THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. 3 IN CONGRESS. The Tariff Adjustment Probably Adjustable- No Pariialtty Betwocn Japanese and Chi nese, in America--Snnalor Butler's Poli tical FancInQ Prciiflont Cleveland's Righteous Veto--Conoressional Money Lost on Alabama--The Sugar Trust Willing to Givo n Million to bo Let Alone. From our Heuulur correttpondunt. Washington, Aug. ij, 1894. " It is the hour before day that is always the darkest." Just when Demo crats almost despaired of any agree ment ever being reached on the tariff and the outlook was at its darkest, the day of tariff reform began to dawn, and now the sun is brightly shining upon an agreement which, if it does not meet with the enthusiastic approval ofcvery Democrat, can be honestly and conscientiously supported by every Democrat without loss of dignity or smirching of party principles. The agreement is not a victory (or either House or Senate; it is victory for the great Democratic party of the country, which made its wishes known in Washington, and there should not be any doubt of its prompt acceptance by both House and Senate. There isn't as far as the House is concerned, but, unfortunately, tilings do not look so promising in the Senate, where threats have been made which mav be carried out and the will of the party be defeated by the votes ot members of the party. However, let us not borrow trouble when we should be rejoicing over the end of the long (iean-iocK. it may De that the threats referred to, which were made before the agreement was reached by the conferees, were merely made for bluff ing purposes, and that the only dan ger the agreement will have to meet in the Senate will be the attempt of the Republicans to postpone a vote by dilatory .tactics. Next week will probably tell the story. The Mouse Judiciary committee has unfavorably reported Representa tive Everett's bill to enable persons of Japanese descent to become citizens of the United States. The committee couldn't see any good reason for granting to the Japs what has been denied to the Chinese. In response to several petitions asking that Judge Ricks, of the North crn District of Ohio, be impeached for misdemeanors in office, the House Judiciary committee has, through Representative Bailey, of Texas, re ported a resolution authorizing that committee to investigate the charges and the House has adopted it. Senator Butler, of South Carolina, naa itiuiucu iu usiimgion irom ms sensational joint stumping tour with Gov. Tillman. The Senator expresses the greatest confidence in his' re election to the Senate. President Cleveland's veto of the private bill for the relief of Eugene Wells, late captain in the Twelfth Infantry, is approved by army officers, and it is moreover based upon princi ples of the highest justice. This man retired from the army, in 1870, to avoid a court martial that would have resulted in his dismissal ; was up pointed a second lieutenant in 1885, and court martialed and dismissed the service in 1887, for drunkeness and other causes. The vetoed bill provided that he should be appointed a second lieutenant of artillery and placed on the retired list without the usual examination. In plain words, that a man who had been officially found unfit to be an officer shou'd be paid a salary for the rest of his life as a retired officer. The fact that Wells has influential friends merely adds to the credit to which the President is entitled for vetoing the bill, and brings out the strongest trait in Grover Cleveland's character his ab solute determination to do what he believes to be right regardless of whom it may please or displease. The Republicans in Congress who were deluded into contributing money to the Ivolb campaign in Alabama there 'are a number of them in the hope that the movement might be made the entering wedge to break up the solid Democracy of the South, were a deeply chagrinned lot of in dividuals when the returns were re ceived. Needless to say that the Democratic colleagues of Governor elect Oates were delighted at his success, and doubly so because he has always stoutly opposed anything like concessions to the Populists. Presi dent Cleveland also had good reason to feel gratified, as Col. Oates from the beginning of his campaign for the nomination had been classed as the Cleveland candidate. This election has thrown a wet blanket over the loud-mouthed, but poorly-informed individuals who have been prophesy ing tremendous gains to the Populists . in the South at the expense of the Democratic party. It has also con vinced many that the Democrats will 1 ..r u 1 r ...... . icuiiii iuiiinJi ui tuc iiuuac at 1110 coming Congressional elections. Senator Jones, of Arkansas, wag not speaking at random when he said : li It is absurd to talk about the sugar trust owning the Senate. I believe that the tnifct would willingly give a million dollars to be assured that ' " Children Cry for PItchor'3 Castorla. 1 there would be no tariff legislation, as under the existing McKinley law its profits would be vastly greater than under any Democratic tariff law." $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, there by destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO , Toledo, O. rSold by Druggists, 75c. Commercial Summary from Dun's Roview. Boston : Improvement continues in mo:t lines of trade. Increased orders from the west for dry goods. The shoo trade is fairly active witli increased orders on cheap goods. Wool sustains a firm lone and s.iles are very large. Money-market steady anil quiet. Philadelphia: Money is easy but very quiet. The iron trade shows more life owing to a short supply and conse quently an increased demand. Belief that present tariff will be undisturbed has caused considerable speculative buying and selling. Great complaint is made regarding collections. This is also the case with printers and publish ers. The jewelry trade barely exists. Liquors have been rather quiet, but wholesale dealers have taken consider able whiskey out of bond. Baltimoie: Grain trade lacks ac tivity. Business generally is without life. Pittsburg : Coke strike still inter feres with iron production. Number of mills in operation slowly increasing, though none are yet running fuil ca pacity. Demand is tairly good, but prices are weak. Coal shipments not large though most miners are doing something. Cincinnati : But little improve ment in general jobbing trade. Cigar making improved. Most factories working full time and full force. Orders for fall clothing brisk. Money market quiet. Little demand for money. Cleveland : General trade improv ed. Increased demand for rolling-mill products. Money continues abundant, with light demand. Detroit General trade normal. Margins in all lines cut to the bone. Fair demand for money but no change in rates. Indianapolis : Money easy with light demand. Furniture manufactur ers report improvement, and retail tr.ule gaining. Fair outlook for fall trade. Chicago : Receipts exceed last year's in Hour, cattle, hogs, lard, wool, seeds, hides, and wheat, but decrease in rye, barley, cheese, butter , oats, sheep and com. Bankers are hopeful that with a tariff settlement business will permanently improve. The steel works have resumed, and the reopen ing of the Pullman shops mark the end of the boycott. A few troops are still doing duty here. Sales of lumber and iron improve ; but liquors, tobac co, and jewelry remain slow. Grain markets are very active, and corn has advanced 6 cents. Milwaukee : Money is accumulat ing with light demand, and rates steady at 5 and 6 per cent. The crops threatened by drought are largely saved by lirnely rains. The potato crop especially promises well. St. Paul : Business continues con servative and collections are fair for the season. A slightly improved con dition appears. St. Louis : Conditions favorable for an active fall trade. Wheat receipts heavy, and wool movement lively. Flour. mills running to full capacity iron trade increasing. Real estate transactions indicate active fall opera tions. Kansas City: Healthy reaction in trade since strike. Business generally improved. Denver : Trade moderate, collec tions fair, and crops promising. San Francisco : Loan market very dull. Some money being loaned on wheat at $to per ton. An advance of 4 cents (luring the week on wheat. Beet sugar works started on the 2nd. to crush 1,000 tons of beets daily. Little Rock : Trade quiet, collec tions slow, and outlook encouraging. Atlanta : Trade outlook cheerful, groceries active. ' Montgomery Cotton arid corn cropj in excellent condition. Trade good. New Orleans : Trade shows some improvement. Sugar is active and strong j rice in good demand. Cotton shows a downward tendency. Money is easy and in very moderate demand. v. "-. ; ' Children Cry for Pitcher's Castcria-' ; Newspaper Iut iil.iX.ti. I fell into a jolly company of news paper men at dinner the other evening, and heard a lot of funny stories about queer things that have happened in newspaper offices. There is no par ticular reason why they should be told now, except that my thrifty spirit prompts me to get ahead of the other fellows. We began I believe, on the old and fruitful subject of typographical errors. Somebody told a story which he tack ed on to A. T. Kelly. It was an episode of wild western journalism. Kelly was an editor, and his compos ing room was giving him a good deal of trouble. One day he was reading an editorial proof which began badly, and got worse and worse. Finally, at a point where Kelly had been demolish ing the argument ot a contemporary, he reached words which he had writ ten thus: " Now, if we consider his major premise, we find it a total ab surdity." In the proof instead of maj or premise, appeared " Major Pren tice." A military gentlemen of that name was a well known character of the town, and a friend of the paper. When Kelly got as far as that he lost all patience. He underscored this last collossal blunder, wrote " cussed fool" on th margin of the proof, ana: sent it to the foreman, with verbal in struction to bounce the compositor who had made the error. It did not retch the foreman ; it went to the nun who was correcting the galley in which the editorial stood. lie was a man who obeyed orders if he broke owners, and this was the way the editorial fi nally appeared : . " When we consider this Major Prentice (cussed fool) we find a total absurdity." This naturally hurt the Major's feelings a great deal, but the result to Kelly was not so seri ous as it would have been to some men, because he can drive little tacks with a revolver at fifteen paces, and shoot faster than anybody else on eanh. This story led me to tell of a foolish thing I did a good many years ago, when 1 was the city editor (and half the reportorial staff) of a Connecticut paper. I wrote the story of Decoration Day, having viewed the exercises from one of the carriages in the procession. We passed, on our line of march, a handsome residence with a broad lawn before it, and on the lawn stood a white haired old man with a flag in his hand. I had just come to town, and was obliged to ask the name of this fine looking and patriotic gentle man. Afterwards I wrote him up in the story to the extent of a long and glowing paragraph. I spoke of him as the venerable Mr. So-and so, a model of piety and patriotism. And the rext day I was informed by nearly every body in the town, beginning with the editor of the paper, that Mr. So-and-so had a reputation that would't bear thinking of, and that the adjective venerable might have been applied more appropriately to Captain Kidd. I forgot what it was that he had done, but he ought to have been hanged for it. But queer things don't happen to obscure papers only. In illustration of this fact somebody told of the remark able mix up which startled the readers of a Sunday paper a few years ago. There were two long illustrated arti cles in that day's paper which, if noth ing had happened to them, would have attracted more interest, perhaps, than anything else in that number. One of them told all about Trinity Church, and the other described the adventures of a person who had been charmingly entertained in the harem of the Grand Turk. I remember see ing both of these articles. I don't know why I happened to read the Oriental narrative first, for the other was evidently better suited to a serious minded person, but somehow I did. It described a great number of en tranc'.ngly beautiful women who were said to have received the narrator with great condescension. He conversed with Rose-in-Bloom, Star of the Even ing, and others equally named and fi nally encountered the Rev. M. Austin and several assistant rectors of Tiinity Church, who talked with him cheer fully, and did not seem to feel at all embarrassed at being discovered in that particular place. But as for me, I was scandalized, as they say Eest. I could not understand how these pions and popular clergymen could lie there on the perfumed divans of His Unspeakable Highness and talk on religious topics as calmly as if nothing had happened. Their names were mentioned in the most ordinary way, and as an ex-reporter of varied experi ence, I was surprised. Certainly, if I had been doing the story, I should have referred to them as distinguished gentlemen who did not wish to be mentioned by name. IKit presently I noticed that Rose-in-Bloom and her friends did not appear in the article any more, and naturally I went in search of them. I iound them in Trinity Church, a place to which they seemed little suited either by religious belief or personal reputation. And then I discovered that there had been a mix up in the composing room, and that the latter parts of these articles had been substituted one for the other. I'rcss and I'rintar. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla. . FACTS IN FEW WOPD1 Oiif of h nvwt pi'rfVct p!o of nit hitnlvtin In tin; human lxxly In th IiiiikI. Koiith Orolin.i tn th only Utah" In whlea no onVlal record of trurrriuges 1.4 ki pt. Duloln, n nw nweotctilnn nubstinco, U nu'.il to bo times wotor than Kiiirnr. There arc !." noaMf. l,3!tl h!rI nnd ;?ii) tvpt.:i In the Loiul.m aoolotfleiil jtanlotw. The 'rnt.ro of pollution, If now niM way between CiiiiltinuM anil Indian- CIpollH. We now have1 thiT-o eltliv with over 1.000,000 tnhnlilt.ints: New York, Chl ie nnl Philadelphia. Sfnt.'r1' m'Iiow tlmt the urowth of (.'rent foreign cities has heeu oven rooro r:iilI than our own. Aluminum l now used an n iih nl it iite for leather In bullillrw; up 'he hoela of boot nnd shooa. A StMinlrtli HiUHlclan liui levit"l ti system of musical notation by which sharps nnd Huts tire done away with. There nrt? 10,000 more wofnen llmu men kl the District of Columbia. Ami the Kovernment ut Wantilu'toti Mill lives! At Red Cliff. Col., n woman candi date f. ir mayor was defeated at a re cent election largely by the vnti-s of women. A wood st nie ! ixw made of saw dust, cement and t!Unriirohi, Which ran be unwed, planed or bonwl like natural wood. It was said of !xt.h Athens and Rome flint so numerous were the tem pi""" lltld st:ltlies of ,da it was eict'X t rind a yod than a innii. lettuce was eaten by the ancients at the close of meals, as. from its ceol liU quality, it was considered iiu nut i dote to the heatinif effects of wine. nieefrlc.il weaving machines are In use Iq (Jetniai.y. Seamless stHk!i'rs with double heels are rattled out of each nine!i!no at the rate of eleven pairs an hour. In the conl region of Kansas they have begun to mine coal by electricity. Two coal cutlers, operated by eliK-trl-r-.-il current are now In use, nnd the results aiv very satisfactory. The ramie fibre is tough and wenra will. It Is said flint In China, where it Is used for making clothing. It lasts so well that Children frequently wear tlio clothes which their grandpjireuta wore when children. Of the large cities of tho world Paris Is the deepest In debt, in proportion to 'her population, the I ndebt edness per hend being $IM.22. Antwerp is a close secoud, wtrh $130...H per head. New York's rate is $15.78, aud Chi cago's Jtf.OO. Mrs. Bowdoln. of Newark. N. J., no ticed a. man trying to gain un entrance to her house, and ran into ilio street and screamed "Kire!" Some one neut out nn nlnrm, and several engines Im mediately responded. When the fire men learned what had 'happened they hunted for the burglar and found htm. There was picked up on the slwro at Hoboken a few days ago n pair of shoea in one of which was u parch ment certificate of pnrtmte of a will dutod in 18." X describing a valuable estate lu Ireland, together with numer ous certificates of stock tn several Irish banks. The nfline of the testator was .Tohu Johnson, of the IMoccse of Ologh er. " WORLDLINGS. ' - The number of men and women Is more nearly equal in I'Va.nce than in nny otiher uartou. Elephants sn 'meMaiUMS live to he 1.T0 years old. It takes fifty years for them to reach nutturiity. ni.wletnns of the Middle Ages pres cribed rtie wcudug of an atnerhyst as a sure cure for norvous diseases. Tho first oil well lu America was on n small farm In the mountains of Wayne county, Ky. It wa.s discovered in 1S20. There l so tittle flow at sea that sailors can discover their approach to Innd by obrfervlnx tho moisture on tho elilp's dock. It Is so hot at Masflownh that when the norfehwest wind blows from tho desert the thermometer sometimes re p'sters 1!0 degrees. In Fwnce a ballet rtianeer of the- first class earns from $120 to $.'I(K o month. A srnr in Hie ballet boa un Income of from $5,000 to $10,000. Salvator Rosa's remarkable skill iu TvilnKug brigands wus due to the fnct tilvat. in l's yourti he associated with tlhe britfnnd.s of Southern Italy. A French statistician estimate that wince f'he beirlnnlnd of time sixty-six quintllliofis of people (sixty-ix million millions) have li ved on rlie iMi'tlh. Although buffalo are nlmont extinct in the western part of the l.'nited States, numerous herds of them are oimmntered at times near Wiuuipe.g, In Onnnda. The people of the world spenk 000 languages and 1.200 different delects. The immensity of the great pyramid is shown by tho fact that !t contains SO.OUK.OOO cubic feet of stone. 'J.L I LATTER DAY NIMRODS. Hill Hubbard, of Pftlruyrn, Me., tn eighty-live, and bognn huiirting slxty uluo years ago. n has nveraxed from forty to sixty foxes a ysar. beside other game. Kd rrouin, .Tim Clarke's hired man nt ShawrMle, nccir Montreal, was pounced upon by a large gray eagle recently. Not succeeding hi driving the bird off wlr.li nil axe, he ran heme. In Ciladeville, Va., a party of honey hunters treed a bonr recently. They had no guns, but chopped tho tree down flind pltche.1 into the boar with axes. Ho was killed utter ehewing on: irwin nwhll. A Rimrlar misfortune ovovt.ioL .Tim Rhlnes, the bear hunter of Ridgway, li. He treed a bear, brought, him d.v.vn nt the flit st.ot, but 1'allil to iwM lilni. They wrestled, and .rim -.Vi-ut under, aud would have lieen w 'ped cut had not h!.i brother Ieo)xld eiiric up tiiil s.Uiln the beast. The starllsli hiw 110 nose, but tlm whole of ills uudttr ld Is endowed .with the sense of aan.11. THOUGHT IT WAS A TIP. Thn Piillmim Porter ml the M- ng I'noli.tne or Money. After Mr. Kmdd left the station ! fxperlwncol a never shock uihi dis covering that u locket of banknote whtrh die was taUlug to the city waa nowhere alHuf h'.s person. He must nave loft It lu tho l'ullman car. "I'll go to the wnporintondent's ofllee aud muUe my loss known," he rh'Migbt; and lie did. "I lift a pack iis contain log $'.000 in banknote iu a Pulhn.ui cat not Jj.ilf q imir affN" said Mr.J Seadds to t"ho otllclal. "Which train r "The one which arrived nt 0:1V "Have you your Pullman ehixk?" Fortunately be hud. Hud this ct) ftblod the mtperlnti'lidunt. to semi for the conductor. Ht soon arrived, for ho had not yt finished tin? rejtort of his trip, unl was srfll In the building. "(VmdiK'tov." sikW the siiorlnten dent, "did you nee anything of a pack age left lu your carV "No. sir." "Porter didn't turu anything over to your "No. sir." . "Bring f!ie p"rcr herix." ' He was brought. "Did you six' anything of .1 small packet after the passengers left yiHir car'" "Yen, sail.-' "You haven't tm-niMMt In." "Wb.v, no, !nh. It was ,1 IM of money. Mill." "PriH-lsvl.v. Where in 1t fi.w?" "Here, sa h." It was produced from uti lmaMo pocket. Mr. Seadds' eye brightened when he Haw tho roll. "That's It." he ixelalm nd. He counted the money, and it was nil thore, the entire ifS.om). "Look here, porter." said tho siier liiteiuletit, sovfMvly, "I want to know why you did nt bring that imckage to me tiho moment you got your fin gers on It." "Why, null," replim! rhe man, with an lintnreil air, "I s'posed de g.-mtmm had left, .it for u tip, sah. That's why, sah." Hit Fntnre. An old farmer nnd his sou called upon me rhe other day. The boy was about eleven or twelve years old, ami a gawky, ugly dwmller. He wandered nimlennly about tlw ollltv, runuiuig the tip of his finger over the backs of my books. At last I linked, "Well, my boy, would you like to to a lawyer'" "Naw." t "A doctor'" 1k "Naw." 1 "Preaeher? . u 1 "Naw." A "Well, what do yon -want to br "NawrmV." "By thunder! that's what you will be!" immented his disgusted faither, earnestly. 'rolled I Ha t Ha I" In some prlvato theatricals in Tndia a fugltilvo from Justice was supposed to escape, from hln pursuers by con cealing himself under a table, line tablo 'wns small, while the fugitive was somewhat lengthy. The commnnder of tho pursuing party rushed on the ataige, and fall over the legs of the man h was seAneh'ing for. Picking himself up and ludicrously rubh'ng Ms sfhlns, he caused roii.ru of laugihter by exclaiming lu true dra matic stylo: "Ha! tho viHuln has elud ed us again!" London Answers. In South Carolina. "Are my life insurance polloics all riffhtr "Yes. my dear." "Is my revolver on straight and my bowie knife reachable?" "Yes, dear." "Then, good -by, ray wife. If I re turn, I return. If not, you tnow Where to look for mil. I'm golutf down to the dispensary to get a drink." Judge. Fuetn From Natnrnl History. Old Mr. Soiikley (to bis wlfe)-Tu8t think, dear, a cornel enn work eight whole days without drinking. Mrs. Sookley (with a wiithering lxk) That's nothing. I know tin animal who will drink for debt days without doing a bit of work. Mr. Soaklcy sighs resignedly and turns to the sideboard. New York Truth. The Dear Ola Soul, Uncle Treetop If I had a lot of money to leavo to charity I'd gin some on Ut for a police department for this town they call Kfflgy. Maud Treetop What Is that? Uncle Treetop IMmno; but necordln' to the paper Homebody Is hauguil thoro a'most every night. -Truth, He Kuntr lln HuHtneM. Judge Wlmfs your business? Drunk My perfessilou is iat nv A rnlud-rcuder. Judge Well, I'll give you a nhn.nw to prove your statement. What are my thoughts ut the present niomeut? Drunk You're t'htnkln' I'm do btg ges' liar yer ever run up a'lnst. Judge You may go. Judge. Not Arnllnlile. Professor (to medical studonO Mr. Doselets, will you please mimo the Ikuich of tiio skull? Student (peridexedjI'vc g v rhem all In my head, professor, but the najuijs dou't strike mo at the numortt. -New York Truh. Era ol v ldeu. He What a curious-looking new clock 011 your uiuutel. One of your father's latest inventions? She--Yea. But lt'u not. n clock. Jt'g 4 parlor alarm sua uiuter, Judiro. - Mrs. JJnry A. Tnppor has been released, at Wilton, Me., from tho cuntoily of fjttremo Frnialc M'etikneM, which kept bur a prisoner in bed una- ble to walk. Lydia E. rtnlrttam' Vcg". tablfCompotindmiulrt the change. She advises all sick women to take this valuable uiedirlne, and be thankful for their lives, as she is for lirrs. It costs only a dollar at nny druggists, aud the result is worth millions. ' TOR CL0THE3. th; PROCTrf? t, oamhib 00. ointi. Fine PHOTO GRAPHS and CRAYONS at McKillip Bros., Bloomsburg. The best are the cheapest. NOW !!! THE is TIME TO BUY 11 PaDer -AT- l H. SLATE S )0K STATIONERY STORE, Mwj Hold Miiag, Bloomsburg, - - Pa. Don't Cost anything to look. fura k nm mm WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEED, - Estimates given on Application. SHAW & DONAHUE, Fourth Street. - Bloomsburg, Pa TOWNTOPTCS; The Journal of Society, (33 PAUES ) j NEW YORK. (THURSDAY.) Ta unlrMftilly recognitor gg the molt complete weekly journal In lhj world. Its ''Sttunterliifra" column! are Inlmltdble. It oclrtjr down, cHiieclally of tho clulnca of the 44IO of New York, Ronton. I'hllartelptilit, Chlcngo, and ail over the world, U oot eu.ualk-4 by Buy uewttjiupcr. Ita financial Ieiartment la authority with all tankora and broker. IM "Literary Show"-note on current literature la by tha rlevereat "f re viewers. Ita Aflel.I ami Afloat" makea It tho moHt IntcreHtlTiii paper for nil loTera of aport rauhtlng, ruoton.il, rowing, ahootlnii, tlMilnx, etc. m "On the Turf" excela all other racing notea. IM burleaquea, poem a and Joke are the cleverent. Ita atorlea are by tho iet wrltera among them Amelia Uvea, P. Mniion Crawford, Julian Hawthorne, Kdgar Kawcett, Ullhert farker, alary J. Hawker C'Lanoe Falconer"), Harry I'aln, haul Bout-get, Rudyard Kipling, Ambroitp lllerce, etc., etc., anil are, even If a trine rlaque, yet alwaya clever, bright and pretty, without coaraenesa or anything to offend the inortt renned and moral woman. In addition to all Una there la each week a supplement, portrait, lu colura. of oma nan eminent In hit walk ot life. Tales FromTown Topics Quarterly, flrat day of March, Juna, September. December 1 pugca; lmo. ContalnB lu each number, tn addition to ahort atorlea, poem, bur leaouea, etc., from the old laiiuea of Iovvn Tomca, a complete, orlglual prlie atory of Vi to 19U pagea. No one who enjoya the hlghPHt claaa of notion, and would he au ctitoitt with all that pertalna to uooJ society, can afford to be without Town Topics every week. There la bo much Inteieatlng renillug In ft. and In the " Talea," that a club auhacrtptlon lo both will supply any fumlly with abundant reudiug of Uis moat entertaining charataer all tha year. RATESi Town' Topics pe' annum, ti.oa A trtilai nrtrtiv tlou for three months, sil.UU, aud a specimen copy of "Tales" Free. . Talra From Town Topics, per number, 60 cents. Per annum, e.iA). Both 'lulihe. per annum, 9S.OO, and any two firevlouaNuhJIwrsof "Talea" you ni.iy Npecity Vui.k giTbeud IU coula for sample copy Town Toeica. N B.-Hava you read A.MtLlE KIVKh' Uteal andbesluovd, Tanis, Tho Sang -Digger? r.'mo, ctotu, gut, uncut front ana foot, ai so post pui. I. Kemit bt eiieelr', r. O. moan order, nostul nutc ov segHtered letter t TW TOPIt S. SI West iJi sjireet, Nrw York. lh!lATUPj5 V0RY iSfllllP ... Wa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers