NO KOAP NKKDEn IN nATHTi n. Wonderful Spring In the Cnllfornin , mi l l tilnMlc HoMom. Iw In the California desert, U.O mllr.1 from Los AnRolon, nnd Mx mile from ll,! "ne ' t'16 8oiuntin I'srlflv railroml, nre the remnnnta. of whnt whs once tho "Garden of Krteti." Sonio twenty-flvo years bro roiiip Kt l,oni. and Kvnnsvllle capitalists con celv ' thu Moa that the di-sort Inn.J conM on utilized, and by Irrlpntlon could lo made a great frult-iro luc In country. Accordingly they act out an Im mense orchard of young trees apri cot, lemon, orange and citron built substantial bullulngg for their over-s-er and workmen, laid artl fli-lat walks and ueautlfled the groutuls w th shrubbery and flowers. They made a contract with a corn pan.' which owneJ a reservoir on the San Bernardino mountains, and loon th? liquid life from the uplands was flowing into the garden, beautifying and transforming every growing thing. This went on for several year and from that sandy waste grow Into promts) and beauty, a love ly orchard. Bo sanguine were the promoters that they Incurred the expense of a narrow guage railway from their property to the Southern Pacific, making connection at Palms Spring Statlou. The grove was now at al mnr the bearing point and the Inves. tors were looking forward to quick dividends, when, as a result of an altercation between the grove. owners a d the water company, the latter cut off the water supply, and long be'ci ' the matter could be adjusted by the courts th flowers had with er.'d, the trees had died and the whole estate had reverted to the deser. with only the stump of a tree v-re and there "to point the morul and adorn the tale." A few miles from this wreck, says the Louisville "Courier-Journal," around the spur of a mountain, In a 'little valley, owned by a canny Scotchman, Dr. Murray. The doctor has brought the water from the mountain near by and has croated on "oasis in the desert." He hag about ten acres In orangcH ard alfalfa, anu nothing could be raore pleasant to the eye, after ran;; lng ove a sandy waste, than thin charming little valley. An Indian reservation adjoins the doctor s ranch, and from them e lensei for $100 per annum, a rare spring. The pool formed by this spring Is about as large as a good sized room and is covered by a rude shuck. The uniform temperature of the water is 100 degrees, and It Is raid to hnve many healing properties being especially efficacious In all man- lit o. blood and nervous troubles. When you first enter this pool your foot strike a roft. sandy bottom and o are apparently In water about is tnjuea deep. All at once a ripple B" i over tho Burfaco, much as If a Rt-jne had been thrown in, and near "-u ;ou notice tho Band has opened dluMosltig a hole as large an the clr c m Terence of your body, but how you are fraid to think. rftt the doctor calls there is no dinger and yo j take your life In ; "n-i hands nnd plunge in. Down you go up to your neck, anJ, fearing a mile sand, you call out to the doc tf , but he, smiling Imperturbly, bids you keep quiet and await results. Presently you feel a soft impact upon the soles of your feet, and lowly but irresistibly you feel your tir being forced to the surface. VI th In the space of three minutes you are again standing In eighteen Inches of water, and the hole has disappear ed, only to appear a few feet further on. ou hasten to it, plunge in anJ e-ain reach the surface as before. Only one hole Is formed at a time, and between tl:- closing of one and the appearing of another, thore is an interval of about five minutes. In this wonderful bath you do not reqr're any brush or soap, bat when you come out your skin is smooth ad spotless, here and tiere appear ing upon your body minute scales of silica. After dashing a bucket of d water over you you feel wonder fully Invigorated and refreshed. People come hundreds of miles to bathe in thi-se healing waters, and if the doctor could only move this aprlng lo 1ab Angeles he could make h.c: fortune In a few years. The Jn dwru (the Mission tribe) attach rrt-nt value to tho water and use the overflow of the pool for bathing nt ! drinking purposes. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, ) M . Lucas County. j fcS' T'Vank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing busi ness iu the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONK HUNDRHI) DOLLARS for eacli and every case of Catarrh that can not be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. PkanK J. Chunky. Sworn to before me and subscrib ed in my presence, this 6!h day of December, A. D. 18H6. (SttAL.) A. W. Glkason, Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in ternally, and acts directly on the b!o 3d and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. Address F. J. CHUNKY & CO.. Toledo, O. , 'Sold by nil Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. il'ilfVAAAAAAAAAAAAAAJL A . r ' v , j Grippe or Influenza, whichever yen Kke to call it, 13 one of ihe most :.I:ynIr ' y diseases known. V g Scott's Emulsion, which is Coc! Jr Liver Oil and Hypophosphites in eaaily di- O gested form, is the greatest strength-builder known to medical science. g It is so easily digested that it sinks into the system, making new blood and new fat, and strengthening nerves and muscles. Use Scott's Emulsion after 4 Influenza. Invaluable tot ALL DRUOOIST81 Few "Westf Earrihae. "The habit of wearlr- earrings Is dy ing out not only In America, but all bver the civilized world," said a promi nent Wr York Jeweler. Many queer notions obtain regarding the wearing of earrings, and many le gends concerning their advent are told. The Mahometans have it that Sarah, being Jealous of Hagar, vowed that she would not rest until she had tinged hef hanAa In the blood of her bondmaid. Abraham, hearing this, quickly pierced Hagar's ear and drew a ring through It, so that Sarah was able to fulfill her tow without danger to the bondmaid's life. From that time, they say. It became customary for women to wear ear rings. When Aaron made the golden calf, it will be remembered that he called upon the Israelites to "break oft the golden earrings which are In the ears of your wives, of your sons and of your daughters, and bring them unto me." For a long time men continued to wear earrings, and one portrait of Shakespeare represents him wearing Buch an adornment. The picture Is at Wentworth Park, In Yorkshire, Eng lnnd. Nowadays few men wear car rings. But in southern countries, es pecially Ppnln, the wearing of these ornaments still holds. The Spanish be lieve that piercing of the ears prevents ophthalmia and scrofula, and there Is a popular notion that piercing the ears docs exercise a beneficial effect upon the cyefl, a notion that is shared to some extent by surgeons and physi cians the world over. The Chinaman pieces the ears of hla little boy and makes him wear ear rings, for, he argues, If an evil spirit should happen to see htm, the spirit will mistake the child for a girl and will not take the trouble to carry It off. Polygamy In Congoland. It is the general opinion of compe tent observers that polygamy will sur vive for many years. Nothing but the spirit of Christianity will overcome the evil. The native mind cannot be Induced by ordinary argument aa to see any wrong in it. Why a man should not have Just aa many wives as he can afford to buy and keep is too much for his comprehension. He re gards woman as created solely for his pleasure and profit, and trades In her accordingly. He buys her from her lather for one or two goats or a cow, she becomes the mother of his chil dren, and prepares and cooks his food lor him. That la her career, and she shares it with aa many other wives ad her husband's inclination and re sources permit him to buy. When she dies alio is burled sometimes. Cer tain Central African tribes regard bur ial after death as a superfluous cere mony for women, and place their bodies where they will be devoured by hyenas and vultures. From two to threo wives la the average quantum of the ordinary Central African barba rian, and between 30 and 40 tor a chief. New York World. Color of Cold. All golfl is not alike when refined. Australian gold Is distinctly reddet than that taken in California. More over, placer gold Is more yellow than that which Is taken from quartz. This is one of the mysteries of metal lurgy, because gold In placers comes from different placers will vary In from that which Is In quartz. Gold takes clor. The gold In the Ural mountains i thm ruffdant In t world. FOR Neuralgia. Sciatica. .Rheumatism. Backache. Pain inchest. Distress in stomach. Sleeplessness THE COLUMBIAN, Coughs and Colds. BOo. AND 1.00. V $5,000,000 TO KEEP A KING. Several Fortune Put Into Royal Yacht An Expensive Luxury. ' liuyalty is cheap enough dues not coBt as much aa It's worth social ly," la the frequent argument of Eng lishmen. Some radicals add: "And the loyal family doesn't cost an annual ouiu that is as large as the taxes that one or two New York millionaires tiodge every year." it is a fact that EngllBh royalty doesn't cost, on the face of the returns, as much aa some royal families on the continent cost the taxpayers of their countries. In direct grant from the public treasury, the BritiBh royal fam ily receives about $5,000,000 a year. Reynolds' Newspaper, a radical weekly, however, has been investigat ing the Indirect cost of royalty and gives some details thereof. The king's yacht, completed two or three years ago, cost the nation, in one way or another, about $5,000,000. And now a new yacht is being built nt a luither cost of several million dollars. A grant of $100,000 is to be made this year towards the expense of the visit of the Prince and Princess of Wales to India. That, of course, la only the first bite. It would be Impolitic to alarm the taxpayers too excessively at the start. A similar grant of $100,000 was made for the visit of the Prince, as Uuko of Cornwall, to the colonies, and it coat much more. This Is exclusive of the cost of warships for conveyance and escort. That portion of the outlay will hi concealed in the navy estimates. The funeral of Queen Victoria cost $105.00f., tha celebratiou of her sixtieth anniversary of accession to tho throne, SiibS.i'M, the king's coronation $625,000. There are numerous other extra ex- j penses which appear under different j heads In the nation's financial ac counts. Savs Reynolds': "But, after all, if people will have royalty they must pay for It. Royalty consists of functions and clothes, ceremonies and parapher nalia, and all these are expensive luxu ries. The point is that people ought not to be deceived by crafty attempts to make the cost appear to be less than It Is actually. Kipling's Pay Off. Literary enthusiasts aro somewhat likely to forget that authors are not always like their works at least, In appe.-.rance and In this connec tion an amusing story 'Is told of a young lady who had for years been an ardent admirer of the "Jungle Books," and "Plain Talk from th HlllB." For lonj she bad been eager to see the Idol lu the flesh, and one day, to her great Joy, she was introduced. But when she met Mr. Kipling face to face, the young lady's countenance fell somewhat, for sht realized that he was not. after all, the exact coun terpart of the Apollo she hud pic tured him. "Are you Hudyard Kipling?" she cried, staring at the author In dis may. Mr. Kipling naturally felt some what embarrassed, and murmured "Yes," meekly. 'But I thought." explained the lady, who could not cover her disap pointment, "1 thought I thought you were quite dl'Vrent!" "I am oh, 1 am, madam!" Mr. Kipling hastened to assure her in confident. nl tones. "I am indeed! Only, you seo, this is my day off!" Answurj. mm W X " "c-r i i rasLi m mr w siTk svr t II 11 B"J K-tiTiarrVil 9 f. I fe . i. I V . at J 11 t S A X I I I . .; ii , ' s I ir.i.u. u uji i r pkx J BLOOMSBUMi, fcA. -.IK.SIIII1 I.N WAKFAItR. .ii .Ii- Profiler Tell .How Tin': "on-( fitrt imI TluMr Aeropliine. r Hit- first time since they first nt flirted ntte'itton the Wrights Or vii! ana Wilbur have Just told m'iio of the secrets of their machine i:il how they perfected It. They began their experiments after l.ll'enthal's death In 1898. Their ovlnloii ns to what was needed waa an n'r-Bhlp tlint would not capsize when tho wind was blowing. The chief trouble Is the turmoil of tho air. The common impression Is that tho atmosphere runs in com paratively regular currents which we call winds. Tho air along the ur f;-.ce of the earth, as a matter of faot, Is continually churning. It is thrown upward from every Irregularity, like sua breakers on a eoast-Ilne; every hl'i and tree anu building senda up a wave of slanting current. "And it moves not directly back and forth upon its count line, like the sea, but In whirling rotary masses. Some of these rise up hundreds of yards. In a fairly strong wind the air uear the earth is more disturbed that the whirlpool of Niagara. They tell how they adopted the two-plane machine, how they gave up tho tall, used a rudder In front, their idea being' to get a machine that could be balanced and steered by re flex action, as a bicycle is. In re markable experiments they found that certain birds, like the bustard, were merely animated aeroplanes. "The buzzards and hawks find the currents blowing upward oft the land; the gulls that follow the steam, ers from New York to Florida are merely sliding down hill a thousand miles on rising currents in the wake of the steamer In the atmosphere and on the hot air arising from her smokestacks." Acting on this knowledge, they gradually developed a sliding ma chine until December, 1903, when they sal lei with a machine equipped with an engine. Then they found the preat problem to be equilibrium in turning corners. By the most careful experiments they found the way to control the machine around corners. "The machine was now under prac tical control. Six flights averaged over 15 miles each; we obtained a flight of twenty-four miles in thlrty eiht minutes that is, at the rate of thirty-eight miles an hour. "We know tha we have at last secured a practical working aero plane." Tho Douhlo Kagie. Bankers say the new $20 gold gold pl-ces will bother paying and receiving tellers. The principal causes of this pre the absence of mill ing and the high relief of the de signs on both sides. As the coins are to-day the relief Is Inconsiderably re duced from what It was in the orig inal design. If the Government de cides to contlrue tho coinage of the new piece the relief will be further reduced. "The new $20 gold piece lacks ar tistic finish,' said Mr. Henry Chap man, the coin expert. On the obverse Fide the attempt at foreshortening of the left leg of the figure Is largely responsible for this defct. Foreshort en, njr is one of the most difficult things to do In this kind of work, and when it Is' done incorrectly, It makes a tltiful showing. "On the who.e, the coin is highly Imprtcticable. Furthermore, It has the appearance of gold plate. This and the high relief of the designs, will make It easy to counterfeit. "The attempting to reproduce a tiny picture of the Capitol building on a apace aa big aa a pin head, down to the left of the figure on the ob versj side of tbo coin, is, I think, be. littling the structure. It gives no adequate Idea of the size and grand, eur of the building. "It does not look like a coin, and It ts not good motat work. It lacka dignity, and, in the whole. Is highly impracticable. "That creature on the reverse side of the coin Is a bird., but I'm at se' to decide what kind " said Whltmer Stone, curator of birdB at the Academ of Natural Science. "If I were to be real lenient I might concede that It's a bird of prey, which might show it at leas to be a distant relative of th- agle. But an eagle, never!" Philadelphia Press. V Si of lhc Li Hie Tablets akd az Pain is DR. HUMPHREYS' SPECIFICS. DlrPttlna. with ..rfc TUI In fli ltnra.fr. English, German, SpanLIi, Portuguese an 1 French. no. ro-i rvirtr 1. Frc-, C-'ne-lIn- i. faftanimatln:' ... 2, Vvi.ri. 1, V .11.1 1 riT.or .irm 3 I ullr, Crjrmjf rinrl WakrfullM'rtrl nf lulitn'r. . ' 4. IHnrrhrn. of dill. Iron ami Adult - 5, HyM-ntsry, ONInk, I minus Collo U T. Cuh, Cnlcl, llroni'hlll. v H. Tixillinrhe, Kaccache, NmiralEln 1. U. Ilrndnehr, Kick lli-wlaohe, Vnrtigo fO. Uinpppala, Iniliift'.tlon, Weak HUjmach il.l 13. t'rnup, Iloarae Cough, Larytiffltlii 25 I I. Knit llhruin, Eruption., Krynlprlaj 25 15. K hrumiill.in. or iihi-uirmtlo Palm '45 10. Krver and Amir. Malaria 23 IT. FMi-, lillnilor Mecdluif, External, Internal. 2.1 18. Ophthnlmln, Weak or Inflamed Eye 'Jit 10. C atarrh, Innuonza.CoM In Head 2.1 20. Whoopltic ('otiRh.Bii&.mnrilc Cough '23 21. A.lhma.Opprc.MMj, binicult Dreatblng v; ST. Kidney Ol.ra.e, Gravel. Calculi 55 2H. Nrnoui Debility, Vital Weakneia 1.00 , flora Month, Fever Soretor Canker 23 SO. I'rlnary Incontinence. Wetting llod 23 34. More Throat, Quln.y anil Diphtheria U3 S3. Ihrenlo Contention., Ueadaehea 25 77 Crippc, Hay Fever aid Sumner Colds. ...25 A amatt bottle of Pleamnt Pellet, flu tha Teat pocket. SulU bjr drugglau, or aeul ou receipt of price. Meitlrat Book tent free. HT7MPIIKKVS' HOHF.O. MRDIdNB CO., Comer Wllllaxu and Jubn btrueta. Nw York. lo'.i Mother Itatied Itcforo Ills Itlrih The one hundred and first nnnl versary of the birth of General Rob ert E. Lee, recalls the little known fact that he whs born more than a yea. after his mother had been bur led, furnishing to the world one oi the most astonishing cases of revlv Iscence on record. 'Jeneral Lee's mother was by no mi'ans an entirely healthy woman Rh" sufiered from catelpsy. and lur Inn a prolonged trance, she was pro noip ced deid. The body was nre parcd for Interment nnd the morning of the third day after her supposed death the remains were laid to test in the family vault In the graveyard of Stratford, Va. While the sexton was cleaning up anj arranging some fresh flowers to be placed on tho casket, he heard a faint voice aa though of some one ca'llng for nss'stance. He listened closely and the voice was distinctly heard again. jJeco.-iln; satisfied that the voice cr.ne from within the casket he at once opened It. discovering that Mrs. Lee was alive. Wlth!n a short time sho war safe In bed at her own home. Mra. Lee's recovery was slow, but he did regain good health and a lit tle more than a year after she waa burled alive her youngest son, Robert E., was born, and thus came Into tha worlat one of her bravest men and greatest generals. Shortage of Horsca. Dealers and breeders who are pre. dieting a shortage of horses almost amounting to a famine In the next few years will find much to confirm their opinion in the records of the trade at the Unijn Stock Yards, Chi cago In 1907. There was a falling off of 24,224 bead lx. the arrivals of the year; and all classes of horses aver aged higher than in 1906, notwith standing the financial disturbances and the fact that users of horses all over the country were economizing In their purchases. There seems to be no doubt in the minds of market experts that the shrinkage In arrivals during the year was due to the fact that the nunsr of marketable, or, rather, serviceable horses had declined. Farmers and breeders seem to hav discovered too fully the expected results of the use of the automobile and to have bred fewer hcrses of late years. Certain ly If they had been In the country the Llgh prices of the year must have brought them out! Records of the Union Stock Yards show that 2,000,000 horses have ar rived there In the last twenty years. This la an average of 100.000 horses a year. The banner year waa 1905, when 127,250 head arrived. The largest receipts for one month were 18,448, In Marcu, 1305, and for one day, 2,177 head, rn March 6, 1905. The total value of the horses arri lng In 1907 was $16,797,000. and tnere was an advance of from $20 to J30 a head in the prices for all class, as compared with the figures for 1302, fancy draughters atd matched car riage pairs, making the gre.-test gains. One consignment of twenty one head, all nig Perchcrons. made th record a vera- of $4 22.15 each at auction. l;le MncliltiHS. H. L. Shaw of Clnii Hock. York; County, Pa., has some rope machines over one hundred years old. He got them quite recently from Joel and Ell Craun.er. Ell nld he used to help his father, John Craumer, to twist bedcords and wr.shllnes with those Quaint old wooden maonines. If you have Headacjie They Relieve Pain Quickly, leaving no bad After-effects '777777777777?77777m77777777m. 25 Doses 25 Cents Go we. IN ever 3 Columbia & Nontcur El. Ry. T1MK TAIll.i; ICKI-l-.tT June I 1904, end until .''unlitr lice. Cars leave Itloum for Kfpy, Almedia, Lime Riilr, Berwick and intermediate points as follows: A. M. t?:oo, 3:40,6:20, 7:00, 7:40, 8:20, 9.00,9:40, 10:20, II:oo, 11:40. P. M. ia:2o, 1:00, 1:40, a. 20, 3:00, 3:40, 4:20, 5:00, 5:40, 6 20, 7:00,7:40,8:20, 9:00, (9:40) 10:20 (! l:oo) Leaving depart from Berwick one hctt from time ns i;iven above, coioinein.in u 6:00 a, m, Leave Hloom for Catawista A.M. 513c. 6:15,17:00, t8:oo, 9:00, tiosoo, tll:..t, 1 2:00. P. M. 1:00, fixo, 3:00. 4:00, 5:00, 6:CO, l7:Oo, H:ov, 9:00, 10:20, (11:00) Cars returning depart from Ctawio 20 mliirtentrom time as given above. Kiret tailleaves MnrkelSqiiarrforjBi-t ick on Sundays at 7:00. m. First cartfor Cnlawj.n PunHnys 7:non. m. First cur from licrwick for iilocm SuihIojs leave at 8:00 n. m . First car leaves Catawisya Sundays at 7 30 a. m. (From Power Moure. Saturday l)i:lit only, fl'. K. K. Connection. Wm. Tkrwii.ligm, Superintendet''. Blooinslmrg & Sullivan Railroad. Taking Effect Feb'y 1st, 1908, 12:05 a. m. NOHTI1WAKI). 1 A.M. r.M. P.M. A. at Hloomsnurg DH W... P0 tin j'ib C00 Bloomaburg P a K... .. 9 2 81 17 ... Paper Mill (14 (63 II en 0 in Light Htreer II in jtl 8 84 Sis Oranifevllle 9 UK 8 (13 S 48 (Ml Fork 93A x 33 g ajj 7 M Hners fj 40 f3 17 6 l7 7 16 Ntlllwater.. Vab in 7 08 7 40 Benton MI 8 88 7 18 8 IS Edons "lO f 8 87 7 17 8 SO coles ( reek Ill 08 8 40 ft n 16 Laubachs in C8 Ji 4S 7 8. 8 40 Oraas Mere I'ark floiO JS 47 J7 "8 .... 'en'"il 10 19 3 152 7 41 9 0 Jamison Cltr lo 18 8 ns 7 4S is BOl'TnWAKD. oo A.M. A M. r.M. A.M. A. tL. t t t lnmtnnCtty.... JM 1048 4 8S 7 00 n 80 central... ........ 64 10 61 4 88 7 08 1146 (trass Were I ark fB 01 fllOO f , 47 r7 12 .. I.BMharbB 08 ll (S f 4x 7 18 11 58 Colea Crerk W 13 ll 0 4 88 jl 22 12 oj Edenns yu 14 m on M 5(1 tin un Benton 18 11 13 8 00 7 is lijj Htlllwater. n 1121 6 0S 7 88 1245 Zuners.... 18 85 fllM8 17 H 4B 11 58 Forks 6 89 11 -a 6 21 7 49 1 no Orstipevllle 6 50 11 2 6 81 8 00 1 80 Light Hired 7U0 1160 (89 8 10 148 PnperMlll 03 11 63 6 42 8 18 Bleu m. ' H. 18 2 10 BlOOUj.filiA W. 710 1210 00 80 216 Trains No.4 50dS mixed, second class, t I)nii fxctpt MDdfV I Dally Bunday only. fHagbioi'. W. V. tN YDEK, bupt w-44L 60 YEARS i Tradc Marks DcaiaN Copvriohts Ac. Anrone ending' a aketeh and description nay qntcklf ascertain our opinion fraa whether an Invention la probably patentable. Communlea tlnniatrlctlfcnnndentlnl. HANDBOOK on Pateota aunt free. Oldeat agency fur aecurlng patanta. I'nienia taken through Munn A Co. recelT IftrUU not tea, without charge. In th Scientific Americam A handsomely Illustrated weekly. I.anrest etr eulatlon or any acientltle Journal. Terms, 13 a year: four months, tL BoU by all newsdealers. MUNN Cq.88jb;m New York branch Offloa, 636 7 BU Washington, D. 0. 12-io-iy CHICHESTER'S PILLS W TIIK DIAMOND BRAND. A IIBAND PILLS, for aa1 yam known as Best. Safsat. Alwars Rellet 1 SOLO BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE PARKER'S I HAIR BALSAM riraiitni and fcraui. fin the hair. I Pmtimtci iQitiruint frruwth. I N?vrr Fails to He1 torts Oravr1 Hair to itm Yauthrti. fTolr.i. mm y4j ClU.iCatjt UifP'.art rV htir talaatljj. mm rlOCUieO.NODrFNrE:V Kendlnudnl uii.nuf o, punt.. K. .-., n Hfnn: u:ul In-) rvtrC t I'lffl lulviL-o, how to ol.lboa )wu.!,ui, trhuu ruaWra, wt oopnalils, etu, IN ilL COUNTRIES. f-t ZIhsIms dirrct nnh H'lifiii suits tinu ' I monry und of m tin patent, ft ! faio.it and infri.Ttjs.ni.nt Practice ixcn'v, 52 ivr!l(iiirnnrr.t Diiiurl SI 03J rinia tlratt, rr-p ir,(rd Bk.tM fiinet Ottirt 5 WASHIMV.-CiN, . T. l 7 Ladles I Aak year Draultt for A l'hlkea-tra Dlaaaoad RraadW I'llls la B.e and tlJ4 mmutSSJJ boe. sealed with Blue Rlbboa. VX Tata attor. Bay ef year V Draaalst. Alt frfin.'lfVa-Tf-I?ar DIAMOND .n Sold in Bulk-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers