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The Women of To Day. i iiioeiug is the latest pastime for „ -lish ladies. • J bev are talking of starting u female oil. Iso iu Paris, after the plan of Vassar utul Wellesley. , Society belles have tract portraits of their favorite dogs sketched and paint ed on their fans. !ier |>er by ian Nine vouug ladies have presented themselves for examination for admis „i,,u to Harvard University. Two of the best journalistic positions iu New York City are Ailed by women, the editorship of a weekly and month ly publication; each is said to receive a year. *in the last promenade day in New York's fasUiouuble park, when the elite of the city were taking an airing, there were 213 dogs sitting in the different carriages, and but 811 little children. Women are, in all enlightened coun tries, the keepers of the gates of so -11. ty, and curry the keys on their proper person. Hence society, in its strictly social sense, always has been aad always must be conventional. So cietN admits oulv those whom women approve. Mrs. C. A. Plimpton, of Cincinnati, lias discovered how to make Agures in relief on pottery, and exhibits several specimens of her work at the art sales rooms. She has been trying to Aud out the secret of producing these figures for some time and after several failures lias succeeded iu making Agures iu four colors. Whatever may be said of Queen Vic toria, no one can accuse her of being a fair weather friend. Once a friend she a friend through thick and thin. T<he lias been even more a fiiend to the bereaved Eugenie in her adversity than iu prosperity. Her recent pathetic visit to tho nillicted mother shows what a true-hearted woman tho Queen is. Miss E. D. Biuinger, a New York liible class teacher, linding that the young men in her class had no pleasant place to spend their evenings, has opened a club for them, with billiard tables and other games and a pleasant reading room, with the daily papers. Smoking is allowed, but no drinking. Tea and coffee are furnished to mem- in the evening. The rage for athletic exercises has produced one good effect, at least, iu awakening a desire umoug ladies for outdoor sports. They now excel ill tennis, croquet and archery, flowing and horseback riding are among their exercises, and clubs for each have been organized in nearly all lurge cities. In Boston and Baltimore have been started two baso ball clubs—one culled the " Lady Nine of Boston," the other the " Lady Nine of Baltimore." First Look in a Mirror. The effect which the sudden seeing of themselves as others see them had upon several Siamese women is narrated by a lady. A few weeks ago a company of Siam ese women came to see me and to look at my house. They consider it a great jjjftreat if I invite them through my rooms, and let them look at my bed, my tables, my chairs, my pictures and nick-nacks, and especially if they can get a look at themselves in the mirror on my bureau. One or two of those who came had been here before, and they were telling of how they looked in the glass, till the others were all anxious to see too, so they gathered in a crowd aud stood be fore the mirror. One quick look, and then a surprised, startled cry, and some of them hid their faces, others jumped away, and some looked about to see who was really there. They had never seen themselves be fore, and did not know how miserably they looked, with their black teeth and naked bodies. They drew their scarf over their breasts, and tried to hide from the sight of themselves. One turned and said to me, " We are very hateful-looking ; don't you think 80 ?" I did not tell them I had nlwuys thought so, but I said, — " Now, since you know how you look, is \t any wonder that we always tell you to wear more clothes, and to quit chew ing betel V" Home of tliom wonlil not be induced to look the second time, while otherß stood and stared. PICKING GEESE.— Picking should be done in a close room or every breath of uir will scatter the feathers and down. Having taken up your bird, draw a long stocking over its head and down on the neck to prevent its wreak ing its vengeance on you by its merci less biting. _ The wings are formidable weapons, al so, and must beheld or their blows will leave many a black andjolue mark as evi dence of their power. Pick when the quill of the feather is ripe, that is, clear; while the feathers are developing the qull is tilled with bloody matter, which shows their uniitness of picking. When picking take all the small feathers, leav ing all the large ones, except four or live uuder each wing, which must be left to keep the wings from drooping. Take off the down only in warm weuther. The number of times to pick geese in a season depends upon the climate. The rale we have given above will enable any one to determine when the feathers will do to pluck. Keep the geese in a warm place when they are out of waier, jt the weather is cool after picking. The young goslings might bo picked wheu their feathers are grown and ripe, and yet grow out in full in time for fattening for the holiday market. The yield of feathers will bo about one quartor of a pound from each goose, and these alone will very nearly pay for rearing them. —Poultry World. In counting over a pile of greenbacks the teller of a Wisconsin bank was struck by some bold handwriting across one of tiro bills, and upon examination it proved to bear the foil >wing pathetic hjgend, dated anil signed at Wausau, VVis.: "The last of six hundred dollars. Busted !" Jurymen should staud by their con victions. Josh Hillings' Philosophy It iz the honest man in this world that want watching; the rogues will cheat yu ennyhow, whether yu watch then or not. I kind or notiss thoze folks who are krazy to And out all that iz going on, allwuss And our a good deal that ain't so. Honesty iz no doubt the best policy, but i have seen policy that wasn't the best kind ov honesty. One ov the best ballanced chaps that I meet in mi travels iz the one who talks the most and lies the least. Tliare is no man so poor bufr that ho kan afford to keep a dog, and i hav seen them so poor that they could afford to keep three. An original wize man iz very diOikult to And, but to And an original fool iz still more diilikult. The man who iz free from vanity hoint been born yet, and probably never will be. Them folks who never look ahed, but allwuss look back aud around them, and akt ackordin, are a going to learn the most and suffer the least. The karakters who are all energy, and thoze who are all judgment, are like the gruyhouml and the foxhound, the lirst follows the game hi sight, the other bi sceut. The choicest kompliment that kan bo paid to virtew iz that the best lies we hav are tboze which most resemblo the truth. I never yet hail mi own way in enny thing, but what i saw ufterwart how i could hav improved upon it. Yung man, i wouldn't hav yu too wi/.e for yure years; thare iz no fun, it iz true, in getting kikt bi a mule, but thare iz absolute joy in learning that that the mule kunt do it ngin. When 1 hear a man red hot in argu ment, i oftner hunt for the lie he iz tricing to bury, than i do for the truth he iz trieing to dig up. The grate blunder we make iz in mis taking plezzure for happiness; thare may be some plezzure in getting tight, but thare don't seem to be enny happi ness in getting over it. Thare iz nothing that a man will talk louder about than to prove his religious lieleaf, and thare iz nothing which real ly interests tho bistanders less. The man who never takes enny risks, makes az meuuy blunders az enny boddy. The eumforts and discumforts ov life are so nicely ballanced amung human ity, that every one thinks he iz just a little better off than the other phellow. The top round ov the ladder iz the dangerous one; come and roost with mi', mi boy, on tho middle one. Thare iz no man wize euuff to kuo what others think ov him. Our plezzures too often are the most silly things about us. Napoleon's Will Tho will of Prince Napoleon is pub lished. It is written in his own hand, and dated Chislehurst, February 20, 1870. The following are the chief points: I die in the Catholic Apostolic and lioman religion, in which I was born. I desire that my body shall be placod near that of my father, pending the time when they shall both be trans- Eorted to where the founder of our ouse reposes in tho midst of the French people, whom we have, like him, dearly loved. My last thought will be for my country. It is for France that I would wish to die. I constitute my well be loved mother, Empress Eugenie, my sole legatee, she being charged with at tending to the following legacies: I leave 200,000 francs for my cousin, Prince J. N. Murat; I leave 100,000 francs to M. F. Pietri, in gratitude for his good services; I leave 100,000 francs to M. Lebaron Corvisart, in acknowl edgment of his devotion; 1 leave 100,- 000 francs to M'lle De Larminat, who has always shown herself so attached to my mother; I leave 100,000 francs to M. A. Filou, my old tutor; I leave 100,000 francs to M. L. N. Conueau; 100,000 francs to M. N. Espinasse; 100,000 francs to Capt. A. Bizot, my oldest friend. I desire that my dear mother shall pay a pension for life, of 10,000 francs, to Prince L. L. Bonaparte, a life pension of 5,000 francs to M. Bac hon, my old equerry, and a life pen sion of 2,500 francs each to M'me Thier ry and to Ahlmann. I desire that all my other servants be never deprived of their situations. The New York Tribune says: The most striking feature of the will of the Prince Imperial is the strong pride in the name of Napoleon and the real faith in the cause. He urges his mother to remember that so long as there are Honapartists the Imperial cause will have a representative, and that the line will not end with him. He adjures her to defend the memory of his great uncle and his father, and expresses a hope that the time may come when the bodies of the three Napoleons may rest to gether in the tomb now tenanted alone by the founder of the family. THE PATRIOT SRV.—Captain Hale was just of ago when he was hanged in New York for being found within the British lines with important information con cerning the English force and plans in his possession. Ho was a native of Cov entry, Conn., and was born in 1775. Educated at Yale College, he was a teacher in New London, with tho ulti mate purpose of entering the ministry, when the news came from Boston of the battle of Lexington. He was one of tho first to enlist a few hours after the news was received, and he encour aged others to enlist. " Let us march immediately," he is on record as flay ing, " and never lay down our arms un til we obtain our independence." The next morning tho New London com pany were on the road to Boston. Some years ago an effort was made to induce Congress to mako au appropriation for a monument to Hale's memory. It was unsuccessful. Then the women of his native town, Coventry, with the aid of a small sum granted by the State of Connecticut, collected money enough to erect a monument. It is a simple granite shaft, forty feet high; it bears his name and the dates anil places of birtli and death, and his dying words : •'1 only 1 egret that I have but one life I to lose'for my country." Wonders of Venus. Many who admire the beautiful star which now adorns the western sky until more than three hours after the com mencement of twilight may not be aware that its splendor is derived from the sun ; that in it, like on the earth, night curtains the landscape, morning dawns and seasons in quick succession come and go. Lofty mountains show that forces similar to those which upheaved the Alps and lifted the summits of the Andes above the regions of eternal ■now have ridged its surfaoe and covered it with hills and vales. Variablo spots prove that clouds float in its atmosphere, and gleams of light, which dart across its sky, afford evidence that in it light ning seams the sky and the thunder's roll reverberates through the valleys. But 300 miles less in diameter than the earth, and revolving on its axis in nearly the same time, Venus makes thir teen revolutions around the sun while the former makes eight. As the inclin ation of the planet to the plane of its orbit is at least tifiy-four degrees, its torrid zone is double that extent, or 103 degrees, and its polar circles fifty four degrees from the poles. It there fore has two frigid and a torrid, but no temperate zone. Since the sun must arrive at the equator and depart from it to the dis'auce of fifty-fouf degrees twice in each of its years, there must be two summers and two winters an nually in the torid zones and a winter and a summer in each of the frigid. Venus becomes the morning star after its superior conjunction, when it ap pears, through the telescope, crescent shaped like the new moon. The orbits of this planet and of Mercury are with in the orbit of the earth, and conse quently they are never seen in opposi tion to the sun, that is in the east when the sun is in tho west, or in the west and the sun in the east. At its inferior conjunction, Venus is nearer to the earth than any other planet except the moon, and sometimes when uproaching the greatest distance, when it seems to recede frotn the sun, casts a shadow and is visible in the full light of day. If at the period when it is nearest to the earth, the enlightened part were fully turned toward the latter, this planet would appear twenty times as brilliant as it now does and almost vie with the moon in dissipating the darkness of night. Being situated at about one third less distanco from tho sun than the earth, Venus receives more light from tliut luminary than is received by the former planet* and seems not to re quire the aid of the moon. Neverthe less, several astronomers have allirmed that they have noticed such a body, and have even gone so far as to calculato tho orbit of the supposed satellite, but their observations have not been veri fied. The trausits of Venus, or its passage between the earth and the sun, when it appears as a round dark spot moving slowly across the solar disc, have been made to assist in determining the dis tance of the earth from the central lu minary. The last transit occurred in December, 1871, and the next will take place in December, 1882. As this can be viewed in the United States it will awaken a greater interest than the tran sit which Bittenhouso and others ob served more than a century ago. Bat four transits of Venus have been ob served, and after 1882,121% years will elapse before the alternately morning and evening star will pursue its seeming pathwav across the surface of the great orb of day.— Albany Journal. Reminiscence of Howard Paul. Some twenty-two or twenty-throe years ago Mr.Buckstone, the manager of the Haymarket Theater, invited me to lunch with him at the Cafe de l'Europe, in the Haymarket, London, as he had bus iness to talk about. I had a reputation for the production of impromptu farces —mere vols au vent, calculated to live a month at the outside. While the cut lets were preparing and the wine being decanted, liuckstone said, " I have got a girl who, I think, will moke a hit in a part of some dash, but I do not know of anything that will suit her." "Dash, eh ? Why not give her one of Nesbitt's old characters in which she Bhone at the Tottenton Street Theater ?" "Oh 1 they are passe —consigned to the limbo of forgotten things. I want something new—merely a farce—and I want you to write it—right away." " Well, I will tcritc uicay, to oblige yon. Can I see the damsel ? I may know how to tit her when I have taken her measure." " Come to the theater after lunch. She will be there at three; it is now two r. m." We disoussed the chop, imbibed the sherry and some sparkling Mosel, and then to the Haymarket, next door. Tko young lady came. Her maunors were frank and easy — neither forward nor reticent. "This gentleman," said Mr. Buckstone, in troducing me, " wishes to take your measure. He don't look much like a tailor, however." "Am I to do a breeches part ?" asked the young lady. " That depends," I replied; " have you —pardon me—have you a--" "Oh! yes; I hit your meaning. All right about the leg." " Good—an idea oc curs to me. Do you fancy the debardeur costume ?" " Suits me to a T. Have you anything ready in that way ?" " No, but I shall have in a day or two. Some thing lias just struck me." "Well, I hope, it didn't hurt you ?" " No, it didn't go deeper than my fancy. Can you sing?" "liather " and she burst out into a charming tri-ra la. "Good, I will be here with a one-act trifle the day after to-morrow." We parted. That same evening the piece was born—the next day it was dressed and equipped by a copyist—on the morrow it was baptized " Any Port in a Storm," and was presented to the public in three or four days later. The principal character was, of course, cre ated for the debutante. Miss Feather stone, and she made a hit. Her style was fresh, courageous, dashing, yet | chaste witbul. Not long afterward, she j exchanged the maiden dissyllable for n monosyllable and became the wife of Paul (Howard) —reversing the usual order of things when a maiden doubles herself by becoming a wife. This is one of many domestic memories which have no relation to Washington city, aud for the insertion of which I very I humbly apologize.— The II me Journal. A Portuguese Heroine A correspondent of the Pall Mall Ocuette at Lisbon vouches for the truth of the following narrative, which he translates from the Diario de Moticias: At the distance of one kilometre from the village of Fratel, near Niza—i. e., on the frontier of Spain and Portugal, near the town of Portalegre—There si Maria, who was carrying her husband's dinner to him in the fields, was told by a little shepherd boy that a wolf was prowling about the place. Wishing to see one for the first time in her life, she put down her basket and climbed up to a high place to which the boy directed her. There she saw the animal in the act of devour ing a lamb. The shepherd boy began shouting and throwing stones, to see whether it would let go its prey, and the wolf, in its fury, then attacked the poor little fellow, jumping up at his face, tearing the flesh from his jaws and throwing him upon the ground. The woman, seeing the boy's immi nent danger, in an impulse of heroic self-devotion, ran on the wolf wholly unarmed, seized tight hold of him, and then, after a struggle, contrived to blind him with a stone, and eventually killed him. Meanwhile, the boy whom she had rescued ran, wounded as he was, to seek help in the village. While several of the villagers were coming up, armed with guns, stones and sticks, to kill the beast and save the woman from its fangs, she was returning to the village covered with blood, and with her arms, hands and face terribly wounded. She said that at times she was on the point of being overcome, but contrived to keep the animal's throat in the close hold of her left arm, while hitting him hard on the head with a stone which she was able to pick up. She was taken to the Niza hospital. It is with regret that all will read what I have now unfortunately to add— that exactly a month afterward the poor creature died there of her wounds. She has left eight children, six of whom are very young, and a distracted husband to mourn her loss; but she found comfort in her last sufferings, and under the pain of such a parting, from the recollection that she had given her life for another. The English and Portuguese have sent some £22 as a small consolation to a poor and indus trious family who have to mourn a no ble heart taken from them. In a postscript, written two (lays later, the correspondent says: "I am sorry, indeed, to have to "add to tho narrative that the little shepherd hoy for whom the brave woman sacrificed her life is dead also. She was allowed to console her dying hours with the be lief that she had perished in saving a life. But it was not to be so. The poor child died in the terrible sufferings of hydrophobia. Besides* the subscrip tion raised on behalf of the bereaved husband and the orphans, another has very properly been started to erect a monument at Niza, so that such a deed may not be forgotten." A Lady Divorced without Knowing it. The Philadelphia Presg commences' the recital of the trials and troubles of a Philadelphia lady by quoting from David Oopperfield, Mrs. Betsy Trot wood's exclamation, " Twenty years ago I was married to that man, but I hare seen very little of him since," as appropriate to Louisa Brewster, who, in 1855, was married to William Cow per Williams. His father was a minis ter, and he was a medical graduate, but being poor it was agreed that they should lire apart until his circumstan ces improved. Williams went to New castle, Del., shortly after the marriage, and changing his name was about to be married again, when the fact that he was already married was communi cated to the intended bride. Williams returned to Philadelphia, but refused to acknowledge his wife. He went to Europe and returned in 1857, and then went West. Six months later Mrs. Williams received a letter announcing her husband's death, apparently signed by his mother, who subsequently pro nounced it a forgery. In IsCd she dis covered that her absent husband was Colonel of the Forty-fourth Indiana Regiment, and his arrest followed; but he was released by order of General liosecrans, who needed his services at the front. A few months since Mrs. Wiliiams discovered that her husband was living in Albion, Noble county, Indiana; that he had been married fif teen years ago to a Miss.Bliss, and was the father of two children. Strange, too, she discovered that he had obtain ed a divorce on the ground of her aban donment of him on the day of the mar riage. Without any notice to the de fendant, the farce of a divorce was car ried through by a referee, who recom mended the granting of a divorce, and the fees were ordered to be paid by the defendant. That part has not been complied with, and suit is to be insti tuted to vacate the decree, in order that the aggrieved lady may ascertain whether she is married or single. Miss Brewster or Mrs. Williams is a music teacher, and a cousin of the Hon. Ben jamin Harris Brewster. Williams, it is said, served with credit during the war, and is a prominent politician in his district, having served tko State in various capacities. Help somebody worse off than your self, and you will feel that you are bet ter off than you fancied. THAT DKEADFIL AFFLICTION, Epilepsy, Convulsions or Fits, soon becomes firmly fixed by liabit, each attack Increasing the liability to a return, and adding greatly to the difficulty of arresting the disorder. Iu the abaeuce of proper treatment, a mere faintness, with slight muscular Iwilchings, occurring at long intervals, in time becomes violent convulsions of great frequency, aud the patient gradually sinks into imbecility. If relief is obtainable at all after the disease Is thus firmly seated, it must be from some trea inent which is permanent in its effects, and which not ouly has a tendency to sup press the uttueks, but which will remove the morbid tendency to relapse. l)r. .Jayue's Alterative has happily been found to an swer this purpose admirably; it gradually changes the ui< rbid cot ditiou ol the system, removes the cause of the disease, and l when its use is continued for a sufficient j length of line, produces a permanent turn. 1 l.et the a diced try it. 65 CENTS. Special Campaign Rates. OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. Tho Lending Paper. _ _ Nevada Tribune., May 9. The SAX FRANCISCO CHRONICLE row occupies the proud position of Seine the lead ing paper of the 1 acitic Coast. Almost single-banded it made the tight in favor of the new Constitution The result shows a long and prosperous life in the future. It can assume an imperial! dictatorship hereafter, and makes its own term*. WE WILL SEXD THE THE SAN FRANCISCO Weekly Chronicle During the coming great struggle of tlie People under the auspices of the New Constitution Party at the September Election, for Three Months from the time the money is received at the office, tor the small sum of 65 CENTS In postage stamps, postal order or in coin. Or we will send the SAN FRANCISCO DAILY CHRONICLE' Including the Double Sheet SUNDAY CHRONICLE, in which the occurrences connected with the great contest will be fully detailed, for the small sum of SI.OO, In postage stamps, postal order or in coin, until September 10th, which will cover the entire campaign and one week thereafter. Address all orders to CHAS. DE. YOUNG Sc CO., San Francisco, Cal. PHOSPHATE SOAP! THE BEST TOILET SOAP EVER MADE. If your wife will persist In «»« »r PHOSPHATE SOAP cost* no more cosmetics buy lier a cake of PHOh- ,hnn other good toilet soaps, while Its PHATE SOAP and tell her to use It medicinal qualities make It worth ten every night before retiring. In that times Its price to every man, woman way much of the harm will he avoided, and child. as the skin will thereby he able to retain ♦♦ much of lis natural vigor and beauty. ror 81 , diseases of the shin ase PBOS- ♦♦ PHATE SOAP. There Is nothing like It natural beauty snrpasses anything for removing Imparities and giving the which ran he Imparled by artificial a hen,thy and natural vigor. means. PIIOIPHATE MO A P gives health to the skla simply by removing pjfOHPHATK SOAP Is made of the impurities and eradicating the poisons , oap „ lork combined with the which give rise to skin diseases. phosphste of soda and other materials _ , . . . beneficial to the skin. Cheap tetlet soaps manufactured from rnneld and refuse grease Injure the skin and are really more expensive than " ' OM """« ° n,cr » r,lr,e ot To,, ' t PHOSPHATE SWAP, which retails for ■»»» «"»d something that Is beneficial to *3 rem. per cake. PHOSPHATK SOAP. THE BEST soap for toilet use ever man ufactured. BEST because It contains all the TISTIJIOSIALSs excellencies of the most expensive foreign SAN FRANCISCO, July 19, 1579. or American soaps without their defects. standard Soap Co.— GENTLEMEN : The BEST because it combines strcug h with 0 f my household (four in number) delicacy In such a way that its strong de- un [j e with me iu pronouncing your "Phos tcrsive qualities do not injure the skin. Soap" the best ever tried for toilet BEST because it is the result of years of use . | a noticeable that while it readily re study and experiment in the soap manufac- ~ioves impurities from the skin, italsoleaves turing business, assisted by modern cue ml- un disturbed the natural oil so eanential to cal discoveries. BEST because it contains health. it ) g n ot too strong language to say ingredients beneficial to the skin, winch tl(at we gre deputed W nh it, unite chemically with the soap In such a man- <J J], SAWTELLI, M. D„ ner as to increase its saponaceous qualities. PJQ Capp street. Everv chemist familiar with soap manufac turc knows that some ingredients which are t.,.„ 10 is-u iu themselves hencticial to the skin cannot J SAN FRANCISCO, July IJ, lb i 9. be saponified; some are partially neutralized, Standard Soap Co. GENTS: I have tried while others injure the quality of the soap, your " Phosphate Soap, upd have no heal- There arc soaps in the market which arc to tation in saying that it is the best toilet soap some extent beneficial to the skin, but. they I ever used. My wife has used it and is of are inferior articles for toilet use. PROS- the same opinion. I have paid as high as PHATE SOAP Is the ONLY article offered to fifty cents per cake for an article in every the public which combines all the best ele- respect inferior to what you sell for twenty, ments of toilet soap with medical ingrcdi- five cents. HBNRT U. LTNCH, cuts beneficial to the skin. 513 H*"* ll ' sweet. IVIuA.2STTJI r, THE STANDARD SOAP CO., 204 Sacramento St., San Francisco. a ■ WAKELEE'S^ PATENT SQUIRREL and GOPHER EX T E R MI N A TOR! Sold by General Dealers and Druggists throughout the Coast. 11. I». WAKEI.EE A CO., Proprietor*. Cor. Montgomery nnU Hush Hta. n. »■ SAVES JIISC'LE, HEALTH. TIMK AND TKMPEIL NEWWT |.OP»- lar machine in the market. Liberal tcritit to »wr-n'i» or dealers, bend for price list to J. «>• EVANS, W Post St.. Sun Fwuclaco. _____ R MOUNO COLLEGE, SAN KKAXt-ISCO. Bo»riin?'Schiol for Youn? Men »nii Bov«. Kali term hi-sui* July i\. K r Catalogue apply to JOHN VinilU:, «• A., Prlnri|»»l. P, N.P. Co.. (new scried No. 73 Dr. Spinney & Co., It Kmrn; at., San Francisco. There arc many men frum thirty to sixty years or age suffering from general prostration and a weakeutng of the system which they can not account for, l)r. bplnney will guarantee a perfect cure In all such cases and a com plete restoration of the physical and nervous powers. Call or address as above. la stiMkliiK any pnrehsae or In ssrltlssg la mpsaw to may adwertl.cin.at In tbl. paper, yon will plessae meatlou tbe aasae of tbe paper. CONCORD CARRIAGES. The I'oiirord <nrri aire Ke|»owlt©ry ll** tvmoVf.l t«» No. 46 N>w \loni#om-ry »lwt.uext to f .-il*i *> Ho(«L smi Fr*nrlm«o, where * fuil stock of '* Com-ora" Buinric* *i»«l W*<uii*. the genuine •*Com*«»ril lUrtifM" *iut K. M. Millrr A C'o.'» guln cy. Ui.) HuffKtc* *:i'l will l»r <Mju»t*nt»y on han'i. T. - EASTMAN, AgeßL 46 X«tr XmuUwuk rj *l.. •. »•