DOINGS OF CONGRESS WHAT OUR NATIONAL LAW MAK ERS ARE CONSIDERING. Some of the More Important Work of the National Congress —Bills That the Committees Report Favorably Upon—Washington Topics. Senator Pettus, of Alabama, has in rodueed a number of amendments to he Puerto Rican bill, which include ree trade for the Island and the re duction of the President's power over Mie revenue. Secretary Root has submitted to digress a recommendation that the ixtra services performed by War De partment during the war .ritli Spain be paid for by an appro . riation aggregating $85,394. The Hawaiian Government bill has passed the Senate without a division, . fter an amendment had been defeat • (I to pay Queen Liliuokalani $250,000 : ir the crown lands. In the House the Democrats have . cored their first victory of the ses ioii by preventing consideration of •,ie committee report on the Aldrich- Lobblns contested election case from Alabama. Two Republicans voted itli the Democrats. Senator Penrose has made a favora de report from the Committee on the iill diminishing the number of ap praisers at the ports of Boston and I'hiladelphia. The bill provides for one pprniser at each port instead of two, . s at present, and for salaries of ■ 4.000 instead of $3,000. The Senate Committee on Finance . thorized a favorable report on the ill authorizing redemption or allow ing for revenue stamps that have iioen spoiled or destroyed. The Puerto Rican Tariff bill, ninended so as to reduce the tariff rom 25 per cent, to 15 per cent, and limiting its life to two years has passed the Houso by a vote of 172 to 101. Six Republicans voted with the ppoSition against the bill, and four i 'emocrats voted with the Republi i alia for it. Each side made herculean • 'forts to get out a full vote, six mem icrs being brought from beds of sick ness to vote. HOLDS A SECRET And It Is Worth $20000.000 In Wall Street. Wall street, is in the vortex of the reatest gamble that has character ed speculation since the birth of the stock Exchange. Big operators and he bucket-shop "pikers" aro all . iicssing as to t.he next dividend that . ill be declared on the 36.908,000 of ' ommon stock of the Sugar Trust. There is only one man who knows ; reciselv what is going to happen hi the next meeting of the directors > i the company, and he trusts no one. i bat man is Henry O. Havemeyer, resident of the Sugar Trust. The neeting does not take place until Alarch 10, and in the next ten days . irtum - will be lost and won. !i Mr. Havemeyer so wills the divi '.end can be passed, and the price ■ i the stock will possibly drop 20 points. Or he can declare the regular ■ •uarterly dividend of 3 per cent., and • tie stock will jump 30 or 40 points. President Havemeyer has been noted as saying that the trust made ho money during 1899. During that > ear, however, it. paid in dividends 7,023,920. In 1596 the Sugar Trust produced :>0 per cent, of the sugar consumed in this country. It now controls 7ft ier cent, of the total production. These are President Havemeyer's • wn figures. The Arbuckles barely •iroduce 5 per cent, and the indepen dent 25 per cent. On this basis when the Arbuckles force the trust to sell :,t a losing figure the trust loses four Veen times as much as its smaller ri val. COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY. Lftest New* From the Active Bual r.Ma World. A strike at the Montreal Cotton Company's mill at Valley Field, Que bec. by which 2,000 operatives were affected, has been settled, the men i ettlng an advance of 5 per cent. The Liggett & Myers branch of the Continental Tobacco Company, at :'t. Louis, has granted 100 feeders an ncrease in wages amounting to 31 per cent., or $2.50 per week each. Cigar manufacturers at Tampa. Florida, will establish a factory, at which cigar boxes will be manufac tured. Advance in prices of cigar boxes is the incentive. The Republic Iron aud Steel Com pany has decided to observe the Weekly Pay law of Indiana, and .".,(>OO workmen will go back to work. The eleven big iron and steel mills in Indiana owned by the Republic Iron and Steel Company have closed down indefinitely, on account of the recent filing of suits in Muncie to enforce the weekly pay law. Over 5,000 men become idle. The Rodman Manufacturing Com pany, of Wlckford, Rhode Island, doe skin manufacturers, have announced a 10 per cent, wage increase to their .">OO employes. The yardmen and trainmen t» the Cleveland Terminal and Valley Rail way have decided to ask for an in crea-;? in wages. Porto Rico Conditions. The people of Puerto Rico are showing signs of discouragement at the failure of Congress to provide a government for the island. The local Spanish papers h- ve printed many articles criticising the Americati gov ernment and the American people and policy. The army and na. offi cers gave a ball there on the even ing of Washington's Birthday, issuing invitations to many Puerto fticans. The editor of El Diario stated in his paper that he could not accept. He said he did not feel that he could at tend American celebrations nor ob serve American holidays until the American people chose to recognize the people of Puerto Rico by riving them a government, and thus lifting them from the commercial roir< from which they have sunk, tuc local papers join In declaring iii.it tlv pres ent conditions are worse than during the darkest days of the Spani-ii re gime. REPORT ON TRUBTB. The Industrial Commission Makea Sonic Recommendations. The Industrial Commission has sub mitted to Congress a preliminary re port on trusts and industrial combina tions, together with testimony, review of evidence, charts showing effects of prices, etc. The Commission makes the following recommendatlous, based en such information as it now has: Promoters and organizers of cor porations or industrial combinations which look to the public to purchase or deal in their stocks or securities should be required to furnish full de tails in regard to their business neces sary for safe and intelligent invest ment. Any prospectus which fails to give this information or which gives false information should be held le gally responsible. The nature of the business, together with the powers of the various officers, should be ex pressed in the certificate of incorpora tion. which should be open to inspec tion. Directors or trustees of a corpora tion, it is said, should be required to report to the members thereof its financial condition in reasonable de tail at least once each year. The Interstate Commerce Commis sion. it is declared, should be given authority not only to prescribe the methods of keeping accounts of the railroads and to demand reports in i;uch detail as it may require, but al uo to inspect and audit said accounts. It also says the Interstate Com merce Commission should be author ized to make rules for freight trans portation. The report says that it is difficult to state accurately the amount of over-capitalization of the various com binations. The following, however, gives a fair estimate on this point of the concerns mentioned under the head of "Over-capitalization." American Sugar Refining Company, capitalized at twice the amount (75.000,000) of cost of reconstruction i>? plant:?. Standard Distilling and Distributing Company, six times the actual cash Value of the plants. National Steel Company, double the Value of plants. National Biscuit Company, double the value of plants. American Steel Hoop Company, double the value of plants. American Steel and Wire Company, double the value of plants. International Silver Company. r>s per rout, over-capitalized. National Shear Company, five tinie3 ,Vo! • than cash value. Tlie Standard Oil Trust, it will be Holed, is. :.ot included in the list of rcipparii*":; "over-capitalized." SOCIALIST MAYORS. Th>>y Visit Now York City and Make A Good Impression. Mayors Chase, of Haverhill, and Coulter, of Brockton, Mass., have just been the j?uest« of the Social Demo cntic Club, ai Manhattan Lyceum, in New York. Tlie> are the only Social ist .Mayors in the United States, and Socialist Labor men are rejoicing greatly over their visit. They prom ise to make another visit next year, bringing with them more Mayors and other public officials of the same creed. They are both Americans by birth, young in years and intelligent. Mayor Chase says that he remembers the time when people laughed at the preteusions of Socialists, and said tlfey would never be able to win an election. Yet he has been elected twice ,and the second time was chos en over a combination of Republi cans, Democrats and Prohibitionists. "It used to be predicted," he said, "that our movement would be a thing of the past before we sent a single Socialist to the Legislature. Well, we have two members to our party in the State House ot Massachusetts, and we have, besides, six men on the Municipal Board of Haverhill —a town with 40.000 population—and three in the Municipal Board of Brockton, which is a centre of the shoemaking industry like my town, and has a pop ulation of about the same size. I'm a cool headed Yankee, but I tell you it's growing like wild fire. Haverhill and Brockton and the surrounding towns are full of Socialism, and other places are catching on rapidly." CASUALTIES. A Montreal express on the Canadian Pacific Railroad jumped the track be tween Ponty Pool and Burkton, On tario, March 3, and bounded down a steep embankment, the coaches top pling over each other as they ueared the bottom of the incline. Twenty three passengers were injured, none of them seriously. Six persons were burned to death and two were injured March 4 In a five in the seven-story lodging house at 44 to 48 Bowery, New York. The steamer Walcott, of the Pacific Steam Whaling Company, is missing. She left Seattle for ITnalaska, by way of Sitka. Valdes and Cook Inlet, De cember 2S, and has not been heard from since. By the giving way of the floor of a mine carriage Feb. 2G. in the Mount Pleasant Mine, near Scranton, four li l .en were precipitated 300 feet to the bottom of the shaft and instantlv kfiled. IN KENTUCKY. Two Governments, Each Claiming to be Legal, Now Exiat. i wo State governments .completely officered. and each claiming to be the i" •iular and legal officials are in Frankfort. Ky., and will remain, each claiming the right to administer the affairs of Sta'f until the question is adjudicated in the courts. As antici pated the banks refuse to recognize e'.thei of the contending factions and as a result both are without money, and the State funds aro as securely tied up as they could be. Legislators county as well as State officials, and all kinds of contractors with the State will have to wait until somebody is authorized by a decision of the court t;> pay them, and the State will have i<> wait on what is due it until the courts say who is authorized to receive it. The Democratic State offi cers have opened offices in the State Hotel. Nearly all thfe New England gran ite cutters have struck to enforce a demand for eight hours work, with a minimum price of $3 per day. The movement involves about 8,000 men. livenn of th« Week Told In a Few Word*. Forty-ihrep imd one-hulf inches of chow in :"ixt.v liotr.-s is the new record established in New York State by the rpct'iit storm, that amount of snow rtilllng at Rochester. The United States Government has ptirr-Unsed a site of a hundred acres in Portsmouth, six miles from Now port. Rhode Island, a? a coaling sta tion. Tho British second class o.'u:.sor Hermes is reported off Cat Island, in t.he Bahamas, with her shaft broken*. Recent murders near I.etohntchte, Alabama, have roused the whites and blacks, and race trouble is imminent. The Cuban delegates who came :.o Washington to protest. 011 behalf of the Cuban people, against the ap pointment of Mgr. Sparettl as itoman Catholic Bishop of Havana, nave tailed in their mission. The War Department iias received cabled statement showing that, the total receipts from the Phllllpine I3l f.nds for February, IftOO. were 5426,- 423. of which amount: SO"7.000 was de rived from customs. The winter herring fishery iu New foundland waters lias been a complete failure, anil thin; American vessels have left Sr. John's without obtaining cargoes. la a revolt in the privon at Cairo. Egypt, the troops were obliged to tire upon the mutineers in r.rci.v m res;oro order. Five men we;c tliwt. two of l.lieni fatally. Edinburgh l.'ah"is:..y is to confer the degp r ();' rj. it. • 1. • Amb.iMrHdor Choatu. The Portland. .\m :iO. Board of Trade har {uip»ati«:iliy endor 1 d the views e\pr' : -« ii by (' .rv/es I uri l.lt tlefleid ns'uluat tin- P .• ,\o Uicaa bill, and praised inui lu.' his "ot)!<iMv,w>uß stand" in the matter. ! An unusually heavy fall of snow has occurred in Xorihera Xe>v \'ork, in some places the >;;;nv b< tirf t>vo feet deep the level. Mrs. Anna .lory, ; v.( i! ~C, yeiiro, has been found dead ;>i he- h>>ui«: iu Balti more. Kscapiti!: iliuiiiii.itii:.;' gas from :i leaking tube v, a. t»i • ea.ite of her leath. A San .T;inn de I'm :!•> H'eo doowreh I says that to tr troo;is of the Fifth United Stat. « «• avail.- are under or ders to return to 111 »• Cui».od States and that native ro:> .; are being re ! cruited to till their pi.'ie -. Steps to erect, a inon imeni over the grave of Nancy iani l.i'ico'ti, j mother of Abraham T,'nc:iln were ta- I ken at a nuennti; of tii" Nancy Hanks Lincoln Memorial As.-aieirtioa iu In tliannpoiis. iiuiiar.fi. en Wednesday. An appropriation of SIOO,OOO has been made by the Kentucky I.egisla ' lure to be med in detecting and con victing the assassin of Covernor Cioe bel. liJs-Ma.vor Hu-rh ,t. Grunt has been tine Railroad Company upon ncejM appointed reeeivir for the New York Third Avenue Railroad Company up on the application of the Old Colony Trust. Company of Roston. the Direc tors consenting the application. The finding of ar empty mail pouch near a I.ong Island City dock dis closed the theft of reglsterd mail, and a discharged carrier who is missing If suspected by th« authorities. Frederick Kahb'r, a dealer in books. In Philadelphia, has been sentenced )y .Indgo Finletter, in the Criminal Court, to one year imprisonment for iselling copies of Hamlet's novel. "Sapho." The completion of a deal whereby the Erie telephone system, the largest Bell system in the United States, passes into the hands of the Tele phone, Telegraph and Cable Company of America, has been announced. The Erie Company controls five branches operating in North and South Dako ta. Minnesota. Wisconsin, Michigan, Arkansas, Texas and a part of Ohio and employs $22,000,000 capital. Two more white persons and eight Kanakas have died of the bubonic plague at Noumea, New Caledonia. There were three deaths from the plague at Honolulu on the 19th ult., the first for twelve days. Lent will be observed more strict ly than usual in Germany, owing to the death of the mother of the Em press. Robert Johnson, at one time propri etor of a large dry goods store In New York, and who was worth |2,000 000 twelve years ago. had a wonder till escape from death by fire In a !iouse in which he was living by the courtesy of a trust company that had ii'.reclosed a mortgage on it. Ceneral Otis has purchased from Ihe Spanish Government and turned mer to the navy two small gunboats and a transport. Marcus Daly testified in Washing ton that he lias no feeling against Senator Clark, of Montana, but he ad mitted contributing heavily to the an ti-Clark fund. Kentucky's Stale Election Board lias issued certificates of election to the six democratic candidates for mi nor State offices, but the republican incumbents refused to vacate the places. Minority stockholders in the H. C. Flick Coke Company are trying to an -1 nul the contract with the Carnegie ; Steel Compnny. Heirs to the Venecia estate in Cuba, I have presented to the State Depart- I ment, through an attorney, a claim i for $ 100,000 for damages to the prop | erty during the Cuban insurrection. ! The claim is based on a clause in the j Paris peace treaty. Millou Rathbun, of Mount Vernon, | N. Y.. broke his fast of thirty-five days Feb. 26, during which time his weight has been reduced from 207 to 164 pounds. , Lieutenant Governor Woodruff has returned to Albany, jubilant over the results of his Western trip. He is now planning a Southern trip. He has been invited to deliver an address before ' the Americus Club, of Pittsburg, and has accepted. POLITICAL. Mr. Clark paid big money to purify the politics of Montana, and Mr. I i ih paid big money for the elimination of Mr. Clark as the best means to the same end. And still virtue < ••••muind* a high premium, in Mou:. " The Industrial Trust Company, ot Providence, capital $1,000,000, will ab sorb the Pacific National Bank and the First National Bank of Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The lockout at the piano and'organ factories of Chicago, which has kept 3,500 men out of eraplayment for thir teen weeks, has been raised. The former employes will be taken back without discrimination. The manu facturers say that they will talk over the question of wages and hours with the men after work has been resumed. A fish combine has been formed by forty of the wholesale houses of Bos ton and other points on the New Eng land coast, under the title of the Bos ton Fish Company. The authorized capital Is $5,000,000. The Mexican government has grant ed a concession to Chicago capitalists of one million acres of valuable land fronting on the Gulf of Mexico and ly ing in the State of Tamaulipas. The bricklayers and plasterers 01! Pensacola, Florida, have began a strike for an advance in wages from $2 to $3.50 per day, which the con tractors have rtfused. Chicago labor unions have an nounced that the Building Trades Council will declare against the rules adopted by the contractors' associa tions, and order a general strike if any attempt is made to enforce them. The striking blacksmiths at the Brooks Locomotive Works at Dun kirk, New York, have returned to work, having been granted an increase of 10 cents per day. CRIMINAL. In an alley iu the rear of Pearl street, Philadelphia, above Twentieth, the dead body of Hugh Dugati, 12 years old, was found in a pool of blood. His body and clothing boro marks of violance, and his death, it is thought, resulted from internal hemorrhage. Charles Welsenborn, 18 years old, a baker, with whom the dead boy had quarreled, was arrest ed, and, it is said, confessed to the po lice that he had beaten the boy a few hours before the body was found. Wlnfleld S. G. Walker shot Margaret Davis and then committed suicide in Philadelphia Feb. 4. Miss Davis, whom he was to marry, is not danger ously wounded. Henry Smith has been convicted in the Superior Court at Macon, Ga., of mayhem and sentenced to life impris onment. Smith and his wife boarded with Mrs. Susie HUlard, but on ac count of not paying board Smith was sent away, Mrs. Hillard keeping the young wife. Smith went to the house on December 9, and, on being refused permission to see his wife, dashed acid in Mrs. Hillard's face, permanent* ly blinding her. William F. Miller, of Franklin syn dicate fame, has been located in Can ada, and is under police surveillance. FIRE RECORD. The Cony Opera House at. Corry, Pa., was destroyed by tire .March I. The loss is $40,000. The Western Union Tannery, at Spartansburg. Pa., was burned, en tailing a loris of SBO,OOO. The extensive anvil plant of the Ilay-Buddeu Company. occupying three buildings in Brooklyn, were de stroyed by fire March 4, the loss be ing about SBO,OOO. The postoffice at Ivan, Michigan, has been burned, and Herbert Bates, the postmaster's son, perished in the flames. During a (Ire Feb. 27, iu Clarion, Pa., which destroyed $150,000 worth of property, ex-Judge W. W. Barr dropped dead from excitement. A portion of the Minetto Shade Cloth Company's plant at Minetto. a suburb of Oswego, New York, was destroyed by fire Feb. 26. iMst $200,000. The Theatre Francals aud five business places in Montreal were burned Feb. 26. Loss about SIOO,OOO. Franz Thielmann's summer garden, In Chicago with its palm house, stage and other buildings, has been burned. The loss Is estimated at $50,000. Fire In Bangor, Northampton coun ty, Pa., destroyed Milton Flory's flour mill and other property, the aggre gate losses being estimated at $50,000. NCW YORK MARKETS. Flour and Grain. FLOUB. Klnneanta Patent*. H 75 fS> $s no Winter patents. :i so (ii 3 H5 Winter Straight*. a4O (a) 3 Ou BTI FLOUR. Fair to good. n 13 (H 8 .10 Choice to fancy. :i » t,o 8 66 BTK. No. 3 Western, per bushel. 60V State. do. GO BAULKY. Feeding, p<ir tinshel, 43 f<» 43 Malting. do. 4'J (S> 64 WBCAT, Ho. 2 Bed, per bushel. 7: No. Northern, do. hi OOBH. No. 2, f.o.b aQoat, per bushel, 43 , OATS. No. 2, per bushel, 2ti *lO. 3, do. 'js Produce. BAT. Shipping, per hundred lbs., ' 65 IS 73 Oood to choice, do. MM u HOPS. State. 1896 crop, per pound, A 1899 crop, do. 12 (3 14 WOOL. Domestlo Fleece, per pound, 21 & 20 Texas. do. 1* 11 BEEF. Family, per hundred, 11 60 013 00 Mess. do. 10 60 Beet Hams. do. 22 60 0 'M 00 LA*l>. Western Steaui, per hundred, i «33 Continent. do. I 23 0 6 GO FOB*. Mem. per hundred. 10 23 (3 10 73 Family. do. 12 00 (d 12 60 BUTTER. Western Creamery, per pound, 21 (3 25 Factory. no. 17 (3 1» Bute Dairy. do. 18 (3 2j OBEBSK Xancy small. 12X® 13 Late mailt*, 11 (3 lj EGOS, State and rennsylranln, 13 (3 17 Western ungraded. 13 ( 3 13 DBKBBED roULTBV. Fowls. Western, choice, 11}{(3 Fowls. Western, tair to good. 10h® 11 Nearby chickens, 11 (3 1:1 ] Nearby turkeys, taney. 11 (3 1 j Western turkeys, choice hens, (3 i-> ■■ Ducks, westeru choloe. 10 la) 11 Ueese. Western choice, 8 fa) 'j BEANS AND PEAK. Marrows, choice, |«r bushel 2 :W (3 Mediums, bright f u ) 223 Pea Beans, choice. - 193 13 222 Fruit and Vegetable. ArrrM. Spits, choice to fancy, per bbL 3 23 13 Klnm. - 300 (3 Baldwins - '• • •• • M (3 a2t Greenings, choice. 2 75 (3 aOO Mixed Winter Tarieties. iti (~) .> no CBANBKHKIEK Cape Ood, i*i*r barrel. 110 la) 'J .VI VKOKTABLK*. Potatoes, \. V. mid Western, ft t,i j, Jersey swsei per basket, i rlmr. to » Onions. Yellow Globe, |>er bbt. 1 20 f.if 1 40 Yellow Denver*. •• 1 uo i„> I 10 Cabbage. Danish. i«*r ton. 20 00 m> 22 01 domestic. •• 17 uu 13 lit 01 An SB.OO Dictionary for $2.00 of tie flre't^ltlon^he^ntlrecOTrMtiona an.l improvements of the second edition, J;,;-'&S^nWa to which is prellxed an introductory dl«- IMffifffi..v. ■ -ilffis/; :*'' ', -"•• -• y^wQl&jl sertntion on the history, origin, and colt- nertioiis of the languages of Western Asia is.-''," •' '''WtWf/Mffllm «i ami Kurope with an explanation of the Bp>.t t* - 4jSi 112 principles on which languages aro formed. fe * v ' " -ij wM.vfloil t Thin hook contain* every word that Stir';'- • -,*? f«K > Soah Webster ever defined, and the ' following SPECIAL FEATURES: AnAp- '•'■ fcj '■ i peridlx of 10,000 words, Pronouncing Vo- SKSL iVA™ V"' : :rtl>ulary of Scripture name-:, (ireek and I Utin 1 roper Names, Modern Geographical :* '■ '•'• ?■', f ,*W.vjj fiXmtfEm Same?, Dictionary of Antonyms and Syn- " t^dlSgaKi onyms, Dictionary of Familiar Allusion?, EjJ- U» i; 'V£<V>ftM»S® I I.e*icou of Foreign I'hrases, Dictionary of SSS /; >; "r?s..f AMiruvlntlonß. etc.. etc., together with fityf-i ■ 4 B2AUTIFUL COLORED PLATES, show - iSfo ' : ?Z:?S£jii inn in their actual colors the Flags of the Jres>v' Vti'ion.i Nations. U.S. Naval Flags. I'llot Slg- RS&v . Bmll\~~'ln imlsof Various Nations, Yacht i'lubS!gmii>, |g»y ''•'•tfwSMlßlSijlKiJi*- nivl Shoulder Straps for Ollicers. THIS JSUnilad'' IS KOT THE CHEAI BOOK but a beauii- -— -350p" fully printed edition on fine paper with thousands of valuable additions of aid to till students of modem edctii-e. It is a grand educator of the masses, now oflered to our readers in a sumptuous ityle in keeping u i<h its great ralue to tho people Bound is Tan Sheep with a beautiful cover deslmi m, 1 sold «t the small price of $2.00, makesitthe handsomest, low-priced Dictionary ever published For every day use in the office, home, school and !itaur>, this Dictionary is iinequalert. Forwarded by express upon receipt of our gpeciai offer price J MO. 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A \ Recent fl!«c*orflrioi in nrchipology linvobrought \ A the worlil . 112 toil iv face to face with the men who A \ lived, anil ' i. airl wrote during the early T A perin-i- mUiPtoriann. These A W dinoov«*!-icH huvo i'i th<'triuni|>hantvin- ¥ \ client ion of the siirr"-! volui i " from the chareen \ 1, iiroui'.ht :» •nin-'t it by open and pretended m *' i'riend.". I . :i»ry intelliKont per-on will order tho \ « iiook, :i * u '< r contained in it is ol' vital A \ npor» j tanuot be found in any other r • r descriptive and beautifully \ r.ited pamphlet circular. Address A ) 7K£ HENRY 0. SHEPARD CO. 4 KonroeSl. CHICAGO, i «»N '-IS AV 9*l 0| 8f • g fg -OD 3HA «»JPPT 5 uuiiM 337M « SuipniDut S I ;g 'jes.* i9<l *OOC Xjufr uoiidiosqng tjv|n ( > Ijr -3tiJ*d |>uu •ausi IOJ am.\\ liOM 5 *5 * 'OJ »uiniuiijd |njijnesjj -Ai||e3o| J IS JUJIBSCUI kiq) JCt ps»u** NUS3V £ J G '3IJ0 4 \\ *«UO| S S 'sujaiifa sarßJJsnui £ 3 vairtj p9JO[Oj injiintraa suj)fiuo3 g •. % p*n»nq"d M>iqg|jg g WSnV3SW USS "IS ISOI £ pus "oas-iiin 'SI V Illlld 68' ! * t ii.iiuo naNTva j : ;S t[ttx "»N "l»"IS MIM M9H OIBEI | iS 'ANVdWOD 11VD3W aHI ■ | l'Jl »uiod iroA «sajppv ! » 5» p»A|»3»j idmtu iu#B auo an oi I3»i|p \ • SS PUM w»qi datjf IOU .»op 19)110 inoi n ■ ) 5 P»>|Ofi »m U| UMCI pu« Aj»a# ■ ; •5 u| p|o> »jv innnid »*aii.LJU ! 2 #MN>S3UU« w S scaaid «<a«iv <jqi £ # SJji,»uiss»i(j J ;» Zuipn>l <q papujn>aio»H > | |M iavl'lH« i o| o| - 5 5 $ <§' o ilq>p»=lß iX : " s's* - i Sis ins' a * ,! A I? M ~ 2. "1 rs d as kBH & 112 m- • > a-a a.s. a i 3 \ ir P'nvss-TJa ||i-i J-0|? = © £ J i !pT ; *tj2 fj *S c| C r *- jj A $2.50 Cook BOC - For Only 85 Cents, \7UIt.T Eoufif Rlvo l *- Ullcr^' l llßs^' f u':ui.a,' rira of tiio with miiitie cover de bij'U. JlloMrKted with beauliful half tones of i "■-Aiv> of mm y of tbo l'resioeuts, interior views ">f'. 1h: V.liite LI. use, eta, ete. ifjrou desire this boos solid ui> our opeclai offer price, 60 e.ont?, r.mt jo ct«u I'oriKvUpo ami it will be forwanl<fl to yi u ut otice. Older now. Bead for on? iili.-? I: \-I b. (.k catalosrwa, qiiolif y lowest prices FKEE. Adilrei^ nil crci.jr, to THE WERNER COMPANY, Pub!ihb<irt nnd AkrOU, Oflio, To Cure ConstlpuTlon ForeTßr. Take Cascarets Cundy Cuthurtic. 10c or Ke. If (". C. fall to cure. drugitiHts refund monev fTTrnnnjTo PATENT Good Idais illl 0 Si SR&-3B UU. I ■ I THE PATENT RECORD, Baltimore, Md. Subscriptions to Tbe Pstent Record *I.OO per snaum.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers