-distance railroading, runs of 1500 miles and upward, the roads of the far West beat tne.world; but for shorter distances, say s thousand miles, tbe great roada of tbe East excel. To ride over the Pennsylvania Chicago from New York to Chicago is to take the cream of American railroading and that means the very best In the The train, is U stands in tbe station at City, is evidently something that tbe road Is proud of. The engine is The engineer is that kind of an cnglueer who starts a train as gently as a mother rocks a cradle, but who, as you will discover when you get there, takes you through the country on tbe schedule time. When the conductor ' the "AH aboard!" the porters at , the car entrances my " All off that's , going," as the officer at the gang plank , of an ocean steamer aays " All ashore , that's going" just before the steamer ] starts. Those who have come to see , off look at them through the | windows as the train glides out of . the station, and quiet, but none tbe less ; ardently admiring railroad men. look . below at every truck and wheel and the train has already been inspected, , but tbey like to look at the train and to \ be anre agtta that the blossomed ptak of die road Is to perfect trim for snot her t 1900 miles run to twenty -four hours. , Outside the cars are gorgeous ; inside they are beautiful and luxurious. You | may meet on any big road to any part of the country cars as beautiful and per- . haps quite as comforta'ile, but here is a : whole train of luxury. The vestibules - the can are to deftly joined j that you cannot discover under fool where the platforms come together, and the carpeted ways to lighted by a centre Qght overhead. In the smoking-room big, comfortably upholstered wicker ■ chairs, with broad, easy becks and reaL . ful anna. Books if you' want to read. Cabinets of bric-a-brac, not too profuse. ' to which yon may play canto ; t electric beds that will call a porter, who will fetch ApoUlnsrto water, or maybe stronger waters to emergency. Electric lights everywhere. I had neglected to get shaved, but the barber-shop on the train afforded comtortable opportunity. . It lakes a pertly fair sort of a man to . ■have another on a railroad train at forty . or fifty or more miles an hour, but he . can do It, though it to-wet quite so easy , as to shave a man on a steamer. How- | ever good the road and the rolling stock , may be. can will away, but the barber , establishes a gentle but Ann union of himself, the chair, and the patient, so that all move together, and the thing to done. Y'ou may take a bath on the train If you wished to do so. In the dining „ g^Jg|gg| | boon.
The Future of AuatraliaIt to as certain as anything to human r affaire can be that by . end of this , century the Australian population will amount to at least 10.000,000. In twenj ty yean it will probably be greater than , that of the motber country. In fifty e years, according to official computation j v Australia' will be inhabited by 50,000,- I a 000 souls. Now, ' the capacity of the u continent for supporting a teeming pop- „ ulatlon is beyond til question. Tbe Unl,r ted tiutca have s population of -80,000,000 on an area of jLpfiO.OOO square miles, j which is just the Sea of the Australian c Continent, exclusive of Tasmania and l_ New Zealand. p The climate to perfect. Morp rain | __ falls In Australia than in England, and j | t the irrejfAlarity of the rainfall Is bcirg „ redressed by storage and irrigation, ' while subterranean rlvera have b en ilis- : , covered to pans of the country which a were thought doomed to permanent ater0 ility. The toil Is tortile and suitable for y the cultivatiod of almost every crop. a The mineral resources are almost incxr haustible and especial attention should B be directed to the yast deposits of coa! . which have been discovered. Here, then, we have all the conditions nocea- 1 s sa ry for a growth so prodigious as scarcely to be conoeived. America, 1 when the War of Independence was flef clfticd, had a population somewhat less B thin Australia has now, and baa settled 5 a s-imewbat similar area of her territory, t Looking at the development of Amcrj ica since then, at toe great means of do- , velopment we now possess in the various [ applications of steam and electricity, at the increased activity of human thought, t at the vaster scale on which industrial processes and commercial transactions ^ arc now carried on, at tho progress of education and the spread of culture ; t looking at all these, whst may we not j imagine — nay, rather, wqat may we B da e imaging— as the future of the still < infant nation, whose hundredth birth- ' day marks, after all, but one short stage of its lifrjpurney.— Itattmal Rrtine. . Why Thay Don't Marry- ' ^ We sent out a few days since a note of inquiry to a number of bachelors to the city, asking them to give us, confidentially and briefly for publication, tbe reason why they never married. Over one- ' J half of them have answered, and we give our readers some of tbe causes assigned: . ^ "Am only 45 yesrs old. Consider my- ' self too young." . v '"Ilavn'l been properly urged." "Some other fellow married the girl. 1 owe him a debt of gratitude. She made it lively for him." "Heard that my intended snored, and i J I broke off my engagement" f "My brat girl bad fits." "Came very near being married once ; ' I asked a girl and she said 'no.' " | | "The happiest man I ever saw was j ( one who had jnst been divorced." s "I had a friend who was married. He _ sent me a book called 'Don't" "I know a man who put up his retrig-
• j nttion at tho club the same day the invitations to his wedding were sent out. _ In three months lie was reelected to the . club, and now spends bis evenings, from n 8 until 12 o'clock, with the boys. This ^ makes me wonder." "Am afraid to get married. I know 'r' two or three young married men who congratulate each other when tbelr I wires go out of town. Think iliey e ought not to do so ; bnt there must be j "Find considerable difficulty to bring0 tog my diverged rays of affection to fob eus, owing to the beauty and charms of ® so many Richmond girls."— Richmond • Stat*. I. A" A't*rn"IVe' r They were walking arm In arm- She ' was keeping very close to him- but be l( seemed to be keeping rather away from '■ her. y ■ "Dear, yon do not love me to-night." ' "Yea, I do." II "No. you don't. You do not respond T to my pressure, and when I do give yon B a little squeeze you xbndder; you shrink awav from me. You 40 not fore me." "My love, you force me to painful confession. Will yoir wave your little t predilection and lake mr right arm? Y'ou see, I've juat been vaccinated, and It has taken." They move and she takes his right ' arm. She gives no more pleasure. He squeezes her arm. ■ "Dearest you will forgive me, bnt I - cannot take your right arm," says she. ; "Y'ou cannot stand so slight a diseotn5 fort even for my sake ?" " No, dear," it isn't that But my 1 vaccination took very badly, and It isn't • quite well yet— and— yon see my difll- - culty. do you not?" » "What can we do?" asks be. " Well— there to my watot" ' Brace Up. 1 You are feeling depreaaed, your appe1 lite to poor, you are bothered with Head1 ache, you are hdgety, nervous, and ' generally out of aorta, and want to brace - up. Brace np, but not with stimulants, ' spring medicines or bitters, which have " for their basis very cheap, bgd whisky. 1 and whirh stimulate you for an hour 1 and then leave you to worse condition than before. What you want to an sltcrn1 stive that will purify your blood, start healthy action 01 Liver and Kidneys, re- ' store your vitality, and give renewed [ and strength. Such a medicine you will find in Electric Bitters, and 1 only 60 cents a bottle at Marcy & Meets y's Drug Store. 8 Tux Lomhd-fob Lxttkk. — As the last note of that touching UUle ballad, "The ; letter that be longed for never came," • vibrated on the evening air, she turned And a tear trickling slowly down his cheek. "Ah. Mr. Sampson," she said, sympa- , helically, 'you, ton, -have 'longed!' •' "Yea,' he replied, huskily; "two years ago a very dear friend of mine went Wert on twenty-flve dollars which loaned him, and for augbt I know be may be dead. ab* wts a Chad, shs erM !»r Castsria, tFb- sb. tww Mlas^h. ehrng «. Csleto, had CMMm.ih* save thee Castas*. "We could not get out the Boomer and Snorter this week," ays an estapmed Arizona contemporary, "because our 1 wife had a baby on Sunday, and we had ' atay borne on Monflay to keep the nurse from lighting out when she found was triplets- If any subscriber can . show a better band than three of a kind this year he gets the Boomer free for six _ month."— Ex. Advlon to &yepwwtlo».
WEAK NERVES J II ^ORMEUfc, AT1SM dingo , B Ml Alilf KIDNEY COMPLAINTS w dyspepsia ■ Dsn Harms Praatretlos. Nervous Heaftuh*. llmm»M l-> mlauw lU Imlua I M Neuralgia, Nervous Weakness. Slonseh (vnd lor I reft. , - —a ttvar Diseases, Rheumatism. Dj-s- »""« f 00. SoW PniBflsla. ^^^l-cpsls.and all aBsetions cX lha Kidncya. WELLS. RICHARDSON A CO. Prop's . II: i guildtofl Itombfr, grirfes, Xlmr, (Sootrartors, <?tc. _ 1 This Space is Reserved for S. °H. MORRISON, THE LUMBER MERCHANT ; OF CAMDEN, 1^. J. planing mill FACTORY & LUMBER YARDS. MANPFACTCKBHB OF Doors, Sash, Blinds, Shutters, Moulding. &c. or wmcn we hare a lazze stock now on nan«,tBoorwarerooms, ready for ImmMlau- aaipmrm. BRACKETS, SCROLL WORK, TUNINGS. ETC., building' lumber OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. WILLIAM C. SCUDDER & SON. FRONT ASP FEDERAL STREETS. CAMDEN, N. J. JySSASH AND DOOR D£P01* rito ooitirsUrneJ Is prepared to furnish all kinds of MILL- WORK Doors, Sash, fills, Slims, MoMis, Sreens, Etc. DOOR AND WINDOW FRAMES A SPECIALTY. A. L. CONNER. SBS-T cane Mar Cltv. N. J. MM -
* kimball, prince & c0-, : LUMSER MERCHANTS, mill-'work. * Rockliand Lime, Cement, &c., &c., [. ALWATS OH HAMD. ESTIMATES Pt'RNISIIEU >- KIMBALL, PRINCE A CO., ( BRANCH TARD AT M1LLV1LLB. ' VniBLAHD, N. J. * GOSHEN manufacturing COMPANY, Goshen, Cape May Co., N. p COT* NATIVE STOCK TO ORDER IN * Ship, House & Wagon Stuff. A AND ALL KINDS OF WOOD WORK. [J Experience^ Sawyer to Manage Cutting Lumber. d * QABBISOR, BOYAL * FEASTEE- ; c. B. coles, . lumber merchant, MANUFACTURERS OF 1 Doors, Sash, Blinds, Mouldings, Boxes, &c. ~ BRACKETS, AND SCROLL SAWING. t CaU examine stoet tad (MMtUntlea. Agent for Walton A Whannl Ik.L Bhoemaker-e Fr I an Office, No. 14 Kaighn'e Avenue. Camden. N. J. Jy8-y en0s r. williams, Architect and Builder, CAFE MAY CITY, N. J, 1 Baa had an experience of Iwenly years In ball din* si Caps May. No chanre tor drawing of 5 w make rtl^auou wT paper vhao after lie J' io ,rom ' *«*> deelgn, sad drape ! 1 DUKE & DOAK, > Contractors and Carpenters, CAPE MAV CITV. N. X . * goff & smith, ' MANUFACTURERS AND SHIPPERS OF bricks, potters buff and clay W* keep conetaatiy on hand a large atoekofihe heal quality of Brick which w* will eell al the LOWEST CASH PRICKS. Paoorue at Beneplaln and MlITOUe; OOoe. BmlthX Qrooory Store, «tn«i !•_ LvOle, N.J. W. e. HAW, Agent. js-y Ordera ay Man wia Iteoe ve Itoeir' Aiientlop. GEORGE M. POWELL, merchant tailor No. 1 5 Decatur 8tra«t, Cape Mav City, 2." eSS^Silf *}™*' HIRAM DeWALT, aMERCHANT tailor, No. 817 Chestnut Street, Philada. Fowlar arte a ftwto Rte l»i il >a lilml al i Rite Price. JOSE PH P. HENRY, House, Sign and Frescoe Painter; CAPE MAV CITV. N. J. JH-t NATHAN Cf PRICE. Surveyor -and Conveyancer, / CAPE MAY CITY, N. J. fij !
^ Etat gab! ti. i y7"est •jersey railroad. Trams wia ipve Cape slay sa roiiowa ro 6 50 Y ^hilsdeqSa and u oiaSuKWo for Valem 'sod llnii*emn. 8.00 at PhStaelpWr *5? A^S^kMeaeS at Camden for Treoxoo and New Tort. g 25 MfvS^MSS^'SeJ'laleYSo ortyrkxprea sj£'i\fit Wfdirat. t,P . ^S^k.iinsnrffje. wmii'di laUmTY-ll.. ■■ • ' ' ' : jr ' " •. •• " HUMPHREYS' W ZZ- bms lUMI t Cloth & Cold Binding , ' , IBBSSEEB • I5 ■ HOMEOPATHIC fPfflSO !?. iks , || :|es SPE CIF IC s". > i
New jersuy trust SAFE DEPOSIT CO. CAMDRN, S. J. f CopiMSm.OOO . paid . nSWO, 000. FIRST ANNUAL STATEMENT. Jan. 1. 1888. DEPOSITS OF* MONEY RECEIVED. m a r .1 ■ y ' jt garble Sard. ' Sdlffl JffiSET MABBLE f OfflS " a. K. r. r. Track * Turnpike, .y ! CAPE MAY CITY, N. 1. , Monument* and Toombstona* In all kinds of Marble and|Ulo< Blonr. | L. T. ENTRIKIN r jtBUfflna ftit. LUMBER YARD ' J- Schellengers Landing, r CAPE MAT CITY, M. J. tfhora may bo tonnd a Urge Mock of BUILDING LUMBER, J 10 seltet froukor everj kind and ^quality to rail ' CONTRACTORS and BUILDERS J and all others. , ORDERS PROMPTLY PILLED. J. B. SCHELLENGERS. MMflSfppII " I ineenuro progirea laa method add fyatetn of work lhal can be performed all over iheenaoiry I without separating Hie workers from their Innni'. . Pay Uberal; anyone can do the work: eliher tree. eprnMhln* of *reai rator uo'pwlanre io yon, thii Will «!an you In '■u.m-vt, wnk ti win bring yon m more money rlgnt away, than ani- - drma TRUE A t'™AOf ulsfalilne! "** js-,' ; ua."8. LaadkaaM Oo.,ni Braad^t. Newark 8350 "J?"™' reinroe. A ^ J fe. sw f. a®4"'® :PATENTS;:-fc„ -
J, H. vmztx & 3R0„ IMASUPAtTURERS OP AND DRALRRS IS f ; FURNITURE of all kinds, CARPETS latest Styles, * HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS. Stoves, Ranges Heaters, Hardware, Tinware, Crockervware, Etc 19 Washington and 42 Jackson Streets; Cape May City. Cap3 May Cou!rt House and Dennisville 1 1 C-^cdjLay^ t C C-, \ ((i3 Apt~ fycu/jL. ( - l 6 -T
. I /lour, £tr&, Sau, <?tr. george L lovett, 64 Jackson Street, Ci»pe May, N. J. Good Quality FLOUR. $2.75 per Cwt„ | OATS. GROUND FEED, D0NDITI0N POWDERS, j Harness, Blankets, Lap Robes and Repairs AT SHOP ON OCEAN STREET <»3-y ! " DAYID W. RODAN, foot of jackson street, cape may, n. a. !' F I ELD ' '[AN'D^'SAR^N ' ""sEE D Coal A Wood, Flour A Feed of aH Kinds, Fresh A Salt Hay in Bales. (Tin and Ylirtt Mron U'orkfrs. A. 4IIAYNE3, dealer in Stoves, Ranges and Heaters, Retlmuiee furnished and cnatracla made for all klnd^of TIN ROOFING and GUTTER WORK, On fair banner, principals of " LIVE AND LET LIVE." At hti Stables are to be foand • strluh lot of Carriage Horses and Road Equipages to Hire. Homes taken on I.lvery. naiiaf action Ooarsnfced. WILLIAM CAMP, TIN AND SHEET IRON WORKER, Cape May Court House, N. J. Wores void from Cslaloene. All kinds of Tin work done. In lading HooOng tnd Spooling. Itrpalra nude. ds-y SWAIN & GIBSON, TIN ANP SHEET IRON WORKERS, No. 44 Jackson Street, Cape May. , AH km la of Tin Work done In SraLclaes siyls. OMnyts Ph ranked. Jlt-Am ICE! 1CEI ICE! Knickerbocker Ice Company, OF PHILADELPHIA. Hotels, Restanraats aid Cottages titk Pare Men let. ALSO WITH TBI BIST QUALITY OF COAL! COAL! cajtarully prepared pyr family usb, amd full weight ouaramteed ^arad yonr ordera 10 the Rranch ^g,g1HQTolt ynjxxT gboy, qcram. oapm fay. »J. STEAM HEATING. ORLANDO KELSEY, NO. 510 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA Kelsey'a Patent Sectional Safety Steam Generator. Beat in tbe World. Adapted to Hotels, Manufeosuriee and Buildings of Bvery Description. flS-y _______ _ ___ h nson >• Wetotalnston cape RSaxCP. J-r dealer in BOOTS AND SHOES, RUBBER GOODS A 8PECIALTV. AMoa fnu rapply oonitanily a bea^of - Fine Wall Papers of the Latest Patterns. ■alUYit lor Cottages, notets, etc. Call sad examlns stook sad prices. sS-y

