S VM ji J THS FABM, Bwunpf LotB^â€" Hot m Bad m n^ Look When land oan be dninad, aad ytt b left jekr after yeer, to-gntw tedgee mm nramp gnui, theraonghtto bea gooi namm tat it,' or elM it ehowa negligent fanning. I have joit anoh a lot â€" tJiree aorea or more in extent, witii hardly a sqnare rod of dry ground on It^ txMp\ jnat along one edge, where the «owa go to find a dry apot to lie npon. A tall willoir had|;e fenoea it on a part cf one aide, and there u a brook and many aprioga of never failing water in it. Here the bog- graaaianecn ear^iw tiian anywhoo else, and my Jeraey oowa get enongh of it to ool- •r their butter a month or two earlier thui tiiey otherwise woald. In faot, aa aoon aa the green ahowa, be it in Maroh or Febnuuy, they have a chance at it, and we get golden butter from^that time on. ^ere u not muoh nutriment ia the grata, or whatever the T^ietation is â€" ^I thiu aedce or earex is the name for itâ€" bat it oontaina cUorophyl all the same, which, though green in the pl^t is yellow in the butter. It does not Ulmt many days of mild weatiier to start the tusook's sprouting, by day, and the peepers piping by night, all over the swamp, and very soon the cows will need very little, if any other f d Jer. I do not tliink there is as much butter in these sedges, even though tender, succulent and abundant, as there is in poor upland pasture. Still, the butter comes abundantly, acd it has not only gojd oolor, but a fresh grassy flavir. The warm weather ccmas on, and the â- edge becomes tough and wiry. The cows Saw the upland grasees, which grow on the IT patches of hard ground, down to the roots, so after the grasj starts well on the npland, the co^s of course " go to grass." and leave the sedge to grow. Well, it does grow, and after tha hay crop is all in, we mow this, and it gives me a big stack of so.v- eral tons of at least good bedding. Youog stock vill eat a good part of it, and cows and horses nibble at it. It is ridi in ash constituents, and goes a great ways toward making a big manure pile. If I Were to "reclidm" the meadows, I should hardly know what to do. It would change my whole system â€" no yellow butter in March, and very little in April. I would have to raise more rye for straw, get less and not co valuable manure, and not have such an easy time with my hayiog. No doubt the mead- ow would yield splendid timothy and cr- ehard grass, and tiiere would be more mon- ey in it, but now, as for a good many years past, I am not quite ready to give up the only swamp meadow I have left. Timely Suggestions- We find the following plan floating among our exchanges Have a strap in baiter long enough to pass through ring in post or manger and reach to the hind feet when the horse stands as naturally tied. Fas en a strap around the ankle of one hind toot, pass the halter-strap through the ring, between the fore legs, and fasten to the strap around Makle pass a surcingle around the horse to hold up the strap. Lt him puU he will sit down likfi a dog, only to get up the worst beat horse you ever saw. A few at- tempts vUl break the most inveterate halter-breaker. Probably posts and timbers cut now will not prove as durable as if out at midscm- mer. Such is s aid to be the experience of those who have tried cutting at both sea- sons, but few want to spend time then to out fence-posts, and it is well to save out all such as are suitable for that purpose when cutting fuel. Bean poles and pea-brush may also be saved out now, which will save time in getting ihem at planting time. Tiiere is great economy in feeding corn- stalks which have first been cut into as short j^eoes aa possible. If the stalks are cut before frost injures them, cattle will devour nearly the entire stalk. An acre ot stalks thus managed will keep a cow three months, but it will pay to add some oom-meal, es- peoially if the cow is giving milk for butter. u milk only is desired, Imn made into a slop with warm water is better than com- meid, which is likely to fatten rather than P inoreasa the mDk yield. I The Homestead finds no trouble In mak- ' ing a hog fenoe of idre. Use 'siz wires, and posts about a rod apart. Use hog wire for the lower strands, and pull the lower wire qidie close to the gtoond, and the Mcond four inches above the first. They are cheaper than Iwarda and in every way better. Moat of the farming that can Im done in winter ia in the bwnyard. Before cold weather it should be covered two or more feet deep with straw, which will be trampled down while the ground is soft, and will help to save the droppiogs of stock from waste. Successive layers of straw may be added at times, especially if there is stock •siongh to make a due proportion of .Aanure. Live Stock Notes* January is a critical month with all hinds of live stock. They should ba kepi com- fortable and gaining. If they begin to fall off in condition, they will be almost sure to lose rapidly, and will require more food and better care to keep them up, than if well housed, and oontinnonaly well fed. Bj sys- tematic and regular, then they will not stand and worry for food or water, and will take time to feed, to mmhiate, and to rest. Look after sheds and stables, to keep the-n dean and w«rm. Water ought not to freez la cow or horse stables, on the coldest Bights, and at.the same time tiia ventilation Zhonld be such, that the air is always swest. Pin suffer greatiy with the cold, and ahould ha!^ dry, weU-Uttared ne»t^ alwaya. Lit- ter tiiem with straw or sw«mp hay, enongh â- ethattliay oaaoovar themaelvea out of ^t in it. Sheep should hajo dry sheds Sy bear a great deal of oold, bat shvald Mtliavowot nor dirty tateaw «« Jie ta. Where modi atmw ia to IM thmwii into tiitfr alMda, provido a few movable platforms, Ukoold ban doon, lor tham to atandupon. Ihoy willboagraatooafortto them, and thav an sMily tuned nvar whni fratfi stoaw irttiiowBln.«rtii«y0ldirtiy. Fowls will laviftiMyb«v«wan9wuoa. are wail fed, ^^IkKvaa flhanoato «Mdas. Tbm free m^flfthn oaMa lAaO, sbaqp died^ and ^^^^iiovaida. 1^ wmaDj ndSoiant ax- m^uTlf*^'"^^ " ^i" thCTmnit ham AalMod raMM^ Jbiunnoaad. Dooltfe Mad«Dba«diia^Ml^9w«d to-|i» SofMkffiMrM* ^1^ *«V Toomnflii oon fa abnfi had, axosfffe far lattcaiag pooltry, as It prodnoes faitennl fat^ atqpa laying, and makaa tin fowls bay. No axwdse, no e^p. OliEts of H(ane Iiiie BT ASSa U JACK. There are many lessons to be iaamed Ity the ohi'dren at Chilstmaa that we liardly realize at the time, but often see afterward in the wise ordering of a Providence that guides ail thingk The bleaaadneas of giving should ba inoul- oated mora tliaa tiiat of reoolving, for it is part of the prlvfloge of the saason. Thara ia a lesaon oi j^tiaaee, too. In tiie waiting for tiia day and its enjoymanta and a lesson of faith fai the trust that it wiU bring happior»e no the three graoea ara taught by the bdvent of the Christmas morning. To the hcuKekeaoer it is a busy season and in the couirv there is as much work aa at midsummer. G ^inerally a touch of honse- oleaning preceCbH it; then the panning for extra meat, and attention to fowls and the condiments of mince pies, and plum pudding and when about the Christmas pudding it is as well to make up snfScIent to divide into two or three. Boil them all for five hours, then hang in a cool plaoe. They are better for.the keeping, and an hour's txdling prepares them for t£e table, and gives a nice change during New Year festivities. There is a grain called corn flour that the children of one household are fond of, and in the form of porr|dge it makes a good supper for little ones, when eaten ^wlth sugar and milk It is white, and wholesome, and preferable to com starch as being more nutritious, and re- quiring no additions to make it palatable. Children's appetites are often variable about these times, but there ia really nothing bet- ter than to wrap them well up and give them plenty of air and exercise. But there must be warm underwear for all in this Canadian dimate if one would have health. Taen, while the long evenings lut, let there be an hour before bed 'time when they can play and sing with you â€" let it be games, or ^y other pleasant way, and let the singing be from their hearts and something they will remember in after years. About holiday t mo, when friends drop in, it is often desLrable to dispense hospitality. There is nothing batter than a cup of coffee, with a simple cake and a dish of good fruit. A very agreeable style of ooftee is " C^e au lait, " mada by straining a quart of clear strong ooffdo through muslin and boiling a quart of milk. Scald the coffee urn and pour in coffee and milk alternately stirring the while. Prepare a pint of whip- ped cream, and beat s:iff the whites of two eggs with a tablespoonful of powdered sugar. Wrap a cloth around the nm for five minute* and when sent to table put a large Bpoiutu) bf tb«. fitveetened whit s and cream nponeaci vup. Tae simple hospitality we extend at this time does not depend so much on the quantity of tha viands, as the man- ner of tne hr stess. Given with a truly plea- sant appreciation of one's guest Jhe plahicst food becomes ambroiial. The holidays are the children's time of ecjoyment, too, and if their hrme is made pleasant they will not seek to stray from it. Let the New Year be ushered in with good wbhes and resolves, but a^so with kindly deeds, and mutual for- bearance in the family circle. While. we are busy with the rich food the season makes fashionable, let us not forget that plenty of fruit is a ccr-ectire to the system, and much more healthful for children tha" a surplus of sweets. An orange after dinner is better than pastry, and apples ara always whole- some. A very nica way to use apple sauce is to take a quart of it, fine and smooth, mb into it while hot sugar to make it quite sweet, nutmeg, and a spoonful of butter make a heap of it in a dish, wet it all over with 'b aten egg, and sift rolled cracker thickly over it. Bake half an hour and eat hot. It is not the sumptuous fare or ex- travagant expenditure for provisions that makes food palatable, it Is the knowing how to make the most of it and to serve it to the best advantage. A 3p«cimea Spiritualist. A noted spiritualist of New York visited Montreal some time ago, and before leaving had several oonferenoes with some of the leading dead of that City. His acquaintaoce- ship in the other world extends back to gentiemea who lived at the time of the deluge and he has been enlightening some of the people in the United States, as we perceive by a New York inper, upon cer- tain Scriptural problems. He is perfeatly well acquainted, he says, with JoaM whom he describes as a person of waverirg charac- ter, though "extremely sociable " and he declares that "the gentleman never was swallowed by a whale." The Scriptures are. true he, maintains, but "the incident \(ith respect to my friend Jonah was this He was fleeing away from certain people, and God put in his way a ship whose name was The WhaU. Into tiiat vessel my friend went; and after the days mentioned in Ho)y Writ, he was delivered from the ship, which was cast upon dryland." The New York papers seem to del^ht in his irreverence and a large number of persons accept the new ver- sion of Jonah, and ask all manner of ques- tions respecting his personal appearance c. The spiritualist, however, is aUowing his mind to wander away from sacred things, and he spends his time, at latest acoounts, raving about a beautiful Egyptian Princess a daughter of one of the Pnarsahs, who, hi declares, redprooates his afEection. Two obstacles are In the way of his murying the Eastern beauty with the large, dusky eyes namdy, he has a wife in New York, and he baa not the advantage of bsing dead. He prays for his rde .80 from life hourly, and the only doud that stands upon the exquisita horiaon of tlis other world is tha dread that iriien hla wile follows, she may seek to aapwate him from hii beautiful bride, with htk lotas Imdv, and her diviaa a^arabeL Ha waawizadwhhanUbiaMlaBt wack, which habalieved woold be fatal, and aa ha lay upan Ua oouo^ with rigid eyes, ha repeated is an aoataoy (rf delight. nbs ^.^li.^.ttw. Tbagjoriooa vision was broken np ly tha J^ of hii wife, "Youra dhronk Vrfi xZ baJa^acayal' Thapriaoaas tripud b^ â- rt W â- â- llooWnrapaadUaaa WimS ITOn W IBTiEBBBI- T6» inaiiinlfeB from laikmd â- â- * parfao« atandatOL The paopla fliare «• m hopaa siaee tiia election.! The new British man-of-war OampaidowB, boot of sted, at a oost of $2,375,000, i â- »• heaviest diip aver kvnohad in England. It will be thrae years before alM ia ready forsea. A new pretender has tamed op In P»w, a young man of intdligsnoe, olMnung toM the uTprinoe Imperial, aaoaped «r*m «»P«7- ity among tiie Zolns. He reae mM sa tba Prinoe slightly, but is insane. A man appeued on the atreeta of Denver leoslntiy driving a team of foUy ^â-¼*»P«* dks. worthl,800, and oapaUo tea»«Jf: ing 100 milea a day. The ohildren thought Santa Clans had oome to town. The ooal minea near Egypt, N. C, aw to be reopened next sonuner. Oneof thaae mines lias a shaft 480 feet in depth. It was this ooal that waa used on Uookada runners at Wilndngtott during the war. Capt. Ead's Tehnante^ ship railway scheme has reodved a great impetus from the reoent aotion of the Mexican Congress in enlarging tiie conoesdon to the railway, and guaranteeing it $1,250,000 a year for fifteen years, on oondition that some other country guarantees twice as much for tiie same period. A dgar-smoking doctor says that when other smokers ask him for a light he oflers them a box of matches, but never his cigar. "Gentlemen suppose," said he, "that I do this beoauce my own cigar is not well light- ed. The real reason ist':at I wish to avoid the risk of oontagion from any one disease out of the dozen or more which may be transmitted by putting into the montii an article infected parsons have handled." The Okemiat and Druggist tells how an astute rascal has been playing "what the Americana would call tiie disinfecting racket." He appears with a charcoal fur- nace and some brimstone, saying that the Health Board has sent him to dinnfect the house. Then he blows np his fnmace and creates so outrageous a stink that the ser- vants leave tiie house, and he soon follows them with everything he can lay his hands on. Referring to the decidon of the Roman Church deolMring the op' ration of craniot- my to constitute homicide, Dr^ Mielzioer writes to the Medical Stcord that according to the Mishnaâ€" the earliest oollecUon of rabbinical decisions â€" "it is justifiable to ^iU the unborn infant in order ta save the mother, as her life preoedei his life. If the child be partially bom, however, the rule does not apply, as 'one human life must not be set adde on account of another. In the Ch'nese maritime reports it is stat- ed that the Amis savages of Soath Formosa "harden their ohildren" by bathing. The infant is thrown into a tub of Qold water on the dy of his birth, and a month.afterward is taken to the river or sea and allowed to struggle until tired out. The Amis children can swim long before tfaey are able to walk. It is said that he "hardeiei" ones become strong because they were bom so; the treatment knocks out the weak ones. A Connecticut deacon »received a slight injury to one of his eyes, which gave the organ a peculiar, fixed expression. Hence, when he askeJ the village drug clerk for soda water, that exp.'rienoed person be- lieved he recognized the mute request for saperior eld p de which prevails in muiy temp.ranoe villages. He acted on this be- flodied dightly M -i'SiS#£ti? hwlBabMonearegahreastOBarfar "va^ and tiM wlwy of tiM elaxk haa bean rataad. and the anlary Tha late Lord RMMlaghlaflttae. flj^gjl- maU daughters by »;»«^â„¢8'*~*?*;2 batobsoare Hrtii. One of tiicm ""J^tod tiie Hon. Mark Naoier, aaoond •»» f* Naniar. remembered sa a boy In WaaUagtoa wSnUaiMtor wai British Minister tiieie. iomadiatdy preoeding Lord Lyona, and who la now tiirvery able J«H«*V'^;.Ti' dnotedAnbi'adefenoe. Another fa wadded in AnatnU, and the other fa Mrs^ Langtryla siater-in- law, having married Mr. Ls Breton, her brotiier, of Jersey Island. A writer in the Peoples HiaUh Journal tdb of a debUitatad patient who did not do at all weU on beef tea, bat waa eaally re- stored to health on a dbt of bem soup. The only remtfkable thing aboat thfa fa that the patient never azpactad to derive strength and nourialunant from iieef tea done Conddering that we have upwwd of a hnndred thonaand dootora, and that » very large proportion of them are fully agreed that beef tea is almost valnelea^ ex- cept aaa stimulant, it fa sarpifaing tiiat people continue to look upon it as a food. A bee's working took oomprtae a variety equal to that of the average meohanio. The feet of the common working bee exhibit the oombination of a basket, a brush, and a pair of i^oera. The brush, the hairs of which are arranged in symmetriod rows, is only to be seen with the mioroMope. With thfa brush of fairy deliiaoy the bee brushes its velvet robe to remove the pollen dust with which it becomes loaded while auoking up the neotar. Another article, hollowed like a spoon, reoeiv' s all the gleanings the insect oarriea to the hive. The oanss of cold waves, Lieut. Weodmff of theU. S Signal Service Bureau says, is not yet nnderstoira. He explains that in various investigations and studtos it has been shown that "a f of tamperatnre aoooeeda or follows an area of low barometer and a rise precedes snob an area," and asks the following ques- tion "In tiie cdld the effect of an area of high barometer, or is the area of high bar- ometer due to decrease of temperature ' The prediction of the approach or progreaa of odd wavea u as yet apt to go wrong nine times out cf ten. The moat intense oold waves follow severs stornia. The London Medical Press leams that "an Amerlcui lady fa driving in a carriage and six horses through our provincfal towns, at- tracting people 1^ means of her brass band to accept ber device and medicine as from the world renowned American lady doctor." The same papsr telS of an English quack "now travelling in Atnerica with a very 1 lovely young woman, whom he exhibits as result of bis medfaiUe, which, he declares, causes the petfeotion of her complexion. He selh a tonic, too, to which he attributes the abundance of her hair, and drags for the increase or reduction of flesh to her standard." "Gat" Howard Slandered- A Montred newspaper pubUshed the other day, in what purported to be a speoid from Toronto, a charge against Howard, the Gat- linnc man, of having sodped a dead Indian at Ffah Creek. That thfa story U as fdae as many others which have .been spitefully cir- culated about Captain Howard will be borne .out by any who were at Fish Creek. The writer happened to be thei« with Captain Howard, and in faot was one of those who conducted hiiii and Oolonek Straubende and Williams over the soene of the engagement. Oaptdn Howard ^^**«k5*5 Fidi Cred. o^iie^K^iiS "rij- until the fiftt 5*S?'f J5?rffiS'sg *»«»:? first Tbltedtt,e,2tt?'^cJfi the â- pot where t W* **« a* todrhhnr»ii*»S^5 Howard returned tol2!!'«' I ttiep.rty,andaS,SS!?*i tiie force set out for Steli*" or WM pasting tiie bS? Hi unm he remarked thelLi*** d Howard has not b.en at!2^«*J some dow. WINTEB ThesighoftheseI^;hJ7. I The world owes everyTr^M meofusarefindinjjjjlh^ our new parson it is h^ffll often hear of a coal dX"2?1 but^e doesn't go much orit'J The most thoughtful mu liA.^I one who mimedlatly BtOMri?!"' remhidedti»thi,4inS!J^ expired. ™«moij "Thank heaven,"exol»jaad .y. M he paced the floor at iuIuS howUng hefr, "thank h«Z ,1* twins!" ""^W, The most gigantic slutkihiLl •re raid to be found nw aLwI course this discovery wDl buJwStJ lawyers mad, bat facts srehci Judge Peterby'a wile ahnoitblh aAod a friend. "Splendid; ijj. such a fearful cold she cant Wk." " Have you read "Half Eom â- eota Tasked Bromley. "lfo,"l plied Pompano, with aretromeofcl in hfa eye. « but I know whrt^! The more hat a man oia bay kit larathe less bonnet a womincaL twenty, and yet aome folki n iSi was slung together fa pjrftot has^l It was a nenr Western " eTsanll'i comforted his hearers witb the tm there was hope for their fisil as they had "faith as big as a ter." A Euisas man " points wiUi (.. the faot that his wife has vm nk for twenty-five years. Tht bM which the wife pofats to the hniW] not been described. "What's the first thiogymi Jones, if you were stnng by iL asked Smith, who had beenresdi^i ole on the toeatment ofstingi, "h replied Jones, solemnly And its sation abruptly ceased. " Sa you've been out to the Pdti eh? Did yon see- the great gorgiillf oradoT" "I th-thhik si. AiMi Cheyenr e-I aaw a buck Indian nta of bologna sausege, half a box rf i andnfaeteen herrings witbontigiBtl fa that for gorge?" aRAND PRBMIUMS FOB TWO SItBSCMBSES TO We have had a large number of letters from people who sent in Clnbs last year and received the prize books, in which they say, "We had no idea that the prizes would be such good, well bound, valuable books. If your subscribers only knew what good nine in prizes you were offering, there is not one of them who would not send in a dub." Thfa year we are offering a much more attesMstive and in every way Ietter list of prizes. ^!2^^*.^.*t"^i"»'5. '" TWO Yearly Subscrlprions to THE WEEKLY IVIAIL^ at the regular rate of One Dollar a year each, will receive as a present a choice of one of the following valuable Books, which will be forwarded postage prepaid. 8 HAWOETH'S Bt XTtAJTCES SODOSOS BURNETT Author of "That Lbm o' Lowrto's." 820 nasaa Bonn.! ia oloth extra. **""" •• " P"«»» AWOKAIT'S KBABOJT BzW.D. HOWELLS Author ot "A Ohanoe Ae- Qnatntanoe," "OorWed- 7," eta.,eto. STOpagat. Wallptlntad BESSIE'S FOETTnrS SzXABTJ.HOLUEB â€" !? 'â- ^'f* ?o«nd Jn cloth extra, with handioine BtM|laek and sold. A Wimilim atorrbr this ever popular anthorets atVkS aUEEHEB HETEEETON BtHABTJ.HOLBCES AlMM^ Bond in oloth extra and gold. One [•DJ^storlaa leTer publiahed, with hand- WUHOUT A HOKE BXE.P.BOE AeOor at ' 'Barri sra Burned Away," "A Toons ^â- ^^ Glrl'a WoolngT* etc.,otc. 4a)pagei UandsomelT bound in oloth. » A YOTWa OIEL'S WOOISO BZS.B.BOB Author ot'*Baiw .rlors Burned ^Aiw,»-Wttho« • Honw,"eta.;atB pares. Band- somelj booad In Sloth u Uaokaad â- old.' Aaoeten- fartaialac and popular sntjrSMd one irtitoh ahould ba read far every SSSSSSli' *^ Hn SOnu SI7AL8 ' *»*«//35 8 IHFELICE Bx MBS AUGUSTA J. KVAJfS ••S"tf»",r?*'^^^°»tP}«°"'l repuUtlon. Her wUfci^-fU.**!.? poworfnl picture of a bud man witniatenttraltiiol! goodness, whlcharedcvelopert ..^ »?• centU influence of a pu e woman. Her Infelioe" la- a thrilling storj of the stags, end showa a cle»r naalysis of human natura. 10 ST.EIMO « Bt MISS AUGUSTA J. EVAX3 «W pagea. Bound In cloth extra, with gold etut nps. 11 SPY OE THE EEBEIUOH ,Bt ALLAN PnTKEETON •»..-• "°W ?* *•** *SJ syrt^m of the United ™«i?.!S?'».^"rl'?«^*"» •"*« rebellion; revealiSg mwayKeroets of the war hitherto not made puhii^^ S?S"J^Si'V"° '"" reports prepared for Preei- mSLi.^«^°' Geuerol kcClellai^and Trovost Marriial, Goneral, bjr AUan Wukerton, who was united States Secret Service "" " sw Chief of the „....„ pagaa. Illustrated. 12 COirilON SENSE nr THE HOUSEHOLD Sn^VumiSr^^ cartoJn to ttie Imiaa- W XTS'S SAVGHTBES 2ffi2K*J!Sf ;.*"J!!["M» *»«1 ««* Mother, by -SSSSUiS^sSlSSfcgSJ: '^^^ 14 bum ^SPOSptEHT fWy ate. Also TslHstai sattesaoaa on 10 KOODT'S SELlsii;! VOU Br D. L. MOODI 413 p«g«i. With portrait of tti»-»™^l is a colleotimi of aueodotc? imdilWW" Mr. Moody 's apecchei aod 6ernio» nGETTnrGOlTIlfTHEVOll Bl WILLIAM MATHEffS, IIA 340 pagei. round in cloth, in Mm «J{ Tills is one of the most P'lPJ'f.^^a writer who combines knowleiii;e»™"~3 to impart it in a mosta-.lTacUvefora- j v no better book for a youn* ™°""'r.ii' one, to road than " Gettiiic on m tie »«-»â- 18 hours with meiajj i "books By WILLIAM MATS^WS.lLt. sea pages. I5o.:ndinclolh,tape«g5 part it contains." FullofnsefUliii»»|^| 19 THE COTTAGE SEiBB f A larga, finely printed '""""j.^^j up of attractive Uterature pwe » iiruslrated. Its pnce 's J â- ^A'^ikfir' sendingTHBBKy "â- ""'t'^^J'llu' Mail at the regular rale o' o»'i!Sa*J receive as a pr"«nt. tho above a^*-g for one year. Specimen w'M^(4,MI on apiilicaUon to'llie Cotta.t ui-- Maai., UJS. ._ RULES. l.-The full prices ot the papers subscrib- ed for must 'u all ciuos occompniiy the order. The prices are Wkeu- LV Matl, $1.CJ a year, SO cents for HmoiitliB: l.)AiLr MAn..»7.00aysar, JJ^aforSmoutM, jlSsforSniouths; J^ EVESISO ilAII.. PX $:.60a year, tl-'"".., for 6 mouthd, tiS -v- cents for 3 mouths. 1â€" In countins np your subscrip* tions to s«e how mauy prizes you ere entitled to: A fubscr i p t i on -^. HS/Sttiiesnpaa W|gisl[llMnbA.M; ?*W)tai ijSt- ShOHiS SSniiiaiia by BLoaBâ€" r.StUt'SM*M5s2: ^Sl^7rj27!|jaad- A fubscr i p t i on __,__, v.n, W 'il to the lAit,T or EjFKwa ..p^* and a Dailt or EvEhttO «* .^ 3.-SubscriptloM for ae ;j5i ' same as ordinary f«bscrip^jj, T-There is NO ""J^S^,* to Great *ritam or IW^J^ co*" soriptions for those Pâ„¢" anbaorip tions. _jâ€" adi*^^ 6.-TO entitle «?,«P^d M»"^?3 least TWO robscribers, »n'»ajj i.»| sible: that la to W' *iMt«*Siril aoription to the »^*t^*lTiij Mail would not entitle tM-^p^igSJ a yearly •"bsorlptlon W w'»'a^o*r' or several â- ubscriptioM"' beaUrifht wTw"^« with the money in •^Jf^l* «*" seriben or, a snbscnpo" three •ubrerlben- j-AJf'K U^At» thit list it "^*f*r.Ztrt* iiUwiUhM*nict»t*o»' There books •'• •"JSHS? Cloth. They ara W 2 urill be walcoma \n "r* T^ j- papers and on thabo«» â- ead Ibr s| (sated prise ^dontha^ooK*^- r r '/Ti-TiiiilS' :;iM;s^feis