JLJ THE TOMBS DOCTOIt. fi!S CPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDYING j CRIMINAL NATURE. 3o.t at HU ratlenU Suffer From th Ef fect of Uiasipatloa Victims-jf Morpbinw bd1 Optam-Flaebo Tor ThoM Who Trlfn Hlnns. While his duties are limited officially to th" are arid medical treatment uf ihe; i-iiatrt of the Tombs, or city prison, Dr. O. J. Ward undoubtedly has one if tb rr.u-t iutt resting fields of profusion al rart iro and study. It extends juucng a class of r-alient rhifh, taken all in all. are hurdly to Le duplicated any vli re t le. It was nt to dilate on the valuable c.pportaniTit-s to Fcieucerrc' utf,d to the city risou jJijsician for the uiakiug of a study or Fpociulty of criminology iu Ins calling, however, that I visited Dr. Ward recently, but to ascertain from him somocf 'he more interesting details of hi work and experience. I found liiin evidently about 55 years old. with 1 1. -asaiit anl kindly features. When he ;,ok lie expressed himself meditatively itlld to the jxuiit. His words were well w- yheil. and tliere could be uo uiisixiu M ruing his meaning. "Oh. there is no doubt cf the Tombs ling a fine place to make a study in t!i" line of criminology," said Dr. Ward vh n I first bro:ohed the subject of my v.sit and alluded to the field ojicn in this line. "The material is here, and the opjxrtuniites for observation are uulim- Itid." In answer to my question as to the physical condition of the prisoners at the Tombs and their ailments the phy tieiau replied: "About 75 percent of all that come in here suffer from some gastric and nervous troubles, the results of dissipa tion. Thirty-five per cent of these are or have h-en addicted to the opium or morphine habit. After th.-se- opiate vic tims have Ix. u here a short while and their a'-ce" to their favorite drug cut off their sufferings become pitiable to a derive. "I hare had patients here of this ilars" he continued, "to whom I had to administer as high a JJO !?-aiiis of xuorjMiine in one day to save their lives This dose would be sufficient to kill about five ordinary ite-reou not aecus ronied to th lrug. " That victims to the opium and mor phine habits suould furnish as many as 35 out of every 100 criminals lauding in tne ciry prison, when the jtoliee and other authorities of the city are pro claiming that the open sale or ue of fh se drugs lias Us n entirely suppress d or stamped out, somewhat surprised me, a! id I a-ked Dr. Waid whence this nartirnlar class of prisoner came fmm. "The alcoholic patients are prin ripally from the upper wctiou of 'the citv, but the morjihine or opiuni vic tims, as a rule, all come from the lowt r part of the city," h replied. "One of the most pitiable puljects of the opium Lbit that came here was Georgj Appo, the gren gois operator, who i the son f ijuimlio Ajipn, the ChintemurtL rer. AppL testiiied before the Lesow cetiii mitt against McNally, trn king of -the greii gKxls men. Appo had not been in the Tombs without his opium Jor over a few days when the want of the drug bi gau to assert itself on his entire fysti m. His ujoansaiid groans at night fairly kept awake and annoyed all the prisoners in the other cells cn tiie same corridor. " One curious feature, from medical tanripoiijt, about the Tombs prisoners is ti;af they almost immediately become x iz-d with the impression that they .nre suffering from all sorts of ailments jnd want treatment. They ruminate Aiver their old complaints and shout for the doctor, whereas if they were at home they would never thiuk of need ing medical attendance. With the habitual criminal or "re-r-ters" and "revolver"." as they are - aiJvd, this is not the case. These know the regulations of the prison and under stand that the least troublesome way to -get along is to cause as little annoyance is possible. It is lemarkable also to no tice how newcomers to the city prison p:ite readily bee me reconciled to the surrounding. The first day they appar ently fi-el their degradation, but in a f w days it is wonderful to tiehold them, laughii'g and joking utout their jredicamelits. L4maly remarkable is the way the 3iewc tmers. or at least those committed l.ir ieity ffeiis s will take to lionizing .uid looking up to those committed for she higher grades of crime, such as murder and ba:ik robbery. "A c lass f ptvple who are great at feigning illness are those who come down here fmm the workhouse on Ulaekwell's islautL"saidDr. Ward fur Uer. "As soon as I bear of these "ob-plaining and find them in a normal ."ondition I tell them they require no medicine, and if they take any it will ..lo tiu in more harm than gcxtd. If they .are p. relent after my examination or advice, why, I give them a prescription calling for plactlio, which is really s"m 'thing iu the name of a medicine o!:iy, but iu reality composed of pills of common bread or a colored water. This 1'ljceho a-ts like a charm in these cases, le when I go my rounds and ask the plat bo patients how they ftvl after tak ing th: medicine they declare the roni--dy exce llent a::d want to know why I --.lid not pr.-cri;ie it for them b fore. " ne thing that surprises me here is the way cr-. iinals charged with mon 'no c: i::ies si cure the sympathy of ;'.io- w:iien who ate of a benevolent or charitable mm etf mind. Tlies1 crimi nals pour e stories of their fall from grace ;:-id icin"e!ve i::to the e-:trs if tht se eeMi.'.il.g M-oplc, but ill nine i'js(ii:t ;eu where the primmer is 'p'tl :;::d t:, ts out lie or she makes -iii of t!:ecredul:ty of the beiiefacTor." r-eiieiutled Dr. Ward as he stepped out .if his of!ieo to make his rouuils. Xf-.v York Xi wv. Tlio tVimna of It. She h:A reail the sign, "Do not speak ft the mntprmau," and she said, "I vender why not?'' Then in wins. -me voi'v she inquired t'f that functionary, "Why mustn't one talk to the motor j.iau'r" He told her it was against the cubs. "But why is it against the fuV-:'' "lieeauso it is." "Then you i.a'i like to be talked to?" "Oh, ye. t at Thunder, I came within an ace of ratuiiig dewu that old gent!' "But I should thii.k it would bo nice to have : 'iu" !r to sj'oak to ins'oad of talking t t uoitody all day long." "Lady, you ..-v giving to stop talking, or there's go tt l-e a smash up on this line, alula i 2 one. see?' "The hateful thing! :id I did so want to lie miciaLlelike. .!" jaarried. I'll U t. He's jart like ib ::ry when he's got the pajter under i.is i.ose.T Boston Transcript. The OrmntioK of I'atent. I a the cas of a p-rson who believes :iuj-'it tit lt t!;t original inventor of :a; arti-ie it d vie- ix which l:e desin s a p-;. i.t the right will u.t U n fused. iii:if the same article cr ui vice has iy-i u known orpat ntod in jsouie foreign coviiitry that i", provided the invention i.- i u'it I '.-li desetibed iu auy printed '1 ljeTi,:i. In ls4 occurred the "great Cre" at .-"a: tie. il Washington, in which prop, crty to the vlue e.f J JO, DUO, 000 was J.ctr.yed. The Lgyptiaus, Chaldeans, P ndans. - - . - - - - t " ....... u v. ,u V Jl .A lillUiB i.i;aa the year in tin' autumn. Tho "Fcgio" coins were struck in ? :v York and were so called from the - vice employed en the reverse of the .,;n. this among the other things being -a d.;l w:h tins word "Fugio," and in 4icritijn, "Hind your business, " A PLEA FOR PLAIN FOOD. UiaU Thmt Mmy Many Doctor.' Bill, and Valuable Llr. It is not a generally understood fact, tut a f set nevertheless, that some of the wealthiest aud most luxurious app-ar-. ing people live on the plainest f'Xid. There are children in the families of millionaires who would no more be. permitted to partake of 6ueh meals as i re given to the children of many a la fioring man than tby would be allowed tu use articles that were known to Le poisonous. Many a mechanic's little ones live on meat, warm bread, all the butter they want, and that of an inferi or quality, coffee as much as they choose, and cheap bakers' cake, which is in itself enough to ruin the digestion of an ostrich. The children of one family make their breakfast of oatmeal cr some oili er cereal and milk, with br.-ad at least 24 hoursold. a little, very little, butter, sometimes none at alL The breakfast is varied by corn bread, well done, a little zwieback and sometimes stale bread dip led in egg and cracker crumbs and browned with butter. A fresh egg is often the only article outside of farina ceous food that they are albnved. For dinner, which is the middle of the day, thev have some well crooked meat, one or two vegetables, a cup of milk if they like it, or weak dK-uii, with plenty of bread and butter and a simple dessert, tsupjx r, which is a very light meal, fre quently consists of graham crackers or brown bread and milk or the puddit.g, eaten with a little molasses or maple sirup. A few days ago, in a call at the house of a v.orkingman, there were five chil dren st ated at a table, on which was a large dish of meat, swimming with gravy, in which potatoes had lcen cook ed. These potatoes were saturated with fat and almost imjiossibk' of digestion by any person of ordinary constitution. There" were hot rolls, soggy looking and smoking from the oven; parsnips fried in laid and reekii.g with the grease. A ile of cheap cakes, sufficient to fill a gixwl sized four quart measure, stood on oue corner of the table ; also two pies, with crust containing so much lard that they looked absolutely greasy. There was i ollee, daik and rank look ing and worse sm. lliug, and this the children wfre indulging in quite as much as they pleased. Tiny ate like lit tle wolves, with an unnatural and fero cious appetite. Two of them had pasty, unheal tiiy looking complexions; one vi as eviili l:1v suffering from some skin disease; the hb r of the group had an ugly liAtking truptiou on his face and ears, and the entire lot were living ex ample's of the results of a mistaken sys tem of feeding. It was no surprise to the visitor to hear, a few days later, that two of tin m were very ill, one hopelessly so, with cholera morbus. That the death rate among such ikhv p!e does not increase with frightful ra pidity is the one thing that the thought ful persons and philanthropists never cease to wonder at. The parents of these children would undoubtedly have said that they gave the little ones the best they could af ford, but this was just exactly the cause of all the troubles. They pave J hem too much and too expensive food. A proper diet would have cos: a third of the money and would have saved health and doctors' bills, to say uothiug of their Jives. New York Ledger. Mwvtborne ta m Worker. There is a t.ry about the famous Brook farm experiment to the effect that several of the most distinguished numbers, Hawthorne among them, found the place so uncongenial that they used to lean over the pigsty ul.d si ratch Chti pigs' backs for amusement. When, however, it became Hawthorne's duty to feed the pigs, he drew the line. Scratch a pig' back lie might; feed a pig he would net. His daughter, Mrs. Lath i op, denies that he was a finical man. She writes in the Cambridge Mag azine : "Hawthorne could work with his hands too. He hoed many a vegetable garden, planted sunflowers, of which he was a thorough adaiirer, cut beau poles cheerily and ate his personally raised fresh vegetables with the best of us. He did not fear to help his wife in their early married life by doing the house work when she was not strong enough. Moreover, he did not do it with 6urly innuendoes and sudden snarlings, nor did he abruptly stop and sit down to niggardly reproach. He washed di-hes .and cleaned knives and cooked like a prince of fairy tale reliability and gvn tleliesji." TratlifulorM. A man may. from education, trail ing and habit, or e ven from motives of policy or other reasons, usually speak the truth and be cstei mini accordingly. Yet he may not by any means be im bued with the spirit of truth which ani mates his neighbor, who lovi s and re veres it, not merely for its results, but for its own sake, whose impulses spring toward it and whose whole lib' mani fests it not only in won!. Lutinditd and in thought. Truth does not get x alted by Hinging it at people. It is x alted whenever it is really cxpressi-d in a man's life and shines out thrcagh him. Exchange'. lMiublj Fatal. The extravagance of e xpression com mon to certain young ladies of uu "ii phatic habit leads them iujoqueer state ments. For instance, a contemporary reports this fragment of conversation t'tw on two girls : "I w:. just dying to sexj it." "Yes? ' "Yes, and when I saw it it w; j r fectly k.lling. " Wlir Mie Tooii It. "Mr den." said Mr. D.:rley, "did j-ou lake any tu lit J out eif J.ir Waist- 'OUt JH ei.( l" "I;liu. ' r.-pli"d she tli fLuitly. "Why did yo::r" 'li. cause tiiat is one of l'lir: i d wem--U's Vested rights." Liehal.g e. A Boy's Chances Spoiled- Farmer's Ioy "Father, why can not I rise in the world the same as other men? For instaiiiv, why can not I some day U'e-oine Secretary of Agriculture?" Old Farmer "Too late, too late, my son. Yon know too intieh about farmin'." New York NVwklv. "I have nothing in the store that sells so well tr gives such general satis faction as Dr. Fowler's Kxt. of Wild St raw 1 terry. I always recommend it in cases of sUllilue r eitinphiiiit or liowel trouble of any kind." V. A. West, Uaiiisitoroiigh, . Title ( In lit J".i y. "This is the saddest case of all, and yet lie aehieveel his ambition." The kee'jter paused, and with pitying eyes the vi;-it4rs gazed on the hoie li-ss, express i n Uss fae-e of the patient Ironi which all traces of intelligence bail v inishi.il. "How 1 iel liee-oine to this sail state?" "II ? was out of work and endeavor ed to make himself eligible to se-rve as a petit j uior."' Tiutli. Wheels in Their Heads. Visitor "I supjxtse most d" the patients are quite rational em many liints?" IVKte.r "Oh, e! Some of them cu-invl about the difliTeiit n bkes of wheel just as if they we-re absetlutely Kane." Fuck. SOUND MOSEY TALK. By a Practical Business Man of New York. The following address by Freeman II. lln.bllt, a protiiineiit merchant of New Yoi k, is such a complete refuta tion of some of the sophistries iiolulgiil in by candidate- llryan, that we pi.blish it br the in format inn ef the readers of the Ilut.vl.ti: "The eaj.italist ami the banker, whose uninestd wealth lies idle in their vaults, drawing neither interest nor ilivideiid-, are no more in the rn-si-tion of their choice' than is the work inginau whose haiuls are nervously folded across his kii'es. Wliat will, bring prosperity to tlnio will bring ri.plov lot tit t hilnT, and when Ial r is i it .phalli vl re inill.i r .tie wages the farmer never seeks in vain feT a jtrolU able market. Whciieve-r capita! is tbreateliei! or throttled the V.lu-els of iiitlti-try erase- to revolve and the workingmati's npimrtiinity and tl:e hirmer's marke ts are gon'. "Capital, laltor, and agriculture- are' oss nt ial parts of a harnionii us wlmle as are the root, the stem, and the rip etied grain of the fanner's harvest. Capital is the genu that, planted in the human earth, take-s nnit and sends birth the tender stulk that nourish-s the grain at its summit and turns it into gold. Laltor is the riot, agricul ture the stem and profit for all the fruitage of the proe-e-ss, no part of which can U- omitted without destruc tion to the plant. "W hit is w illing to lend tr invet a dollar worth J hi cents while even u possibility exists that only oU ce'iiU will lie re paid. What farmer w ill not hoard his grain if there is a prosjie-e t that there will he-a ri- in prtiv? Has he a right to complain of the capitalist refusing to rik U'ing robUtl of half he has? The gold standard has not para-lyzi-d the huiitl of lalntr or 1 -ere ft the farmer's market of profit; but the thnat of a ilirliom-st silver stundanl hits. The fact that the bullion value etf silver hns faileii iilmost fifty -e-r cent, in ten years, almost twelve pt r nt. siiu-e Ilrytiu was nominatei, -hows 1 ow dillietilt it is to fix a ratio that will hist even n decade, and ex plains the reluetiiiiee of other nations to join in such an attempt. "Itrytni says the test tf the value of money is its pure. using jtower, niul that 'an absolutely honest dollar would tint vary in purchasing jxwe-r, but would U- staple when meii-ured by avirage prici-s.' Average jtrice-s tf what, when, ami fr what length of time? The priee-s of all commodities chilli ire- according to the relations of supply to ih mart), according to the di-tanee of the m.-irket from the source' of supply, accortlihg tn the means f.r traiisjMirJiitioii, .-.ml the nulhods of prodtu-tioii. When some are high others are low, and the lowest this yi ar may be the highest next. Cold ii'in or bullion, the standard of all v:,l lies, re e-ogi:it d alid aeei pted the wotld ic, i r. w ill buy more of any article in some places than in others. "An expression that M-otirs with great frequency in Mr. ISryan's ad dresses is 'the value of silver measured by gold.' 1I- might as well say the lciiirth of anything lnea-ured by the f.Mtt or the we-ight measured by the polilel. We- measure e-wrything by the measures we have- adopted and the iiistrunu tits we have ilivejited for the puijKtse, tr witii son in- quivahnl. fluid is the aeii-pted staini.-ir'l of value, and all values are measured by it. Sil ver has and can have no value' uiile-ss it is measured by- the acii pted stai!I ard. A ham can have no weight un less it is weighed by our standard of weight, mid there is nothing by which we e-an compute length, breadth or thickness except by the uoi-opted standards of lineal measurement. "It is said by the advocate- of free coinage that there is not gold enough in the- eituniry to transact its business. Neither is t he-re Hough of silver if we shouid coin it all. If every business transaction were transacte-d by an act ual transfer of .coin, there is not enough i;i the world to transact the busilK-sj of Ilu- I nited Statjes alone. Fortutiate-ly that fact was discovt-riil and remedied long U-fure Mr. Bryan was iioiuinab d. A sound paper cur rency and subsidiary coins are j'arts ef the circulating medium of every coun try that mllicrcs t the gold stauelanl. "It is ti e demand fi,r the prod-JeN of the f;irm iiinl factory that oreah-s pro-jterity, not a pleiititudc of the means of measuring values. We might as well ex k ct un incre-ase-d de mand ftr cloths us the reult of mul tiplying yanlsticks us an ini-reiise in business activity through a large r num. Iter of coins to liie-usure vahu-s. Mr. Bryan may multiply measures until doomsday without adding an iota to the needs of the' community fur what is to U- niea-ured. His statement that 'gold is a commodity that the H-ojtle must buy with the products of their farms or of the ir toil' is inexcusably in-ace-urati'. ioid coin is not a enliimnd ity. NoIkmIv inH'ils or e-an Use it exce-pt as a lne-aure eif the- worth tf either things. To acquire it is to acquire- the means ef e xchanging one iinuinndity for another, for it sole ott'uv is to me asure- w bat is bought r.ini what is sold. It is a means of fae-ilitating an exchange of coniiieth'.ii but in itse-If is no more a e-omuinuity than the biisl.e-1, the gallon, or the jmund." V.: l'1.t!f,Ve)v.,ii"iHi! 1 2!1MJ Backache is simply Kidney ache it's a way the kidneys have of telling us they are sick and need help. Only way to cure it is by reaching the kid neys direct. Piasters and lini ments may relieve they can't cure. DOflN'S KIDNEY PILLS Get down to the root of the trouble make the kidneys strong and healthy, take away the cause of backaches, lame backs and all kidney and urin ary troubles, and so cure them permanently. Mr Stnntn P1ttt ! an M n-d.1- nt nf Nee .-U. Iter a-Mrr-fl i M Pnrtu-e utree-t. Stie nay: - As the reuit ..f the (rriMK-. wtiii-h I hail aenie months ai?o, I havo mtri-red with a J' un in tnv liaek ati'i iliinU'r .1 k:ftieys. KiJif -v is.M,!a:iit l.ail inn an iiiti trouble of mine, but I lml l-eii f vliug iuiie well unlil thitt attar t of the priji'ie; I ha1 tu-li a jain M-ri intr ki'tnevs that I mind hanlly get antun-l. and if 1 sal down I n fno-tsl to trrasp s-tim-tiiitiz to crt un. I r. a lox of Iiin' Kiilm y l'ii!s ami tliey relieved the riain and re-ston-d the urine, vhit h had t-nuseil me triHiMe. to tiatural ixinditniiin. I am feelinc first rate aL-Min. ami I owe the ciiaupe entirely to l.n Kidney lili. Doan's kidney Pills Cost 50 Cents at Druggists. Foster-Milta CoMAGTJty. 5ll I VfTiSi !!!!) hi " - ; -lI IU III Strong: Arms 1 i ( j) are not neceteary to do til making ( l are not necessary to do til washing when Sunlight Soap Is nsed: It does most all the work Itdelf. Jnet rub a lilUeoo the clothe, roll them tip and put tbem bark in the water. Then when joa take Uieai out Joa will see that m I!I Sunlight Soap Oocs the work It ?m, Hudson Harrbua hta No" Vutk. A Hard Bargain. Torre w;is :i wistful exitressiou on bis f;ie-e as he sdrolleei up to the Imx-olile-e of the the-atre. He stmkeel iiis Iteurd with an assumption of nom-bal-unee ami saiel to the young; man who was M-Iling tie-kets: "lie ye goin' ter bev anytliiu goin' ui here ter-night ?" "Yen, tir," was the answer. "We have a iierfonnam-e here every night." "t'retWele-d hoUst-s?" "Oh, I giu-ps we can find a place for you if you want to go In." "I wouldn't want anythln' very ex Iensive. 'Most any place 'ud do fur me." "We can sell you a seat for twenty-UVe-centK." "That's rock-Mtoin prices, is It?" "We can't give any discount on that." "Wal, I dunno. Would ye sorter do tne a pus'nal favor?" It was a dull day and the man in the liox-oflloe was a little lonely ami to keep the conversation going, he ans wered: "Ye-s, if you don't ak tne to jtassj-ou into the show for nothing." "I wouldn't make no sech re-epiest es that. I'm uillin' ter pay fur my aiiiusi'ment, or g wethout. Hut would you tuke five two-cent stamiis in part payment ?" "Yes. We can use them." "An' I've got a dime with a hole in it. Would ye jes ez soon let that go in fur eight cents? That's a discount of two ce-nts on aitnunt of the hole." The ticket seller was thoroughly amusc-el by this time and he answered. "Yes. Ix-t's have it." "That'll make eighteen cents. I reckon you'll want seven cents more." "I'm afraid I will." "Wal, he-re's the eighteen cents-. I'll e-ome around te r-night an' set down any win-re ye put me an' when ye think I've .-con eighteen cents' worth, ye kin se iul one o' yer hireil men n round an' notify mo. I'll git right up an' go out nil' there won't lie any disturbance whatsonievt-r.'' "We fini'l do anything like that. Y ti'll h;-ve to buy a ticket for the v hole show or not go in at all." "W al, thor's only one thing I kin nlli-r ye. Ye can take ycr choice. I'll give ye this he-re jack-knife that I paid a uartcr fur less'n a year ago, an' which only hez one blade out o' the three broke. Kr I'll give ye this ten ccnt pii-cc of chew in' terbacker whie-h I wus goin' te-r take home a present te-r the hired man.'' "I I don't see how we can elo any thing like that." "It 'ud 1 a great accommodation." "AH right," suit! the amiable' ticket feller. "Ualiel ovt r the jiit k-kliife.'' A ml he threw him out a ticket. "I know ye ain'l ruiiniu' no junk shop," the itpplii-ai.t said a be psi-sod over the cuthTy, ' un I'm inm-h obliged te-rye fur m.ikiii' thise-Xe-eptiun. I hated ter go way wi-Miout s'-e-in' a t he-ay ter-show, but t-f I uus te' hev paiel real iuoiie out an' out, I don't think MchitaU-l would ever fi rgivi me f.ir it. Hut the p:-t ie st:iini 'nil likely hev got lost 1m f.r- I c. t achaiiee; te-r u-m' -ni an' I couldn't p.is the lime an' I've got another j:u k-knife. Sot z longezl jes traded in ftirit, I kin enjoy the aciiu" weth a char con scietitv an' go home- an' lell Mehital-el ;i!l about it." iMroit 1'n-e 1'ress. - Seat it to Eis iloLher ia Geriay. Mr. Jacob Iv-Ih-iim-ii, who is in the employ of the Chicago J.uiiiIk r Ct,, at los Moines, Iowa, says; "I have just sent some mcelie-lne hack to my mother in the old country, that I know from personal use to lie the K'st medicine in the weirld fur rheumatism, having u-d it in my family for several years. It is called ChainU rlain's Tain Halm. It always does the work." o0 vnt Utttles for sale by Henfonl's Pharmacy. Eather Crowded. Aunt Prue "Ifyou tell lies, Dicky, you will go to the bad place." Dicky "J)oes everybody wlio tells lies?" Aunt Prue "Yes, Dicky, they all go there." Dicky "Then I guess I ain't afraid much. It must lie overcrowded now." Truth. From all accounts Chamtterlaiu'a Cough Kemeely is a (Joelsend to the alllicted. There is no advertisement about this; we feel just Jike saying it. The 1'emocrat, Carrollton, Ky. For sjtle by Ilcnford's Pharmacy. He Wanted the Earth. Stanley and JJenry, two fuur year ohls, ga?.eel with w ide-oiten eyes at a K. P. funeral the otheF day. The uni forms made a strong iiupreMion upon their youthful minds, ami the band, playing a funeral march, a stronger one still. After the parade hud passed on they resumed their play. "Ix't's play fooneral," said Stanley. "All wight," assented Henry. "P1I dwive de touch." "No. I'll dwive," asserted Stanley. "Den 1 11 lie de liand." "No. I'll be de band." "Tan I lie de dead man, den?" "No, you tan't. I'm doin' to lie de deael man," insisted Stanley. "You want V lie de whole fooneral. I won't play." And away he went in indignation. Detroit News. Quite a Cariosity. "Sir, I am poor, but I am honest." "Well, become rich and remain lion- j e -t, and you can get a job iu a museum." i Truth. Made of It j The IU-veretid Mr. Longuecker j (solemnly) "Man is made of dusL" j Young Skoflington "So the gills Jhiuk, anyhow." Puck. Met After Many Years. There was a remarkable seene at a N'irtliunilierlanil avenue hotel on Thurselav. It Kfiiis that a party of ! newly-arriveil Ameriean., most of j them strangers to eaeh other, were pitting at luneheon ami one ot them was with an English frieml, who hael j found time to develop mi mature an m eitlli d to we him. eapai ity for uude-r-taiidiiig the atiltjeot he The converstttinn between the two naturally drifted back to the war time, and the American, who had been a Federal, describad ome of his advent ures, and how at one place the oppos ing soldiers useel to work so near eaeh other in the tre nches that they were able to engage in conversation, ami surreptitiously exchanged tobacco ami j tea the Northerners having plenty of the latVr ami none of the former, while the iSiutln-rners were in exactly the opposite condition. I Jut, he con tinued, the most curious "swop" he ever made was a small jmcket of iiuin ine fur a jmuiiil of tobacco, to which the Confederate added a curiously carved wooden pijie. Thai piH he j had kept ever since, I u-cn Use he regard- eel it alul the ttili:icco as having saveel his life; for somehow or other his su perior otlh-er hail cuiue to know th it ! he ItossesM d a iiu.-intity of the "weed," i ami ortliTed him to re-iMirt hinist If con-I ceming it. 1k fore he could regain his j Mtst a skirmish occurrcel, and the man who was iu his place was killed. At this mint it tall, sunburned American with while hair and heard, who had be fit listening to the olhe r w ith considerable emotion, inte rrupted with, "Iixciisc me, though I am a strange-rtei you, but eiitln't that South erner tell you that the epuiniue was for his little daughter, wlu was down with fever?" "Yes," said the other, "and didn't the Northerner wry that hi little girl was ill of fever, too, hut he would share her nie'die-ine with the either littleone, even w ithout the toliacco?" "Why, yes," cried the original nar rator, "I Itelieve he did, ami that was me." "And I was the Southerner," erieel tbe other, "and here is my daughter, whose life you heliied to save, here's, one of my grandchildren with her." The F.iiglishman who was pre-sent say that tliere was then such a scene of haml-shaking, introductions, ai'-l congratulations as must have made pe-oplc at the other tables think the ceimpany mut have la-en visitors from Ile-ellam. The Northerner hail also a daughter with him, who is a w ieletw anel the embrace, of the two women who had never seen each other before, but whose e-arly lives hail so closely touched, was tcculiarly all'ecting. "Ami to think we' should meet each other so far from home, ui.el in F.ug himl, too," cxe-laimcel one. "(Jod bless Kngland for it, say I," replied the other. Loudon Telegraph. -- - Iu a recent letter to the manufactur ers Mr. W. F. lieiijainin, editor of the Sin-etator, Kushford, N. Y., says: "It may U- a pleasure to know the high esteem in which ChamU'rlain's medi cines are held by the people of yeiur own State, w here they must lie U-st known. An aunt of mine, whore-sides at De xte r, Iowa, was aUuit to visit tne a few ye::rs since, and In-fore leaving home' wrote me-, asking me if they were sold he re, staling if they wer" i; d she wouhl bring u quantity w ith her, as she elid not like to lie without them." The in -dicines referred to are ChamU-rhiin's Cough Itcmitly, famous for its cures of colds and croup; Cham berlain's Pain litlm for rheumatism, lame' back, pains in the side and chest, and ChamU'rlain's Colic, Cholera and ( Diarrhoea llcim-dy for Imwcl com plaints. These medicine's have Urn in constant iw in Iowa for almost a quarter of a century. The jtoople have learned that they are articles of great worth ami merit, and une'ipialeel by any other. They are for sale here by IU n ford's Pharmacy-. The Czar's Good Sense. No iMtiple in the world are more stitl'nt e ketl in their ow n etiquette than tin. et'Tici rs tf the crack regiments iu St. Pete Tsburg. Since Nicholas II. U-- came t 'azar he crt-.lit the initio should not ride PeeT-IiUrg the has eiiele-avoicd ti elic it that an army olVni r in a street car. In St. armv ttli-er has loti (otisi.h n d '"'iiiself too superior to tin.-e-ome.:oii civilian to share with him this "vulgar" mode of conveyance-. A few weeks :v;o one ofthefevv un titled tillicers iu the I(U-ai:;il capital venture tl to ride iu a atr-oet-oar to his barracks. It was a presumptuous and a imuraeo'.is act, fur ho had to alight U'fore the fashionable cavalryman's club of the city. Hut It proved an un comfortable act, for his fellovv-oilhrs eleclared that he hail elisgraeiil his uni form, and refused to listen to his quo tations of the Czar s remark on the subject. After senile days the colonel of the regiment urged ujs)ii the oll'nvr the propriety of resigning his commission. He gave as a reason for his feelings, and that of other officers, that he had committeel a degrading oH'ense by as sociating with the jiopulaee in a street car. In hisilistre-ss, the unfortunate ollici r turned to a frit-mi in high official rank, who teild the Czar of the affair. Nicho las heard the story at four in the after iioon. He immediately put on a dark suit, and, with his adjutant, went to the locality w here the officer had taken the car, Imarded one ami rode on it to the barracks. He there alighted, anil, getting on a return car, went h ick to the palace. The next day the colonel of the aris tocratic regiment in question received a full autograph aecnutpi of tle trip, whie-h the young ruler en. lid with these words : "Am I still worthy to wear the uni form of a Il'issian officer? Nicholas." Of course, there Gould lie only one answer to that question. There is now in that regiment signifloiut reserve ami sileme respecting riding with de splseel pli-U-lans, and titleei snobs fall over each other to see who can signal a passing carfirsL The Czar eleserves respet for his eon duct. If he shows a?uud ooiutnon sense in all state -natters as he has shown in this little alTair, his reign will not lie a elt-aelK- conservatism that clings to old forms ami smothers pro-gre-ss ami reform in its stagnant em- braces. - Youth's Ci uupaniem. - A Pla m Fact. "Mv husUind's sight was ght was poor before I m i rrie-d him, "I supposed so. 10." j-Life 5 THE KIWQ CURE OVER I HHBTDMATISM, Soma Bryanisms. From N. V. Tribune. For William J. llryan to make a (perch or write a letter without diKplay iiiK his ignorane'e seenit Iteyoml hit pow er. Kvery time he gets within hailing diHtane-eof a puhlie question ho says something to justify Carl Sehurz's wonder that a man no young should have ' rlos IO expoHIlll. Ills lonuai ii'uri "i i aoeeptanee fairly bristie" witu iiiisiiiinr- niation. For uistanee, m elisruismg trie recent Iminl issues, ho declares that the policy of giving to the holders tf (iovern nieiit ohlipitions the option whether th-y shall lie paiel in gold or silver "leaves the lioveriiment at the mercy of tleiso who find a pecuniary profit in I mux! issues." Perhaps Mr. iSryan can ! explain. but wedoulit it, how witu an emntv Treasury any. AUiiimisiraiion could inee-t the eleiiiands niaile on it hy paying out silve-r instead of gold. Sup pose the men ho presenteil green hacks for redemption had askeel for silver in stead of gold. I low would the liovern ment have lte-e-n better otl It had hss silver than gold. Mow ennld it have paid tut silver, except by iMirmwing it, just as it lturrowed gold T There is iu the Treasury to-day, available fur use, over ?lUt,0"l.0O0 of gold, and less than fJJ,i,- urn oi'iiilver Tlipr urn outstanding over LT.VtiiU)ou Greenbacks. Will S-'.outM-Kl ju hlv,.r g(, ,urti.r lu puyinent e.f those 0,ijt;.ttj,,llH t,a $e ,imii,(h n in gold? d,m.s Mr. Bryan think that free coinage of silver would meet deficits? Free coinage of anything means the stamping of somclmdy else'a metal into coins ut the expense of the tJovcrmnciit. Uuild ing more mints, as Mr. llryan suggests, would iuere-ase the elelicit instead etf lessening it, Ui-ause it would involve more expense". Possibly he thinks that Junes and Stewart and the other silve r miners would givesilver to the' intern ment to pay its debts w ith. Mr. Hryan ulso says that "to assert that the ioveriiiuc ul is ele-peiulent on tho assistance or gisxlwill of a portion of the pimple other than a onustitutiona 1 majority is to assert that we have a government in form, but without vital force." Very well. There are over 7o,ui,(1io people, in this country. We have an army of almut :l,ti men. Ilccnnse the liovermneiit is dependent on the assistance of thut army to repel an invasion of foreign foes, is it any proof that the tiove-rnment is w ithout x-ital fore-e? I'.ce-ause the city of Lincoln, Neb., iu a time of proi'o imel peace, was dependent on the assistance of e-crtain capitalists w hen it w anted to raise money to pave its streets and put iu sewers, w as it any proof that the e-ity's govei miieiit was one of form only ? Hut w hen the National (Jovernioent, finding itst L without ftinels, goes to the men whei have money to lmrrow what it nceels, that, to Mr. Pryan's mind, lieeomes proof that republican institutions are be ing niisnscd. What nonsense! Mr. liryan further maintains that, "while the I'nited States guarantees to every State a republican form of govern ment, and is empowered to protect each State against invasion, it is led authoriz ed to interfere in the uom"tic affairs of any State, or upon the application of the Legi-latnre of the State, or upon the ap plication of the Kxecutive when the Legislature can not be convened." If this means anything at all, taken in con nection with the Chicago platform, on w Inch he wit commenting, it means that the transportation ed the I'nited States mails and the blocking of interstate eiun merce are the domestic a Hairs of a State and tint of concern to the Federal (Inv eminent. When we have a man in the Pn'sideiitial e-hair w ho so interprets the Constitution of tin- I'nited States, repub lican institutions will indeed be in elaiiger. Populists Discover Another "Crime. v Li;w Isiox, Me., Se pt. 17. L. ('. Hater man, the 1'e pulist candidal- for le'verit? etr, and see-re-tary eif the National populist Notification Committee, in elissatisfu d w ith Senator Allen's notification to Jlrvan of his nomination lor President by the Populist party. Mr. I'.ateuiaii, iu uu interview this aHernoon, said to a repre sentative of the I'nited A-soe-late-d Pre-ss: Til reet -nt eletttioii in Maine should bit siillii li-nt to iMiiviue-e the entire country that the iiomiiialioii eif Arthur Sew all w as eithe-r a enlossal blunder or a dark-dy e-d crime. I'ntil lately I have U-en 011-1111111 to Ix-lie-ve it was the former, but it ce-rtainly-now looks as if it w as tii lit e rate ly plan ned and execute-d as a e-rime. The; pre-s-e:ice of Sewall etii the National ticket re'-sulte-d in the praetieal annihilation o the HemiH-ratie party iu this State. If here- inains on that ticket, it w ill ine italdy j result in the aniiiliilatioli of the l'opnli.-t i p-u-ty. I have read Senator Allen's letter j of notification t Mr. liryan. i" c-ourHe', j it is a farce. It is on a par w ilh ail ll; j doings of the m.-u wlxi aie trying v eil ; out ami disrupt the Pooph'a partv. A fler we get eltniej laughing o e-r the Sena tors mt.-3 wu siiall iiiite likely take aue trltp.s lo find tail v liethe r Mr. Hi van .mi pis o..r I'.oiuiii.itioii an.l our .itf nil of pliiieipltt. At St. Lulls all of l.i I IrieiuU urged that wh sl mi l in.uiiiiate j him, as ho was a Potttllit. and b.-lieve-d 111 all our principle. W e want t kn ivv whether thee atatHiucuts are true. Vicious Toll Qate War. Si-ittMi-IKl.I, Ky., Sept. 21. Th fre e turnpike mob destroyed five toll gates Saturday night and three last night. These two raids leave only five gales standing in Washington county, the raiders having eh'ftrnytd 4:1 in all. Sat urday night the molt rode up to the Tick Creek pike gate w hile it was guarde-d by 12 men. The leader of the mob was etr elered to take his men away, or to go to jail. The mob then leveled shot guns at the guards and force el the guaiels to cut the gate down and elrove thVm lick to town. Two of the raiders w ere in court to-day on the charge of elestroying toll gate-s, but nothing could lie proven against them and they were discharged. Mrs. Thomas E. Wat3oa. A romantic story is told of the w ife of Thomas li. Watson, the Populist candidate for Vice PreitK-ut. It waa to the ell'ect that after one of the bat tles, of eur civil war, a richly dressed baby was found among the dead and weui tided. As no parents claimed the child, it was supposed that they had perished in the strife, and It is not known whether they were on the Northern or the Southern siele. She waa aelopted and v,Ted for by a South ern soldier and his wife until Tom Watso.ri, farmer and lawyer married hvr. St. Louis Mirror. Taken iu time Hooel's Sarsnparilla prevents serious illness by keeping the blood pure ami all the organs in a healthy (sunlit ion. A teacher wasemeday cxplamiu I dition of fractious to a lael of.) years. She said : "I can no more add one-third and one-fourth without bringing them to a common denominator, than I can add three girls ami four Utys." "Hut I can elo that !" he cried, "sev en children," then added quickly, "Ah ! but that is reducing them to a common denominator !" ALL FOR OMKICSCT MAHKKT KKItmT, coamuTKii WEC.KI.Y Cook & Beerits, Wcdnrmlnif, April SS !&'. (per lu Apples -iilrleil, Bi ( evapornttsl lb. ....... Applet I'.nlN-r. T Kal 1 roll. -r l Hutu r.- fn-li ku, per lt I e-ri-aim-rj, jt lb.... .. 15-esai, p-r P t-fiiiiirv I111111. tH-r Ut II! I'lC ; If. 11 lit to IJir ., .iiar -unsi hum, iter Bt II lo I-'1,: Btt""'- i.ie, r . - s t),!imliler. tier ttt " lo If t wliue navy. Pr bus . !. ,, . I Kivell, M.-r Ut... toii'-e. j r,NIS.tl Mr ib is tn 3k; . II iiiiilM-rlanil. per bll teliieut. 't port ;aIIa, per llil Cornini'Sil, per 1) (? lH-r "oi ...!-' Kish. lake lie rrliig-l CSSS-ZTJ::: Ilone-v. white clover, per lb Ijtnl, ter It. n to Hie lame, IM-r I.I.I ...l.li MtilnsMw, N ., I r gal iinoiis, jH r;ttus '' Potatoes. x r bus Pnu-lit-H, evaMiraUtl, per lb 10 to I ' I'riin.-M iM-r ti. 10 lo l.ir N. V.. s r 1. 1.1 t I Pittslnirit, iter I.I.I I.'"' Salt, I listio't 't bus Nicks.. '-' I I" I l.eis Kii-k grimml alum, lt- IT. niii-ks '" liiiiple, T II. -eitnse I iiuKrieil yellow, i-r tb V Suijar. while, A. T B. i"' icrainilateil, per Bt K I e ul- or pulverized, n r B si; J H-r eal - f"TU. inn pit-, ht fc'al ' t'twr Slum-waif, Kalloii -"-- 'J'hllow, -r ll....... :i to "- Vim-gar, peral. l ' I liuiotiiy, M-r bus tl.T'i j e-lover, ter bus S-'i.tJl) b '.' Set ils. " e-riiuson. Iter bus t.' " u Haifa, per bus S ' I " alsyke, -r bus U Millel, I ieriiiaii, iter bus !.- Uirley. white lnrillcss, h t Ium l.-i hui-kwhiut, ht bus e-oru, rar, r bus .. lo H- lira in hlieiitii, ht bu lo : i oats, per bus to :nte I rye-, M-r bus ...". A Kiiil j wheat, per bus "I"- l bnin, iter lii tt nh- li-orn alul eii Is chop, ite r no B Hour, roller proeess, per bbl f i.j l--l..iir J " spriiiu patent ami fane-y flour, i i,ii, ..i ii ii , Hour, lower cratle, -r lkta tl..icl.-4-i Midi HlliKS. j white, H-r ti D.!. ..-.h- red, H.-r 1'JO tt 'MC 1 3 ENXS YL VAN I A KAI LliOAD. CASTER N STANDARD TIME. IN EFfEGT MJkY 20, 1895. CO!HDEKSKD HCIl CDCLE. TmiriK arrive and depart from thentation a Johustowu as follows: WESTWAKD Western Kx press 4: VI a. tu. Southwestern Kxpn-ss : " Johnstown Ai-e-oiiiiiitHiutittn i:"7 " - Aceoiiiiiiodatiuii t:l(l Paelflo Express Hr.'l " W v Passeiisi r :VJ " Mall i:lti " Kast Line iei p. m. JoluiNtowu Aceoiuuiislation It: A) " EASTWAKO. Atlantic Fxpress 5V a. m. St-a-i-hore Kxpn-ss 5:H " Altoona Aeeomiiioilalion s.JI I lay Kxpre-i " Main Line Kipress liirl'i " XlIiHiti.i Ais-oiiiuioilation l-:'2 p. In. Mail Kxpr.-ss 4:11 Jtthnstown Ais-ouinitxlation : ' I'lulieb i lua Express 7:W Kast Line Itf.:) " For rat-s, maps. Ac, call on TU-kt t Asrentsur addrvTh. K. Watt. 1. A. W. l., -u r inU Avenue, I'ittsburg, t'a. .S. M. Frevost, J. R. WiKt. lien. ilauaKer. licu'i I'au Ai; CONDENSED TIME TABL3S. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Somerset and Cambria Branch. NIRTIIWAKD. Johnstown .i Kxpn-ss. Rock wood T.-tHi a. in.. Somerset sam, siovKtnwn ir.il, 11h.v ersville lt'nO, Johiitow u 11:10. Joliiistown Mail K.xpn-ss. Km-kwuoil llsv; a. in., Somerset I l:'!ii. Stoyestown ll:".s, Hoov ersville liti, Johnstown 1-: Vi p. m. Jithnslown Ai-comuiodation. Km-k woanl "l p. In., Soiiiers,-: ."i:' st.ivtln u iioov ersville tt.tU, JohnUtwn :'). Haily. HorTHWAKD. Mall. Johnstown 7:"ma. in.. Hooversville S::y, SIoetown MVS, Slllilersel Sl;ii KtK'kwoexl '.:4.'. Expr-s. Johnstown 2:10 p. m., llonversvllle J.-.Vi. Stovestowu 3:l i, S.uiu-rl Jiti, K-s'li-wooil Suudav O.ily. JokUkluwu 7:3 Seiniernel P.-ill lint-k wood :io. YOUR EYE! Wcwantto catch It! EVKKY FA KM KK in Somerset Cetunty w ho has a is.nl of Hciuloek Park or a Hiile to ihs;ose of ill fnnl that the t'ON FLL'KXl'K TAXXKRY Co., will pay the hi;hest cash priess for the same. Write for 'juotations Ui WIXSLOW S. COBR A CO., Confluence, Pa. Salesmen Wanted on Salary, t sell IVnnsvl van lit Krown Xnr sery Stm-k. which is the best in tht world. All tin new spi-e-ialtii-; as well as tiie standard vane ties of fruits & Ornamentals. A tine outfit fur nished and nil tnivchiiir exM-nes paid. Ssia ry dates from day work is commenced. Wine lor terms. Matin aire Hoopes, Bro. &. Thomas, Maple Avenue Nurseries, Wet Chester, r. ti -I -I'lH k NEW THE ONLY PERFECT FOR jMILYUSE. For Sale By J. B. HOLDERBAUM, Somerset Pa. YHTT PAN T7TTJn TH!3 a w wnn i nit PAPr n a AW in llTTar(..H at the Altrt.ior bi.n-aol s r i-r- llfM ITOA 1 J THE sIs None Too Good When You EW ( 1 MEDICINES.-: It is Just lis Important to ifi-iirt- FRESH, PURE DRUGS, I It J 1. Wfa.m f'mt ttsffrir AT SNYDER'S You ar always sure of getting the 'artfully TRUSSES FITT.K Jj, All vf the llest ami Most Apjrovetl True Krpt i V in fart ion 11 tui ro u teed. OPTICAL GOODS. jj GLASSES FITTED TO SUIT THE EYES. CALL AfiD HAVE yc5: j v" SIGHT TESTED. ' j JOHN N. SNYDER, Z7 i i 1 Somerset, 0 Lonther's Drug Storcj? Main Street, Somerset, Pa. This Model DrzQ Stors is Uatidiv Bscn: i ravcriis with FRESH . AND . PUKE . BBD&$,s Medicines, Iye Stuffs, Spo?ige3, 1 ' i Supporters, Toilet Article?, Perfumes. the rKTOK e;i vrs trr.MsjkU GREAT C A It C KCINOTAEEN TO LUUUlBi S nijsciio SPECTACLES. EYE-GLASS HS, And a Full Line of Optical Good. always on hand. Fr-. large assortment all can be suited. THE FIKEST BRAKDS OF CIGABS Always on hand. It is always a pleasure to eiisphv ,x ; to mtendinp purchasers, whether they bur rr-s. as ox elsewhere. J. LOUTHER D. MAIN STREET Somerset Lumber Yard! ELIAS CXJTIsnsaTrlL M A N I" TA CIT RE R AND DKALF.R ASl HOLt."ALE AND KFTAII.Fi: Lumber and Building Materials Hard and : c;i Onk, ' Poplar, Mil inc. Fikvt, M;n!Jr: Dalnut. Yellow Flue, Flooring. Sa-.li. sitir K tiX ;' Cherry, SbincleH, Itoons ISul listen. lie-tiuil. ; a. I.al!i. UkllelMne lllinN, eel IN.I, Fie. t A gfii-nl lineof all Knulrseif LumtTaiiil Kiiil.lin Miti rial ati'l K.rir.'.J ; ' :: j. stM'k. A1m, ntu furnish anythiiii; in the line of mir lm-;n. -s 1 tor-It r i;:ir ; ble priiruptn.-ss, such as Brackets, l.-siz-J work, etc. j " 5 E 4o Elias Cunningham, OfBce and Yard Opposite S. k V. R. K. Station, o".inf." The New York j i WEEKLY TRIBUNEj i l -s The Leading National Rerub!ican( i Famiiy Newspaper, Will make a ior.us aii'i rrleutV-s !'.'!. t through tl.f 1": - - tiul campaign, for rintij-li.'s whie'u will lriii jrit.t-i i; t j entire countrv. . I Its campaign news and discussions will interest a:. i - le read by every American citien. We furnish "THE HERALD" and "N Y. WEEKLY TRIBUNE"! . ONE YEAR FOR ONLY S2.C0. j CASH IN ADVANCE. f C SUBSCR!PT!0:;S KAY AdelreMM all orelirs to Write yonr name an 1 aJ.lr.ss on a postal cirJ, sond it to (;i'i. IV. R i. lia " Tribune nuilJior, w York ( itj, and sample copj of Tin- Weeklj Tribaue will be mailed to jon. IT WILL PAY YOU TO BUY YOUR Jlemorial Work WM. F.SHAFFERs SUM EISSCT. PEN N'A. M:inuDn-turf r of and IV-uU r la EasStrn Work Kurnlsh-et em Kliorl Nolire mm aid eEAsiTE v&i Also, Agent for the W H ITE BKi X.K ! Persons In neeJ ef Moiiuiii. nt Work will fltitl it to their Interest te -r 1 ut mv shop wh-rr h prM-r nUiwiiik will lw v'iv.-ii lu.-iii. r-SMtlsiitrtHiu (it:krnlissl In e-ve-rv e-ae anl Vrtev very low. I invite spt-l:il tl-iitiou to ho Wfiits , :. t . i i rortucr.l by R.v4 W. A. R I nit. a el.-rlil. ii tn rvrii.. i.t In tli jiiil e.f Malcriul nml t'oiistrin-timi. and whi.-li Is ilt-stlnesl to I tlif H..ular Motitiin. nl for our i-hunicrablv t'li mate. Give us a rail. 31.. P. SHAFFER BEST ' 4tl tti I'll 1. lit., . Them. fnht melicin- PI:j;.( v 'J.-i Comjiouneied. 1 t hspk n Zzzizz cf attktu" t'i tu r. roMi er -. : : n mm Fm OF.OSLV rKfc--H AND PIKE Ai:7:i - - SOMERSET. PA .. I J Soft "Woods, Eally EoMTlie Flei! c FOR Sound Money. National Honor. I - Home Prospering i BEGIN AT ANY TIME. TIIKIIKlw.I.l sciextisisas Kkl3Vj FSACTICALLI l A Over 500 Beautiful Designs. Ivl Circuit r. tKVoT'i.r . ,,s. MONUMENTAL BRONZE CJ'"'"' a' i tA' i ST S 11 I OX i i t3 t CO ! Cut i J i ? fl !i Otu 5 I v t t i r i i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers