THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. A Mother injsrael By IDA ALEXANDER Baiina iin ihi mi nn n Margaret Ellis lux) never put aside ber mourning for her niotlii-r In heart or in attire, though quite two yearn had elapsed since she llrst put it on. Now, seatud on the train which was to take her home, she wished that there were something blacker than the blackest black. For it was wwae than a houic-goitiK to the home which she had long cciiHldered empty! there was oiK5 too many there now. For two years there had been one too many and one too few. But the house keeper had been, after all, merely a figurehead who deferred in all thin to Margaret's opinion. Now there was someone else. Margaret took out the three-months-old letter. Thero had been others since, but this was the one that had been read and reread. It was folded at the place that had hurt most. She knew it by heart, yet she read it aga In. "And she is a good woman, Margaret, reminding me In many tilings of your sainted mother." She read the letter from beginning to end, and twice she read the part that hurt bo sorely. Then she tore it across, again and yet again. Presently the tiny bits, upon which no word could be distinguished were flung from the window. People were beginning to gather .up their packages, the train to slacken its speed. After a little Margaret found heiself on the platform, with half a dozen others. She saw her father before he saw her. Everything looked much the same the same old buggy, the same old horse, and, with a little thrill at her heart, Margaret aw the same old father. What change she had expected marriage to make in him she did not know; but she knew she had expected one and was thankful that it was not there. Pres ently he spied her with his nearsight ed eyes and came over. There was little said by either but when Mar garet slipped her small band Into her father's he gave a sigh of relief. The first meeting was not what she had feared. All the long ride home she kept up a gay chatter which a more observ ant man would have rightly under stood. But as they drew near the bouse even he noticed how ber face flushed and paled by turns. The group standing in the door was a very pleasant one, but not In Mar garet's eyes. How often In her dreams she had seen them Teddy and Bertha, Myrtle and wee Det but now it was as it they didn't stand be fore her. What she saw, the only thing she saw, was the lady who stood beside them. She was tall, with icon gray hair and sharp, observant eyes, the very antithesis, Margaret hotly thought, of her little dove-eyed moth er. All in the minute, before a word was said the owner of those observ ant eyes took note of the girl who stood before her. She saw a slight girl, scarcely more than a child, with soft, brown hair, which the wind had blown into picturesque disorder; a mouth surely meant for smiling where life was forcing a downward curve; brown eyes, which might have been, which almost were, beautiful in spite of their angry appeal against fate. Grief, rebellion, loathing so many emotions were written on the face that her stepmother involuntarily Btretcbed out her arms as Mr. Willis introduced them. Margaret did not even take her band. She bent over Dot a moment to bide the tears that were gathering in her eyes. "If you'll excuse me, Mrs. Ellis," she said quite steadily, "I'll go up to my room. It's quite a tiresome ride." "Yes," her stepmother answered, "take a good rest. Dinner won't be ready for an hour. I'll bring yours up if you like, you poor, tired child." But the unveiled pity was harder than anger would have been. "No, I'll come down, thank you," Margaret answered, coldly. As day succeeded day the breach between them widened, till Anally it was a gaping place which no one love could have bridged. Even the chil dren helped in the widening with their clinging fondness for their step mother. Mr. Ellis alone stood nerv ously Impassive, longing for peace as only the nervous can, longing in vain, as they usually do. In every possible way Margaret thwarted ber stepmother, sometimes covertly, sometimes openly, but ever with an Intolerant disregard that made Mrs. Ellis feel an intruder in her own home. ' Her patient accept ance of the situation, her silent un derstandlng, but served as fuel to the feelings Margaret nursed. When a sweet and wholesome nature becomes embittered through real or fancied wrongs, no other is so bitter, so 1m placable. "I wouldn't take Dot, If I were you Margaret," said her stepmother one morning, as Margaret took out the child's hat and coat. "She has not seemed well the last day or so, and It looks like rain." Margaret silently put on and but toned the coat and pulled Dot's curls through the elastic of the bat. Then be spoke: "I don't think it wll rain, and Dot seems In perfect health." She looked at the clear sky with a sneer as she went out "She's afraid Dot'll love me," she said to herself.' But on the way home her stepmoth er's words came true. The olouds in creased, the wind blew, the rain fell In torrents. In spite of Margaret's care of the child she was drenched. As bt reached the door ber stepmother opened it and held out her arms foi the child. "Margaret, you shouldn't hnvp j- t your coat over her. Yon mint t wr, through and through. Run and dun;;.' your things." In tho middle of the nln'.t M r-T' t bercmo conscious of a kuotkii-t, t her "door. "Yes?" she .said rlccpily. "(Jet up, Marctret," answered hrr father's voire. "Dot Is very sick. I'm going for the doctor." It seemed only a moment to her bo fore she was dressed ond In her step mother's room. The child lay on tiio bed, flushed, fighting for breath, al most tinrerognlznble ns her baby sin ter. Hut the face that bent over t'.io child, and then turned at her ap proach, a face nllght with love and pity. Margnret wondered where shn had teen that look before. The like- ness grew and grew. Then In a flash 1 she knew whence it came. Just fo her mother had onee fought death for lit tle' Ted. Neither spoke. Her step mother went on with the wringing out of hot clothes, applying them to the tender throat. Margaret watched her deft fingers wonderlngly, or covered her ears with her hands at sound of the rough a sound that once heard Is never forgotten. At last, she drop ped on her knees by the bed and look ed up Into her stepmother's eyes. "Is there" she faltered, "are you afraid?" "Yes," the quiet voire answered, "I am afraid. It Is right to tell you, i Margaret, when the danger Is so , grent. I would not have disturbed you t otherwise. Hut God Is very good, my j dear. Have faith and hope, for I j think He knows we couldn't give up little Dot." Margaret shuddered. Once before she had known. "I can I help you? Do you need me?" "No there Is nothing more to do until the doctor comes. Go and lie down you poor child. You look half sick yourself." Margaret paced her room to and fro, to and fro. After a little she heard her stepmother open the door and let the father and doctor In. She even caught the words and tone of appeal; an appeal we make to the doctor and none other In like case. Then the door of the sick room opened and shtit and there was silence. And Mar garet crouched by the bed, lived again the months she had lived since her return to her father's house. Then backward again to the last months at the boarding school. Then further still to her motner's last kiss and her own promise to "be good." It seemed Impossible to look for ward, and yet through her closed door she beard the opening of the one where the sick child lay. She heard the first faint tap at the door, and her stepmother's voice, "Margaret." Margaret croucned lower. "The child Is dead," she said to herself. Of a sudden she went to the door and threw it open. Her stepmother stood upon the threshold the tears running down her face. Years were crowded into the second before she spoke. "My dear, my dear, the child will live.", Margaret swayed and would have fallen but for the strong and tender arms that caught her. She nestled closer, closer, sobbing away her bit terness and grief against the mother ly heart that yearned over her, even as her own mother might have done. Former Land Steals. Oregon was anticipated in the mat ter of land steals by about 100 years when the "Yazoo fraud" was per petrated. This was a term applied to the transaction by which the State of Georgia, through an act of its legis lature, Jan. 7, 1795, granted about 33, 000,000 acres of her western territory to four land companies, known as the Yazoo companies. The consideration paid was $500,000 and the territory extended from the Alabama and Coo sa rivers to the Mississippi, and from the thirty-fifth to the thirty-first paral lel of latitude. Every member of the legislature except one was a share holder in one of the companies. Al though the grant was repealed and the records of the transaction publicly burned the next year, the case. did not end then. In 1814 the Congress of the United States ordered the landa sold and appropriated $5,000,000 for extinguishing the rights of the claim ants. Man's Best Year. A professor has Just gone deeply Into the records of achievements of the world's chief workers and think ers, and finds that the average age for the performance of the master work is B0. For the workers the averago Is 47 und for the thinkers 52. Chem ists and physicists averago tlio youngest, at 41; poets and inventors. 47; novelists, at 46; explorers and warriors, 47; composers and actors, 48; artists and clergymen, 50; essay ists and reformers, 51; physicians and statesmen, 52; philosophers, 54; math ematicians and humorists, 56; histor ians, 67; naturalists and Jurists, 58. The professor concludes that if health and optimism remain "the man of 50 can command success as readily as the man of SO." Chinese Eat Meat. Unlike the Japanese, the Chinese are meat eaters. Fowls, including ducks and geese, are abundantly con sumed and pork is the most used of all eflsh meats. The number of pigs raised Is enormous. Rose That (liangon Color, By a Japanese ttorlst there has been discovered a rose which is unique. The color is a delicate pink when the plant Is In the shade, but becomes crimson exposed to the sun. SHOOTING H BIGHORN. A Hunting Episode in the Montana Itnckles. I was certainly anxious and ex cited, especlclly when they baited 850 yards distant, and I saw they were all rams, writes a sportsman. I counted twenty of them. They were led by a kingly old monster who sprang upon a large rock, sniff ed the air uneasily and looked be hind him, I was in a quandary. I had a beautiful muzzle rest on n limb, was seated with an elbow resting upon each kneot and was pretty certain I could hit that ram; but If I missed a standing shot It was certain I could not make a running shot afterward at that distance. I decided to wait and was rewarded by seeing tlio lead er spring down and come directly to ward me at a trot, followed poll meil by the rest of the band. My heart fairly loaped Into my throat as I shifted the rifle from the limb and waited for the time to fire. Nearer and nearer they ranm gradually slackening their pare to a walk. Now wan my tlmo; and just as I shifted my rifle toward them a puff of wind wafted the scent of the Indians be low to the leader, who sprang Into the air as thought shot and started oft at a gallop. My first shot, fired hastily, kicked up the dust under him, and followed by the entire band he disappeared In the thick pines before I could even eject the empty hell. I sprang up and rushed around the pines to where the open lope stretched below me Just In time to see the band stop 350 yards distant and look back before their plunge Into the gulch below. My last chance bad come. Steadying myself as best I could, I held the gold bead on the shoulder of the leader and pressed the trigger. In stantly the sheep disappeared as com pletely aa If the earth bad opened up and swallowed them. Half dazed by the suddenness of it all I ran forward to the ledge, half blinded by the wind la my face, and there lay the grand old leader on his side, his eyes al ready glased with death, his mag nificent horns, fourteen and one-half Inches and more than a full circle, making me realize my hunt for the finest trophy our country has to of fer waa over, and I was satisfied. Queer Furs. "TOrta la cat fur.' said the furrier. We nee It for linings. An excellent lining cat fur makes, too. Dogs, calves, colts, coons, opossums, bats, rata, any animal that wears fur, lu tact, la salable la the fur market. Bat hair la felted up with other stuff Into an Imitation skin. It Is also need. I believe. In rope plaiting. The dog, the coon and the opossum yield a fur that, properly treated, makes a very handsome lining. Rat skins are employed In certain delicate re pairs, and they also serve to form the thumbs of cheap gloves. A queer thing about the fur business Is that the furs must be taken in the dead of winter; the trapper must work under the cruelest climatic condi tions; only thus is the fur at its best. The dresser, on the other hand, who aould work best In cold weather, must do al his work In the heat of summer, or otherwise he would not be able to keep up with the changing laahlons," India's Precious Metal. It is estimated that 11,500,000. 000 la gold, and perhaps as much in silver, la hidden away in the Hindu tocklas. Vast quantities of the precious metals are known to be kept la the form of personal ornaments. From time immemorial India has been a reservoir Into which the precious metals have flowed from all Quarters of the globe, only to disap pear from statistics. Could the idle wealth be drawn upon, the effect on the Industrial and commercial life of the country would be very pre" It la, therefore, a matter of concern to try to turn India's dormant capi tal to active use. It may be impos sible to do It. The Oriental mind view everything In a way Incom prehensible to westerners. But if only a tithe of the concealed hoards of India were vitalized a new aspect might be given to the conditions of life in England's great eastern em pire. Retributive Justice. A case of retributive justice, as far aa It goes, is reported from Paris. An attendant at the Andral hospital, where physiological Investigations are being made, discovered that a doeen rabbits had been stolen from their hutches. The loss of the rab bit) themselves was not a source of trouble to the authorities, but the fact that they bad been Inoculated with various germs has had a dis turbing effect. It Is known that the rabbit had all been Inoculated, and several of them were tuberculous or typhoid subjects. The police lost no time In warning the thieves of the dangerous nature of their "swag," but none were returned. A King's Grave Opened. King Edward I. of England died July T, 1307, and 400 years later the Bngllah Society of Antiquarians op ened his tomb in order to find out if be really had been burled In wax, aa the legend ran. The chronicler of the time remarks. "To their great astonishment they found the royal eocpse to appear aa represented by the bUtorlan." "Although the skull appeared bare, the face and hands eemed perfectly entire." The king we fonnd to be 6 feet I Inches in length, thus fully Justifying bis nick aam of Longshanks. Strong Healthy Women It a woman is ttronJ and healthy in womanly way, moth erhood means to her but little suffefinij. The trouble lies in the (act that the many women suffer from weakness and disease of the distinctly feminine organism and are unfitted for motherhood. This can be remedied. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Cure the weaknesses end disorders of women, h sots directly on the delicate end important organ concerned in motherhood, making1 them healthy, strong, vigorous, virile and elastic. "Favorite Prescription" banishes the indispositions of the period of expectancy and makes huhy's advent easy and almost Dninless. It Quickens and vitalizes the feminine orftnns, and insures a healthy and robust baby. Thousands of women have testified to its marvelous merits. It Make Weak Women Strong. It Make Sick Women Well. Honest druggists do not oiler substitutes, and urge them upon you as "just as good." Accept no secret nostrum in place of this non-secret remedy. It contains not a drop of alcohol and not a grain of habit-forming or injurious drugs. Is pure glyceric extract of healing, native American roots. The Wooing of the Woodcork. The wooing of the woodcock Is one of those sights to witness which a lover of nature In all Its moods will make a Journey of miles. The Bcene Is enacted at twilight, and tho set ting Is of willow or alder bushes whose branches are Just beginning to show the tender green of early spring. Suddenly from tho damp ground a bird form shoots upward like some swamp Bplrlt until It is outlined against the gray of the even ing sky. Then it circles above the branches, and tho song of the woo ing begins. Hidden In the dark ness of the thick lower growth is the object to which this love song is di rected. The bird above circles per haps a score of times, then drops back to the damp thicket, making a sound which can be likened only to the dropping of water into a wood land pool. Again the bird soars and circles, singing still the love song. This Is repeated time after time un til the last gleam of light has faded and night's darkness comes down. ' The Life Ideal. "Just as 'soon ae my husband and I have $500 saved up, besides our fare, we are going back to England," said a woman player. "Then we are going to buy one of those gypsy wagons they have over there. They are too awfully Jolly for words, don't you know. They are quite wide, have bunks, a cunning little kitchen and sitting room. You wander through the country all day, then at night you stop, cook your supper, sit un der the trees, and sleep out in the open or In the wagon. Just u you choose. Many of my artist and the atrical friends have them, and Just wander from place to place. It Is an Ideal way to live; beats house boats or bungalows. If you have ever slept out In the open and watoh ed the stars over your head you feel smothered In a bedroom. I played through Australia, and we went from place to place In a big wagon, sleep ing out of doors at night." New Times. Hardly Worth While. Eleanor was the little daughter of a musician whose first oratorio was to be given at a great musical festi val In the city. Eleanor had never been away from borne, and her mother thought she would regard the Journey to the great city as a special treat. The oratorio was pro nounced a great success. But when Eleanor was being put to bed that night she looked bo unhappy that her mother asked her if she bad not had a good time. Eleanor looked up tearfully. "Did you bring me all the way to the city just to hear that thing that's been coming up through the register for the last six months?" Peonies as a Medicine. Peonies were originally esteemed lees for beauty of bloom than for value as a medicine. In recognition of Its curative virtues, the peony was named after Paeon, the physi cian of the gods. An old writer says; "About an infant's neck hang peonie. It cures Alcydes cruell maladle." Nor did the use of the plant stop there, for peony water was esteemed and rank In by-gone times, though whether as medicine or merely as a refreshing temperance beverage is more than modern writers can say. Humorist Not Truthful. In the course of a London law case one of the witnesses, questioned as to a certain speech he had made at a banquet, admitted that he did not confine hlmeslf strictly to the truth. "But," he added, "I was regarded there as a humorist, and one can't ';e a humorist and always speak the truth." FLORIDA WINTER TOURS VIA Pennsylvania R. R. March 9, 1909. ROUND $48.05 TRIP FROM EAST BLOOMSBURC. Special Pullman Trains. Independent Travel in Florida. For detailed Itineraries and full infor mation consult nearest Ticket Agent: 1 3I-7L Discovery of Mammoth Cave Everyone has heard of the Mam moth Cave of Kentucky, but few probably are aware that Its discov ery was due to the search for suita ble earth for the manufacture of salt petre. The anxiety to find saltpetre earth was due to the Embargo bill passed by congress In 1807, which forbade American vessels to sell for Europe and foreign vessels to land cargoes In America. The Americans needed gunpowder and to make It they required salt petre. They had been getting It from Spain and Italy, but the Embargo bill stopped that, and there was no American supply of the substance. A roving chemist, named Samuel Brown bad shown how saltpetre or potassium nitrate could be obtained fom cave earth. And so the quest for cavee was begun and assiduously continued. When the Mammoth Cave was found, every part of the great cav ern was searched for cave earth. From pit, byways and avenues slaves carried out the heavy loads of pet re earth. Many thousands of tons were treated and the rude chemistry of the day produced something like 100.000 pounds of saltpetre within two years. When Rating Causes Colds. If one who has caught cold will take thought, he will often find that he haa prepared himself for the In fection by some tax on his physical condition some extra work which haa depressed his bodily powers, some worry which has preyed upon his mind, some loss of sleep, some undue exposure to atmospheric changes, or some dietary Indiscre tion. For Indiscreet eating is one of the most prolific and yet the least recog nised of all the predisposing causes of a cold. 1 Let the hearty eaters of rich food, who suffer from repeated colds, try a course of abstinence during the coming winter, and they will become convinced of the truth of these re marks. In this case the proof of the pudding Is In the not eating of It. Youth's Companion. Parisian Chlckenweed Sellers. The vender of chlckweed in Paris is a well-known figure. The sellers are numerous and their cry Is one of the most noteworthy of those that resound in the morning in the streets of the French capital. According to the Bulletin des Halles there are about a hundred thousand canaries in the capital and the dally consump tion of chlckweed is estimated at $2, 000. This sum looks large, but it only allows two cents for each bird. A Paris contemporary points out that a goodly portion of land between Suresnes and Courbevole is set aside for the cultivation of the weed. Makes a Prophecy. "Soon there will be In the United States a college-bred sister for every college-bred brother," is the predic tion of President M. Carey Thomas of Bryn Mawr. She calls attention to the fact that even the Catholics have been won over and are now strong In the belief that women should go to college, although they have long opposed it. Educated rr.:r. and educated women, working to gether, she says, will right "the wrongs which educated men work ing alone have been unable to put right. Wisdom in Prison. Fredrich Greullch, a Berlin miller, remarked at a convivial gathering: "All Is not Solomonic wisdom that drops from the Emperor's lips," and Is now undergoing a term of three months In jail for his offense. HUMPHREYS' Humphreys' Veterinary Specifics forthecureof diseases of Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dog, Poultry. A- A. For FEVERS, Milk Fever, Loot Fever. B. B. For HPnAIXS, Lameness, Rheumailsm. C. C. For SO It H Throat, Eplxoolle.Dlseasaar. D. D. For WORMS, Bats. Grubs. B.E. For t'OLGHB, Colds, Inflacnia. F. F. For COLIC, Bellyache, Diarrhea, G. G. Prevents MI8CAIIH IAGB. H. H. For KIUEV and Uladder disorders. I. I. ForSKIV DINEASr"8.Mane, Eruptions. J. K. For BAD CONDITION, Indention. Price, 60 Cents per bottle. Vet. Cure Oil, for Stable op Field Use, $1. At druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt of price. A BOO Page Hook on the treat nient ami oare of Domestic Animals and Stable Chart to banc; up, mailed free. HUMPH BEYS' BOMEO. HEDICQTC OO, William and Aaa Street. Mew York. Columbia & Montour 1. Ky. TIMK rABLK IH June 1 1904, ond until . urther lice. Cars leave Bloom for Espy, Al media, Liar Ridge, Berwick and intermedial points a follows) , ATM.' 1605:40, 6:20, 7:oo,'7:4ou8:"l 9.00,9:40, lo:2o, II:oo, 11:40. "p. M. tj:io, 1:00, 1:40, a. so, 3:0c, 3:4a 4:ao, 5:00, 5:40, 6-20, 7x0,7 140 ,8:20, tf-t (9:40) lo:3o (ll:oo) Leaving depart from Derwicl one hoi from time as given above, comnitntitf 6:00a. m' Leave Bloom for Catawissa A. VI. $:.: 6:15, t7:oo, t8:oo, 9:00, fio-.oo, 4mi I2:oo. P. M. 1:00, fiioo, 3:00, 4:00, 5:oo,,j f7:oo, 8:00, 9:00, 10:20, (ll:oo) Carsreturningdepart from Otnwitse a miuWesfrom timeasgivenabove. First carllenves MorlictjSuare for firrwick on Sundays at 7:00 a. m. First cartfor Cntawisfta Sundays 7:oon, m. First cr from Berwick for Bloom Sundays leaves at 8:00 a. m First car leaves Catawissa Sunday at 7 30 a. m. JKrom Power House. Saturday niht only. fP. K. K. Connection. Wm. Tkrwii.ligm, Su erintendent Bloornslnirg & Sullivan Railroad. Taking Effect Feb'y 1st, iqo8, 12:05 a. m, NORTH WAKD. A.M. P.M. t t Bloomsburtr DLtW,., 9 00 1 87 HloomHburg P 4 K 9 02 2 89 Paper Mill .. 9 14 8 62 Light Street 9IH 2 B Orangevllle 9 2ft t 03 Forks 9 86 8 lit Zftnera fu 40 f8 17 Hilllwater- 9 48 8 t!) Benton 9 60 8 83 Bdsons 10 0u;8 87 coles creek in 08 40 P.M. t IB C 17 6 29 6 84 6 48 6 f8 57 7 08 7 18 17 7 21 Laubacns 10 08 JS i!i Grass Mere Park flOiO 8 47 Central 10 IS 8 52 7 81 7 88 7 41 7 45 amlson Cltv 10 18 8 85 SOUTHWARD. 22: A.M. t 1)81 114 ii'ii 12M 11 M 19M 12 46 18 88 ite IK 1 44 1 64 2 It 211 A.M. t A.M. t 10 48 10 51 fll 00 ll 02 ll 06 fll 09 11 13 11 21 H129 11 1 1142 11 50 11 58 P.M. 4 85 488 f4 47 I 48 68 14 56 500 608 Jl.7 5 21 611 (89 6 42 A.M. t 700 7 0S 17 12 r 1 7 22 H 24 TOT T 88 fl45 7 49 800 810 818 8.25 8.80 Jamison City.... 5 50 Cent.ral 6 53 Gram Mere Park 16 01 Laubacna. s08 Coles Creek fS 19 Bdsons. Benton. s 14 s 18 28 16 85 6 89 6 60 TOO 08 Stillwater., Zaners Forks Oi ng-evllle Light Street..... raper jhiii Bloom. P K.... Bloom. Slit W. 7 20 12 10 6 00 Trains No 21 and 22 mixed, second class, t Dally eicept HuDdar. Dally 4 Hondas only, f Flag biop. W. C. DNYDKR, Supt. v.44l4 . 60 YEARS -EXPERIENCE w 2 J T.inr Mmili Tradc Marks DCBIONa CopvRioHTa Ac Anrone tending; a sketch and description na? aiilcklr ascertain our opinion rraa wnetner aa liirenMon Is probabIT patentable, lommnnicv tlom strictly confidential. K on Patents tent froe. Oldest aitency for eouringatents. fatenta laaen inrougn nuuu m. vu. rwvir. tptciak nolle, without charge. In the Scientific fin.tr.catt A handsomely tllnstrsted weeklr. largest cir culation of an? tclentlllc Journal. Trnn. 93 a rear; four months, 8L Bold bj all newsdealers. MUNN & Co.B1BrMdw'- New York Branch Cfflce. 636 F 8t Washington. D.C. 12-10-ly CHICHESTER'S PILLS TIIK DIAMOND BRAND. A mm mT mmm Itrairli m rivrin-4'ireikTEBrw DIAMOND HRAND Pll.LA, fo. ' BSh yean known aa Best. Setat, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM C1nr ftod beutiin thtj heVlt. Promiaiei a luxuriant erowth. Never Falls to BMtor Gray 21 air o im loumiui voior. Curtu tcalp &tt bsir failing. Ror.iiRFn iNn nrprNnrn Bunumodal, I a h'Hwiiiir oi I'U.ito. lorcxiM'i t AfHii it anu In rrtMirt I Kii: tUvi.v. row ta ouittui T.Kteuu, tnulu Utaakjl copyriguu, uv, IN ai L COUNTRIES. llusiiirst direct It ilk Washington tavl iinu. money ana ojifn me paienl. Patent and Infringement Practice Exclucl.e'y. U rlU or come to us at 623 Distil Street, opp Dulled States latent Offlet. WASHINGTON, ?. A Reliable Remedy CATARRH Ely's Cream Balm is quickly ausorbe.!. Gives Relief at Once. It uluuusL's, soothes, heuls auJ in'oUctit the (lineawil mem. brime ri'aultinp; from CiitiiiTU ami drives nway a Cold iu the Head (luiukly. lie ..." k 'M HOI M rtVLR v iv rHAY FEVER stores the hennes o Tiiste ami Smi ll Full izo 50 eta. , lit Uru'. Ia liimid form. 73 reiits. gists or by mail. lily Urotbera, 0G Wurreu Street, New York Idlal Aak Tr UruH ft Ai hlaea-Uiia lll..4 BrulA Pllla la Ked and tiald netaUlc born, icaled with Blue Rlbboa. J fg n I 1 Jl A.U) 6 00 CM 98 e ee 7 08 7 16 7 I 1 1 ie s is 8 40 0 1 fw
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers