CORN MUFFIN RECIPE. It!■ an Excellent One, find One That 1m .Not Found in Ordinary took Hook*. An excellent rule for corn muffins is as follows: Beat two heaped table spoonfuls of butter and four of sugar to a cream. Add the yolks of three eggs, and then add two eupfuls of milk in which a teaspoonful of soda has been dissolved. Sift two or three times a cupful and a half of flour and a liberal cupful of corn meal, with two even ta blespoonfuls of cream of tartar. Add the mixture of butter, sugar, milk and egg* slowly to the dry ingredients, stir ring well while doing so. After beat ing this batter very thoroughly add the whites of the three eggs —which have been whipped to a very stitf froth. Turn the batter into muffin tins which have been buttered and bake the muf fins in a hot oven. These muffins are delightful for breakfast served with a dainty omelette and a cup of hot coffee with whipped cream. The writer has tried several rules for corn muf fins, but has found none as light or as tender as these. It is not one of the usual recipes found in the average cook book, and it is an excellent one. The following is a very good rule for johnnycake: Put three eupfuls of corn meal to soak with three, eupfuls of sour xnilk over night. In the morning add half a cupful of flour, two tablespoon fuls of molasses, one beaten egg. a tea spoonful of salt, and finally a liberal teaspoonful of soda which has been dis solved in about half a cupful of milk. Stir the batter very thoroughly for sev eral minutes and pour it into shallow baking pans which have been buttered well. Hake it in a very hot oven. It should be about an inch and a half thick when done, and it should have a fine crust. —X. Y. Tribune. HANGING A HAMMOCK. Some Timely Hintx to Thone Who 11 nili><'■■ In Own One of These Summer I.murle*. A manufacturing firm in Connecti cut that sells hammocks offers several excellent suggestions in regard to sus pending the same. Four degrees of curvature are mentioned, and the ex tremes here indicated ought not to be exceeded. Too much slack converts the hammock into a mere loop. A very : N P|i ;i•: • ! ; i HOW TO HANG A HAMMOCK. straight arrangement leaves it too un stable for security. The four positions shown in the draw - ing provide for a clear space between the lowest part of the hammock and the floor of about 10 inches. It is a common error to suppose that the liea" 1 of a hammock should be fastened at the same height as the foot, or higher. The best way is to keep the ring at the foot end from three to live inches high er than that at the head. When the hammock is stretched out nearly straight the difference may be kept down to three inches. Four makes a fair medium. But with a good deal of curvature, the fastening at the foot ought to be five inches above the head fastening. The reason for this is that when the head end is elevated, the whole body tends to slide down in the hammock. What is called a position of equilibrium —one in which the body will remain where \t is—is one in which the hips rest at the lowest point. If the head seems too low, under these cir cumstances, it should be bolstered with a pillow.- —X. V. Tribune. RETURN OF EARRINGS. A Fashion Tlmt Was Hcli'K'ili'tt to Olillvlmi Ten Years Aki> to He I'oiiulitr Attain. Earrings are coming in again, and while fashion's slaves are meekly pro testing that they will not wear the bar barous things they will undoubtedly quietly submit in the end. The eiftct has gone forth that earrings are to be worn again, and the jewelers are [ire pared for an immediate demand for that article of jewelry which was rele gated to oblivion ten years ago. One drawback to the revival is the fact that nine out of ten women will need to have their ears pierced again, and every woman has an acute remem brance of that painful orueal in tho past. When our mothers were young it was the custom to pierce the ears In putting a cork behind them, stretching the lobes of the ear tight over the cork ami then piercing with a needle, after ward drawing a silken thread and a gold ring made especially for the pur pose through the hole. Pearl or diamond screw rings will hold their own for a long time in wom an s favor, but there are some new and startling fancies shown in the way cf earrings in the jewelry stores.—X. Y. Herald. Knew (lie Scale*. "When you get your groceries to day," said the butcher to his wife, "don't goto that little grocer next door to my shop." "Why not?" she demanded. "Because he sent in yesterday and borrowed an old pair of my scales."— Chicago IJ ost. AND STILL THEY COME. Here Are Three New nml Very Slyllah IK'NttsnM fur the Summer Ulrl'a Sunshade. The girl who has a tanned complex ion when the summer is over will have it from choice, for the hundred and one new designs in parasols, ranging any where in price from one dollar to one hundred dollars leave no excuse why the fair skin should be left unshaded from the merciless rays of a scorching sun. The very newest idea in parasol dec orations, and one which affords an agreeable change from the floral trim ming, is that of sewing applique <U*- signs all over the silk covering. All kinds of insects and small animals are impressed into service, but the favorite is the butterfly with deep cream and pale yellow wings and dark brown bod ies. The rib-seams are then trimmed with frills of soft silk or mull. Among the inexpensive designs is a parasol of brown grass linen lined with a pistachio green. The linen is em broidered in green, and ruffles of the ■®5PS> UP-TO-DATE SUN SI I AD ICS. same color lisse decorate the covering for nearly half its width. The third design has a covering of fig ured Persian silk trimmed with frills of the same material, sun plaited, and overlaid with another ruffle of liberty silk edged with narrow ribbon. All of the fashionable summer sun shades are plentifully trimmed at the end of the rod, this little decoration be ing in the form of a rosette developed in soft goods, an immense bow, or any fancy that pleases the fantastic taste of the owner. GIRL WITH THIN ARMS. Cnn Gully Kemeily (lie lli-reet by Kubhinfc Them Vigorously a Km Timea Every liny. Thin arms should be carefully con cealed. They have an impoverished look that robs their owner of some of her dignity. If the arms are unduly long, as they occasionally are, the ef fect may lie neutralized by wearing wide bands of black velvet fastened with pretty buttons or clasps or buckles. This reduces the apparent length of the arms. "Thin arms," says M. Charles Blanc, Ihe great French authority on dress, "denote bad health and an enfeebled race." The best remedy is to wash the arms with a fine lather of soap at least twice a day, and to dry them thorough ly and rub them vigorously. This treatment brings the pores into action and induces a healthy condition of the skin. Rubbing with a soft chamois leather is excellent for the skin, giving it both smoothness and gloss. A girl who was much troubled with an eruptive disor der on her arms was advised to procure a very soft eliamois leather, and gently but persistently to rub the skin for a few moments daily. She did so and never suffered from the same disfigur ing cause again. The arms and shoul ders are greatly improved by being rubbed intliesame way, but the chamois must be very soft.—Ladies' Home Jour nal. Hint for the Summer Table. Table mats, on which to place hot dishes, are no longer used, as the heavy felt underclotli is intended to be suf ficient protection for the table; but many housewives have found the top of their handsomely polished tables de faced by the marks made by the hot dishes. If a sheet of asbestos paper is put under the felt cloth the table will not be injured in the least from this cause. At teas or lunhceons, when the polished table is used with doylies in stead of a cloth, asbestos mats may b« covered with prettily embroidered dol lies for the hot dishes. One of tliest mats covered with a doylie, which should be larger than the mat, is much prettier to use than any teapot stand that can be purchased. To Keep llrusheN Clean. The best way to clean hair brushes is with spirits of ammonia, as its effect is immediate. Xo rubiiing is required, and cold or tepid water can be used as successfully as warm. Take a table spoonful of ammonia to a quart of wa ter; dip the bristles without wetting the back, and in a moment the grease is removed; then rinse in cold water, shake well and dry in the air, but not in the sun. Soap and soda soften the bristles and do not get them so thor oughly clean. Terrorized by Green lVn», The Yienna authorities have forbid den a meeting advertised to take place in furtherance of the cause of vegetar ianism on the ground that it would con stitute a danger to the well-being of the state. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1899 fllflfsm NARROW-TIRED WAGONS. They Are tlie Greatest Eiienilew of Good Roads Next to SurpluM Suriaee Water. The proposed automobile race be tween an American and a French ma chine has brought the attention of the public to the wretched condition of American roads. The French automo bile lias shown an average speed of lit) miles an hour for a long distance, while the best the American machine lias been capable of is a, little over 10 miles. The difference is ascribed to the bad roads over which the American machine was compelled to travel. Referring to this. Chairman Otto Dorner, of Ihc I , A. W. highway improvement commit tee, speaks of one of the causes for the miserable highways. He says: "Next to water, ihe greatest enemy of good roads yes, of all roads is the narrow-tired wagon. Narrow tires and water, acting together, have given our country roads a third dimension. They are not only so many miles long and so many rods wide, but they are deep deep, alas, at times that travel over, oiv rather, through them, is next to impos sible. "A heavily loaded wagon always leaves its tracks on Ihe highway, and the depth of these tracks depends upon the material of which Ihe road is built, the weight of the load and the width of the tires. The rut formed by the pass ing wagon forms a iroiy-ih for the rain, which, instead of running ofV to the side, as it should do, remains to sink into the road way and soften it. The next wagon, finding the ground softer, digs its wheels deeper into the surface, rind so the work of demoralization and destruction continues. "A wide tire, on the other hand, in stead of forming a rut, will roll and harden the road surface. By the use of wide tires, every loaded wagon can be turned into an effective road roller and made to improve I*l ie roadway instead of helping to destroy it. All that is necessary to make the best road in the world is to make it solid and to give it a hard, smooth surface. Nothing so much tends to accomplish this as the. frequent use of road rollers. Wide tires are road rollers, and therefore, road makers. Narrow tires are road destroyers. If wide tires could be adopted for general use. every loaded wagon, which to-day helps to cut ii]> and destroy country roads, would become an active factor in their improvement. "Experience has repeatedly proven that hauling on wide tires requires less tractive force than is needed for the narrow-tired wagon under the same conditions. Director Waters, of the Missouri agricultural experiment sta tion, who has made very extensive tests on the subject, characterized especial ly by their scientific accuracy, declares that six inches is the best width of lire for a combination farm and road wagon and that a large number of tests show, without a single exception, a difference in draft in favor of the broad tires ranging all the way from 3 7 to 100 per cent. "The principle of wide tires is so gen erally acknowledged in Europe that laws have been passed in each country prescribing their use. Austria requires tires of at least four anc'i one-third inches width, increasing ar. the load to be carried exceeds three and one-half tons. In France all freighting and market wagons are turned into road rollers by being required to have tires from three 1O ten inches wide. Ger many requires four-inch tires for all wagons used for heavy loads, and Swit zerland requires that they shall be pro vided with tires of six inches. These regulations have been adopted for the protection of the high-class European roads built during the present century. "Now that the adoption of state aid has solved the financial problem con nected with road improvement in the United States, care should betaken that the roads we build are not destroyed by narrow tires. Country districts receiv ing financial aid for road purposes out of the state treasury should do all in their power to encourage the use of wide tires. This has been accomplished in some places by exempting all wide tired vehicles from taxation." The Dairy Type Con-. Careful experiments show that the dairy type, cow yields on an average 6,500 pounds of milk yearly, while the cow with beef heredity and tendency yields 4,500 pounds under similar con ditions. When inilk brings a dollar a hundred, as is now the case, the net income from the butter from the dairy cow, whose milk averages four j>er cent, fat, is $45, while that from the cow of beef type and whose milk only averages .'ls per cent, fat, is only s2™. The feeding value of the skim milk giving four per cent, butter is worth one-seventh more per pound than is the milk containing .15 per cent. Adding the actual value of skim milk of each cow to the net returns for butter we get from the dairy cows $55 and from the other s33.—Farm, Stock and Home. Clalt Foot In CablißKe, "Club foot" in cabbage results most ly when cabbages are raised on the same land year after year. A change of location is always desirable. The free use of wood ashes, chopped in around each plant, is » remedy, but it is not al ways effectual. The potash of the ashes destroys the maggot which does the damage, and an excellent mode is to mix the ashes in water, make a few holes with a stick around the plant and pour the mixture, in, which is a labori ous operation, however, where there is a large lield devoted to the crop. HANDY CAR FOR BARNS. Can lie I *cd a* I'nsllaße Carrier oK a Dairy Farm and for Muny Other Fnriiuneii The illustration shows a very useful device. It was formerly described in Farm, Field and Fireside by a New York correspondent, who savs he has s.ten it in practical operation «.n a dairy fsrm! as an ensilage carrier and in a slable as a manure carrier. Thinking the idea useful to the readers of this paper, 1 give an illustration and ab breviated description of this really use ful device. It consists of a track of iron, A. A, A, such as is used for barn doors, the carrier wheels and hangings and the box, B. The track is fastened to the ceiling either in front or behind the cows, according as it is intended for use in feeding or in stable cleaning, running the whole length or entirely around Ihe stable, the carrier being constructed in a manner to permit lho --r. i'r A 112 A t - «' r 1 —A •li>"' » r. CARRIER FOR A BARN, wheels to turn on a curve in the track. The four carrier wheels are bolted in pairs tot be blocks, C, C. which run close to the track to prevent the w heels jump ing off. The blocks are bolted to a heavy scantling, D. I), under them, only one bolt being used in each block, >o that the wheels will turn a curve in the track as mentioned. The car (II) is hung by rods, I*. E. to the crossbar, F. which is connected to the timber be tween the wheels by a heavy swivel. There may be a rod from 1 be crossbar, F, to the rear cud of car to hold it steady until ready to dump. I!y the handles at the front end, the ear is readily moved upon the track in cither direction, even when fully loaded, hold ing about one-fourth of a wagon load. • —J. (i. Allshouse, in Ohio Farmer. SPLENDID WIRE REEL. For I ncollliiK llarhed W ire, It* In ventor Seems to Think. K is Without an Kiianl. For unrolling barbed wire, my rack, as illust rated, is made of tliree by three inch scantling mortised together. Up rights. a. are three feet long, and cross pieces, b, IS inches. The two pieces, c, I /y\ ' A or/ /> \n// c. 'V ; ; /•; * ifihM |pj~l v \j V A WIRE REEL, are 12 inches long and notched at the top wo the bar on which the spool is hung can rest as shown. Lever d regu lates the speed of turning or paying oil t wire by pressing against the roll. The whole outfit is set in the ground at an end of the proposed fence, spool putin place and a horse with singletree at tached to end of wire. The horse can be ridden or led by a man, while a boy operates the lever.—R. (■. Melson, iu Farm and Home. l'rolit in Thinning Fruit. The practicability of thinning fruit and its feasibility from a commercial standpoint have been pretty well dem onstrated in the last few years. In western New York it has generally proved profitable wherever tried. Mr. John Craig reports, in the publications of the (Canadian) central experimental farm, some results in thinning peaches and plums which corroborate the notes given from Mr. Beach and others. He concludes that, when a large crop of fruit is set, thinning peaches is highly remunerative for the following rea sons: (1) It increases the weight of the yield. C-) It largely increases the size of the fruit. (3) It reduces the num ber of matured seeds, thereby consid erably lessening the drain on the vital ity of the tree. (4) It renders the crop less liabfe to rot. Thinning plums like wise proved altogether worth while. l'osts in Sandy Soil. There is a great difference in the durability of different kinds of posts and also in the soil where they are placed. Contrary to the general im pression. a sandy or gravelly soil, which is usually dry, is much more li ible to rot our posts than one which is always wet. In the dry soil there are frequent changes from wet to dry. by which more air is brought in contact with Ihe wood and this introduces the germs of decay. In an always wet soil the water is probably stagnant and con tains little air. Oxygen is necessary to all decomposition. An old fartner who bad owned both sandy farms and those that bad a clay subsoil once told un that posts on the sand had to be re moved more than twice on clay subsoil. Would You He Wiillr^rf Would you be willing to have the public judge you by the character of the road in front of your house? —Good Roads. The record of endurance made by the saddle bred horses during the last cam paign is of the greatest interest. HIS COURAGE FAILED. He Wlll, Urate Hnouuh He Faced Mary Ann, Then He Wilted. It is the proud boa st of Archie Rruce that he is a lineal descendant of the great Scot tish hero, and, as becomes a man of his blood, he prides himself on his courage. For several mornths there lias been in his family a servant who has completely terrorized his wife, the latter being the victim and not the commander of her nerves. There was a terrible row between mistress and maid last Saturday, and on Monday morn ing Mrs. Brace aaid to her husband: "Archie, I cannot stand Mary Jane any longer. Won't you please discharge her be fore you goto business this morning? You know how afraid of her I am." "Certainly,"replied Mr. Hruce, with suave courage, "certainly. The crossest creature that ever cracked a cup or cleaned a kettle cannot cow me." The valiant Archibald sometimes sur prises himself and his friends by floating along on a stream of alliteration. I Procur ing his hat and coat, he descended to the basement kitchen, and in stentorian tones bravely addressed the servant: "Mary Jane, ahem! I must hurry off now, but, ahem!— Mrs. Hruce asked me to tell you that she wants, ahem!—to speak to you after 1 have gone to the office!"— San Francisco News Letter. To C'nre u f'old In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. Bacon —"I can't understand why your wife calls that Wagnerian stuff heavenly music." Egbert—"Because it sounds like thunder, I suppose."—Yonkers Statesman. The Nickel l'Jate Road, with its Peerless Trio of Fast Express Trains Daily and Un excelled Dining Car Service, offers rates lower than via other lines. The Short Line between Chicago, Buffalo, New York and Boston. The scarcity of men should never result in making a poor one more desirable, but it unfortunately does.—Atchison Globe. After physicians had given me up, I was saved by l'iso's Cure. Ralph Erieg, VV'il liamsport, I'a., Nov. 22. ISO 3. For disobedience the small boy frequent ly takes the palm.—Chic ago Daily News. HHU'II Catarrh Care Is taken Internally. Price 75c. You needn't stretch it to put quartz in a pint cup.—Golden Days. A pretty safe rule of conduct is to avoid doing anything that will produce headache or heartache. —L. A. W. Bulletin. It would be nice if stout girls could make themselves wasp'-waisted without making themselves wasp-tempered.—Detroit Jour nal. We will sometimes admit that we have not achieved all we intended to, but we are con vinced that no one could have accomplished more under the circumstances. — Puck. No Wonder. —Brown —"There goes a young fellow tint's hated by everybody in his neighborhood." Jone.-. —"What's wrong with him ?" Hrown—"He is learning to play a cornet." —Ohio State Journal. Very Careless. —Tiepass Teddy—"Wake up, Harry, de barn's on fire." Handout Harry—"Blame dese careless farmers. Dey're allers leavin' a lot o' hay around when a feller's apt ter drop sparks from his pipe."—N. Y. Journal. A troubled but trusting subscriber re cently wrote to the editor of the Huron Herald: "What ails my hens? Every morn ing 1 find one of them keeled over to rise no more." The reply was:"The fowls are dead, it is an old complaint and nothing can be done except to bury them." —Kansas City Star. The Bank President —"Are you aware the cashier has taken a half-interest in a yacht?" The Confidential Adviser —"No. Perhaps we had better see he dots not be come a full-fledged skipper."—lndianapolis Journal. An ApologyDDue"Was that your broth er 1 saw you talking to in front of your house last night? "Sir! That was my coachman." "Just apologize for me to the coachman next time yon see him, will you, please?"— Cleveland Plain Dealer. "There's no estimating the amount ot misery entailed by this loose system of di vorce," said the earnest man. "No. sir!" cried the sour-faced one. "Many a di vorced man marries again."—Philadelphia North American. REGISTER OF TREASURY. Hon. Judson W. Lyons, Register of the United States Treasury, iu a letter from Washington, D. C., says: / m IJunntym Hon. Judson W. Lyons, Register of the Treasury. April 23d, 1899. Pe-ru-na Drug M'f'g Co., Columbus, O.: Gentlemen—l find Pe-ru-na to be an exeeellent remedy for the catarrhal af fections of spring and summer, and those who suffer from depression from the 1 heat of the summer will find no remedy the ; equal of Pe-ru-na. Judson W. Lyons. [ No man is better known in the financial world than Judson W. Lyons. His name on every piece of money of recent date, makes his signature one of the most familiar ones in the United States. Hon. Lyons address is Augusta, tla. He is a member of the National Republican. Committee, and is i a prominent and influential politician, lie j is a particular friend of President McKinley. j Remember that cholera morbus, cholera infantum, summer complaint, bilious colic, diarrhoea and dysentery are each and all catarrh of the bowels. Catarrh is the only correct name for these affections. Pe-ru-na is an absolute specific for these ailments, which are so common in summer. Dr. Hart- , man, in a practice of over forty years, never lost a single case of cholera infantum, dysen tery, diarrhoea, or cholera morbus, and his only remedy was Pe-ru-na. Those desiring further particulars should send for a free copy of "Summer Catarrh." Address Dr. 1 Hart man, Columbus, O. I.arir'a Foully Me rticine. Moves the bowels each day. In ordar to l je healthy this is necessary. Acts gently cn the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head ache. Price 25 and 50e. Fllllnv Hit- Onp. The bright boy of fiction is playing with hi? Voah's ark. "What are these two chips of wood?" asks the bright boy's father. It is necessary for the bright bov of fic tion to have u father, you know; ttiere hai to be somebody to draw him out. "Tin 1.1, replied the bright boy, without hesitation, is the microbe.-!' Of course, if we think a minute, we per ceivc t!.::t there iau-t. have been a pair of mi crobes on the ark. —Detroit Journal. I.iiril.n Can V/eni- K'.ioct fine size smaller .■it!.;- Allen's F ooV Kasi>, :i | .wder lor the fo<lt ui:ik r -s tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot. sweating.uchinv fe>-t. tafrrowingiiiiils. corn* and bunions. At all i'rug-r >ts nil slien stores. 35c Trial l acka.' - I-'HKH b> ill. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Hoy, N. Y. A New Gnriic. MeSwntters — I hear that you put a step to vour wife's going through your pockets. SlcSwiltcrs —V( s._ "How do you work it?" "Put tacks in your pockets."—Herlin 'Mil, i Hei-a'd. M ft VST* rkm CF r* Jl jl VAACTF q HB?^^teryrnrrryiipßLLiTAjßa. xuzz*. u: | JafcC And is it not due to ne.TOua I ra||p exhaustion? Things always j 4a? look so much brighter when we J are in good health. How can A you have cou-ags when suffer | ing with headache, nervous I A&k prostration and great physical MM weakness? Would you not like to be rid of this depression of rpirits? T How? By removing tho L cause. By taking It give 9 activity to all parts that carry away useless and T poisonous materials from your 1 body. It removes the-:ause of gMWk your suffering, because it re- xffijSjv moves all impurities from your 'fisjiP blood. Send for our book on Nervousness. I To keep in good health you n|B must have perfect action of the bowels. Ayer's Pills cure con- B^j stipation and biliousness. * Writ a to our Doctors. WIM Perhaps you would llko to consult BffM Bomo eminent physicians about vour MM condition. Then writo us freely all tho Ps3i particulars in your case. You will re- tun cclvb a prompt reply, without cost. frJJ Address, DR. J. C. AYER, «B Lowell. Mass. m tazy Liver "I liuvo been troubled a great dttl with a torpid liver, which produces constlpv tlon. I found CASCAKETS to be ail you claim for them, and secured such relief the drat trial, that I purchased another supply and wa» com pletely cured 1 shall only be too glad to rec ommend Cascarets whenever the opportunity Is presented." J. A. SMITH. 2920 Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. W CATHARTIC mmwmM TWA QE MARK RIOIOTtRtD Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Tante Good. p» Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 30a. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling It.mrd; ConpanV. < lil«.|o, Moatrr.l. t>» Tnrk t<M NO-TO-BAG KA FAT ADIPO-CURA m __ _ Will reduce your weight 10 ill to 20 pounds a Month. No VkS\v starving, No Special Diet- Purelv Vegetable-Absolute, DBCEJira ly SAFE and CERTAIN in IbSbELlvu Its Results. SAMPLE, with ■ iiuiiw Treatise on Obesity. FREE. SORTIIWEBTEK\ I'HAKH.U'AL CO. Ilox 4<»M. Ull.WAt'lkKb WIS, READERS OF THIS PAPER DESIRING TO BUY ANYTHING ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING WHAT THEY ASK FOR, REFUSING ALL SUBSTITUTES OR IM ITATIONS. Hydraulic and Screw Presses, (Jrater». »\n\wwn>v Evaporators. I'umps. etc. lilnMri-ted Catalogue free. I. U. HAMPTON & SONS, DKTK»;IT,nu 11. EDUCATIONAL. BUCHTEL COLLEGE, AKRWTO. Three Collegre Course*. Preparatory, Normal, aiut-10, and Art Schools. Co-e<lucationul. Standard bicb. Lxpensea moderate, t atalotrue KItEE. Addresa I>U. lUA A. riCIKMI, Prraicf-nt NEW HAMPSHIRE MILITARY ACADEMY Prepares for Government Academies and College*, Full Commercial Course. Major li. I'. HYATT. M., Principal, WEST LEBANON, N. H. A. N. K.—C 1770 13 CURES WHtHE ALL USE FAILS. Pj M Cough Syrup. Testes Good. Use W Erl In time. Sold by drugclnts. Hf 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers